std::filesystem::filesystem_error
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< cpp | filesystem
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Filesystem library (C++17)
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Execution control library (C++26)
Filesystem library
filesystem::filesystem_error
filesystem_error
Defined in header
<filesystem>
class filesystem_error;
(since C++17)
The class std::filesystem::filesystem_error
defines an exception object that is thrown on failure by the throwing overloads of the functions in the filesystem library.
std-filesystem-filesystem error-inheritance.svg
Inheritance diagram
Contents
[edit] Member functions
returns the paths that were involved in the operation that caused the error
(public member function) [edit]
(public member function) [edit]
Inherited from std::system_error
Member functions
Inherited from std::runtime_error
Inherited from std::exception
Member functions
[edit] Notes
In order to ensure that copy functions of filesystem_error
are noexcept, typical implementations store an object holding the return value of what() and two std::filesystem::path objects referenced by path1() and path2() respectively in a separately-allocated reference-counted storage.
Currently the MS STL implementation is non-conforming: objects mentioned above are stored directly in the filesystem
object, which makes the copy functions not noexcept.
[edit] Example
Run this code
#include <filesystem> #include <iostream> #include <system_error> int main() { const std::filesystem::path from{"/none1/a"}, to{"/none2/b"}; try { std::filesystem::copy_file (from, to); // throws: files do not exist } catch (std::filesystem::filesystem_error const& ex) { std::cout << "what(): " << ex.what() << '\n' << "path1(): " << ex.path1() << '\n' << "path2(): " << ex.path2() << '\n' << "code().value(): " << ex.code().value() << '\n' << "code().message(): " << ex.code().message() << '\n' << "code().category(): " << ex.code().category().name() << '\n'; } // All functions have non-throwing equivalents std::error_code ec; std::filesystem::copy_file (from, to, ec); // does not throw std::cout << "\nNon-throwing form sets error_code: " << ec.message() << '\n'; }
Possible output:
what(): filesystem error: cannot copy file: No such file or directory [/none1/a] [/none2/b] path1(): "/none1/a" path2(): "/none2/b" code().value(): 2 code().message(): No such file or directory code().category(): generic Non-throwing form sets error_code: No such file or directory