Difference between revisions of "Working with Filenames and Path and Globing"

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|It looks like there are many files, but those are actually just a simulation that allows you a direct view into some kernel data. E.g. try '''cat /proc/cpu''' to see your CPUs.
 
|It looks like there are many files, but those are actually just a simulation that allows you a direct view into some kernel data. E.g. try '''cat /proc/cpu''' to see your CPUs.
 
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|/
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|/var
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|If programs need to store data they should put it here. (/usr is for data that is only read and not written)
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|/
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|/tmp
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|Temporary files - usually deleted on startup.
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Revision as of 09:04, 22 March 2020

Motivation

Here you will get an rough overview of where to find things in the file system and how to navigate the file system.

File System Hierarchy

In Unix/Linux the Top of the file system is the root directory named /. There are no drive letters as you know them from a certain other operating system. What you find below is a structure that exists since the early days of Unix. Here are the most important directories and what they are used for in Linux.

Filsystem Hierarchy
/ everything starts here.
/etc System-wide configuration files.
/usr Program Files (executable, libraries and files the programs need)
/bin System programs
/lib Important system libraries
/sbin Important system programs that usually only the root user needs
/usr/lib libraries for user programs
/usr/local Stuff that is not part of your linux distribution, things you installed locally
/opt Optional - used if you do not want to follow the filesystem standard
/mnt A place where you would want to mount extra filesystems
/media Below /media the system automatically mounts your CD drive or your USB thumb drive, ...
/home Every regular user of the system has their home directory below /home. E.g /home/anna
/root Only the root user has his/her home directory here.
/dev Here you find device files which are placeholders to directly access almost any hardware on our system. E.g. you could directly read the naked hard-drive.
/proc It looks like there are many files, but those are actually just a simulation that allows you a direct view into some kernel data. E.g. try cat /proc/cpu to see your CPUs.
/var If programs need to store data they should put it here. (/usr is for data that is only read and not written)
/tmp Temporary files - usually deleted on startup.