In message <[email protected]>, John Polstra wrote:
} In article <[email protected]>,
} Thierry Herbelot <[email protected]> wrote:
} > Hello
} >
} > I was reading the man page for find(1), looking for the precise option
} > to follow symbolic links.
} >
} > This option is -follow, of course, but it is not described in the man
} > page
}
} Huh? The correct options are the first three options described in
} the man page:
} -H The -H option causes the file information and file type (see
} stat(2)) returned for each symbolic link specified on the command
} line to be those of the file referenced by the link, not the link
} itself. If the referenced file does not exist, the file informa-
} tion and type will be for the link itself. File information of
} all symbolic links not on the command line is that of the link
} itself.
What this doesn't explicitly say is that it causes find(1) to actually
follow the symlink and recursively descend the target tree (if the link
points to a directory); I assume that's the behavior the original poster
wanted.
Near the bottom of the find(1) manpage (on my -stable system), is this:
Historically, the -d, -h and -x options were implemented using the pri-
maries ``-depth'', ``-follow'', and ``-xdev''. These primaries always
``-h'' there should read ``-H''; -h is an unknown option to find(1).
--
Jon Hamilton
[email protected]
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