Hello. There is in the fileutils.info:
Trailing slashes ================ Some GNU programs (at least `cp' and `mv') allow you to remove any trailing slashes from each SOURCE argument before operating on it. The `--strip-trailing-slashes' option enables this behavior. This is useful when a SOURCE argument may have a trailing slash and specify a symbolic link to a directory. This scenario is in fact rather common because some shells can automatically append a trailing slash when performing file name completion on such symbolic links. Without this option, `mv', for example, (via the system's rename function) must interpret a trailing slash as a request to dereference the symbolic link and so must rename the indirectly referenced _directory_ and not the symbolic link. Although it may seem surprising that such behavior be the default, it is required by POSIX.2 and is consistent with other parts of that standard. I have tried this: export POSIXLY_CORRECT=1 mkdir mv_test cd mv_test mkdir a c ln -s a b mv -v b/ c alias mv which mv I expected, as is written, that the directory a will be moved into directory c (the symbolic link b to directory a will be dereferenced), but the link b has been moved. There is no alias for mv, mv resides in /bin. Best regards Hans Ginzel -- Using Debian GNU/Linux Woody 3.0. _______________________________________________ Bug-fileutils mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://mail.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/bug-fileutils