Date: Thu, 09 Sep 2010 13:13:16 -0500 From: Joshua Isom <jrisom@gmail.com> To: freebsd-questions@freebsd.org Subject: Re: how to recursively symlink every file in a dir Message-ID: <4C8923BC.4080209@gmail.com> In-Reply-To: <AANLkTimR9QehTjUrm%2B0CqRVAx=QHkgcfpygrJJfkhbmp@mail.gmail.com> References: <AANLkTimR9QehTjUrm%2B0CqRVAx=QHkgcfpygrJJfkhbmp@mail.gmail.com>
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On 9/9/2010 12:24 PM, Aryeh Friedman wrote: > I want to make it so every file is a seperate symlink in dir2 if and > only if it is a regular file (not a dir) in dir1... the reason is if > the file is unchanged then use symlink but I can rm the symlink and > replace it with a non-symlink: > > To show the problem I am attempting to solve: > > foo: (owned by fred) > arf: > ack > > in barney's account: > > ln -s ~foo/ foo > rm foo/arf/ack # Permissioin denied ... it should nuke the symlink > and let me then do something like "touch foo/arf/ack This should give you at least a good start: find foo/ \( -type d -exec mkdir -p copy/'{}' \; \) -o \( -type f -exec ln -s '{}' copy/'{}' \; \) That'll copy directory foo into copy/foo and the rest is fine. You'll have to tweak the rest as you need but it'll get you started.
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