They are not a way of concatinating directories. They are a way of having a file exist in one place, and having another, sort of virtual file, exist in another place, that references the original file. That is called a link. There are hard links, and sym links. For example: Say you created: /var/www/1.txt Now, for convenience, you want that same file to appear in your home directory. You could just copy it, but then changes to one, would not take effect in the other. So instead, you create a link: ln -s /var/www/1.txt ~/myfile.txt Let us also say, that a user called John, wanted the same file, only called "anotherfile.txt", in his home directory: ln -s /var/www/1.txt ~john/otherfile.txt Now, every time you access myfile.txt, or otherfile.txt, you are actually accessing 1.txt. Regards, Luke On Mon, 13 Oct 2003, Rejean Proulx wrote: > While trying to configure Mailman it gave me a choice. Add a line to a > configuration file or create a symlink in var/www I'd rather create a > symlink in /var/www, but I don't know how to create a symlink. I think > symlinks are a way of concatenating directories. How do I create a symlink? > > Rejean Proulx > Visit my family at http://interfree.ca > MSN is: rejp at rogers.com > Ham License VA3REJ > > > > _______________________________________________ > Speakup mailing list > Speakup at braille.uwo.ca > http://speech.braille.uwo.ca/mailman/listinfo/speakup > -- Want a free month of internet access on a great ISP? Go here: http://www.tacticus.com/net/