I need to find the size of a file or a directory whatever given in the commandline using stat(). It works fine for the files (both relative and absolute paths) but when I give a
Yes. opendir() + loop on readdir()/stat() will give you the file/directory sizes which you can sum to get a total. If you have sub-directories you will also have to loop on those and the files within them.
To use du you could use the system() function. This only returns a result code to the calling program so you could save the results to a file and then read the file. The code would be something like,
system("du -sb dirname > du_res_file");
Then you can read the file du_res_file (assuming it has been created successfully) to get your answer. This would give the size of the directory + sub-directories + files in one go.
Im sorry, I missed it the first time, stat only gives the size of files, not directories:
These functions return information about a file. No permissions are required on the file itself, but-in the case of stat() and lstat() - execute (search) permission is required on all of the directories in path that lead to the file.
The st_size field gives the size of the file (if it is a regular file or a symbolic link) in bytes. The size of a symbolic link is the length of the pathname it contains, without a terminating null byte.
look at the man page on fstat/stat
stat()
on a directory doesn't return the sum of the file sizes in it. The size field represents how much space it taken by the directory entry instead, and it varies depending on a few factors. If you want to know how much space is taken by all files below a specific directory, then you have to recurse down the tree, adding up the space taken by all files. This is how tools like du
work.