Hi Kevin: On Thu, Aug 12, 2010 at 4:17 PM, keith smith wrote: > > Hi, > > For some reason I just don't get the cp command. Maybe it is the deep > rooted MS DOS from the 80's and 90's. I spent about a decade using MS DOS. > > Here is what is going on. I am in a CentOS box and do not ever become > root. I use sudo. > > I want to copy one MySql DB to another so I can use the data for testing. > > 1) I cd to /var/lib/mysql > 2) I can see both DB's > 3) I issue any number of commands that do not work. > > Lets say DB1 is the source directory & DB2 is the destination directory > > mysql]$ sudo cp DB1/*.* DB2/ Results: cp: cannot stat `DB1/*.*': No such > file or directory > > mysql]$ sudo cp DB1/* DB2/ Results: cp: cannot stat `DB1/*': No such file > or directory > > mysql]$ sudo cp DB1/ DB2/ Results: creates the directory DB1 under DB2 and > copies all the files into DB2/DB1 > > mysql]$ sudo cp DB1 DB2/ Results: does not seem to do anything. > > http://www.computerhope.com/unix/ucp.htm shows this example: cp -r > /home/hope/files/* /home/hope/backup > > mysql]$ sudo cp -r /var/lib/mysql/DB1/* /var/lib/mysql/DB2 - cp: cannot > stat `/var/lib/mysql/baseline/*': No such file or directory > > This is driving me crazy. Any help much appreciated! > > ------------------------ > Keith Smith > > Linux is exactly like a good domestic or business partner, telling you very clearly directly and completely what an issue might be. It it says: cannot stat `/var/lib/mysql/baseline/*': No such file or directory There IS not such file or directory. Did you run a nice: ls -al first to determine what was there? You can use the TAB key to autocomplete your commands, which is very useful for linux. It sounds like you might actually want a mysqldump and import instead? -- Office: (602)239-3392 AT&T: (503)754-4452 http://it-clowns.com "Faith is, at one and the same time, absolutely necessary and altogether impossible. " --Stanislav Lem