On Fri, Jul 24, 2020 at 09:42:24AM -0400, The Wanderer wrote: > On 2020-07-24 at 09:22, to...@tuxteam.de wrote: > > > On Fri, Jul 24, 2020 at 07:54:27AM -0400, Greg Wooledge wrote: > > > >> On Fri, Jul 24, 2020 at 07:49:26AM -0400, The Wanderer wrote: > >> > >>> Sounds like a case where directly editing the underlying device, > >>> to modify inode-or-equivalent contents such that the slash is no > >>> longer > > ^^^^^ > > Nitpick: the directory entry is the one carrying the name. > > I had the impression that even a directory is stored in/as something > that is at least analogous to an inode. Is there a different term that's > more appropriate for the on-disk structure which holds a directory, vs. > 'inode' for the one that holds a file?
That's right: the directory is at the same time a file, and thus, represented by the inode. But the name itself is in the content of the directory, whithin the directory entry. [...] > It does seem to suggest that, but when I run > > $ /sbin/e2fsck /tmp/testfs > > on the tiny filesystem created as in my previous mail, it doesn't report > finding any problems and seem to change anything. Hm. You gave it the -f option? Otherwise, if the file system is marked "clean", e2fsck might choose the lazy option :-) Cheers -- t
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