On 9/18/20 4:15 PM, Philip Rowlands wrote:
$ mkdir /tmp/abc
$ cd /tmp/abc
$ rmdir /tmp/abc
$ ls
What happened:
no output, successful exit status
What was expected:
no output, unsuccessful exit status
POSIX says that the rmdir command is supposed to behave like the rmdir syscall.
For the syscall, POSIX allows either of the two behaviors you mention, as
<https://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/functions/rmdir.html> says
that if the rmdir syscall's argument is "the current working directory of any
process, it is unspecified whether the function succeeds, or whether it shall
fail and set errno to [EBUSY]". The Linux kernel rmdir syscall succeeds, so
coreutils rmdir succeeds.
ls tried to list the contents of . but failed to do so, at least on Linux:
open(".", O_RDONLY|O_NONBLOCK|O_DIRECTORY|O_CLOEXEC) = 3
getdents(3, 0x55e10c419cf0, 32768) = -1 ENOENT (No such file or directory)
ls doesn't use getdents directly; it uses the readdir function of the GNU C
library, which specifically tests for this situation and sets errno to 0, with
this comment at
<https://sourceware.org/git/?p=glibc.git;a=blob;f=sysdeps/posix/readdir.c;h=b36278b5f486eb43aeec2cb76138288e39cd56cd;hb=HEAD#l68>:
/* On some systems getdents fails with ENOENT when the
open directory has been rmdir'd already. POSIX.1
requires that we treat this condition like normal EOF. */
It's not clear to me that this comment is correct for current POSIX, but anyway
this is a matter for the GNU C library not for coreutils ls, so if you think
there's a bug there I suggest filing a glibc bug report
<https://sourceware.org/glibc/wiki/FilingBugs>.