Update
The below answer from a couple of years ago is now a bit out of date. The current way is to use fs.existsSync to do a synchronous check for file/directory existence (or of course fs.exists for an asynchronous check), rather than the path versions below.
Original answer from 2010:
You can use statSync or lstatSync (docs link), which give you an fs.Stats object. In general, if a synchronous version of a function is available, it will have the same name as the async version with Sync at the end. So statSync is the synchronous version of stat; lstatSync is the synchronous version of lstat, etc.
lstatSync tells you both whether something exists, and if so, whether it's a file or a directory (or in some file systems, a symbolic link, block device, character device, etc.), e.g. if you need to know if it exists and is a directory:
var fs = require('fs');
try {
// Query the entry
stats = fs.lstatSync('/the/path');
// Is it a directory?
if (stats.isDirectory()) {
// Yes it is
}
}
catch (e) {
// ...
}
...and similarly if it's a file, there's isFile; if it's a block device, there's isBlockDevice, etc., etc. Note the try/catch; it throws an error if the entry doesn't exist at all.
If you don't care what the entry is and only want to know whether it exists, you can use path.existsSync (or with latest, fs.existsSync) as noted by user618408:
var path = require('path');
if (path.existsSync("/the/path")) { // or fs.existsSync
// ...
}
It doesn't require a try/catch, but gives you no information about what the thing is, just that it's there.
Side note: You've expressly asked how to check synchronously, so I've used the xyzSync versions of the functions above. But wherever possible, with I/O, it really is best to avoid synchronous calls. Calls into the I/O subsystem take significant time from a CPU's point of view. Note how easy it is to call lstat rather than lstatSync:
// Is it a directory?
lstat('/the/path', function(err, stats) {
if (!err && stats.isDirectory()) {
// Yes it is
}
});
But if you need the synchronous version, it's there.