Hello, You can't use the mount --bind call to mount more than one directory or file at a time. In other words, you can only specify a single source and a single target. If you want to have all subdirectories available in a single directory, I suggest using the "ln" command to create symbolic links to the directories you are attempting to access. Equal causes can produce very unequal effects. Joseph C. Lininger jbahm at pcdesk.net Verification: 5eab38a77ac40416e075be8f50607ff7 And so it came to pass that on Wed, 15 Jun 2005, Steve Dawes said > Can anyone give me any suggestions as to how they would resolve the > following: > > I have four directories, let's call them 1 2 3 4. > Now what I would like to do is have the contents of these directories > available in a single directory tree, let's call it alldirs. > > I am quite familiar with mount --bind and its strengths, but I cannot figure > out how . > For example, mount --bind 1 alldirs, will expose the contents of 1 in > alldirs, as though the contents of 1 are actually now in alldirs. > However, I cannot figure how to do something similar that would allow me to > combine four directories into one directory tree. > I have tried: > mount --bind 1,2,3,4 alldirs > mount --bind 1 2 3 4 alldirs > mount --bind 1:2:3:4 alldirs > and none of these work. > > Any ideas? > > Steve > > Steve Dawes > Calgary Canada. > > > _______________________________________________ > Speakup mailing list > Speakup at braille.uwo.ca > http://speech.braille.uwo.ca/mailman/listinfo/speakup >