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Full Discussion: cp -R behaviour
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting cp -R behaviour Post 302279575 by aegis on Friday 23rd of January 2009 06:31:52 AM
Old 01-23-2009
thanks for your answer cfajohnson!

but this requires that i do the paste one level up from where i want...

for example i have a folder settings which contains file1.conf file2.conf and i want to insert those files on /etc

to use your way: i have to rename settings to etc and then copy etc to /

am i correct on this?

with the bsd-cp i do a normal copy append to source path '/' and get the directory contents...
 

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MV(1)							      General Commands Manual							     MV(1)

NAME
mv - move or rename files SYNOPSIS
mv [ -i ] [ -f ] [ - ] file1 file2 mv [ -i ] [ -f ] [ - ] file ... directory DESCRIPTION
Mv moves (changes the name of) file1 to file2. If file2 already exists, it is removed before file1 is moved. If file2 has a mode which forbids writing, mv prints the mode (see chmod(2)) and reads the standard input to obtain a line; if the line begins with y, the move takes place; if not, mv exits. In the second form, one or more files (plain files or directories) are moved to the directory with their original file-names. Mv refuses to move a file onto itself. Options: -i stands for interactive mode. Whenever a move is to supercede an existing file, the user is prompted by the name of the file followed by a question mark. If he answers with a line starting with 'y', the move continues. Any other reply prevents the move from occur- ring. -f stands for force. This option overrides any mode restrictions or the -i switch. - means interpret all the following arguments to mv as file names. This allows file names starting with minus. SEE ALSO
cp(1), ln(1) BUGS
If file1 and file2 lie on different file systems, mv must copy the file and delete the original. In this case the owner name becomes that of the copying process and any linking relationship with other files is lost. 4th Berkeley Distribution April 29, 1985 MV(1)
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