Symlinks: Unterschied zwischen den Versionen
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*symlinks does not recurse or change links across filesystems. | *symlinks does not recurse or change links across filesystems. | ||
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Version vom 10. März 2023, 02:49 Uhr
symlinks ist ein Werkzeug zur Verwaltung von symbolischen Verknüpfungen
$ symlinks [ -cdorstv ] dirlist
symlinks is a useful utility for maintainers of FTP sites, CDROMs, and Linux software distributions. It scans directories for symbolic links and lists them on stdout, often revealing flaws in the filesystem tree.
- Each link is output with a classification of relative, absolute, dangling, messy, lengthy, or other_fs. * relative links are those expressed as paths relative to the directory in which the links reside, usually independent of the mount point of the filesystem.
- absolute links are those given as an absolute path from the root directory as indicated by a leading slash (/).
- dangling links are those for which the target of the link does not currently exist. This commonly occurs for absolute links when a filesystem is mounted at other than its customary mount point (such as when the normal root filesystem is mounted at /mnt after booting from alternative media).
- messy links are links which contain unnecessary slashes or dots in the path. These are cleaned up as well when -c is specified.
- lengthy links are links which use "../" more than necessary in the path (eg. /bin/vi -> ../bin/vim) These are only detected when -s is specified, and are only cleaned up when -c is also specified.
- other_fs are those links whose target currently resides on a different filesystem from where symlinks was run (most useful with -r ).
- symlinks does not recurse or change links across filesystems.