Easiest way to explain the difference is: Hard links must exist on the same file system (ie: partition) and soft links (symlinks) can exist across partition boundaries. There are other differences but that is the biggest that you might care about. As explained below a hard link is a pointer to data that is already on the drive. The name can be the same or different. With a hard link if the original link is deleted the data remains accessible via the other hard links. With a soft link if the original link is deleted the data is gone and you have what is known as a hanging sym link, that is a soft link that is now pointing at nothing. There are tools to scan your drives to locate and delete hanging links. You would be surprised how many hanging soft links can accumulate over time! There are more differences but I'll leave that to you to discover. Cheers, Davidm On Wed, 2002-12-18 at 11:36, Mike Starke wrote: > /_> From what I've interpreted from a combination of the info/man pages on ln, it > /_> seems that without the -s it is just another command for copy. > /_> > /_> Is this correct? > /_ > /_With a hard link, you have pointers to the same data saved at some > /_particular location on the disk. So it's technically not a copy. > /_~M > /_ > I must admit, I too, never fully understood the differance between > soft & hard links. > > -Mike > --------------------------------------------------- > PLUG-discuss mailing list - PLUG-discuss@lists.plug.phoenix.az.us > To subscribe, unsubscribe, or to change you mail settings: > http://lists.PLUG.phoenix.az.us/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss -- David IS Mandala gpg fingerprint 8932 E7EF CCF5 1B8C 1B5C A92E C678 795E 45B2 D952 Phoenix, AZ (480) 460-7546 HP, (602) 321-8277 CP http://www.them.com/~davidm/