Symlinks already present
Chris Angelico
rosuav at gmail.com
Mon Aug 31 18:05:27 EDT 2020
On Tue, Sep 1, 2020 at 5:08 AM Richard Damon <Richard at damon-family.org> wrote:
> The file descriptor could remember the path used to get to it. chroot
> shows that .. needs to be somewhat special, as it needs to go away for
> anyone that . is their current root.
But my point is that there might not actually *be* a valid path that
gets you to a file descriptor. It can't remember something that
doesn't exist. (And it's pretty impractical to do that even if it
does.)
> I see no problem with it being a hardlink, and in fact, executables know
> the name they were executed by, so directories knowing the path isn't
> that different.
Actually no, they don't. They are all taught, and being taught,
believe, that their first argument is their name.
> The key differnce between a hardlink and a symlink is
> that hardlinks maintain existance, and always point to something that
> exists (things know how many hardlinks refer to them). symlinks don't
> reference the actual file object, but the symbolic path to it, which may
> or may not actually exist, and who doesn't know such a link exists.
Symlinks refer to a path, which may be relative. Hardlinks refer to an
inode (or whatever other way you choose to identify an actual file's
contents). It's entirely possible to have an open file or directory
that no longer has any actual path referring to it; in fact, things
don't know how many hardlinks refer to them, just how many references
there are.
ChrisA
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