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MV(1)			    General Commands Manual			 MV(1)

NAME
       mv -- move files

SYNOPSIS
       mv [-f |	-i | -n] [-hv] source target
       mv [-f |	-i | -n] [-v] source ... directory

DESCRIPTION
       In  its first form, the mv utility renames the file named by the	source
       operand to the destination path named by	the target operand.  This form
       is assumed when the last	operand	does not name an already existing  di-
       rectory.

       In  its	second form, mv	moves each file	named by a source operand to a
       destination file	in the	existing  directory  named  by	the  directory
       operand.	  The  destination  path for each operand is the pathname pro-
       duced by	the concatenation of the last operand, a slash,	and the	 final
       pathname	component of the named file.

       The following options are available:

       -f      Do  not prompt for confirmation before overwriting the destina-
	       tion path.  (The	-f option overrides any	previous -i or -n  op-
	       tions.)

       -h      If the target operand is	a symbolic link	to a directory,	do not
	       follow  it.   This  causes  the	mv  utility to rename the file
	       source to the destination path target rather than moving	source
	       into the	directory referenced by	target.

       -i      Cause mv	to write a prompt to standard error  before  moving  a
	       file  that  would  overwrite an existing	file.  If the response
	       from the	standard input begins with the character `y'  or  `Y',
	       the  move  is attempted.	 (The -i option	overrides any previous
	       -f or -n	options.)

       -n      Do not overwrite	an existing file.  (The	 -n  option  overrides
	       any previous -f or -i options.)

       -v      Cause mv	to be verbose, showing files after they	are moved.

       It  is  an  error  for the source operand to specify a directory	if the
       target exists and is not	a directory.

       If the destination path does not	have a mode which permits writing,  mv
       prompts the user	for confirmation as specified for the -i option.

       As  the rename(2) call does not work across file	systems, mv uses cp(1)
       and rm(1) to accomplish the move.  The effect is	equivalent to:

	     rm	-f destination_path && \
	     cp	-pRP source_file destination &&	\
	     rm	-rf source_file

EXIT STATUS
       The mv utility exits 0 on success, and >0 if an error occurs.

EXAMPLES
       Rename file foo to bar, overwriting bar if it already exists:

	     $ mv -f foo bar

COMPATIBILITY
       The -h, -n, and -v options are non-standard and their use in scripts is
       not recommended.

SEE ALSO
       cp(1), rm(1), symlink(7)

STANDARDS
       The mv utility is expected to be	IEEE Std 1003.2	 ("POSIX.2")  compati-
       ble.

HISTORY
       A mv command appeared in	Version	1 AT&T UNIX.

FreeBSD	13.2			March 15, 2013				 MV(1)

NAME | SYNOPSIS | DESCRIPTION | EXIT STATUS | EXAMPLES | COMPATIBILITY | SEE ALSO | STANDARDS | HISTORY

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