On Mon, Jan 08, 2001 at 11:50:44PM +0100, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>     From: Andrea Arcangeli <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> 
>     > But in fact it fails with EINVAL, and
>     > 
>     > [EINVAL]: The path argument contains a last component that is dot.
> 
>     I can't confirm. The specs I'm checking are here:
> 
>         http://www.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/007908799/xsh/rmdir.html
> 
> That is the SUSv2 text, one of the ingredients for the new
> POSIX standard. I quoted the current Austin draft, the current
> draft for the next version of the POSIX standard.
> 
> Quoting a text fragment:
> 
>         The rmdir( ) function shall remove a directory whose name is given by
>         path. The directory is removed only if it is an empty directory.
>         If the directory is the root directory or the current working
>         directory of any process, it is unspecified whether the function
>         succeeds, or whether it shall fail and set errno to [EBUSY].
>         If path names a symbolic link, then rmdir( ) shall fail and
>         set errno to [ENOTDIR]. If the path argument refers to a path
>         whose final component is either dot or dot-dot, rmdir( ) shall
>         fail. ...

At the bottom of Andrea Arcangeli's url, it says:
Derived from the POSIX.1-1988 standard.

I think it makes sense that if POSIX changed it, that we should
follow POSIX, and not SuS v2, specially if it simplify's things
in the kernel.


Kurt

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