/* A link may just point to itself. */
if (is_link)
{
- /* If the path the link points to isn't its soname and it is not
- .so symlink for ld(1) only, we treat it as a normal file. */
+ /* If the path the link points to isn't its soname or it is not
+ the .so symlink for ld(1), we treat it as a normal file.
+
+ You should always do this:
+
+ libfoo.so -> SONAME -> Arbitrary package-chosen name.
+
+ e.g. libfoo.so -> libfoo.so.1 -> libfooimp.so.9.99.
+ Given a SONAME of libfoo.so.1.
+
+ You should *never* do this:
+
+ libfoo.so -> libfooimp.so.9.99
+
+ If you do, and your SONAME is libfoo.so.1, then libfoo.so
+ fails to point at the SONAME. In that case ldconfig may consider
+ libfoo.so as another implementation of SONAME and will create
+ symlinks against it causing problems when you try to upgrade
+ or downgrade. The problems will arise because ldconfig will,
+ depending on directory ordering, creat symlinks against libfoo.so
+ e.g. libfoo.so.1.2 -> libfoo.so, but when libfoo.so is removed
+ (typically by the removal of a development pacakge not required
+ for the runtime) it will break the libfoo.so.1.2 symlink and the
+ application will fail to start. */
const char *real_base_name = basename (real_file_name);
if (strcmp (real_base_name, soname) != 0)