Portable way to get file size (in bytes) in the shell Ask Question

Portable way to get file size (in bytes) in the shell Ask Question

On Linux, I use stat --format="%s" FILE, but the Solaris machine I have access to doesn't have the stat command. What should I use then?

I'm writing Bash scripts and can't really install any new software on the system.

I've considered already using:

perl -e '@x=stat(shift);print $x[7]' FILE

or even:

ls -nl FILE | awk '{print $5}'

But neither of these looks sensible - running Perl just to get file size? Or running two programs to do the same?

ベストアンサー1

wc -c < filename (short for word count, -c prints the byte count) is a portable, POSIX solution. Only the output format might not be uniform across platforms as some spaces may be prepended (which is the case for Solaris).

Do not omit the input redirection. When the file is passed as an argument, the file name is printed after the byte count.

I was worried it wouldn't work for binary files, but it works OK on both Linux and Solaris. You can try it with wc -c < /usr/bin/wc. Moreover, POSIX utilities are guaranteed to handle binary files, unless specified otherwise explicitly.

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