Quoth Russ Allbery <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, on 2008-06-21 09:29:33 -0700: > There's an lchmod function that avoids this behavior, but I'm not sure > that Perl provides an interface to it without a new XS module. (It's not > portable to all systems, but it is available on Linux.)
I'm basically familiar with lchmod, but is it really available on this platform? It doesn't seem to be. With Debian GNU/Linux unstable on AMD64 with Linux 2.6.24.2 and GCC 4.3.1 20080523 (prerelease) (Debian 4.3.0-5), I get the following results (newlines added for clarity): $ ln -s /dev/null foo $ ls -l foo lrwxrwxrwx 1 drake drake 9 2008-06-21 12:27 foo -> /dev/null $ man 2 lchmod No manual entry for lchmod in section 2 $ man 3 lchmod No manual entry for lchmod in section 3 $ cat >lchmod.c main() { lchmod("foo", 0700); } $ gcc -o lchmod lchmod.c /tmp/cc478IUh.o: In function `main': lchmod.c:(.text+0x18): warning: warning: lchmod is not implemented and will always fail $ ./lchmod $ ls -l foo lrwxrwxrwx 1 drake drake 9 2008-06-21 12:27 foo -> /dev/null $ gcc -static -o lchmod lchmod.c /tmp/ccqjaRGU.o: In function `main': lchmod.c:(.text+0x18): warning: warning: lchmod is not implemented and will always fail $ strace ./lchmod execve("./lchmod", ["./lchmod"], [/* 40 vars */]) = 0 uname({sys="Linux", node="drache", ...}) = 0 brk(0) = 0x68b000 brk(0x68bf10) = 0x68bf10 arch_prctl(ARCH_SET_FS, 0x68b850) = 0 brk(0x6acf10) = 0x6acf10 brk(0x6ad000) = 0x6ad000 exit_group(-1) = ? Process 16730 detached ---> Drake Wilson -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]