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Check file status on Linux with the stat command
All the information you need about any file or file system is just one Linux command away.
The stat
command, included in the GNU coreutils
package, provides a variety of metadata, including file size, inode location, access permissions and SELinux context, and creation and modification times, about files and filesystems. It's a convenient way to gather information that you usually need several different commands to acquire.
Installing stat on Linux
On Linux, you probably already have the stat
command installed because it's part of a core utility package that's generally bundled with Linux distributions by default.
In the event that you don't have stat
installed, you can install coreutils
with your package manager.
Alternately, you can compile coreutils from source code.
Getting the status of a file
Running stat
provides easy to read output about a specific file or directory.
$ stat planets.xml
File: planets.xml
Size: 325 Blocks: 8 IO Block: 4096 regular file
Device: fd03h/64771d Inode: 140217 Links: 1
Access: (0664/-rw-rw-r--) Uid: (1000/tux) Gid: (100/users)
Context: unconfined_u:object_r:user_home_t:s0
Access: 2021-08-17 18:26:57.281330711 +1200
Modify: 2021-08-17 18:26:58.738332799 +1200
Change: 2021-08-17 18:26:58.738332799 +1200
Birth: 2021-08-17 18:26:57.281330711 +1200
It may be easy to read, but it's still a lot of information. Here's what stat
is covering:
- File: the file name
- Size: the file size in bytes
- Blocks: the number of blocks on the hard drive reserved for this file
- IO Block: the size of a block of the filesystem
- regular file: the type of file (regular file, directory, filesystem)
- Device: the device where the file is located
- Inode: the inode number where the file is located
- Links: the number of links to the file
- Access, UID, GID: file permissions, user, and group owner
- Context: SELinux context
- Access, Modify, Change, Birth: the timestamp of when the file was accessed, modified, changed status, and created
Terse output
For people who know the output well, or want to parse the output with other utilities like awk, there's the --terse
(-t
for short) option, which formats the output without headings or line breaks.
$ stat --terse planets.xml
planets.xml 325 8 81b4 100977 100 fd03 140217 1 0 0 1629181617 1629181618 1629181618 1629181617 4096 unconfined_u:object_r:user_home_t:s0
Choosing your own format
You can define your own format for output using the --printf
option and a syntax similar to printf. Each attribute reported by stat
has a format sequence (%C
for SELinux context, %n
for file name, and so on), so you can choose what you want to see in a report.
$ stat --printf="%n\n%C\n" planets.xml
planets.xml
unconfined_u:object_r:user_home_t:s0
$ $ stat --printf="Name: %n\nModified: %y\n" planets.xml
Name: planets.xml
Modified: 2021-08-17 18:26:58.738332799 +1200
Here are some common format sequences:
- %a access rights
- %F file type
- %n file name
- %U user name
- %u user ID
- %g group ID
- %w time of birth
- %y modification time
A full listing of format sequences is available in the stat
man page and the coreutils
info pages.
File information
If you've ever tried to parse the output of ls -l
, then you'll appreciate the flexibility of the stat
command. You don't always need every bit of the default information that stat
provides, but the command is invaluable when you do need some or all of it. Whether you read its output in its default format, or you create your own queries, the stat
command gives you easy access to the data about your data.
via: https://opensource.com/article/21/8/linux-stat-file-status
作者:Seth Kenlon 选题:lujun9972 译者:译者ID 校对:校对者ID