ln(1) and System V

Geoff Kuenning geoff at desint.UUCP
Wed Nov 2 18:48:57 AEST 1988


In article <1988Oct31.141701.11055 at utfyzx.uucp> harrison at utfyzx.UUCP (David Harrison) writes:

> Recently Geoff Collyer (utstat!geoff) has pointed out that under System 
> V the command:
> 	ln old new
> will destroy "new" if it already exists.  Historically and under other 
> UNIX versions the same command will complain and refuse to make the link.  
> Geoff calls the System V behaviour "an unintuitive shock". It certainly 
> breaks any program that relies on `ln' refusing to link to "new" as a way
> of doing locks (including parts of Cnews).
...
> code like:
> 	if [ !exists new ]	# new command `exists'
> 	then
> 		ln old new
> 	fi
> leaves a terrible window of vulnerability between the test and the
> link.

After seeing this, I checked on my system, since several of my important
scripts use 'ln' to implement locks.  However, I found that all of these
scripts use the following sequence to make the lock:

	trap "" 1 2 15
	touch lock
	ln lock lock1  ||  exit 1
	trap "rm -f lock lock1; exit 1" 1 2 15

This *will* work, because ln will fail complaining the "lock" and "lock1"
are identical.

On the other hand, if your scripts use the following sequence, they will
fail to lock on System V:

	touch lock.$$
	ln lock.$$ lock  ||  exit 1
-- 
	Geoff Kuenning   geoff at ITcorp.com   uunet!desint!geoff



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