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SYMLINK(7) DragonFly Miscellaneous Information Manual SYMLINK(7)
NAME
symlink -- symbolic link handling
SYMBOLIC LINK HANDLING
Symbolic links are files that act as pointers to other files. To
understand their behavior, you must first understand how hard links work.
A hard link to a file is indistinguishable from the original file because
it is a reference to the object underlying the original file name.
Changes to a file are independent of the name used to reference the file.
Hard links may not refer to directories and may not reference files on
different file systems. A symbolic link contains the name of the file to
which it is linked, i.e., it is a pointer to another name, and not to an
underlying object. For this reason, symbolic links may reference
directories and may span file systems.
Because a symbolic link and its referenced object coexist in the file
system name space, confusion can arise in distinguishing between the link
itself and the referenced object. Historically, commands and system
calls have adopted their own link following conventions in a somewhat ad-
hoc fashion. Rules for more a uniform approach, as they are implemented
in this system, are outlined here. It is important that local
applications conform to these rules, too, so that the user interface can
be as consistent as possible.
Symbolic links are handled either by operating on the link itself, or by
operating on the object referenced by the link. In the latter case, an
application or system call is said to ``follow'' the link. Symbolic
links may reference other symbolic links, in which case the links are
dereferenced until an object that is not a symbolic link is found, a
symbolic link which references a file which does not exist is found, or a
loop is detected. (Loop detection is done by placing an upper limit on
the number of links that may be followed, and an error results if this
limit is exceeded.)
There are three separate areas that need to be discussed. They are as
follows:
1. Symbolic links used as file name arguments for system calls.
2. Symbolic links specified as command line arguments to
utilities that are not traversing a file tree.
3. Symbolic links encountered by utilities that are traversing a
file tree (either specified on the command line or encountered
as part of the file hierarchy walk).
System calls.
The first area is symbolic links used as file name arguments for system
calls.
Except as noted below, all system calls follow symbolic links. For
example, if there were a symbolic link ``slink'' which pointed to a file
named ``afile'', the system call ``open("slink" ...)'' would return a
file descriptor to the file ``afile''.
There are thirteen system calls that do not follow links, and which
operate on the symbolic link itself. They are: lchflags(2), lchmod(2),
lchown(2), lpathconf(2), lstat(2), lutimes(2), readlink(2),
readlinkat(2), rename(2), renameat(2), rmdir(2), unlink(2), and
unlinkat(2). Because remove(3) is an alias for unlink(2), it also does
not follow symbolic links. When rmdir(2) or unlinkat(2) with the
AT_REMOVEDIR flag is applied to a symbolic link, it fails with the error
ENOTDIR.
The linkat(2) system call does not follow symbolic links unless given the
AT_SYMLINK_FOLLOW flag.
The following system calls follow symbolic links unless given the
AT_SYMLINK_NOFOLLOW flag: chflagsat(2), fchmodat(2), fchownat(2), and
fstatat(2).
The owner and group of an existing symbolic link can be changed by means
of the lchown(2) system call. The flags, access permissions, owner/group
and modification time of an existing symbolic link can be changed by
means of the lchflags(2), lchmod(2), lchown(2), and lutimes(2) system
calls, respectively. Of these, only the flags and ownership are used by
the system; the access permissions are ignored.
The 4.4BSD system differs from historical 4BSD systems in that the system
call chown(2) has been changed to follow symbolic links. The lchown(2)
system call was added later when the limitations of the new chown(2)
became apparent.
Commands not traversing a file tree.
The second area is symbolic links, specified as command line file name
arguments, to commands which are not traversing a file tree.
Except as noted below, commands follow symbolic links named as command
line arguments. For example, if there were a symbolic link ``slink''
which pointed to a file named ``afile'', the command ``cat slink'' would
display the contents of the file ``afile''.
It is important to realize that this rule includes commands which may
optionally traverse file trees, e.g. the command ``chown file'' is
included in this rule, while the command ``chown -R file'' is not. (The
latter is described in the third area, below.)
If it is explicitly intended that the command operate on the symbolic
link instead of following the symbolic link, e.g., it is desired that
``chown slink'' change the ownership of the file that ``slink'' is,
whether it is a symbolic link or not, the -h option should be used. In
the above example, ``chown root slink'' would change the ownership of the
file referenced by ``slink'', while ``chown -h root slink'' would change
the ownership of ``slink'' itself.
There are five exceptions to this rule. The mv(1) and rm(1) commands do
not follow symbolic links named as arguments, but respectively attempt to
rename and delete them. (Note, if the symbolic link references a file
via a relative path, moving it to another directory may very well cause
it to stop working, since the path may no longer be correct.)
The ls(1) command is also an exception to this rule. For compatibility
with historic systems (when ls is not doing a tree walk, i.e., the -R
option is not specified), the ls command follows symbolic links named as
arguments if the -H or -L option is specified, or if the -F, -d or -l
options are not specified. (The ls command is the only command where the
-H and -L options affect its behavior even though it is not doing a walk
of a file tree.)
The file(1) and stat(1) commands are also exceptions to this rule. These
commands do not follow symbolic links named as argument by default, but
do follow symbolic links named as argument if the -L option is specified.
The 4.4BSD system differs from historical 4BSD systems in that the chown
and chgrp commands follow symbolic links specified on the command line.
Commands traversing a file tree.
The following commands either optionally or always traverse file trees:
chflags(1), chgrp(1), chmod(1), cp(1), du(1), find(1), ls(1), pax(1),
rm(1), tar(1) and chown(8).
It is important to realize that the following rules apply equally to
symbolic links encountered during the file tree traversal and symbolic
links listed as command line arguments.
The first rule applies to symbolic links that reference files that are
not of type directory. Operations that apply to symbolic links are
performed on the links themselves, but otherwise the links are ignored.
The command ``rm -r slink directory'' will remove ``slink'', as well as
any symbolic links encountered in the tree traversal of ``directory'',
because symbolic links may be removed. In no case will rm affect the
file which ``slink'' references in any way.
The second rule applies to symbolic links that reference files of type
directory. Symbolic links which reference files of type directory are
never ``followed'' by default. This is often referred to as a
``physical'' walk, as opposed to a ``logical'' walk (where symbolic links
referencing directories are followed).
As consistently as possible, you can make commands doing a file tree walk
follow any symbolic links named on the command line, regardless of the
type of file they reference, by specifying the -H (for ``half-logical'')
flag. This flag is intended to make the command line name space look
like the logical name space. (Note, for commands that do not always do
file tree traversals, the -H flag will be ignored if the -R flag is not
also specified.)
For example, the command ``chown -HR user slink'' will traverse the file
hierarchy rooted in the file pointed to by ``slink''. Note, the -H is
not the same as the previously discussed -h flag. The -H flag causes
symbolic links specified on the command line to be dereferenced both for
the purposes of the action to be performed and the tree walk, and it is
as if the user had specified the name of the file to which the symbolic
link pointed.
As consistently as possible, you can make commands doing a file tree walk
follow any symbolic links named on the command line, as well as any
symbolic links encountered during the traversal, regardless of the type
of file they reference, by specifying the -L (for ``logical'') flag.
This flag is intended to make the entire name space look like the logical
name space. (Note, for commands that do not always do file tree
traversals, the -L flag will be ignored if the -R flag is not also
specified.)
For example, the command ``chown -LR user slink'' will change the owner
of the file referenced by ``slink''. If ``slink'' references a
directory, chown will traverse the file hierarchy rooted in the directory
that it references. In addition, if any symbolic links are encountered
in any file tree that chown traverses, they will be treated in the same
fashion as ``slink''.
As consistently as possible, you can specify the default behavior by
specifying the -P (for ``physical'') flag. This flag is intended to make
the entire name space look like the physical name space.
For commands that do not by default do file tree traversals, the -H, -L
and -P flags are ignored if the -R flag is not also specified. In
addition, you may specify the -H, -L and -P options more than once; the
last one specified determines the command's behavior. This is intended
to permit you to alias commands to behave one way or the other, and then
override that behavior on the command line.
The ls(1) and rm(1) commands have exceptions to these rules. The rm
command operates on the symbolic link, and not the file it references,
and therefore never follows a symbolic link. The rm command does not
support the -H, -L or -P options.
To maintain compatibility with historic systems, the ls command acts a
little differently. If you do not specify the -F, -d or -l options, ls
will follow symbolic links specified on the command line. If the -L flag
is specified, ls follows all symbolic links, regardless of their type,
whether specified on the command line or encountered in the tree walk.
SEE ALSO
chflags(1), chgrp(1), chmod(1), cp(1), du(1), find(1), ln(1), ls(1),
mv(1), pax(1), rm(1), tar(1), lchflags(2), lchmod(2), lchown(2),
lstat(2), lutimes(2), readlink(2), rename(2), renameat(2), symlink(2),
unlink(2), fts(3), remove(3), chown(8)
DragonFly 4.1 March 23, 2015 DragonFly 4.1