jehanne/sys
Giacomo Tesio 713eb8843f libc: simplify access; libposix: let access lie
There are a few issues with Plan 9's `access`:

- it has side effects: to test the actual access (that the file
  servers can allow or deny according to complex custom rules)
  it opens and then closes the file, allocating (and disposing) the fd
- it does not work on directories, since
  - they cannot be opened for writing, despite the fact that to
    create a file in a directory you must be granted write access on
    that directory
  - they cannot be opened for execution, despite the fact that to
    access a file in a directory you must be granted execution access
    on that directory

Despite the fact that `access` (even on UNIX) is a violation of the
"tell, don't ask" principle (the access could be forbidden just after
its successful return, making subsequent `open` fail anyway), this
fact smells of a little design error in the file interface.

So, right now we choose to let the libposix's `access` lie on directories:
it will always return 0 on AWRITE and AEXEC for them, accepting that
a successive create/mkdir may fail.

However, a cleaner file API and protocol should allow a simpler `access`
to be implemented for directories too.
2017-08-29 00:17:51 +02:00
..
include libposix: add access 2017-08-28 23:04:12 +02:00
lib/plumb first usable version of kernel and commands 2016-11-26 03:49:29 +01:00
log first usable version of kernel and commands 2016-11-26 03:49:29 +01:00
posix fs: no "default" posix library 2017-04-21 23:59:27 +02:00
src libc: simplify access; libposix: let access lie 2017-08-29 00:17:51 +02:00