> The basic algorithm for to copy in a _file_ (not a directory, pipe, et al) is:
> 
>    read $i     # actually, this is the cpio header data (inode info) for the
>                # file, which is followed in a cpio archive by the file itself
>    if [ -e $i ]
>    then rm -f $i
	  ^^^^^

	wait a second here! cpio is supposed to *copy* files, not *move*
them. the man page repeatedly uses the word 'copy', and never mentions
anything about 'delete'.

>    fi
>    cat input > $i  # the file size is in the cpio header
> 
> Note that in your last cpio example (the one where the file disappears),
> your sources for the copy are also your target.

	ok. bad example. but it holds even when the source is in a tree
adjacent to the current directory:

chrome at steel:/var/tmp/test$ dir
total 8.0k
drwxr-xr-x    2 chrome   chrome       4.0k Aug  5 08:13 ./
drwxrwxrwt    4 root     root         4.0k Aug  5 06:26 ../
-rw-r--r--    1 chrome   chrome          0 Aug  5 08:12 file1
-rw-r--r--    1 chrome   chrome          0 Aug  5 08:13 file2
-rw-r--r--    1 chrome   chrome          0 Aug  5 08:13 file3
-rw-r--r--    1 chrome   chrome          0 Aug  5 08:13 file4
chrome at steel:/var/tmp/test$ cd -
/var/tmp/try
chrome at steel:/var/tmp/try$ find ../test/|cpio -padmuv .
./../test/
cpio: ../test/file1: No such file or directory
cpio: ../test/file2: No such file or directory
cpio: ../test/file3: No such file or directory
cpio: ../test/file4: No such file or directory
0 blocks
chrome at steel:/var/tmp/try$ dir /var/tmp/test/
total 8.0k
drwxr-xr-x    2 chrome   chrome       4.0k Aug  5 08:13 ./
drwxrwxrwt    4 root     root         4.0k Aug  5 06:26 ../

Carl Soderstrom
-- 
Network Engineer
Real-Time Enterprises
(952) 943-8700