As Biffen stated, the arguments to ln
are target first, then the link name. man ln
shows:
SYNOPSIS
ln [OPTION]... [-T] TARGET LINK_NAME (1st form)
ln [OPTION]... TARGET (2nd form)
ln [OPTION]... TARGET... DIRECTORY (3rd form)
ln [OPTION]... -t DIRECTORY TARGET... (4th form)
Assuming that 'var/www/html/dell' (the directory where you want the link) is the current working directory, you don't even need to specify the link name as you want it to be the same as the target: ln -s ../../../assets
Although, personally I am in the habit of specifying the destination directory: ln -s ../../../assets .
If you really wanted to have the arguments in the order which you were using, you could use the -t
option: ln -s -t . ../../../assets
However, in that case you are specifying a directory, not the name of the link. To force the specifying the name of the link instead of a directory, use the -T
option.
If you are not sure how a command works both the man
, and info
commands are available to provide information. It is not uncommon to use either an additional command window to show the man/help information while you are working, or to use job control to have the information available in the same command instance.