Difference between revisions of "Tip 20: Hard/Soft Links"
(Created page with "Create a soft link: inductor:foo mrg$ ln -s ../test.sp test2.sp Create a hard link: inductor:foo mrg$ ln ../test.sp test3.sp inductor:foo mrg$ ls -al total 16 drwxr-xr-x 4 ...") |
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Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
Create a soft link: | Create a soft link: | ||
− | inductor:foo mrg$ ln -s ../test.sp test2.sp | + | inductor:foo mrg$ ln -s ../test.sp test2.sp |
− | Create a hard link: | + | Create a hard link: |
− | inductor:foo mrg$ ln ../test.sp test3.sp | + | inductor:foo mrg$ ln ../test.sp test3.sp |
− | inductor:foo mrg$ ls -al | + | inductor:foo mrg$ ls -al |
− | total 16 | + | total 16 |
− | drwxr-xr-x 4 mrg staff 136 Aug 18 16:36 . | + | drwxr-xr-x 4 mrg staff 136 Aug 18 16:36 . |
− | drwxr-xr-x+ 97 mrg staff 3298 Aug 18 16:31 .. | + | drwxr-xr-x+ 97 mrg staff 3298 Aug 18 16:31 .. |
− | lrwxr-xr-x 1 mrg staff 10 Aug 18 16:36 test2.sp -> ../test.sp | + | lrwxr-xr-x 1 mrg staff 10 Aug 18 16:36 test2.sp -> ../test.sp |
− | -rw-r--r-- 2 mrg staff 815 Jul 17 12:44 test3.sp | + | -rw-r--r-- 2 mrg staff 815 Jul 17 12:44 test3.sp |
Note that the soft link is designated with a "->" while the hard link just looks like a file. However, the hard link is actually the SAME FILE: | Note that the soft link is designated with a "->" while the hard link just looks like a file. However, the hard link is actually the SAME FILE: | ||
− | inductor:foo mrg$ ls -al ../test.sp | + | inductor:foo mrg$ ls -al ../test.sp |
− | -rw-r--r-- 2 mrg staff 815 Jul 17 12:44 ../test.sp | + | -rw-r--r-- 2 mrg staff 815 Jul 17 12:44 ../test.sp |
which shows the same date, permissions, etc as the link test3.sp. | which shows the same date, permissions, etc as the link test3.sp. | ||
You can confirm this by seeing what the filesystem inode is for each of these using the -i options to ls: | You can confirm this by seeing what the filesystem inode is for each of these using the -i options to ls: | ||
− | inductor:foo mrg$ ls -li ../test.sp | + | inductor:foo mrg$ ls -li ../test.sp |
− | 18906739 -rw-r--r-- 2 mrg staff 815 Jul 17 12:44 ../test.sp | + | 18906739 -rw-r--r-- 2 mrg staff 815 Jul 17 12:44 ../test.sp |
− | inductor:foo mrg$ ls -li test3.sp | + | inductor:foo mrg$ ls -li test3.sp |
− | 18906739 -rw-r--r-- 2 mrg staff 815 Jul 17 12:44 test3.sp | + | 18906739 -rw-r--r-- 2 mrg staff 815 Jul 17 12:44 test3.sp |
− | inductor:foo mrg$ ls -li test2.sp | + | inductor:foo mrg$ ls -li test2.sp |
− | 19237135 lrwxr-xr-x 1 mrg staff 10 Aug 18 16:36 test2.sp -> ../test.sp | + | 19237135 lrwxr-xr-x 1 mrg staff 10 Aug 18 16:36 test2.sp -> ../test.sp |
The first two are identical where as the symbolic link is a separate inode. | The first two are identical where as the symbolic link is a separate inode. | ||
So, why use hard links? Well, what if you remove the original file? | So, why use hard links? Well, what if you remove the original file? | ||
− | inductor:foo mrg$ rm ../test.sp | + | inductor:foo mrg$ rm ../test.sp |
− | inductor:foo mrg$ ls -al | + | inductor:foo mrg$ ls -al |
− | total 16 | + | total 16 |
− | drwxr-xr-x 4 mrg staff 136 Aug 18 16:36 . | + | drwxr-xr-x 4 mrg staff 136 Aug 18 16:36 . |
− | drwxr-xr-x+ 96 mrg staff 3264 Aug 18 16:39 .. | + | drwxr-xr-x+ 96 mrg staff 3264 Aug 18 16:39 .. |
− | lrwxr-xr-x 1 mrg staff 10 Aug 18 16:36 test2.sp -> ../test.sp | + | lrwxr-xr-x 1 mrg staff 10 Aug 18 16:36 test2.sp -> ../test.sp |
− | -rw-r--r-- 1 mrg staff 815 Jul 17 12:44 test3.sp | + | -rw-r--r-- 1 mrg staff 815 Jul 17 12:44 test3.sp |
− | inductor:foo mrg$ more test2.sp | + | inductor:foo mrg$ more test2.sp |
− | test2.sp: No such file or directory | + | test2.sp: No such file or directory |
− | inductor:foo mrg$ more test3.sp | + | inductor:foo mrg$ more test3.sp |
− | + | * File: invx1.pex.netlist | |
− | ... | + | ... |
The soft link is pointing to nothing now. The hard link still has the file. Files are only "removed" when there are no more hard links to a file. | The soft link is pointing to nothing now. The hard link still has the file. Files are only "removed" when there are no more hard links to a file. | ||
One example where I use hard links is when I do backups. You can tell rsync, for example, to use hard links rather than make new copies when files don't change. That's beyond the scope of this though. | One example where I use hard links is when I do backups. You can tell rsync, for example, to use hard links rather than make new copies when files don't change. That's beyond the scope of this though. |
Revision as of 23:44, 18 August 2014
Create a soft link:
inductor:foo mrg$ ln -s ../test.sp test2.sp
Create a hard link:
inductor:foo mrg$ ln ../test.sp test3.sp
inductor:foo mrg$ ls -al total 16 drwxr-xr-x 4 mrg staff 136 Aug 18 16:36 . drwxr-xr-x+ 97 mrg staff 3298 Aug 18 16:31 .. lrwxr-xr-x 1 mrg staff 10 Aug 18 16:36 test2.sp -> ../test.sp -rw-r--r-- 2 mrg staff 815 Jul 17 12:44 test3.sp
Note that the soft link is designated with a "->" while the hard link just looks like a file. However, the hard link is actually the SAME FILE:
inductor:foo mrg$ ls -al ../test.sp -rw-r--r-- 2 mrg staff 815 Jul 17 12:44 ../test.sp
which shows the same date, permissions, etc as the link test3.sp. You can confirm this by seeing what the filesystem inode is for each of these using the -i options to ls:
inductor:foo mrg$ ls -li ../test.sp 18906739 -rw-r--r-- 2 mrg staff 815 Jul 17 12:44 ../test.sp inductor:foo mrg$ ls -li test3.sp 18906739 -rw-r--r-- 2 mrg staff 815 Jul 17 12:44 test3.sp inductor:foo mrg$ ls -li test2.sp 19237135 lrwxr-xr-x 1 mrg staff 10 Aug 18 16:36 test2.sp -> ../test.sp
The first two are identical where as the symbolic link is a separate inode.
So, why use hard links? Well, what if you remove the original file?
inductor:foo mrg$ rm ../test.sp inductor:foo mrg$ ls -al total 16 drwxr-xr-x 4 mrg staff 136 Aug 18 16:36 . drwxr-xr-x+ 96 mrg staff 3264 Aug 18 16:39 .. lrwxr-xr-x 1 mrg staff 10 Aug 18 16:36 test2.sp -> ../test.sp -rw-r--r-- 1 mrg staff 815 Jul 17 12:44 test3.sp inductor:foo mrg$ more test2.sp test2.sp: No such file or directory inductor:foo mrg$ more test3.sp * File: invx1.pex.netlist ...
The soft link is pointing to nothing now. The hard link still has the file. Files are only "removed" when there are no more hard links to a file.
One example where I use hard links is when I do backups. You can tell rsync, for example, to use hard links rather than make new copies when files don't change. That's beyond the scope of this though.