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Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers Quoting of special characters Post 61074 by vibhor_agarwali on Friday 28th of January 2005 02:01:01 AM
Old 01-28-2005
Quoting of special characters

Hello,

I am getting very confused as to where should i quote special/metacharacters in shell.

Sometimes i write * directly and it works, othertimes i have to do "*".
Same is the case with other special characters like /,\,.,$,etc.

Can somebody give me link to somewhere where i can found some detailed documentation of this, if not stated here ;-)
 

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MOUNT(2)							System Calls Manual							  MOUNT(2)

NAME
mount, umount - mount or remove file system SYNOPSIS
mount(special, name, rwflag) char *special, *name; umount(special) char *special; DESCRIPTION
Mount announces to the system that a removable file system has been mounted on the block-structured special file special; from now on, ref- erences to file name will refer to the root file on the newly mounted file system. Special and name are pointers to null-terminated strings containing the appropriate path names. Name must exist already. Name must be a directory (unless the root of the mounted file system is not a directory). Its old contents are inaccessible while the file system is mounted. The rwflag argument determines whether the file system can be written on; if it is 0 writing is allowed, if non-zero no writing is done. Physically write-protected and magnetic tape file systems must be mounted read-only or errors will occur when access times are updated, whether or not any explicit write is attempted. Umount announces to the system that the special file is no longer to contain a removable file system. The associated file reverts to its ordinary interpretation. SEE ALSO
mount(1) DIAGNOSTICS
Mount returns 0 if the action occurred; -1 if special is inaccessible or not an appropriate file; if name does not exist; if special is already mounted; if name is in use; or if there are already too many file systems mounted. Umount returns 0 if the action occurred; -1 if if the special file is inaccessible or does not have a mounted file system, or if there are active files in the mounted file system. ASSEMBLER
(mount = 21.) sys mount; special; name; rwflag (umount = 22.) sys umount; special MOUNT(2)
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