How to check if a file exists and is readable in C++?

I would probably go with:

ifstream my_file("test.txt");
if (my_file.good())
{
  // read away
}

The good method checks if the stream is ready to be read from.


You might use Boost.Filesystem. It has a boost::filesystem::exist function.

I don't know how about checking read access rights. You could look in Boost.Filesystem too. However likely there will be no other (portable) way than try to actually read the file.

EDIT (2021-08-26): C++17 introduced <filesystem> and there you have std::filesystem::exists. Boost is no longer needed for this.


if you are on unix then access() can tell you if it's readable. However if ACL's are in use, then it gets more complicated, in this case it's best to just open the file with ifstream and try read.. if you cannot read then the ACL may prohibit reading.


What Operating System/platform?

On Linux/Unix/MacOSX, you can use fstat.

On Windows, you can use GetFileAttributes.

Usually, there is no portable way of doing this with standard C/C++ IO functions.


C++17, cross-platform: Check file existence with std::filesystem::exists and readability with std::filesystem::status & std::filesystem::perms:

#include <iostream>
#include <filesystem> // C++17
namespace fs = std::filesystem;

/*! \return True if owner, group and others have read permission,
            i.e. at least 0444.
*/
bool IsReadable(const fs::path& p)
{
    std::error_code ec; // For noexcept overload usage.
    auto perms = fs::status(p, ec).permissions();
    if ((perms & fs::perms::owner_read) != fs::perms::none &&
        (perms & fs::perms::group_read) != fs::perms::none &&
        (perms & fs::perms::others_read) != fs::perms::none
        )
    {
        return true;
    }
    return false;
}

int main()
{
    fs::path filePath("path/to/test.txt");
    std::error_code ec; // For noexcept overload usage.
    if (fs::exists(filePath, ec) && !ec)
    {
        if (IsReadable(filePath))
        {
            std::cout << filePath << " exists and is readable.";
        }
    }
}

Consider also checking for the file type.