Re: "Susan,

You can execute an ls -i for each path (ls -i ../../blahblah). This returns
the inode for the file. If the inode is the same, the files are the same
(one inode for each file).


Lee H. Burstein"

Lee, this is on face value okay, but technically wrong; there is a chance
that filea in file system x has the same inode as fileb in file system y
share the same inode number. I wouldn't want to calculate those odds or
chances, but ...
Inode numbers are assigned per file system, I believe...

Bob Wyatt
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