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You can delete a file with unlink
or remove
.
Deletion actually deletes a file name. If this is the file’s only name, then the file is deleted as well. If the file has other remaining names (see Hard Links), it remains accessible under those names.
Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | See POSIX Safety Concepts.
The unlink
function deletes the file name filename. If
this is a file’s sole name, the file itself is also deleted. (Actually,
if any process has the file open when this happens, deletion is
postponed until all processes have closed the file.)
The function unlink
is declared in the header file unistd.h.
This function returns 0
on successful completion, and -1
on error. In addition to the usual file name errors
(see File Name Errors), the following errno
error conditions are
defined for this function:
EACCES
Write permission is denied for the directory from which the file is to be removed, or the directory has the sticky bit set and you do not own the file.
EBUSY
This error indicates that the file is being used by the system in such a way that it can’t be unlinked. For example, you might see this error if the file name specifies the root directory or a mount point for a file system.
ENOENT
The file name to be deleted doesn’t exist.
EPERM
On some systems unlink
cannot be used to delete the name of a
directory, or at least can only be used this way by a privileged user.
To avoid such problems, use rmdir
to delete directories. (On
GNU/Linux and GNU/Hurd systems unlink
can never delete the name of a directory.)
EROFS
The directory containing the file name to be deleted is on a read-only file system and can’t be modified.
Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | See POSIX Safety Concepts.
The rmdir
function deletes a directory. The directory must be
empty before it can be removed; in other words, it can only contain
entries for . and ...
In most other respects, rmdir
behaves like unlink
. There
are two additional errno
error conditions defined for
rmdir
:
ENOTEMPTY
EEXIST
The directory to be deleted is not empty.
These two error codes are synonymous; some systems use one, and some use
the other. GNU/Linux and GNU/Hurd systems always use ENOTEMPTY
.
The prototype for this function is declared in the header file unistd.h.
Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | See POSIX Safety Concepts.
This is the ISO C function to remove a file. It works like
unlink
for files and like rmdir
for directories.
remove
is declared in stdio.h.
Next: Renaming Files, Previous: Symbolic Links, Up: File System Interface [Contents][Index]