Ah! Okay, cool. -- Puryear Information Technology, LLC Baton Rouge, LA * 225-706-8414 http://www.puryear-it.com
Author, "Best Practices for Managing Linux and UNIX Servers" http://www.puryear-it.com/pubs/linux-unix-best-practices Identity Management, LDAP, and Linux Integration Adam Melancon wrote: > Yep, one is in a filesystem for a virtual server created by virtfs > http://www.prongs.org/virtfs/ > > On Jan 15, 2008 11:34 AM, -ray <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: >> Do you have anything mounted with mount --bind? We use it on our >> mailservers so everyone has the same "filespace" but we can keep actual >> directories on different filesystems: >> >> [EMAIL PROTECTED] ~]# ll -d -i /home/Students/Z/W0398506 >> /home/stu/09/Z/W0398506 >> 4358377 drwx-----x 3 W0398506 W0398506 4096 Dec 18 05:30 >> /home/stu/09/Z/W0398506 >> 4358377 drwx-----x 3 W0398506 W0398506 4096 Dec 18 05:30 >> /home/Students/Z/W0398506 >> >> ray >> >> >> On Tue, 15 Jan 2008, Dustin Puryear wrote: >> >>> Any ideas how this is possible? >>> >>> # ll -d -i /home/virtfs/abc/home/abc /home/abc >>> 132759554 drwx--x--x 22 abc abc 2048 Jan 14 12:02 /home/abc >>> 132759554 drwx--x--x 22 abc abc 2048 Jan 14 12:02 /home/virtfs/abc/home/abc >>> >>> I thought this was expressly forbidden/denied? How can two directories >>> point to same inode? That is, how can you have a directory hardlink? >>> >>> >> -- >> =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-= >> Ray DeJean http://www.r-a-y.org >> Systems Engineer Southeastern Louisiana University >> IBM Certified Specialist AIX Administration, AIX Support >> =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-= >> >> >> >> _______________________________________________ >> General mailing list >> [email protected] >> http://mail.brlug.net/mailman/listinfo/general_brlug.net >> > > > _______________________________________________ General mailing list [email protected] http://mail.brlug.net/mailman/listinfo/general_brlug.net
