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rename(2)							     rename(2)


NAME    [Toc]    [Back]

     rename - change the name of a file

SYNOPSIS    [Toc]    [Back]

     #include <stdio.h>

     int rename(const char *old, const char *new);

DESCRIPTION    [Toc]    [Back]

     rename renames a file.  old is a pointer to the pathname of the file or
     directory to be renamed.  new is a	pointer	to the new pathname of the
     file or directory.	 Both old and new must be of the same type (either
     both files, or both directories) and must reside on the same file system.

     If	new already exists, it is removed.  Thus, if new names an existing
     directory,	the directory must not have any	entries	other than, possibly,
     ``.'' and ``..''.	When renaming directories, the new pathname must not
     name a descendant of old.	The implementation of rename ensures that upon
     successful	completion a link named	new will always	exist.

     If	the final component of old is a	symbolic link, the symbolic link is
     renamed, not the file or directory	to which it points.

     Write permission is required for both the directory containing old	and
     the directory containing new.

     rename fails, old is not changed, and no new file is created if one or
     more of the following are true:

     EACCES		 A component of	either path prefix denies search
			 permission; one of the	directories containing old or
			 new denies write permission; one of the directories
			 pointed to by old or new denies write permission; or
			 new exists and	write permission is denied on new.

     EBUSY		 new is	a directory and	the mount point	for a mounted
			 file system.

     EDQUOT		 The directory in which	the entry for the new name is
			 being placed cannot be	extended because the user's
			 quota of disk blocks on the file system containing
			 the directory has been	exhausted.

     EEXIST		 The link named	by new is a directory containing
			 entries other than ``.'' and ``..''.

     EFAULT		 old or	new points outside the process's allocated
			 address space.

     EINVAL		 old is	a parent directory of new, or an attempt is
			 made to rename	``.'' or ``..''.




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rename(2)							     rename(2)



     EINTR		 A signal was caught during execution of the rename
			 system	call.

     EIO		 An I/O	error occurred while making or updating	a
			 directory entry.

     EISDIR		 new points to a directory but old points to a file
			 that is not a directory.

     ELOOP		 Too many symbolic links were encountered in
			 translating old or new.

     EMULTIHOP		 Components of pathnames require hopping to multiple
			 remote	machines and the file system type does not
			 allow it.

     ENAMETOOLONG	 The length of the old or new argument exceeds
			 {PATH_MAX}, or	the length of a	old or new component
			 exceeds {NAME_MAX} while _POSIX_NO_TRUNC is in
			 effect.

     ENOENT		 A component of	either old or new does not exist, or
			 the file referred to by either	old or new does	not
			 exist.

     ENOLINK		 Pathnames point to a remote machine and the link to
			 that machine is no longer active.

     ENOSPC		 The directory that would contain new is out of	space.

     ENOTDIR		 A component of	either path prefix is not a directory;
			 or the	old parameter names a directory	and the	new
			 parameter names a file.

     EROFS		 The requested operation requires writing in a
			 directory on a	read-only file system.

     EXDEV		 The links named by old	and new	are on different file
			 systems.

DIAGNOSTICS    [Toc]    [Back]

     Upon successful completion, a value of 0 is returned.  Otherwise, a value
     of	-1 is returned and errno is set	to indicate the	error.

NOTES    [Toc]    [Back]

     The system	can deadlock if	there is a loop	in the file system graph.
     Such a loop takes the form	of an entry in directory a, say	a/foo, being a
     hard link to directory b, and an entry in directory b, say	b/bar, being a
     hard link to directory a.	When such a loop exists	and two	separate
     processes attempt to perform rename a/foo b/bar and rename	b/bar a/foo,
     respectively, the system may deadlock attempting to lock both directories
     for modification.	The system administrator should	replace	hard links to



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rename(2)							     rename(2)



     directories by symbolic links.

SEE ALSO    [Toc]    [Back]

      
      
     link(2), unlink(2)	chmod(2), open(2).


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