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X-WM-Posted-At: | avacado.atomice.net; Fri, 19 Jul 02 19:27:45 +0100 |
Message-ID: | <004401c22f51$fa5f4800$0100a8c0@atomice.net> |
From: | "Chris January" <chris AT atomice DOT net> |
To: | <cygwin-developers AT cygwin DOT com> |
References: | <Pine DOT GSO DOT 4 DOT 30L DOT 0207181251310 DOT 17110-100000 AT buzzword-bingo DOT mit DOT edu> |
Subject: | Re: bash lookups |
Date: | Fri, 19 Jul 2002 19:27:45 +0100 |
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> So this is very strange. I have some files stored in NFS, for some reason > when I cd into a directory in NFS and 'ls' it acceses all the files > nicely. (i.e. one lookup for each file, plus some extra dll's) > > However ls -l accesses all these other files: > sfsrwcd: LOOKUP: winmm.dll > sfsrwcd: LOOKUP: wave1 > sfsrwcd: LOOKUP: wave2 > sfsrwcd: LOOKUP: wave3 > sfsrwcd: LOOKUP: wave4 > sfsrwcd: LOOKUP: wave5 > sfsrwcd: LOOKUP: wave6 > sfsrwcd: LOOKUP: wave7 > sfsrwcd: LOOKUP: wave8 > sfsrwcd: LOOKUP: wave9 > sfsrwcd: LOOKUP: midi1 > sfsrwcd: LOOKUP: midi2 > sfsrwcd: LOOKUP: midi3 > sfsrwcd: LOOKUP: midi4 > sfsrwcd: LOOKUP: midi5 > sfsrwcd: LOOKUP: midi6 > sfsrwcd: LOOKUP: midi7 > sfsrwcd: LOOKUP: midi8 > sfsrwcd: LOOKUP: midi9 > sfsrwcd: LOOKUP: mmdrv.dll > sfsrwcd: LOOKUP: aux1 > sfsrwcd: LOOKUP: aux2 > sfsrwcd: LOOKUP: aux3 > sfsrwcd: LOOKUP: aux4 > sfsrwcd: LOOKUP: aux5 > sfsrwcd: LOOKUP: aux6 > sfsrwcd: LOOKUP: aux7 > sfsrwcd: LOOKUP: aux8 > sfsrwcd: LOOKUP: aux9 > sfsrwcd: LOOKUP: mixer1 > sfsrwcd: LOOKUP: mixer2 > sfsrwcd: LOOKUP: mixer3 > sfsrwcd: LOOKUP: mixer4 > sfsrwcd: LOOKUP: mixer5 > sfsrwcd: LOOKUP: mixer6 > sfsrwcd: LOOKUP: mixer7 > sfsrwcd: LOOKUP: mixer8 > sfsrwcd: LOOKUP: mixer9 > > And in the presence of cygwin symlinks (symlink.lnk) ls -l does the > following for each symlink > sfsrwcd: LOOKUP: symlink > sfsrwcd: LOOKUP: symlink.exe > sfsrwcd: LOOKUP: symlink.exe > sfsrwcd: LOOKUP: symlink.exe.lnk > sfsrwcd: LOOKUP: symlink > sfsrwcd: LOOKUP: symlink.exe > sfsrwcd: LOOKUP: symlink.exe > sfsrwcd: LOOKUP: symlink.exe.lnk > > Is there a way to switch off the devices lookup above? What's sfsrwcd? Are you opening /dev/dsp? Chris
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