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In POSIX systems, one file can have many names at the same time. All of the names are equally real, and no one of them is preferred to the others.
To add a name to a file, use the link
function. (The new name is
also called a hard link to the file.) Creating a new link to a
file does not copy the contents of the file; it simply makes a new name
by which the file can be known, in addition to the file’s existing name
or names.
One file can have names in several directories, so the organization of the file system is not a strict hierarchy or tree.
In most implementations, it is not possible to have hard links to the
same file in multiple file systems. link
reports an error if you
try to make a hard link to the file from another file system when this
cannot be done.
The prototype for the link
function is declared in the header
file unistd.h.
Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | See POSIX Safety Concepts.
The link
function makes a new link to the existing file named by
oldname, under the new name newname.
This function returns a value of 0
if it is successful and
-1
on failure. In addition to the usual file name errors
(see File Name Errors) for both oldname and newname, the
following errno
error conditions are defined for this function:
EACCES
You are not allowed to write to the directory in which the new link is to be written.
EEXIST
There is already a file named newname. If you want to replace this link with a new link, you must remove the old link explicitly first.
EMLINK
There are already too many links to the file named by oldname.
(The maximum number of links to a file is LINK_MAX
; see
Limits on File System Capacity.)
ENOENT
The file named by oldname doesn’t exist. You can’t make a link to a file that doesn’t exist.
ENOSPC
The directory or file system that would contain the new link is full and cannot be extended.
EPERM
On GNU/Linux and GNU/Hurd systems and some others, you cannot make links to directories. Many systems allow only privileged users to do so. This error is used to report the problem.
EROFS
The directory containing the new link can’t be modified because it’s on a read-only file system.
EXDEV
The directory specified in newname is on a different file system than the existing file.
EIO
A hardware error occurred while trying to read or write the to filesystem.
Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | See POSIX Safety Concepts.
The linkat
function is analogous to the link
function,
except that it identifies its source and target using a combination of a
file descriptor (referring to a directory) and a pathname. If a
pathnames is not absolute, it is resolved relative to the corresponding
file descriptor. The special file descriptor AT_FDCWD
denotes
the current directory.
The flags argument is a combination of the following flags:
AT_SYMLINK_FOLLOW
If the source path identified by oldfd and oldname is a
symbolic link, linkat
follows the symbolic link and creates a
link to its target. If the flag is not set, a link for the symbolic
link itself is created; this is not supported by all file systems and
linkat
can fail in this case.
AT_EMPTY_PATH
If this flag is specified, oldname can be an empty string. In
this case, a new link to the file denoted by the descriptor oldfd
is created, which may have been opened with O_PATH
or
O_TMPFILE
. This flag is a GNU extension.
Next: Symbolic Links, Previous: Working with Directory Trees, Up: File System Interface [Contents][Index]