Followup to: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
By author: David Feuer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
In newsgroup: linux.dev.kernel
>
> . and foo/. are also links, not directories... the directories themselves
> are filesystem internal objects, and not discussed by the standard. I
> didn't know that linux supported hard links to directories... Isn't that
> just asking for trouble?
>
It is on filesystems which has ".." physically on disk. Linux no
longer requires this, although for example ext2 does have this.
I don't believe it's inherently impossible in Linux anymore. In fact,
vfsbinds provide a lot of the same kind of functionality; the main
difference between vfsbinds and hard links are that the former (a) can
cross filesystem boundaries and (b) aren't persistent.
-hpa
--
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"Unix gives you enough rope to shoot yourself in the foot."
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