Defined in header <filesystem> | ||
---|---|---|
void rename( const std::filesystem::path& old_p, const std::filesystem::path& new_p ); void rename( const std::filesystem::path& old_p, const std::filesystem::path& new_p, std::error_code& ec ) noexcept; | (since C++17) |
Moves or renames the filesystem object identified by old_p
to new_p
as if by the POSIX rename
:
old_p
is a non-directory file, then new_p
must be one of: old_p
or a hardlink to it: nothing is done in this case new_p
is first deleted, then, without allowing other processes to observe new_p
as deleted, the pathname new_p
is linked to the file and old_p
is unlinked from the file. Write permissions are required to both the directory that contains old_p
and the directory that contains new_p
. new_p
is linked to the file and old_p
is unlinked from the file. Write permissions are required to both the directory that contains old_p
and the directory that contains new_p
. old_p
is a directory, then new_p
must be one of: old_p
or a hardlink to it: nothing is done in this case new_p
is deleted if empty on POSIX systems, but this may be an error on other systems. If not an error, then new_p
is first deleted, then, without allowing other processes to observe new_p
as deleted, the pathname new_p
is linked to the directory and old_p
is unlinked from the directory. Write permissions are required to both the directory that contains old_p
and the directory that contains new_p
. new_p
is linked to the directory and old_p
is unlinked from the directory. Write permissions are required to both the directory that contains old_p
and the directory that contains new_p
. old_p
is a symlink, it is itself renamed, not its target. If new_p
is an existing symlink, it is itself erased, not its target. Rename fails if.
new_p
ends with dot or with dot-dot new_p
names a non-existing directory ending with a directory separator old_p
is a directory which is an ancestor of new_p
old_p | - | path to move or rename |
new_p | - | target path for the move/rename operation |
ec | - | out-parameter for error reporting in the non-throwing overload. |
(none).
The overload that does not take a std::error_code&
parameter throws filesystem::filesystem_error
on underlying OS API errors, constructed with old_p
as the first path argument, new_p
as the second 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.
#include <filesystem> #include <fstream> namespace fs = std::filesystem; int main() { std::filesystem::path p = std::filesystem::current_path() / "sandbox"; std::filesystem::create_directories(p / "from"); std::ofstream{ p / "from/file1.txt" }.put('a'); std::filesystem::create_directory(p / "to"); // fs::rename(p / "from/file1.txt", p / "to/"); // error: "to" is a directory fs::rename(p / "from/file1.txt", p / "to/file2.txt"); // OK // fs::rename(p / "from", p / "to"); // error: "to" is not empty fs::rename(p / "from", p / "to/subdir"); // OK std::filesystem::remove_all(p); }
renames a file (function) |
|
(C++17)(C++17) | removes a file or empty directory removes a file or directory and all its contents, recursively (function) |
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