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Contact Us Post Here to Contact Site Administrators and Moderators Broken Links in the Site Link Directory Post 302582732 by butterbaerchen on Saturday 17th of December 2011 04:42:53 PM
Old 12-17-2011
Quote:
Originally Posted by Scott
Hi.

Can you please post a copy of the exact link you used?

Thanks.
Sure, ... OH, If I paste it it gets pasted like this: (I removed opening and closing brackets)
Code:
URL="https://www.unix.com/featured-books-and-articles-by-active-forum-members-33/"]https://www.unix.com/featured-books-and-articles-by-active-forum-members-33/[/URL

here is the 'live' version - does it work for you?
https://www.unix.com/featured-books-a...um-members-33/

this link is on this page: The UNIX and Linux Forums Directory

in fact - every link on that page brings up the vBulletin page. The links read correct in the status bar on hover or the address bar when pasted. Is this just happening to me?

... actually - they just omit the /links/ in the address - filling it in by hand brings up the page. no big deal - sorry. So where does links2 get the correct address from ...
... in safari the status line gives all links without the links directory /links/ in links2 the status line reads all links with /links/

Here is a better version - short and sweet Smilie

Quote:
Ygor
Moderator

The links directory seems to be working incorrectly?

For example the URL for UNIX OS Links is https://www.unix.com/unix-os-links-2/ and not UNIX OS Links - Links

Last edited by butterbaerchen; 12-17-2011 at 08:42 PM.. Reason: add text
This User Gave Thanks to butterbaerchen For This Post:
 

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link(1) 						      General Commands Manual							   link(1)

NAME
link, unlink - Creates an additional directory entry for an existing file SYNOPSIS
link file1 file2 unlink file STANDARDS
Interfaces documented on this reference page conform to industry standards as follows: link: XCU5.0 unlink: XCU5.0 Refer to the standards(5) reference page for more information about industry standards and associated tags. DESCRIPTION
The link command performs the link() system call to create an additional directory entry for an existing file, file1. In effect, the underlying file then has two names, file1 and file2 (either of these arguments can be a pathname). The old and new entries share equal access rights to the underlying file. The unlink command performs the unlink() system call to remove a link to file created by link. The unlink command removes the directory entry specified by the file parameter and, if the entry is a hard link, decrements the link count of the file referenced by the link. You should be familiar with the link() and unlink() system calls before you use these commands. The link and unlink commands do not issue error messages when the associated system call is unsuccessful. NOTES
The link and unlink commands cannot be used to link and unlink directories. EXIT STATUS
The link and unlink commands both exit with the following: The link() or unlink() system call succeeded. Too few or too many arguments specified. The link() or unlink() system call failed. SEE ALSO
Commands: fsck(8), ln(1) Functions: link(2), unlink(2) link(1)
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