fhlink
, fhlinkat
— make a hard file link
Standard C Library (libc, -lc)
#include
<unistd.h>
int
fhlink
(fhandle_t
*fhp, const char
*to);
int
fhlinkat
(fhandle_t
*fhp, int tofd,
const char *to);
The
fhlink
()
system call atomically creates the specified directory entry (hard link)
to with the attributes of the underlying object
pointed at by fhp. If the link is successful: the link
count of the underlying object is incremented; fhp and
to share equal access and rights to the underlying
object.
If fhp is removed, the file
to is not deleted and the link count of the underlying
object is decremented.
The object pointed at by the fhp argument
must exist for the hard link to succeed and both fhp
and to must be in the same file system. The
fhp argument may not be a directory.
The
fhlinkat
()
system call is equivalent to fhlink except in the case
where to is a relative paths. In this case a relative
path to is interpreted relative to the directory
associated with the file descriptor tofd instead of
the current working directory.
If
fhlinkat
()
is passed the special value AT_FDCWD
in the
tofd parameter, the current working directory is used
for the to argument. If tofd has
value AT_FDCWD
, the behavior is identical to a call
to
link
().
Unless flag contains the
AT_SYMLINK_FOLLOW
flag, if fhp
names a symbolic link, a new link is created for the symbolic link
fhp and not its target.
The link
() function returns the
value 0 if successful; otherwise the value -1 is returned and
the global variable errno is set to indicate the
error.
The fhlink
() system call will fail and no
link will be created if:
- [
ENOTDIR
]
- A component of to prefix is not a directory.
- [
ENAMETOOLONG
]
- A component of to exceeded 255 characters, or entire
length of to name exceeded 1023 characters.
- [
ENOENT
]
- A component of to prefix does not exist.
- [
EOPNOTSUPP
]
- The file system containing the file pointed at by
fhp does not support links.
- [
EMLINK
]
- The link count of the file pointed at by fhp would
exceed 32767.
- [
EACCES
]
- A component of to prefix denies search
permission.
- [
EACCES
]
- The requested link requires writing in a directory with a mode that denies
write permission.
- [
ELOOP
]
- Too many symbolic links were encountered in translating one of the
pathnames.
- [
ENOENT
]
- The file pointed at by fhp does not exist.
- [
EEXIST
]
- The link named by to does exist.
- [
EPERM
]
- The file pointed at by fhp is a directory.
- [
EPERM
]
- The file pointed at by fhp has its immutable or
append-only flag set, see the
chflags(2)
manual page for more information.
- [
EPERM
]
- The parent directory of the file named by to has its
immutable flag set.
- [
EXDEV
]
- The link named by to and the file pointed at by
fhp are on different file systems.
- [
ENOSPC
]
- The directory in which the entry for the new link is being placed cannot
be extended because there is no space left on the file system containing
the directory.
- [
EDQUOT
]
- The directory in which the entry for the new link is being placed cannot
be extended because the user's quota of disk blocks on the file system
containing the directory has been exhausted.
- [
EIO
]
- An I/O error occurred while reading from or writing to the file system to
make the directory entry.
- [
EINTEGRITY
]
- Corrupted data was detected while reading from the file system.
- [
EROFS
]
- The requested link requires writing in a directory on a read-only file
system.
- [
EFAULT
]
- One of the pathnames specified is outside the process's allocated address
space.
- [
ESTALE
]
- The file handle fhp is no longer valid
In addition to the errors returned by the
fhlink
(), the fhlinkat
()
system call may fail if:
- [
EBADF
]
- The fhp or to argument does
not specify an absolute path and the tofd argument,
is not
AT_FDCWD
nor a valid file descriptor open
for searching.
- [
EINVAL
]
- The value of the flag argument is not valid.
- [
ENOTDIR
]
- The fhp or to argument is not
an absolute path and tofd is not
AT_FDCWD
nor a file descriptor associated with a
directory.
The fhlink
() and
fhlinkat
() system calls first appeared in
FreeBSD 12.1.