Next: Creating Directories, Previous: Deleting Files, Up: File System Interface [Contents][Index]
The rename
function is used to change a file’s name.
Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | See POSIX Safety Concepts.
The rename
function renames the file oldname to
newname. The file formerly accessible under the name
oldname is afterwards accessible as newname instead. (If
the file had any other names aside from oldname, it continues to
have those names.)
The directory containing the name newname must be on the same file system as the directory containing the name oldname.
One special case for rename
is when oldname and
newname are two names for the same file. The consistent way to
handle this case is to delete oldname. However, in this case
POSIX requires that rename
do nothing and report success—which
is inconsistent. We don’t know what your operating system will do.
If oldname is not a directory, then any existing file named
newname is removed during the renaming operation. However, if
newname is the name of a directory, rename
fails in this
case.
If oldname is a directory, then either newname must not
exist or it must name a directory that is empty. In the latter case,
the existing directory named newname is deleted first. The name
newname must not specify a subdirectory of the directory
oldname
which is being renamed.
One useful feature of rename
is that the meaning of newname
changes “atomically” from any previously existing file by that name to
its new meaning (i.e., the file that was called oldname). There is
no instant at which newname is non-existent “in between” the old
meaning and the new meaning. If there is a system crash during the
operation, it is possible for both names to still exist; but
newname will always be intact if it exists at all.
If rename
fails, it returns -1
. In addition to the usual
file name errors (see File Name Errors), the following
errno
error conditions are defined for this function:
EACCES
One of the directories containing newname or oldname refuses write permission; or newname and oldname are directories and write permission is refused for one of them.
EBUSY
A directory named by oldname or newname is being used by the system in a way that prevents the renaming from working. This includes directories that are mount points for filesystems, and directories that are the current working directories of processes.
ENOTEMPTY
EEXIST
The directory newname isn’t empty. GNU/Linux and GNU/Hurd systems always return
ENOTEMPTY
for this, but some other systems return EEXIST
.
EINVAL
oldname is a directory that contains newname.
EISDIR
newname is a directory but the oldname isn’t.
EMLINK
The parent directory of newname would have too many links (entries).
ENOENT
The file oldname doesn’t exist.
ENOSPC
The directory that would contain newname has no room for another entry, and there is no space left in the file system to expand it.
EROFS
The operation would involve writing to a directory on a read-only file system.
EXDEV
The two file names newname and oldname are on different file systems.
Next: Creating Directories, Previous: Deleting Files, Up: File System Interface [Contents][Index]