CPMAC(1) BSD General Commands Manual CPMAC(1)NAME
/usr/bin/CpMac — copy files preserving metadata and forks
SYNOPSIS
/usr/bin/CpMac [-rp] [-mac] source target
/usr/bin/CpMac [-rp] [-mac] source ... directory
DESCRIPTION
In its first form, the /usr/bin/CpMac utility copies the contents of 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 directory.
In its second form, /usr/bin/CpMac copies each file named by a source op‐
erand to a destination directory named by the directory operand. The
destination path for each operand is the pathname produced by the con‐
catenation of the last operand, a slash, and the final pathname component
of the named file.
The following options are available:
-r If source designates a directory, /usr/bin/CpMac copies the direc‐
tory and the entire subtree connected at that point. This option
also causes symbolic links to be copied, rather than indirected
through, and for /usr/bin/CpMac to create special files rather than
copying them as normal files. Created directories have the same
mode as the corresponding source directory, unmodified by the
process' umask.
-p Causes /usr/bin/CpMac to preserve in the copy as many of the modi‐
fication time, access time, file flags, file mode, user ID, and
group ID as allowed by permissions.
-mac Allows use of HFS-style paths for both source and target. Path
elements must be separated by colons, and the path must begin with
a volume name or a colon (to designate current directory).
NOTES
The /usr/bin/CpMac command does not support the same options as the POSIX
cp command, and is much less flexible in its operands. It cannot be used
as a direct substitute for cp in scripts.
As of Mac OS X 10.4, the cp command preserves metadata and resource forks
of files on Extended HFS volumes, so it can be used in place of CpMac.
The /usr/bin/CpMac command will be deprecated in future versions of Mac
OS X.
SEE ALSOcp(1)MvMac(1)Mac OS X April 12, 2004 Mac OS X