table of contents
| RENAME(2) | System Calls Manual | RENAME(2) | 
NAME¶
rename — change
    the name of a file
LIBRARY¶
Standard C Library (libc, -lc)
SYNOPSIS¶
#include
  <stdio.h>
int
  
  rename(const
    char *from, const char
    *to);
int
  
  renameat(int
    fromfd, const char
    *from, int tofd,
    const char *to);
DESCRIPTION¶
The
    rename()
    system call causes the link named from to be renamed
    as to. If to exists, it is first
    removed. Both from and to must
    be of the same type (that is, both directories or both non-directories), and
    must reside on the same file system.
The
    rename()
    system call guarantees that if to already exists, an
    instance of to will always exist, even if the system
    should crash in the middle of the operation.
If the final component of from is a symbolic link, the symbolic link is renamed, not the file or directory to which it points.
If from and
    to resolve to the same directory entry, or to
    different directory entries for the same existing file,
    rename()
    returns success without taking any further action.
The
    renameat()
    system call is equivalent to rename() except in the
    case where either from or to
    specifies a relative path. If from is a relative path,
    the file to be renamed is located relative to the directory associated with
    the file descriptor fromfd instead of the current
    working directory. If the to is a relative path, the
    same happens only relative to the directory associated with
    tofd. If the renameat() is
    passed the special value AT_FDCWD in the
    fromfd or tofd parameter, the
    current working directory is used in the determination of the file for the
    respective path parameter.
RETURN VALUES¶
The rename() function returns the
    value 0 if successful; otherwise the value -1 is returned and
    the global variable errno is set to indicate the
    error.
ERRORS¶
The rename() system call will fail and
    neither of the argument files will be affected if:
- [
ENAMETOOLONG] - A component of either pathname exceeded 255 characters, or the entire length of either path name exceeded 1023 characters.
 - [
ENOENT] - A component of the from path does not exist, or a path prefix of to does not exist.
 - [
EACCES] - A component of either path prefix denies search permission.
 - [
EACCES] - The requested link requires writing in a directory with a mode that denies write permission.
 - [
EACCES] - The directory pointed at by the from argument denies write permission, and the operation would move it to another parent directory.
 - [
EPERM] - The file pointed at by the from argument has its immutable, undeletable or append-only flag set, see the chflags(2) manual page for more information.
 - [
EPERM] - The parent directory of the file pointed at by the from argument has its immutable or append-only flag set.
 - [
EPERM] - The parent directory of the file pointed at by the to argument has its immutable flag set.
 - [
EPERM] - The directory containing from is marked sticky, and neither the containing directory nor from are owned by the effective user ID.
 - [
EPERM] - The file pointed at by the to argument exists, the directory containing to is marked sticky, and neither the containing directory nor to are owned by the effective user ID.
 - [
ELOOP] - Too many symbolic links were encountered in translating either pathname.
 - [
ENOTDIR] - A component of either path prefix is not a directory.
 - [
ENOTDIR] - The from argument is a directory, but to is not a directory.
 - [
EISDIR] - The to argument is a directory, but from is not a directory.
 - [
EXDEV] - The link named by to and the file named by from are on different logical devices (file systems). Note that this error code will not be returned if the implementation permits cross-device links.
 - [
ENOSPC] - The directory in which the entry for the new name is being placed cannot be extended because there is no space left on the file system containing the directory.
 - [
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.
 - [
EIO] - An I/O error occurred while making or updating a directory entry.
 - [
EINTEGRITY] - Corrupted data was detected while reading from the file system.
 - [
EROFS] - The requested link requires writing in a directory on a read-only file system.
 - [
EFAULT] - Path points outside the process's allocated address space.
 - [
EINVAL] - The from argument is a parent directory of
      to, or an attempt is made to rename
      ‘
.’ or ‘..’. - [
ENOTEMPTY] - The to argument is a directory and is not empty.
 - [
ECAPMODE] rename() was called and the process is in capability mode.
In addition to the errors returned by the
    rename(), the renameat() may
    fail if:
- [
EBADF] - The from argument does not specify an absolute path
      and the fromfd argument is neither
      
AT_FDCWDnor a valid file descriptor open for searching, or the to argument does not specify an absolute path and the tofd argument is neitherAT_FDCWDnor a valid file descriptor open for searching. - [
ENOTDIR] - The from argument is not an absolute path and
      fromfd is neither 
AT_FDCWDnor a file descriptor associated with a directory, or the to argument is not an absolute path and tofd is neitherAT_FDCWDnor a file descriptor associated with a directory. - [
ECAPMODE] AT_FDCWDis specified and the process is in capability mode.- [
ENOTCAPABLE] - path is an absolute path or contained a ".." component leading to a directory outside of the directory hierarchy specified by fromfd or tofd.
 - [
ENOTCAPABLE] - The fromfd file descriptor lacks the
      
CAP_RENAMEAT_SOURCEright, or the tofd file descriptor lacks theCAP_RENAMEAT_TARGETright. 
SEE ALSO¶
STANDARDS¶
The rename() system call is expected to
    conform to ISO/IEC 9945-1:1996
    (“POSIX.1”). The renameat()
    system call follows The Open Group Extended API Set 2 specification.
HISTORY¶
The renameat() system call appeared in
    FreeBSD 8.0.
| March 30, 2020 | Debian |