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Operating Systems Solaris Difference between hard link and copy command Post 302378399 by jim mcnamara on Monday 7th of December 2009 09:05:43 PM
Old 12-07-2009
jilliagre -

In really old filesystems it was possible. Ever see a hard-linked directory? It is not allowed now. Read up on it if you want. Why would such a thing be mentioned or considered a problem, you ask?

Maybe it happened a long time ago...
 

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filesystem(7)						 Miscellaneous Information Manual					     filesystem(7)

NAME
filesystem - event signalling that filesystems have been mounted SYNOPSIS
filesystem [ENV]... DESCRIPTION
The filesystem event is generated by the mountall(8) daemon after it has mounted all filesystems listed in fstab(5). mountall(8) emits this event as an informational signal, services and tasks started or stopped by this event will do so in parallel with other activity. EXAMPLE
A service that wishes to be running once filesystems are mounted might use: start on filesystem SEE ALSO
mounting(7) mounted(7) virtual-filesystems(7) local-filesystems(7) remote-filesystems(7) all-swaps(7) mountall 2009-12-21 filesystem(7)
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