stat
stat file
- Returns a 13-element list giving the statistics for a file, indicated by either a filehandle or an expression that gives its name. It's typically used as follows:
($dev,$ino,$mode,$nlink,$uid,$gid,$rdev,$size, $atime,$mtime,$ctime,$blksize,$blocks) = stat $filename;
Not all fields are supported on all filesystem types. Here are the meanings of the fields:Field Meaning dev
Device number of filesystem ino
Inode number mode
File mode (type and permissions) nlink
Number of (hard) links to the file uid
Numeric user ID of file's owner gid
Numeric group ID of file's owner rdev
The device identifier (special files only) size
Total size of file, in bytes atime
Last access time since the epoch mtime
Last modification time since the epoch ctime
Inode change time (not creation time!) since the epoch blksize
Preferred blocksize for file system I/O blocks
Actual number of blocks allocated $dev
and$ino
, taken together, uniquely identify a file. The$blksize
and$blocks
are likely defined only on BSD-derived filesystems. The$blocks
field (if defined) is reported in 512-byte blocks. Note that$blocks*512
can differ greatly from$size
for files containing unallocated blocks, or "holes," which aren't counted in$blocks
.If
stat
is passed the special filehandle consisting of an underline, no actualstat
is done, but the current contents of thestat
structure from the laststat
orstat
-based file test (the-x
operators) is returned.