Symlinks and ..
Richard Tobin
richard at aiai.ed.ac.uk
Wed Nov 22 05:39:24 AEST 1989
In article <12407 at ulysses.homer.nj.att.com> ekrell at hector.UUCP (Eduardo Krell) writes:
>".." should be treated as a logical operator that moves you one level
>closer to the root by stripping the last component off your current
>working directory (which is whatever path you used to get to where
>you are). This preserves the "/usr/foo/bar/.. == /usr/foo" paradigm.
Well, that's a nice paradigm to preserve, but another one is that
a directory should be the same however you got there. Sometimes you
want one, sometimes the other.
(Of course, this isn't a problem of symbolic links per se; hard links
would have the same problem but making hard links to directories is
"discouraged").
I think it's a bad idea for shells (or whatever) to treat ".." as something
special. It would be better to use a new name ("..." perhaps?).
-- Richard
--
Richard Tobin, JANET: R.Tobin at uk.ac.ed
AI Applications Institute, ARPA: R.Tobin%uk.ac.ed at nsfnet-relay.ac.uk
Edinburgh University. UUCP: ...!ukc!ed.ac.uk!R.Tobin
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