



(10 ratings)
The root directory. The starting point of your directory structure. This is where the Linux system begins. Every other file and directory on your system is under the root directory. Usually the root directory contains only subdirectories, so it's a bad idea to store single files directly under root.
Don't confuse the root directory with the root user account, root password (which obviously is the root user's password) or root user's home directory.
< /boot >
As
the name suggests, this is the place where Linux keeps information that
it needs when booting up. For example, this is where the Linux kernel
is kept. If you list the contents of /boot, you'll see a file called vmlinuz - that's the kernel.
< /etc >
The configuration files for the Linux system. Most of these files are text files and can be edited by hand. Some interesting stuff in this directory:
/etc/inittab
A text file that describes what processes are started at system bootup
and during normal operation. For example, here you can determine if you
want the X Window System to start automatically at bootup, and
configure what happens when a user presses Ctrl+Alt+Del.
/etc/fstab
This file contains descriptive information about the various file
systems and their mount points, like floppies, cdroms, and so on.
/etc/passwd
A file that contains various pieces of information for each user account. This is where the users are defined.
< /bin, /usr/bin >
These two directories contain a lot of programs (binaries, hence the directory's name) for the system. The /bin directory contains the most important programs that the system needs to operate, such as the shells, ls, grep, and other essential things. /usr/bin
in turn contains applications for the system's users. However, in some
cases it really doesn't make much difference if you put the program in /bin or /usr/bin.
< /sbin, /usr/sbin >
Most system administration programs are stored in these directories. In many cases you must run these programs as the root user.
< /usr >
This
directory contains user applications and a variety of other things for
them, like their source codes, and pictures, docs, or config files they
use. /usr is the largest directory on a Linux system, and some people like to have it on a separate partition. Some interesting stuff in /usr:
/usr/doc
Documentation for the user apps, in many file formats.
/usr/share
Config files and graphics for many user apps.
/usr/src
Source code files for the system's software, including the Linux kernel.
/usr/include
Header files for the C compiler. The header files define structures and
constants that are needed for building most standard programs. A
subdirectory under /usr/include contains headers for the C++ compiler.
/usr/X11R6
The X Window System and things for it. The subdirectories under /usr/X11R6
may contain some X binaries themselves, as well as documentation,
header files, config files, icons, sounds, and other things related to
the graphical programs.
< /usr/local >
This is where you install apps and other files for use on the local machine. If your machine is a part of a network, the /usr
directory may physically be on another machine and can be shared by
many networked Linux workstations. On this kind of a network, the /usr/local
directory contains only stuff that is not supposed to be used on many
machines and is intended for use at the local machine only.
Most likely your machine isn't a part of a network like this, but it doesn't mean that /usr/local is useless. If you find interesting apps that aren't officially a part of your distro, you should install them in /usr/local. For example, if the app would normally go to /usr/bin but it isn't a part of your distro, you should install it in /usr/local/bin
instead. When you keep your own programs away from the programs that
are included in your distro, you'll avoid confusion and keep things
nice and clean.
< /lib >
The shared libraries for programs that are dynamically linked. The shared libraries are similar to DLL's on Winblows.
< /home >
This is where users keep their personal files. Every user has their own directory under /home,
and usually it's the only place where normal users are allowed to write
files. You can configure a Linux system so that normal users can't even
list the contents of other users' home directories. This means that if
your family members have their own user accounts on your Linux system,
they won't see all the w4r3z you keep in your home directory. ;-)
< /root >
The superuser's (root's) home directory. Don't confuse this with the root directory (/) of a Linux system.
< /var >
This directory contains variable data that changes constantly when the system is running. Some interesting subdirectories:
/var/log
A directory that contains system log files. They're updated when the
system runs, and checking them out can give you valuable info about the
health of your system. If something in your system suddenly goes wrong,
the log files may contain some info about the situation.
/var/mail
Incoming and outgoing mail is stored in this directory.
/var/spool
This directory holds files that are queued for some process, like printing.
< /tmp >
Programs can write their temporary files here.
< /dev >
The
devices that are available to a Linux system. Remember that in Linux,
devices are treated like files and you can read and write devices like
they were files. For example, /dev/fd0 is your first floppy drive, /dev/cdrom is your CD drive, /dev/hda is the first IDE hard drive, and so on. All the devices that a Linux kernel can understand are located under /dev, and that's why it contains hundreds of entries.
< /mnt >
This directory is used for mount points. The different physical storage devices (like the hard disk drives, floppies, CD-ROM's) must be attached to some directory in the file system tree before they can be accessed. This attaching is called mounting, and the directory where the device is attached is called the mount point.
The /mnt directory contains mount points for different devices, like /mnt/floppy for the floppy drive, /mnt/cdrom for the CD-ROM, and so on. However, you're not forced to use the /mnt/floppy and /cdrom as mount points instead of directories under /mnt.
directory for this purpose, you can use whatever directory you wish.
Actually in some distros, like Debian and SuSE, the default is to use
< /proc >
This is a special directory. Well, actually /proc is just a virtual directory, because it doesn't exist at all! It contains some info about the kernel itself. There's a bunch of numbered entries that correspond to all processes running on the system, and there are also named entries that permit access to the current configuration of the system. Many of these entries can be viewed.
< /lost+found >
Here Linux keeps the files that it restores after a system crash or when a partition hasn't been unmounted before a system shutdown. This way you can recover files that would otherwise have been lost.
20 Random Tutorials from the same category :
What's a window manager?
How to set Shell Environment Variables (bash shell)
Linux XP - a joke becoming reality?
Redirecting standard input and output
Text scrolling off the screen?
Unix And C/C++ Runtime Memory Management For Programmers
Automating Program Compilation - Writing Makefiles
Asking questions in a discussion forum
Running multiple X sessions
Setup of Ensonic Sound Card (PCI Sound card)
How to change a file's owner and group in Linux
Understanding file permissions and modifying them using chmod
How to find files in Linux using 'find'
Multi-Threaded Programming With POSIX Threads
How to edit and understand /etc/fstab
Debugging "C" And "C++" Programs Using "gdb"
Parallel Programming - Basic Theory For The Unwary
Unix Multi-Process Programming and Inter-Process Communications (IPC)
Pipes - Get the most out of your shell
Introduction To Unix Signals Programming













