user following the link.
CDPN variables can be used in any path name, not just with symbolic links. However, the
CDPN variable name cannot be combined with other characters to form an actual directory or
file name. The CDPN variable must be used alone as one segment of a complete path.
Usage
For a Normal Symbolic Link
ln -s TargetLinkName
Target
Specifies an existing file or directory on a file system.
LinkName
Specifies a name to represent the real file or directory on the other end of the link.
For a Variable Symbolic Link
ln -s VariableLinkName
Variable
Specifies a special reserved name from a list of values (refer to
Table 4.5, “CDPN
Variable
Values”
) to represent one of multiple existing files or directories. This string is not the name
of an actual file or directory itself. (The real files or directories must be created in a separate
step using names that correlate with the type of variable used.)
LinkName
Specifies a name that will be seen and used by applications and will be followed to get to
one of the multiple real files or directories. When
LinkName
is followed, the destination
depends on the type of variable and the node or user doing the following.
Variable
Description
@hostname
This variable resolves to a real file or directory named with the
hostname string produced by the output of the following command:
echo `uname -n`
@mach
This variable resolves to a real file or directory name with the
machine-type string produced by the output of the following
command:
echo `uname -m`
@os
This variable resolves to a real file or directory named with the
operating-system name string produced by the output of the
Usage
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