Eryk Sun <eryk...@gmail.com> added the comment:

Ingrid's patch misses the requirement to log off after adding a privilege to 
the current account. A new access token is required, from a fresh logon. 

Privileges can also be added to groups, not just to individual user accounts. 
Thus the symlink privilege can be granted to a standard group or well-known 
group, such as "Users" or "Authenticated Users".

Python 3.8+ supports the system's developer mode, which allows unprivileged 
symlink creation. This is just for developer tools, such as Git. Developer mode 
should not be relied on for regular scripts and applications. 

In POSIX, symlinks are widely used to reduce the burden of software 
maintenance. In Windows, however, symlinks are not reliably available, due to 
limited file system support (primarily NTFS, ReFs) and the requirement for a 
privilege that standard users lack by default. Another significant problem in 
Windows is the behavior of the shell API (shell32.dll), which eagerly resolves 
a symlink to its target and thus breaks many use cases for symlinks (e.g. 
virtual environments). Given these problems, using symlinks may actually 
increase the maintenance burden in Windows. Applications have to support a 
fallback path for Windows -- such as hard linking, copying, or launchers -- 
when symlinks either aren't available or for use cases that are unreliable 
(e.g. due to the way symlinks are accessed in the GUI shell).

----------
nosy: +eryksun

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<https://bugs.python.org/issue10608>
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