Defined in header <filesystem> | ||
|---|---|---|
path canonical( const std::filesystem::path& p ); | (1) | (since C++17) |
path canonical( const std::filesystem::path& p,
std::error_code& ec );
| (2) | (since C++17) |
path weakly_canonical( const std::filesystem::path& p ); | (3) | (since C++17) |
path weakly_canonical( const std::filesystem::path& p,
std::error_code& ec );
| (4) | (since C++17) |
p to a canonical absolute path, i.e. an absolute path that has no dot, dot-dot elements or symbolic links in its generic format representation. If p is not an absolute path, the function behaves as if it is first made absolute by std::filesystem::absolute(p). The path p must exist.operator/= from the result of calling canonical() with a path argument composed of the leading elements of p that exist (as determined by status(p) or status(p, ec)), if any, followed by the elements of p that do not exist. The resulting path is in normal form.| p | - | a path which may be absolute or relative; for canonical it must be an existing path |
| ec | - | error code to store error status to. |
std::filesystem::absolute(p).canonical(x)/y, where x is a path composed of the longest leading sequence of elements in p that exist, and y is a path composed of the remaining trailing non-existent elements of p.The overload that does not take a std::error_code& parameter throws filesystem::filesystem_error on underlying OS API errors, constructed with p as the first path argument and the OS error code as the error code argument. The overload taking a std::error_code& parameter sets it to the OS API error code if an OS API call fails, and executes ec.clear() if no errors occur. Any overload not marked noexcept may throw std::bad_alloc if memory allocation fails.
The function canonical() is modeled after the POSIX realpath.
The function weakly_canonical() was introduced to simplify operational semantics of relative().
#include <iostream>
#include <filesystem>
int main()
{
/* set up sandbox directories:
a
└── b
├── c1
│ └── d <== current path
└── c2
└── e
*/
auto old = std::filesystem::current_path();
auto tmp = std::filesystem::temp_directory_path();
std::filesystem::current_path(tmp);
auto d1 = tmp / "a/b/c1/d";
auto d2 = tmp / "a/b/c2/e";
std::filesystem::create_directories(d1);
std::filesystem::create_directories(d2);
std::filesystem::current_path(d1);
auto p1 = std::filesystem::path("../../c2/./e");
auto p2 = std::filesystem::path("../no-such-file");
std::cout << "Current path is "
<< std::filesystem::current_path() << '\n'
<< "Canonical path for " << p1 << " is "
<< std::filesystem::canonical(p1) << '\n'
<< "Weakly canonical path for " << p2 << " is "
<< std::filesystem::weakly_canonical(p2) << '\n';
try
{
std::filesystem::canonical(p2);
// NOT REACHED
}
catch(const std::exception& ex)
{
std::cout << "Canonical path for " << p2 << " threw exception:\n"
<< ex.what() << '\n';
}
// cleanup
std::filesystem::current_path(old);
const auto count = std::filesystem::remove_all(tmp / "a");
std::cout << "Deleted " << count << " files or directories.\n";
}Possible output:
Current path is "/tmp/a/b/c1/d" Canonical path for "../../c2/./e" is "/tmp/a/b/c2/e" Weakly canonical path for "../no-such-file" is "/tmp/a/b/c1/no-such-file" Canonical path for "../no-such-file" threw exception: filesystem error: in canonical: No such file or directory [../no-such-file] [/tmp/a/b/c1/d] Deleted 6 files or directories.
The following behavior-changing defect reports were applied retroactively to previously published C++ standards.
| DR | Applied to | Behavior as published | Correct behavior |
|---|---|---|---|
| LWG 2956 | C++17 | canonical has a spurious base parameter | removed |
|
(C++17) | represents a path (class) |
|
(C++17) | composes an absolute path (function) |
|
(C++17) | composes a relative path (function) |
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