@section @code{renameat}
@findex renameat
-POSIX specification: @url{http://www.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/functions/renameat.html}
+POSIX specification:@* @url{http://www.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/functions/renameat.html}
Gnulib module: renameat
@item
This function does not reject trailing slashes on non-directories on
some platforms, as in @code{renameat(fd,"file",fd,"new/")}:
-Solaris 10.
+Solaris 11 2011-11.
@item
This function ignores trailing slashes on symlinks on some platforms,
such that @code{renameat(fd,"link/",fd,"new")} corrupts @file{link}:
Solaris 9.
@item
+This function is declared in @code{<unistd.h>} instead of @code{<stdio.h>}
+on some platforms:
+Solaris 11 2011-11.
+@item
This function is missing on some platforms:
-glibc 2.3.6, MacOS X 10.3, FreeBSD 6.0, NetBSD 3.0, OpenBSD 3.8, AIX
-5.1, HP-UX 11, IRIX 6.5, OSF/1 5.1, Solaris 8, Cygwin 1.5.x, mingw,
+glibc 2.3.6, Mac OS X 10.5, FreeBSD 6.0, NetBSD 5.0, OpenBSD 3.8, Minix 3.1.8,
+AIX 5.1, HP-UX 11, IRIX 6.5, OSF/1 5.1, Solaris 8, Cygwin 1.5.x, mingw, MSVC 9,
Interix 3.5, BeOS.
But the replacement function is not safe to be used in libraries and is not multithread-safe.
@end itemize
@code{ENOTDIR} if either argument is a symlink with a trailing slash:
glibc, OpenBSD, Cygwin 1.7.
@item
+After renaming a non-empty directory over an existing empty directory,
+the old directory name is still visible through the @code{stat} function
+for 30 seconds after the rename, on NFS file systems, on some platforms:
+Linux 2.6.18.
+@item
This function will not rename a source that is currently opened
by any process:
-mingw.
+mingw, MSVC 9.
@end itemize