std::experimental::filesystem::resize_file

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< cpp‎ | experimental‎ | fs
 
 
Technical specifications
Filesystem library (filesystem TS)
Library fundamentals (library fundamentals TS)
Library fundamentals 2 (library fundamentals 2 TS)
Extensions for parallelism (parallelism TS)
Concepts (concepts TS)
Extensions for concurrency (concurrency TS)
 
 
Defined in header <experimental/filesystem>
void resize_file(const path& p, std::uintmax_t new_size);
void resize_file(const path& p, std::uintmax_t new_size, error_code& ec);
(filesystem TS)

Changes the size of the regular file named by p as if by POSIX truncate: if the file size was previously larger than new_size, the remainder of the file is discarded. If the file was previously smaller than new_size, the file size is increased and the new area appears as if zero-filled.

Contents

[edit] Parameters

p - path to delete
new_size - size that the file will now have
ec - out-parameter for error reporting in the non-throwing overload

[edit] Return value

(none)

[edit] Exceptions

The overload that does not take a error_code& parameter throws filesystem_error on underlying OS API errors, constructed with p as the first argument and the OS error code as the error code argument. std::bad_alloc may be thrown if memory allocation fails. The overload taking a 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. This overload has
noexcept specification:  
noexcept
  

[edit] Notes

On systems that support sparse files, increasing the file size does not increase the space it occupies on the file system: space allocation takes place only when non-zero bytes are written to the file.

[edit] Example

demonstrates the effect of creating a sparse file on the free space

#include <iostream>
#include <iomanip>
#include <fstream>
#include <experimental/filesystem>
namespace fs = std::experimental::filesystem;
int main()
{
    fs::path p = fs::current_path() / "example.bin";
    std::ofstream(p).put('a');
    std::cout << "File size: " << std::setw(10) << fs::file_size(p)
              << " Free space: " << fs::space(p).free << '\n';
    fs::resize_file(p, 1024*1024*1024); // resize to 1 G
    std::cout << "File size: " << fs::file_size(p)
              << " Free space: " << fs::space(p).free << '\n';
    fs::remove(p);
}

Possible output:

File size:          1 Free space: 3724541952
File size: 1073741824 Free space: 3724476416

[edit] See also

returns the size of a file
(function)
determines available free space on the file system
(function)