If I have a POSIX system like Linux or Mac OS X, what's the best and most portable way to determine if a path is on a read-only filesystem? I can think of 4 ways off the top of my head:
open(2)a file withO_WRONLY- You would need to come up with a unique filename and also pass inO_CREATandO_EXCL. If it fails and you have an errno ofEROFSthen you know it's a read-only filesystem. This would have the annoying side effect of actually creating a file you didn't care about, but you couldunlink(2)it immediately after creating it.statvfs(3)- One of the fields of the returnedstruct statvfsisf_flag, and one of the flags isST_RDONLYfor a read-only filesystem. However, the spec forstatvfs(3)makes it clear that applications cannot depend on any of the fields containing valid information. It would seem there's a decent possibilityST_RDONLYmight not be set for a read-only filesystem.access(2)- If you know the mount point, you can useaccess(2)with theW_OKflag as long as you are running as a user who would have write access to the mountpoint. Ie, either you are root or it was mounted with your UID as a mount parameter. You would get a return value of -1 and an errno ofEROFS.Parsing
/etc/mtabor/proc/mounts- Doesn't seem portable. Mac OS X seems to have neither of these, for example. Even if the system did have/etc/mtabI'm not sure the fields are consistent between OSes or if the mount options for read-only (roon Linux) are portable.
Are there other ways I'm missing? If you needed to know if a filesystem was mounted read-only, how would you do it?