• 0 Posts
  • 10 Comments
Joined 1 year ago
cake
Cake day: June 14th, 2023

help-circle





  • The reason you expect this is because Windows has a file lock behaviour that won’t let you delete a file when it’s in use, in Linux this limitation doesn’t exist.

    Raymond Chan, arguably one of the best software engineers in the world, and a Microsoft employee, has repeatedly lamented the near malware like work arounds developers have had to invent to overcome this limitation with uninstallers.

    Think about uninstalling a game. You need to run “uninstall.exe” but you don’t want uninstall.exe to exist after you’ve run it… but you can’t delete a file that’s in use. Uninstall.exe will always be in use when you run it….so how do you make it remove itself?

    Schedule a task? Side load a process? Inject a process? Many ways…. But most look like malware.

    Linux has never suffered this flaw.