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Date: | Tue, 20 Dec 2011 12:44:23 -0500 |
From: | "Larry Hall (Cygwin)" <reply-to-list-only-lh AT cygwin DOT com> |
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To: | cygwin AT cygwin DOT com |
Subject: | Re: Symlinks and sharing a home directory between Windows and Linux |
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On 12/16/2011 11:46 AM, Jon Clugston wrote: > On Fri, Dec 16, 2011 at 11:20 AM, Andrew DeFaria<Andrew AT defaria DOT com> wrote: >> On 12/15/2011 07:40 PM, Larry Hall (Cygwin) wrote: >>> >>> I'm having difficulty seeing how what you have described could work unless >>> the consumers of these files are looking for symlinks only, which your >>> example above contradicts. And both of the ".bashrc" files are registering >>> as plain files, so I think you're right that the file system on which they >>> reside is coming into play, assuming the output above is from Cygwin's 'ls'. >>> But even if you had ".bashrc" and ".bashrc.lnk" with the former being a >>> UNIX-form of symlink and the latter being the Cygwin one, I'd still expect >>> Cygwin to recognize ".bashrc" first and only go looking for the .lnk version >>> if it couldn't find that. >> >> I would think that Cygwin should see the .lnk version first. No? I guess >> not. I thought it worked that way before. > > This would be a performance disaster - forcing a check for 'x.lnk' > every time the software tried to access file 'x'. I doubt that it > worked that way before. Correct. It did not work this way for the reason you stated. -- Larry _____________________________________________________________________ A: Yes. > Q: Are you sure? >> A: Because it reverses the logical flow of conversation. >>> Q: Why is top posting annoying in email? -- Problem reports: http://cygwin.com/problems.html FAQ: http://cygwin.com/faq/ Documentation: http://cygwin.com/docs.html Unsubscribe info: http://cygwin.com/ml/#unsubscribe-simple
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