Hi Guys, On Sunday 20 November 2016 17:42:26 E. Liddell wrote: > On Sun, 20 Nov 2016 14:38:26 +0000 > > Baron <baron@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > Quick question. 32 Bit LinuxOS, Trinity 14.0. > > Is there a limit to directory depth ? if so what is it. > > I believe the limit is the length of the path in bytes, which will > vary according to what filesystem you're using, how your kernel is > configured, etc. > > What documentation I can find suggests 4096 bytes is often set as > the limit. So if you haven't done any special setup and you're > using single-character directory names on ext4 or similar, that's a > bit more than 2000 levels of nesting, although you might run out of > inodes or something first. Using sane directory names will give > you less depth: 7 characters -> ~500 levels. > > There is one exception to this: the filesystem normally used for > data CDs seems to have a hard-coded limit of eight directory levels > regardless of path length. > > E. Liddell I think this nails it ! I've been trying to backup a directory to a DVD and whilst the path gets copied the directory is empty and nothing gets recorded in it. Net result a DVD with an empty directory tree. Thanks both, your quick replies are appreciated. -- Best Regards: Baron --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: trinity-users-unsubscribe@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx For additional commands, e-mail: trinity-users-help@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx Read list messages on the web archive: http://trinity-users.pearsoncomputing.net/ Please remember not to top-post: http://trinity.pearsoncomputing.net/mailing_lists/#top-posting