I guess it all depends on how you *created* the symlink. If you are
trying to remove the link you created in your last mail, that link
still reads #ddd and is interpreted as a mount point.
The theory is that if you create the link using
ln -s ./#ddd
Then you should be able to remove it with
rm '#ddd'
or at least with
rm '.#ddd'
-- Christer
On 11 apr 2005, at 04.26, Dean Anderson wrote:
On Mon, 11 Apr 2005, Ivan Popov wrote:
As Jeffrey Hutzelman pointed out,
ln -s ./#foo a_rare_case_of_symlink
does the trick.
Nope:
ls
ls: ddd: No such device
[EMAIL PROTECTED] xxx]$ rm ./ddd
rm: cannot remove `./ddd': No such device
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