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UNIX has a tree-like file system starting at the
highest level with a directory called root (referred
to as /). A directory on Unix is similar to a folder
on a microcomputer. The structure and content of many
of the directories is similar on various UNIX
implementations. That is, the user does not decide
how to set up all of the directories. There is a
preset meaning to certain directories. Directories
like bin, usr and etc contain certain system level
information and are maintained by a system
administrator. The figure below displays the
uppermost levels of some of the directories.

The directory you will be most interested in is
your home directory and that will be found somewhere
under the /home directory path.
Viewing contents of your
directory
Use the "ls" command for a simple
listing of your files, as shown in the example
below:
$ ls
assem.cpp cs2xxx classes create
Use the "ls -l" command to view more
extensive information about the files.
$ ls -l
-rw-r----- 1 juser user 14769 Feb 3 19:38 assem.cpp
-rw-r----- 1 juser user 5708 Jan 14 20:37 cd.txt
drwxr-x--- 4 juser user 8192 Mar 29 19:20 classes
-rw-r----- 1 juser user 2688 Feb 3 19:38 create
lrwxr-xr-x 1 juser user 30 Mar 29 19:20 cs2xxx ->/home/classes/cs2xxx/juser
A B C D E F
A File types and permissions
(see next figure)
B Indicates the owner of the file
C Indicates the group that can
access the file.
D Gives the size of the file in
bytes
E Gives the date and time that the
file was last modified
F File name. For symbolic links
(like cs2xxx above) shows the file being pointed
to
Relationship between a personal directory
and the class directory
You will be issued one permanent personal bgunix
account that you will use for both class and personal
use for as long as you are at BGSU. For each CS class
you take you will need to issue a special command to
"join" the class. Class accounts are
created in another directory but, for ease of
navigation, a symbolic link is placed in your home
directory to allow you to easily access the class
directory that has been assigned to you. At the end
of the semester the symbolic link will be replaced
with a directory containing all of your work for that
class. This allows you to save your work in your own
home directory once the semester is finished.
How to refer to directories
The following example shows ways for juser to go
to the class directory.
|
Absolute path |
Relative path |
| Description |
path always begins with root (/) |
starts looking in current directory |
| Examples |
cd /home/99/juser/cs2xxx
cd /home/classes/cs2xxx/juser
|
cd cs2xxx
|
| Result |
Either command can be used from anywhere
since each gives complete information about the
location of the directory |
This command can be used only within
juser's home directory (/home/99/juser) |
Other directory commands
The following commands, given in the Unix Overview, relate to
directories: cd (change to a new default directory),
mkdir (create a new directory), pwd (display the
current default directory), rmdir (remove a
directory).
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