Because:
- If I overwrite a shared library and then one running program crash, it
will be my fault (as system administrator) or mistake.. ;-)
- It is probable that one file library is updated within one more global
update, then probably I restart later the new demon or program. So if
the program crash I'll fix the problem eventually.
- The previous version of a file library that I am replacing can depend
on another file that the installer of the new version of the program
simply erases it. For example:
a.so depends of b.so
but
a_new_version.so does not depend of b.so.
When I or an installer install the new program version, me or the
installer erase b.so because the new version doesn't use it.
So, that it matters if a program can or can't access to the old version
of a.so if b.so was erased?
And eventually, if I decide to update a library, I would have to do it
(I suspect it would be the same case with executables files). It doesn't
the matter if the change implies a fault in a running program.
It can be that this serves so that a hacker can attack the system... or
I could hang a program when this is not my objective. Maybe a flag in
/proc/somewhere would be am useful thing:
- if it's 1, I can overwrite all the libraries and executables files (If
I've permission, etc.);
- if it's 0, I can not overwrite anything If it's in use.
I only want that everybody respect my right to do the wrong or stupid
thing. This is an system administrator right :-)
Pablo
-
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in
the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org
More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/