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--- Chris Faylor <cgf AT cygnus DOT com> wrote: > On Tue, Feb 29, 2000 at 11:43:21AM -0600, Parker, Ron wrote: -8<- > >What would be the side effects of using matched mounts instead of symlinks? > > > >For, example > > mount -b C:\\cygwin / > > mkdir /usr/bin > > mount -b C:\\bin /usr/bin > > > >or, > > mount -b C:\\cygwin / > > mkdir /bin > > mount -b C:\\usr\\bin /bin > > There are no side effects. The biggest problem is "user confusion". It's > pretty > obvious what's going on when you do a "ls -l /usr". It's not so obvious when > you are using mounts. > > Someone mentioned that symlinks might be slow on network drives. I'm not > worried > about that. The problem is that symlinks *may not work* on network drives. > > That may blow the symlink idea out of the water, unfortunately. So your suggestion here is to use the mount and not use the symlink because will not work for everyone where the mount method will. I agree that this will be more confusing to those unfamiliar with Cygwin; but then the mount process always is. This way they'll at least have a working example of what mount is for. I suggest /usr/bin as the real directory and /bin as the "paired" directory. ===== --- Earnie Boyd: <mailto:earnie_boyd AT yahoo DOT com> __Cygwin: POSIX on Windows__ Cygwin Newbies: <http://www.freeyellow.com/members5/gw32/index.html> __Minimalist GNU for Windows__ Mingw32 List: <http://www.egroups.com/group/mingw32> Mingw Home: (Coming Soon) __________________________________________________ Do You Yahoo!? Talk to your friends online with Yahoo! Messenger. http://im.yahoo.com
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