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Linux

The document provides descriptions of important Linux directories: / contains the root directory where the file system begins and kernel/boot files are kept. /etc contains configuration files, /boot stores boot files, /usr contains user programs/files, /bin and /usr/bin contain essential programs, /sbin and /usr/sbin have system admin programs, /var stores changing logs/spooled files, /lib contains shared libraries, /home is for user files, /root is the superuser home, /tmp stores temporary files, /dev contains device files, /proc shows kernel processes/config, and /media and /mnt mount removable devices.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
51 views

Linux

The document provides descriptions of important Linux directories: / contains the root directory where the file system begins and kernel/boot files are kept. /etc contains configuration files, /boot stores boot files, /usr contains user programs/files, /bin and /usr/bin contain essential programs, /sbin and /usr/sbin have system admin programs, /var stores changing logs/spooled files, /lib contains shared libraries, /home is for user files, /root is the superuser home, /tmp stores temporary files, /dev contains device files, /proc shows kernel processes/config, and /media and /mnt mount removable devices.
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as ODT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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pwd ls cd cd .. cd .

/bin ls -a

Present work directory List directory Change directory to home directory Hacia el directorio superior Hacia el directorio abajo de el actual Show hidden file names Muestra un archivo Scroll back one page Scroll forward one page Go to the end of the text file Go to the beginning of the text file Search forward in the text file for an occurrence of the specified characters Repeat the previous search Display a complete list less commands and options Quit Tipo de archivo

less archivo Page Up or b Page Down or space G 1G /characters n h q file archivo

Directory
/

Description The root directory where the file system begins. In most cases the root directory only contains subdirectories. This is where the Linux kernel and boot loader files are kept. The kernel is a file called vmlinuz. The /etc directory contains the configuration files for the system. All of the files in /etc should be text files. Points of interest:
/etc/passwd The passwd file contains the essential information for each user. It is here that users

/boot

/etc

are defined.
/etc/fstab The fstab file contains a table of devices that get mounted when your system

boots. This file defines your disk drives.


/etc/hosts

This file lists the network host names and IP addresses that are intrinsically known to the system.
/etc/init.d

This directory contains the scripts that start various system services typically at boot time. These two directories contain most of the programs for the system. The /bindirectory has the essential programs that the system requires to operate, while/usr/bin contains applications for the system's users. The sbin directories contain programs for system administration, mostly for use by the superuser.

/bin, /usr/bin

/sbin, /usr/sbin

/usr

The /usr directory contains a variety of things that support user applications. Some highlights:
/usr/share/X11

Support files for the X Window system


/usr/share/dict

Dictionaries for the spelling checker. Bet you didn't know that Linux had a spelling checker. See look and aspell.
/usr/share/doc

Various documentation files in a variety of formats.


/usr/share/man

The man pages are kept here.


/usr/src

Source code files. If you installed the kernel source code package, you will find the entire Linux kernel source code here.
/usr/local and its subdirectories are used for the installation of software and other files

/usr/local

for use on the local machine. What this really means is that software that is not part of the official distribution (which usually goes in /usr/bin) goes here. When you find interesting programs to install on your system, they should be installed in one of the /usr/local directories. Most often, the directory of choice is /usr/local/bin.
/var

The /var directory contains files that change as the system is running. This includes:
/var/log

Directory that contains log files. These are updated as the system runs. You should view the files in this directory from time to time, to monitor the health of your system.
/var/spool

This directory is used to hold files that are queued for some process, such as mail messages and print jobs. When a user's mail first arrives on the local system (assuming you have local mail), the messages are first stored in /var/spool/mail The shared libraries (similar to DLLs in that other operating system) are kept here.
/home is where users keep their personal work. In general, this is the only place users are

/lib /home

allowed to write files. This keeps things nice and clean :-)
/root /tmp /dev

This is the superuser's home directory.


/tmp is a directory in which programs can write their temporary files.

The /dev directory is a special directory, since it does not really contain files in the usual sense. Rather, it contains devices that are available to the system. In Linux (like Unix), devices are treated like files. You can read and write devices as though they were files. For example /dev/fd0 is the first floppy disk drive,/dev/sda (/dev/hda on older systems) is the first hard drive. All the devices that the kernel understands are represented here.

/proc

The /proc directory is also special. This directory does not contain files. In fact, this directory does not really exist at all. It is entirely virtual. The /proc directory contains little peep holes into the kernel itself. There are a group of numbered entries in this directory that correspond to all the processes running on the system. In addition, there are a number of named entries that permit access to the current configuration of the system. Many of these entries can be viewed. Try viewing /proc/cpuinfo. This entry will tell you what the kernel thinks of your CPU. Finally, we come to /media, a normal directory which is used in a special way. The /media directory is used for mount points. As we learned in the second lesson, the different physical storage devices (like hard disk drives) are attached to the file system tree in various places. This process of attaching a device to the tree is called mounting. For a device to be available, it must first be mounted. When your system boots, it reads a list of mounting instructions in the file/etc/fstab, which describes which device is mounted at which mount point in the directory tree. This takes care of the hard drives, but you may also have devices that are considered temporary, such as CD-ROMs, thumb drives, and floppy disks. Since these are removable, they do not stay mounted all the time. The /media directory is used by the automatic device mounting mechanisms found in modern desktop oriented Linux distributions. On systems that require manual mounting of removable devices, the /mnt directory provides a convenient place for mounting these temporary devices. You will often see the directories /mnt/floppy and /mnt/cdrom. To see what devices and mount points are used, type mount.

/ media,/mnt

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