SYMLNK
— Create a symbolic link ¶Makes a symbolic link from file PATH1 to PATH2. A null
character (CHAR(0)
) can be used to mark the end of the names in
PATH1 and PATH2; otherwise, trailing blanks in the file
names are ignored. If the STATUS argument is supplied, it
contains 0 on success or a nonzero error code upon return; see
symlink(2)
. If the system does not supply symlink(2)
,
ENOSYS
is returned.
This intrinsic is provided in both subroutine and function forms; however, only one form can be used in any given program unit.
GNU extension
Subroutine, function
CALL SYMLNK(PATH1, PATH2 [, STATUS]) |
STATUS = SYMLNK(PATH1, PATH2) |
PATH1 | Shall be of default CHARACTER type. |
PATH2 | Shall be of default CHARACTER type. |
STATUS | (Optional) Shall be of default INTEGER type. |
LINK
— Create a hard link,
UNLINK
— Remove a file from the file system