On Fri, 18 Sep 2020 09:41:56 +0200
"'Felix Fontein' via Ansible Development"
Ok, I'll look into that.
> --links, -l
> When symlinks are encountered, recreate the symlink on the
> destination.
>
> --copy-links, -L
> When symlinks are encountered, the item that they point to (the
> referent) is copied, rather than the symlink. [...]
I still don't understand why both exist, they appear to be mutually
exclusive.
Or is --links intended to copy links, and --copy-links to copy files,
i.e., they are designed to achieve the opposite of each other? In that
case, I do not understand why ansible offers to turn off or on both of
them independently. That might also explain why setting "links: no" in
ansible does not change the behaviour as expected (because the
underlying rsync option is just removed, but that does not force any
other behaviour).
cu
Gerrit