All three functions return information about a file. Please note that devices are seen as files to Unix, so you could 'stat' things like /dev/mouse to see when the mouse was last moved.
stat return the status of a file.
fstat stats an open file.
lstat reports on a link, not the file it points too.
Libraries: sys/stat.h
unistd.h
Syntax: struct stat stat_p;
stat ("martin", &stat_p);
Stat Structure:
struct stat
{
dev_t st_dev; /* device */
ino_t st_ino; /* inode */
umode_t st_mode; /* protection */
nlink_t st_nlink; /* number of hard links */
uid_t st_uid; /* user ID of owner */
gid_t st_gid; /* group ID of owner */
dev_t st_rdev; /* device type (if inode device) */
off_t st_size; /* total size, in bytes */
unsigned long st_blksize; /* blocksize for filesystem I/O */
unsigned long st_blocks; /* number of blocks allocated */
time_t st_atime; /* time of last access */
time_t st_mtime; /* time of last modification */
time_t st_ctime; /* time of last change */
};
These functions return a large amount of information. See the man page
(below) for details. You will need to understand
structures to work with stat.
man page to provide all the details.
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