@section @code{unlink}
@findex unlink
-POSIX specification: @url{http://www.opengroup.org/susv3xsh/unlink.html}
+POSIX specification:@* @url{http://www.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/functions/unlink.html}
-Gnulib module: ---
+Gnulib module: unlink
Portability problems fixed by Gnulib:
@itemize
+@item
+Some systems mistakenly succeed on @code{unlink("link-to-file/")}:
+GNU/Hurd, FreeBSD 7.2, AIX 7.1, Solaris 9.
+@item
+On MacOS X 10.5.6, in a writable HFS mount, @code{unlink("..")} succeeds
+without doing anything.
@end itemize
Portability problems not fixed by Gnulib:
@itemize
@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{unlink("symlink-to-dir/")} remove @file{dir} and leave
+@file{symlink-to-dir} dangling; this behavior is counter-intuitive.
+The gnulib module 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,