I stand corrected, by my own experiments.  Please ignore me.

On Wed, 4 Dec 2002, Mike Burger wrote:

> It is, however, working properly.  The problem is that in the first 
> example, you specified the -l first...this makes ls think that you are 
> looking to list the current directory's contents, of which mysql is a 
> part.
> 
> In the second example, the order causes ls to think that you want to 
> actually list the contents of the mysql directory.
> 
> On Wed, 4 Dec 2002, Vidiot wrote:
> 
> > Let me start out by saying that I think that ls  is not working the way
> > I expect it.
> > 
> > If I do a ls -la in the directory that contains symbolic links, the links
> > are displayed, such as:
> > 
> > lrwxrwxrwx    1 root     root           16 Dec  4 11:01 mysql -> /usr/local/mysql
> > 
> > But, if I do a ls -al on mysql, I get:
> > 
> > total 0
> > drwxrwxr-x    2 root     users        4096 Dec  4 10:59 .
> > drwxr-xr-x   18 root     root         4096 Dec  4 10:59 ..
> > 
> > 
> > Sorry, not the expected behaviour.  I do not want it to traverse the link.
> > So, to the man page I went.  I see a -L option.  so I try it:
> > 
> > total 0
> > drwxrwxr-x    2 root     users        4096 Dec  4 10:59 .
> > drwxr-xr-x   18 root     root         4096 Dec  4 10:59 ..
> > 
> > 
> > Same damn result.  Yes, the directory is currently empty.
> > 
> > I am running RH 7.1 and want ls to return to the old behaviour of not
> > traversing symbolic links, or have an option that works.
> > 
> > Is there an option that works, or do I need to submit a bug to the e-mail
> > address listed in the man page?
> > 
> > MB
> > 
> 
> 

-- 
Mike Burger
http://www.bubbanfriends.org

Visit the Dog Pound II BBS
telnet://dogpound2.citadel.org or http://dogpound2.citadel.org:2000



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