X-Git-Url: http://erislabs.net/gitweb/?a=blobdiff_plain;f=doc%2Fposix-functions%2Funlinkat.texi;h=cf334098a219aeb42758261b86cce54c15195d71;hb=7c59efd8bc7abb8c79ae969a65ece95e68c9be4c;hp=99c4b3e526724af3a3be708c87bcb4762a1c2fd1;hpb=0460b26278c909bd983c2c8938e72e4cc88e4084;p=gnulib.git diff --git a/doc/posix-functions/unlinkat.texi b/doc/posix-functions/unlinkat.texi index 99c4b3e52..cf334098a 100644 --- a/doc/posix-functions/unlinkat.texi +++ b/doc/posix-functions/unlinkat.texi @@ -13,8 +13,39 @@ 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, Cygwin 1.5.x, mingw, Interix 3.5, BeOS. But the replacement function is not safe to be used in libraries and is not multithread-safe. +@item +Some systems mistakenly succeed on @code{unlinkat(fd,"file/",flag)}: +GNU/Hurd, Solaris 9. +@item +Some platforms declare this function in @code{fcntl.h} instead of +@code{unistd.h}: +Cygwin 1.7.1. @end itemize Portability problems not fixed by Gnulib: @itemize +@item +When @code{unlinkat(fd,name,AT_REMOVEDIR)} fails because the specified +directory is not empty, the @code{errno} value is system dependent. +@item +POSIX requires that @code{unlinkdir(fd,"link-to-empty/",AT_REMOVEDIR)} +remove @file{empty} and leave @file{link-to-empty} as a dangling +symlink. This is counter-intuitive, so some systems fail with +@code{ENOTDIR} instead: +glibc +@item +Some systems allow a superuser to unlink directories, even though this +can cause file system corruption. The error given if a process is not +permitted to unlink directories varies across implementations; it is +not always the POSIX value of @code{EPERM}. Meanwhile, if a process +has the ability to unlink directories, POSIX requires that +@code{unlinkat(fd,"symlink-to-dir/",0)} remove @file{dir} and leave +@file{symlink-to-dir} dangling; this behavior is counter-intuitive. +The gnulib module unlinkdir can help determine whether code must be +cautious of unlinking directories. +@item +Removing an open file is non-portable: On Unix this allows the programs that +have the file already open to continue working with it; the file's storage +is only freed when the no process has the file open any more. On Windows, +the attempt to remove an open file fails. @end itemize