I'm working on a project which, in part, displays all the files in a directory in a JTable, including sub-directories. Users can double-click the sub-directories to update the table with that new directory's content. However, I've run into a problem.
My lists of files are generated with file.listFiles(), which pulls up everything: hidden files, locked files, OS files, the whole kit and caboodle, and I don't have access to all of them. For example, I don't have permission to read/write in "C:\Users\user\Cookies\" or "C:\ProgramData\ApplicationData\". That's ok though, this isn't a question about getting access to these. Instead, I don't want the program to display a directory it can't open. However, the directories I don't have access to and the directories I do are behaving almost exactly the same, which is making it very difficult to filter them out.
The only difference in behavior I've found is if I call listFiles() on a locked directory, it returns null. Here's the block of code I'm using as a filter:
for(File file : folder.listFiles())
if(!(file.isDirectory() && file.listFiles() == null))
strings.add(file.getName());
Where 'folder' is the directory I'm looking inside and 'strings' is a list of names of the files in that directory. The idea is a file only gets loaded into the list if it's a file or directory I'm allowed to edit. The filtering aspect works, but there are some directories which contain hundreds of sub-directories, each of which contains hundreds more files, and since listFiles() is O(n), this isn't a feasible solution (list() isn't any better either).
However, file.isHidden() returns false
canWrite()/canRead()/canExecute() return true
getPath() returns the same as getAbsolutePath() and getCanonicalPath()
createNewFile() returns false for everything, even directories I know are ok. Plus, that's a solution I'd really like to avoid even if that worked.
Is there some method or implementation I just don't know to help me see if this directory is accessible without needing to parse through all of its contents?
(I'm running Windows 7 Professional and I'm using Eclipse Mars 4.5.2, and all instances of File are java.io.File).