Does that check the target of the symlink, or the path to the link itself? I
think the OP was checking the target (or I misunderstood).
--
Stephen Ulmer
Sent from a mobile device; please excuse auto-correct silliness.
> On Mar 8, 2021, at 3:34 PM, Jonathan Buzzard
> wrote:
>
> On
On 08/03/2021 20:45, Jonathan Buzzard wrote:
[SNIP]
So noting that you can write very SQL like statements something like the
following should in theory do it
RULE finddangling LIST dangle WHERE MISC_ATTRIBUTES='L' AND
SUBSTR(PATH_NAME,0,4)='/fs1/'
Note the above is not checked in any way
On 08/03/2021 16:07, Frederick Stock wrote:
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Presumably the only feature that would help here is if policy could
determine that the end location pointed to by a symbolic link is within
the current
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- Original message -From: "Oesterlin, Robert" Sent by: gpfsug-discuss-boun...@spectrumscale.orgTo: gpfsug main discussion list Cc:Subject: [EXTERNAL] Re: [gpfsug-discuss] Policy scan of symbolic links with con
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Subject: [EXTERNAL] Re: [gpfsug-discuss] Policy scan of symbolic links with
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Could
quot; Sent by: gpfsug-discuss-boun...@spectrumscale.orgTo: gpfsug main discussion list Cc:Subject: [EXTERNAL] [gpfsug-discuss] Policy scan of symbolic links with contents?Date: Mon, Mar 8, 2021 10:12 AM
Looking to craft a policy scan that pulls out symbolic links to a particular destination. For instanc
Looking to craft a policy scan that pulls out symbolic links to a particular
destination. For instance:
file1.py -> /fs1/patha/pathb/file1.py (I want to include these)
file2.py -> /fs2/patha/pathb/file2.py (exclude these)
The easy way would be to pull out all sym-links and just grep for the