#!/usr/local/bin/perl # mklink.pl # The first command line argument is a non-empty relative path # specifying the "from" directory. # Each other argument is a file name not containing / and # names a file in the current directory. # # For each of these files, we create in the "from" directory a link # of the same name pointing to the local file. # # We assume that the directory structure is a tree, i.e. that it does # not contain symbolic links and that the parent of / is never referenced. # Apart from this, this script should be able to handle even the most # pathological cases. my $from = shift; my @files = @ARGV; my @from_path = split(/\//, $from); my $pwd = `pwd`; chop($pwd); my @pwd_path = split(/\//, $pwd); my @to_path = (); my $dirname; foreach $dirname (@from_path) { # In this loop, @to_path always is a relative path from # @pwd_path (interpreted is an absolute path) to the original pwd. # At the end, @from_path (as a relative path from the original pwd) # designates the same directory as the absolute path @pwd_path, # which means that @to_path then is a path from there to the original pwd. next if ($dirname eq "" || $dirname eq "."); if ($dirname eq "..") { @to_path = (pop(@pwd_path), @to_path); } else { @to_path = ("..", @to_path); push(@pwd_path, $dirname); } } my $to = join('/', @to_path); my $file; $symlink_exists=eval {symlink("",""); 1}; foreach $file (@files) { my $err = ""; if ($symlink_exists) { symlink("$to/$file", "$from/$file") or $err = " [$!]"; } else { system ("cp", "$file", "$from/$file") and $err = " [$!]"; } print $file . " => $from/$file$err\n"; }