Jeffrey Altman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> A symlink is not an object that Windows knows how to describe.
> It is reported to Windows as a directory if it points to a
> directory and as a file if it points to a file.  The behavior you
> are seeing is the behavior that Windows provides when you delete
> a directory.  It deletes all of the files under the directory
> and then the directory.
>
> To remove a symlink, use
>
>   right click for the context menu
>   select AFS
>   Select Symlink
>   Select Remove

There is also a symlink.exe command line binary.

-----

Would using mount points instead of symlinks to directories help with 
this problem?

<<CDC


_______________________________________________
OpenAFS-info mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.openafs.org/mailman/listinfo/openafs-info

Reply via email to