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+---
+layout: page
+category-page: fs
+category-title: FileSystem
+tags: link symbolic hard file shortcut
+author: Riccardo Antonio Vivanco
+title: ln
+---
+
+The ln
command is used to create a link of a file or directory.
+A link is used to create multiple copies of a file in
+different places without using more storage than that needed to store a single copy
+of the given file.
+The copies are instead a link that points to the original file. If the original is deleted,
+the copies will point to a non-existant file and become pointless.
+The name of the command stands for LiNk
+
+There are 2 kinds of links: hard and symbolic.
+
+In an hard link, the original is indistinguishable from the linked copy, and the changes
+made to the file are the same, regardless of whether the modified file is the
+original or the linked copy. Hard links are not used for directories.
+ln
creates hard links by default
+
+The symbolic link (symlink) instead contains the path to the original file and referencing the linked copy
+will make the referencer point to the original file instead.
+
+
+ln [flags] [source1] [source2] ... [target_dir] +ln [flags] [source] [target] +link [source] [target] ++ +The
link
command can be used instead of ln
, but flags and multiple
+source files won't be supported.