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_access, _waccess, t_access

Determines if a file is read-only or not. More secure versions are available; see _access_s, _waccess_s.

For _taccess, see Generic-text function mappings.

Syntax

int _access(
   const char *path,
   int mode
);
int _waccess(
   const wchar_t *path,
   int mode
);

Parameters

path
File or directory path.

mode
Read/write attribute.

Return value

Each function returns 0 if the file has the given mode. The function returns -1 if the named file doesn't exist or doesn't have the given mode; in this case, errno is set as shown in the following table.

Value Description
EACCES Access denied: the file's permission setting doesn't allow specified access.
ENOENT File name or path not found.
EINVAL Invalid parameter.

For more information about these and other return codes, see errno, _doserrno, _sys_errlist, and _sys_nerr.

Remarks

When used with files, the _access function determines whether the specified file or directory exists and has the attributes specified by the value of mode. When used with directories, _access determines only whether the specified directory exists; in Windows 2000 and later operating systems, all directories have read and write access.

mode value Checks file for
00 Existence only
02 Write-only
04 Read-only
06 Read and write

This function only checks whether the file and directory are read-only or not, it doesn't check the filesystem security settings. For that you need an access token. For more information on filesystem security, see Access tokens. An ATL class exists to provide this functionality; see CAccessToken Class.

_waccess is a wide-character version of _access; the path argument to _waccess is a wide-character string. _waccess and _access behave identically otherwise.

This function validates its parameters. If path is NULL or mode doesn't specify a valid mode, the invalid parameter handler is invoked, as described in Parameter validation. If execution is allowed to continue, the function sets errno to EINVAL and returns -1.

By default, this function's global state is scoped to the application. To change this behavior, see Global state in the CRT.

Generic-text function mappings

Tchar.h routine _UNICODE and _MBCS not defined _MBCS defined _UNICODE defined
_taccess _access _access _waccess

Requirements

Routine Required header Optional headers
_access <io.h> <errno.h>
_waccess <wchar.h> or <io.h> <errno.h>

Example

The following example uses _access to check the file named crt_ACCESS.C to see whether it exists and whether writing is allowed.

// crt_access.c
// compile with: /W1
// This example uses _access to check the file named
// crt_ACCESS.C to see if it exists and if writing is allowed.

#include  <io.h>
#include  <stdio.h>
#include  <stdlib.h>

int main( void )
{
    // Check for existence.
    if( (_access( "crt_ACCESS.C", 0 )) != -1 )
    {
        printf_s( "File crt_ACCESS.C exists.\n" );

        // Check for write permission.
        // Assume file is read-only.
        if( (_access( "crt_ACCESS.C", 2 )) == -1 )
            printf_s( "File crt_ACCESS.C does not have write permission.\n" );
    }
}
File crt_ACCESS.C exists.
File crt_ACCESS.C does not have write permission.

See also

File handling
_chmod, _wchmod
_fstat, _fstat32, _fstat64, _fstati64, _fstat32i64, _fstat64i32
_open, _wopen
_stat, _wstat functions