getcwd(3) — Linux manual page

NAME | LIBRARY | SYNOPSIS | DESCRIPTION | RETURN VALUE | ERRORS | ATTRIBUTES | VERSIONS | VERSIONS | STANDARDS | HISTORY | NOTES | BUGS | SEE ALSO | COLOPHON

getcwd(3) Library Functions Manual getcwd(3)

NAME top

 getcwd, getwd, get_current_dir_name - get current working
 directory

LIBRARY top

 Standard C library (libc, -lc)

SYNOPSIS top

 #include <unistd.h>
 char *getcwd(char buf[.size], size_t size);
 char *get_current_dir_name(void);
 [[deprecated]] char *getwd(char buf[PATH_MAX]);
 Feature Test Macro Requirements for glibc (see
 feature_test_macros(7)):
 get_current_dir_name():
 _GNU_SOURCE
 getwd():
 Since glibc 2.12:
 (_XOPEN_SOURCE >= 500) && ! (_POSIX_C_SOURCE >= 200809L)
 || /* glibc >= 2.19: */ _DEFAULT_SOURCE
 || /* glibc <= 2.19: */ _BSD_SOURCE
 Before glibc 2.12:
 _BSD_SOURCE || _XOPEN_SOURCE >= 500

DESCRIPTION top

 These functions return a null-terminated string containing an
 absolute pathname that is the current working directory of the
 calling process. The pathname is returned as the function result
 and via the argument buf, if present.
 The getcwd() function copies an absolute pathname of the current
 working directory to the array pointed to by buf, which is of
 length size.
 If the length of the absolute pathname of the current working
 directory, including the terminating null byte, exceeds size
 bytes, NULL is returned, and errno  is set to ERANGE; an
 application should check for this error, and allocate a larger
 buffer if necessary.
 As an extension to the POSIX.1-2001 standard, glibc's getcwd()
 allocates the buffer dynamically using malloc(3) if buf is NULL.
 In this case, the allocated buffer has the length size unless size
 is zero, when buf is allocated as big as necessary. The caller
 should free(3) the returned buffer.
 get_current_dir_name() will malloc(3) an array big enough to hold
 the absolute pathname of the current working directory. If the
 environment variable PWD is set, and its value is correct, then
 that value will be returned. The caller should free(3) the
 returned buffer.
 getwd() does not malloc(3) any memory. The buf argument should be
 a pointer to an array at least PATH_MAX bytes long. If the length
 of the absolute pathname of the current working directory,
 including the terminating null byte, exceeds PATH_MAX bytes, NULL
 is returned, and errno  is set to ENAMETOOLONG. (Note that on some
 systems, PATH_MAX may not be a compile-time constant; furthermore,
 its value may depend on the filesystem, see pathconf(3).) For
 portability and security reasons, use of getwd() is deprecated.

RETURN VALUE top

 On success, these functions return a pointer to a string
 containing the pathname of the current working directory. In the
 case of getcwd() and getwd() this is the same value as buf.
 On failure, these functions return NULL, and errno  is set to
 indicate the error. The contents of the array pointed to by buf
 are undefined on error.

ERRORS top

 EACCES Permission to read or search a component of the filename
 was denied.
 EFAULT buf points to a bad address.
 EINVAL The size argument is zero and buf is not a null pointer.
 EINVAL getwd(): buf is NULL.
 ENAMETOOLONG
 getwd(): The size of the null-terminated absolute pathname
 string exceeds PATH_MAX bytes.
 ENOENT The current working directory has been unlinked.
 ENOMEM Out of memory.
 ERANGE The size argument is less than the length of the absolute
 pathname of the working directory, including the
 terminating null byte. You need to allocate a bigger array
 and try again.

ATTRIBUTES top

 For an explanation of the terms used in this section, see
 attributes(7).
 ┌──────────────────────────────────┬───────────────┬─────────────┐
 │ Interface Attribute Value │
 ├──────────────────────────────────┼───────────────┼─────────────┤
 │ getcwd(), getwd() │ Thread safety │ MT-Safe │
 ├──────────────────────────────────┼───────────────┼─────────────┤
 │ get_current_dir_name() │ Thread safety │ MT-Safe env │
 └──────────────────────────────────┴───────────────┴─────────────┘

VERSIONS top

 POSIX.1-2001 leaves the behavior of getcwd() unspecified if buf is
 NULL.
 POSIX.1-2001 does not define any errors for getwd().

VERSIONS top

 C library/kernel differences
 On Linux, the kernel provides a getcwd() system call, which the
 functions described in this page will use if possible. The system
 call takes the same arguments as the library function of the same
 name, but is limited to returning at most PATH_MAX bytes. (Before
 Linux 3.12, the limit on the size of the returned pathname was the
 system page size. On many architectures, PATH_MAX and the system
 page size are both 4096 bytes, but a few architectures have a
 larger page size.) If the length of the pathname of the current
 working directory exceeds this limit, then the system call fails
 with the error ENAMETOOLONG. In this case, the library functions
 fall back to a (slower) alternative implementation that returns
 the full pathname.
 Following a change in Linux 2.6.36, the pathname returned by the
 getcwd() system call will be prefixed with the string
 "(unreachable)" if the current directory is not below the root
 directory of the current process (e.g., because the process set a
 new filesystem root using chroot(2) without changing its current
 directory into the new root). Such behavior can also be caused by
 an unprivileged user by changing the current directory into
 another mount namespace. When dealing with pathname from
 untrusted sources, callers of the functions described in this page
 should consider checking whether the returned pathname starts with
 '/' or '(' to avoid misinterpreting an unreachable path as a
 relative pathname.

STANDARDS top

 getcwd()
 POSIX.1-2008.
 get_current_dir_name()
 GNU.
 getwd()
 None.

HISTORY top

 getcwd()
 POSIX.1-2001.
 getwd()
 POSIX.1-2001, but marked LEGACY. Removed in POSIX.1-2008.
 Use getcwd() instead.
 Under Linux, these functions make use of the getcwd() system call
 (available since Linux 2.1.92). On older systems they would query
 /proc/self/cwd. If both system call and proc filesystem are
 missing, a generic implementation is called. Only in that case
 can these calls fail under Linux with EACCES.

NOTES top

 These functions are often used to save the location of the current
 working directory for the purpose of returning to it later.
 Opening the current directory (".") and calling fchdir(2) to
 return is usually a faster and more reliable alternative when
 sufficiently many file descriptors are available, especially on
 platforms other than Linux.

BUGS top

 Since the Linux 2.6.36 change that added "(unreachable)" in the
 circumstances described above, the glibc implementation of
 getcwd() has failed to conform to POSIX and returned a relative
 pathname when the API contract requires an absolute pathname.
 With glibc 2.27 onwards this is corrected; calling getcwd() from
 such a pathname will now result in failure with ENOENT.

SEE ALSO top

 pwd(1), chdir(2), fchdir(2), open(2), unlink(2), free(3),
 malloc(3)

COLOPHON top

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Linux man-pages 6.10 2024年07月23日 getcwd(3)

Pages that refer to this page: pwd(1), chdir(2), syscalls(2), realpath(3), core(5)



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