@node unlinkat @section @code{unlinkat} @findex unlinkat POSIX specification:@* @url{https://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/functions/unlinkat.html} Gnulib module: unlinkat Portability problems fixed by Gnulib: @itemize @item This function is missing on some platforms: glibc 2.3.6, Mac OS X 10.5, FreeBSD 6.0, NetBSD 5.0, OpenBSD 3.8, Minix 3.1.8, AIX 5.1, HP-UX 11, IRIX 6.5, Cygwin 1.5.x, mingw, MSVC 14. But the replacement function is not safe to be used in libraries and is not multithread-safe. @item This function is declared in @code{}, not in @code{}, on some platforms: Cygwin 1.7.1, Android 4.3. @item On Mac OS X 10.10, in a writable HFS mount, @code{unlinkat(fd, "..", 0)} succeeds without doing anything. @item Some systems mistakenly succeed on @code{unlinkat(fd,"file/",flag)}: GNU/Hurd, Solaris 9. @end itemize Portability problems not fixed by Gnulib: @itemize @item When @code{unlinkat(fd,name,AT_REMOVEDIR)} fails because the specified directory is not empty, the @code{errno} value is system dependent. @item POSIX requires that @code{unlinkdir(fd,"link-to-empty/",AT_REMOVEDIR)} remove @file{empty} and leave @file{link-to-empty} as a dangling symlink. This is counter-intuitive, so some systems fail with @code{ENOTDIR} instead: glibc @item Some systems allow a superuser to unlink directories, even though this can cause file system corruption. The error given if a process is not permitted to unlink directories varies across implementations; it is not always the POSIX value of @code{EPERM}. Meanwhile, if a process has the ability to unlink directories, POSIX requires that @code{unlinkat(fd,"symlink-to-dir/",0)} remove @file{dir} and leave @file{symlink-to-dir} dangling; this behavior is counter-intuitive. The gnulib module @code{unlinkdir} can help determine whether code must be cautious of unlinking directories. @item Removing an open file is non-portable: On Unix this allows the programs that have the file already open to continue working with it; the file's storage is only freed when the no process has the file open any more. On Windows, the attempt to remove an open file fails. @end itemize