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Linux. Files. Files and directories. As in Windows directories are structures which contain Other directories Files. Root directory. Base directory All others are contained within this directory Not to be confuse with /root This is the home directory of the root user.
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Linux Files
Files and directories • As in Windows directories are structures which contain • Other directories • Files
Root directory • Base directory • All others are contained within this directory • Not to be confuse with /root • This is the home directory of the root user
Typical directories • /etc configuration • /var files that change (vary) such as logs • /home structure containing user home directories • /bin executables • /sbin root user executables • /usr regular user files • /tmp • /root • /boot • /dev used to access hardware resources • /lib system libraries
Shell • Command line environment • Like the Windows “DOS command line” • Prompt displayed • Enter a command and bit [enter] • Result (if any) returned, and next prompt displayed • Or.. Error message
Commands • pwd • print working directory • cd • change directory • mkdir • rmdir • ls • touch
cd • cd name • changes to the name directory • uses relative and absolute names • one dot refers to current directory • two dots refers to parent directory • forward slash ( / ) indicates a directory name • no slash indicates a subdirectory in the current directory
ls • lists the names of files in a directory • ls –l • long listing
touch • updates the time stamp of a file to that time • creates a new file (0 bytes) if the file does not exist
cp • copy cp file1 file2
rm • remove rm file1 • no “undelete” • file is not placed into a ‘recycle’ bin as in Windows
mv • move mv file1 file2 • can be used to rename a file • move it to a file with a different name
file • displays the type of file file myfilename • can be used to determine if the file is an executable or a “text” file which can be displayed using cat, more or less
cat • views the contents of a file • will scroll off the screen • use the “ | “ (pipe) to the more command cat | more • displays a screen, then stops • spacebar will bring up next screen • enter key brings up next line • ctrl-x will exit the cat command
zcat • “cats” a compressed file to the screen
less • displays a screen at a time • use “Q” to exit • pageUp and pageDown as well as arrow keys can navigate the file
more • displays a screen at a time
Filenames • Length can be 256 characters • upper or lower case • peridos, numbers, punctuation marks • NO SLASHES!
File Properties ls test -rwxr-xr-x 1 cmalinow users 1839423 Apr 1 15:12 test • permissions • user, group, other • user • group • timestamp • size
File Properties ls test -rwxr-xr-x 1 cmalinow users 1839423 Apr 1 15:12 test first character indicates type - regular file d directory user permission rwx group permission “other” permission
Changing owner • chown username.groupname filename • chown cmalinow.faculty testfileA • command is invoked by root
chmod • Changes permissions assigned to the file or directory • used by root • uses “g”, “u”, or “o” for group, user and other • chmod o+w test • allows “other” to write to file • chmod g=rw test • allows the group to read and write
chmod • read, write and execute assigned • 4, 2, 1 respectively • chmod 640 test • user has “6” 4 and 2 (read and write) • group has “4” (read) • others have “0” no access
File permissions • When creating a file, permission are assigned • umask determines the permissions to assign • umask 022 • same pattern as permission in chmod • umask executed as part of logging in
What’s a “sticky bit”? • Dilemma • depending on permissions set, any user in the group might be able to delete a file of another group member • setting the sticky bit on a directory only allows the owner, the directory owner, or root to rename or delete the file • set the sticky bit by chmod 1nnn • 1 indicates to put a sticky bit on the directory chmod 1777 mydir ls –ld mydir drwxrwxrwxt 2 cmalinow faculty … etc… • “t” indicates the ‘sticky bit’ is on