NAME
Lchown - use the lchown(2) system call from Perl
SYNOPSIS
use Lchown;
lchown $uid, $gid, 'foo' or die "lchown: $!";
my $count = lchown $uid, $gid, @filenames;
# or
use Lchown qw(lchown LCHOWN_AVAILABLE);
warn "this system lacks the lchown system call\n" unless LCHOWN_AVAILABLE;
...
# or
use Lchown ();
warn "this won't work\n" unless Lchown::LCHOWN_AVAILABLE;
Lchown::lchown $uid, $gid, 'foo' or die "lchown: $!";
DESCRIPTION
Provides a perl interface to the lchown()
system call, on platforms that support it.
DEFAULT EXPORTS
The following symbols are exported be default:
- lchown (LIST)
-
Like the
chown
builtin, but using thelchown()
system call so that symlinks will not be followed. Returns the number of files successfully changed.On systems without the
lchown()
system call,lchown
always returnsundef
and setserrno
toENOSYS
(Function not implemented).
ADDITIONAL EXPORTS
The following symbols are available for export but are not exported by default:
- LCHOWN_AVAILABLE ()
-
Returns true on platforms with the
lchown()
system call, and false on platforms without.
SEE ALSO
"chown" in perlfunc, lchown(2)
AUTHOR
Nick Cleaton <nick@cleaton.net>
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
Copyright 2003-2009 Nick Cleaton, all rights reserved.
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.