问题
Possible Duplicate:
.NET - Check if directory is accessible without exception handling
Im making a small file explorer in Visual Studio 2010 with NET 3.5 and C#, and I have this function to check if a directory is accessible:
RealPath=@"c:\System Volume Information";
public bool IsAccessible()
{
//get directory info
DirectoryInfo realpath = new DirectoryInfo(RealPath);
try
{
//if GetDirectories works then is accessible
realpath.GetDirectories();
return true;
}
catch (Exception)
{
//if exception is not accesible
return false;
}
}
But I think with big directories it could be slow trying to get all sub directories to check if directory is accesible. Im using this function to prevent errors when trying to explore protected folders or cd/dvd drives without disc ("Device Not Ready" error).
Is there a better way (faster) to check if directory is accessible by the application (preferably in NET 3.5)?
回答1:
According to MSDN, Directory.Exists
should return false if you don't have read access to the directory. However, you can use Directory.GetAccessControl for this. Example:
public static bool CanRead(string path)
{
var readAllow = false;
var readDeny = false;
var accessControlList = Directory.GetAccessControl(path);
if(accessControlList == null)
return false;
var accessRules = accessControlList.GetAccessRules(true, true, typeof(System.Security.Principal.SecurityIdentifier));
if(accessRules ==null)
return false;
foreach (FileSystemAccessRule rule in accessRules)
{
if ((FileSystemRights.Read & rule.FileSystemRights) != FileSystemRights.Read) continue;
if (rule.AccessControlType == AccessControlType.Allow)
readAllow = true;
else if (rule.AccessControlType == AccessControlType.Deny)
readDeny = true;
}
return readAllow && !readDeny;
}
回答2:
I think you are looking for the GetAccessControl
method, the System.IO.File.GetAccessControl
method returns a FileSecurity object that encapsulates the access control for a file.
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/11709862/check-if-directory-is-accessible-in-c