Well I threw together a test program that ran each of these methods 100,000 times, half on files that existed and half on files that didn’t.
#include <sys/stat.h> #include <unistd.h> #include <string> #include <fstream> inline bool exists_test0 (const std::string& name) { ifstream f(name.c_str()); return f.good(); } inline bool exists_test1 (const std::string& name) { if (FILE *file = fopen(name.c_str(), "r")) { fclose(file); return true; } else { return false; } } inline bool exists_test2 (const std::string& name) { return ( access( name.c_str(), F_OK ) != -1 ); } inline bool exists_test3 (const std::string& name) { struct stat buffer; return (stat (name.c_str(), &buffer) == 0); }
Results for total time to run the 100,000 calls averaged over 5 runs,
Method | Time |
---|---|
exists_test0 (ifstream) | 0.485s |
exists_test1 (FILE fopen) | 0.302s |
exists_test2 (posix access()) | 0.202s |
exists_test3 (posix stat()) | 0.134s |
The stat()
function provided the best performance on my system (Linux, compiled with g++
), with a standard fopen
call being your best bet if you for some reason refuse to use POSIX functions.