From: Pádraig Brady Date: Wed, 3 Apr 2013 17:33:43 +0000 (+0100) Subject: doc: add details on ln --relative symlink resolution X-Git-Tag: v8.22~169 X-Git-Url: http://git.ipfire.org/cgi-bin/gitweb.cgi?a=commitdiff_plain;h=34023817cb0225b50779a546a58e057e5e920d2c;p=thirdparty%2Fcoreutils.git doc: add details on ln --relative symlink resolution * doc/coreutils.texi (ln invocation): Describe how symlinks are resolved with --relative, and give an example showing the greater control available through realpath(1). * tests/ln/relative.sh: Add a test to demonstrate full symlink resolution, in a case where it might not be wanted. --- diff --git a/doc/coreutils.texi b/doc/coreutils.texi index dfa9b1c21e..4cfe4c50ce 100644 --- a/doc/coreutils.texi +++ b/doc/coreutils.texi @@ -9798,8 +9798,24 @@ ln -srv /a/file /tmp '/tmp/file' -> '../a/file' @end smallexample +Relative symbolic links are generated based on their canonicalized +containing directory, and canonicalized targets. I.E. all symbolic +links in these file names will be resolved. @xref{realpath invocation}, which gives greater control -over relative file name generation. +over relative file name generation, as demonstrated in the following example: + +@example +@verbatim +ln--relative() { + test "$1" = --no-symlinks && { nosym=$1; shift; } + target="$1"; + test -d "$2" && link="$2/." || link="$2" + rtarget="$(realpath $nosym -m "$target" \ + --relative-to "$(dirname "$link")")" + ln -s -v "$rtarget" "$link" +} +@end verbatim +@end example @item -s @itemx --symbolic diff --git a/tests/ln/relative.sh b/tests/ln/relative.sh index 818da8392d..8d4f1e7e0d 100755 --- a/tests/ln/relative.sh +++ b/tests/ln/relative.sh @@ -34,4 +34,15 @@ ln -s dir1/dir2/f existing_link ln -srf here existing_link test $(readlink existing_link) = 'here' || fail=1 +# Demonstrate resolved symlinks used to generate relative links +# so here, 'web/latest' will not be linked to the intermediate 'latest' link. +# You'd probably want to use realpath(1) in conjunction +# with ln(1) without --relative to give greater control. +ln -s release1 alpha +ln -s release2 beta +ln -s beta latest +mkdir web +ln -sr latest web/latest +test $(readlink web/latest) = '../release2' || fail=1 + Exit $fail