Path: utzoo!mnetor!uunet!yale!moran-william From: moran-william@CS.Yale.EDU (William L. Moran Jr.) Newsgroups: comp.unix.wizards Subject: an rm question Message-ID: <27133@yale-celray.yale.UUCP> Date: 14 Apr 88 06:08:37 GMT Sender: root@yale.UUCP Reply-To: moran-william@CS.Yale.EDU (William L. Moran Jr.) Organization: Yale University - Dept. of Computer Science Lines: 17 I managed to create a file whose name contained bizarre characters; in fact, they were so bizarre that rm * wouldn't remove them (oh well, porting arc is a nasty business), I got a nonexistent file message. Anyway, since the directory they were in was junk I went up one dir and did an 'rm -r' on the directory, and that worked. So, being the curious sort, I went to the BSD sources and took a look; however, I can't figure out why the rm -r worked when the other didn't. I would appreciate any explanation. BTW the original problem was on a Xenix system, so I would probably accept a "Xenix is f***ed" explanation. :) William L. Moran Jr. moran@{yale.arpa, cs.yale.edu, yalecs.bitnet} ...{ihnp4!hsi,decvax}!yale!moran A man who could reason like that could not reason at all. Lord Peter Wimsey