Hi Lukasz, The only reason to treat /dev/null differently is because you really can't remove it. It's a special system file and because it is special many people think it should be treated as such. So, the -f flag is sort of strange in this particular case. Andy On Thu, 3 Sep 2015, Lukasz Janyst wrote: > `xrdcp` warns you if you overwrite existing files. `/dev/null` is not a directory, it is a file that happens to represent a character device that will accept an infinite amount of data, the same as `/dev/sda1` is a file representing a block device - the first partition of your SCSI disk. I don't see why `/dev/null` should be treated any different than other files. > > --- > Reply to this email directly or view it on GitHub: > https://github.com/xrootd/xrootd/issues/284#issuecomment-137602349 --- Reply to this email directly or view it on GitHub: https://github.com/xrootd/xrootd/issues/284#issuecomment-137606573 ######################################################################## Use REPLY-ALL to reply to list To unsubscribe from the XROOTD-DEV list, click the following link: https://listserv.slac.stanford.edu/cgi-bin/wa?SUBED1=XROOTD-DEV&A=1