bash: difference between //c/ and c:/
Corinna Vinschen
cygwin@cygwin.com
Thu Mar 15 10:17:00 GMT 2001
On Thu, Mar 15, 2001 at 06:02:54PM +0100, Ralf Fassel wrote:
> * Corinna Vinschen
> | Bash is a UNIX shell. Why not using UNIX paths?
>
> Because we use non-Cygwin programs which don't grok /cygwin pathnames.
> Unfortunately, there is a world besides cygwin.
>
> $ cl t.c -o t
> Microsoft (R) 32-bit C/C++ Optimizing Compiler Version 11.00.7022 for 80x86
> ...
> $ ./t /cygdrive/c/autoexec.bat c:/autoexec.bat
> 1: /cygdrive/c/autoexec.bat: fopen failed
> 2: c:/autoexec.bat: fopen succeeded
>
> | Actually not C:/ is deprictaed but //c! The syntax is ambiguous
> | since that could also address a SMB server. We may decide to
> | eliminate that syntax for local drives completely in the future.
>
> Uh, please don't... :-/ Aren't single letter SMB servers rather rare?
>
> | Use the /cygdrive/c syntax instead.
>
> As I described in another mail, this currently breaks my openssh
> installation, so I stick with //c for now.
Why don't you mount your drives and drop the double slash:
mount -f -s -b C: /c
...
Corinna
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Corinna Vinschen Please, send mails regarding Cygwin to
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Red Hat, Inc.
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