Two questions: Moving Directories, Ctrl-Z

Earnie Boyd earnie_boyd@yahoo.com
Sun Mar 18 06:03:00 GMT 2001


Mark Allan Young wrote:
> 
> > On Fri, Mar 16, 2001 at 07:16:31PM -0800, Mark Allan Young wrote:
> > >> On Fri, Mar 16, 2001 at 04:44:31PM -0800, Mark Allan Young wrote:
> > >> >One thing I've noticed that changed with our recent upgrade
> > >> >to 1.1.8 was that moving a directory now seems to perform a copy
> > >> >and remove rather than just renaming a directory.  Is there a way
> > >> >to just force the rename?  what's the benefit of the copy over the
> > >> >rename?
> > >>
> > >> I just tried this.  An "mv" in cygwin moves the directory without
> > >> copying.
> > >>
> > >> If it isn't doing this for you we'll need details.
> > >
> > >I tried this again and it started to do a copy...
> > >
> > >then I looked around my system and found another cygwin window
> > >opened to a directory within the directory that I was trying to
> > >move.
> >
> > Ok.  The official answer to this problem is "Don't do that."
> 
> Doesn't seem right to me.  I'd rather it not take several minutes
> to copy a large directory...  As I said in my previous message, if
> the command knows enough to realize that it must do a recursive
> copy/unlink, I'd rather it just say "Can't." or "Won't." or even
> "EFILEBUSY"  :-).
> 

Another reason for copy/unlink is if you mv from one device to another. 
Please also note that the underlying API is Win32.  Cygwin uses the
native Win32 API to affect it's functions.  And, let me say that I would
rather that it attempted to do as much as possible and act like UNIX
than to not do anything.

Earnie.

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