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Full Discussion: Link files....
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers Link files.... Post 71502 by Tom Bombadil on Wednesday 11th of May 2005 08:03:14 PM
Old 05-11-2005
Link files....

How do you identify the type of a link in the output of the ls -l command?
 

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NAMEI(1)							   User Commands							  NAMEI(1)

NAME
namei - follow a pathname until a terminal point is found SYNOPSIS
namei [options] pathname... DESCRIPTION
namei interprets its arguments as pathnames to any type of Unix file (symlinks, files, directories, and so forth). namei then follows each pathname until an endpoint is found (a file, a directory, a device node, etc). If it finds a symbolic link, it shows the link, and starts following it, indenting the output to show the context. This program is useful for finding "too many levels of symbolic links" problems. For each line of output, namei uses the following characters to identify the file type found: f: = the pathname currently being resolved d = directory l = symbolic link (both the link and its contents are output) s = socket b = block device c = character device p = FIFO (named pipe) - = regular file ? = an error of some kind namei prints an informative message when the maximum number of symbolic links this system can have has been exceeded. OPTIONS
-l, --long Use the long listing format (same as -m -o -v). -m, --modes Show the mode bits of each file type in the style of ls(1), for example 'rwxr-xr-x'. -n, --nosymlinks Don't follow symlinks. -o, --owners Show owner and group name of each file. -v, --vertical Vertically align the modes and owners. -x, --mountpoints Show mountpoint directories with a 'D' rather than a 'd'. -V, --version Display version information and exit. -h, --help Display help text and exit. AUTHOR
The original namei program was written by Roger Southwick <rogers@amadeus.wr.tek.com>. The program was rewritten by Karel Zak <kzak@redhat.com>. BUGS
To be discovered. SEE ALSO
ls(1), stat(1), symlink(7) AVAILABILITY
The namei command is part of the util-linux package and is available from https://www.kernel.org/pub/linux/utils/util-linux/. util-linux June 2011 NAMEI(1)
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