Since we cannot see what is going on on your system, you will have to
interpret what we tell you: if it doesn't work as given literally you will have to try to
understand the meaning and try to variate it accordingly.
Having said this:
Quote:
Originally Posted by
karp
OK. This means
take the file tmp_d_.csv in the current directory, so: which is this current directory? Issue the command
pwd (which will tell you exactly that) and save its output.
For the rest of this let us assume the output is "/some/where" (no - it is not, actually, but you will have to substitute the real value for this yourself).
Now replace
/.tmp_d_.csv (relative path) by
/some/where/.tmp_d_.csv (absolute path) and run again. Do so analogously for all the other pathes and path names you use.
If you still have troubles:
post the output of the
mount command. It will tell you which (parts of the) Windows file systems are accessible via which UNIX pathes and vice versa.
I hope this helps.
bakunin