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Happy Steadfast Client
Linux symlink (soft) question
Is there any reason you could not create a soft symlink across two physical hard drives in linux?
Thanks,
Justin
[ JUSTIN ]
[ justechnology llc ]
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There's no reason this should be a problem. A symbolic link is simply a special file which points to a path, so it can refer to any path on any mounted filesystem, even one that doesn't exist. The only filesystems where you cannot create symbolic link files are those that don't support them, such as NTFS or FAT32 partitions.
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Happy Steadfast Client
Thanks Kevin.
Yeah, I didn't think it matter, just never tried it before and google really didn't tell me yes or no.
Just deciding wether to get a 2nd drive of 120 GB or 300 GB :shock:
[ JUSTIN ]
[ justechnology llc ]
[ WEB DESIGN / DEVELOPMENT, TECHNICAL CONSULTING, & BUSINESS WEB HOSTING ]
[ when will apple? ]
[ GUESS THE RELEASE DATE AND GET THE SCOOP ON APPLE'S NEW PRODUCTS ]
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Junior Member
Actually, this is exactly why soft links were introduced. Originally (eons ago) Unix systems only had hard links, which couldn't link across devices.
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