Your Home Directory (Unix Power Tools, 3rd Edition)
1.15. Your Home Directory
Microsoft
Windows and the Mac OS have hierarchical
filesystems (Section 1.14), much like
those in Unix and other large systems. But there is an important
difference. On many Windows and Mac systems, you start right at the
"root" of the filesystem tree. In
effect, you start with a blank slate and create subdirectories to
organize your files.
A Unix system comes with an enormous filesystem tree already
developed. When you log in, you start somewhere down in that tree, in
a directory created for you by the system administrator (who may even
be yourself, if you are administering your own system).
This directory -- the one place in the filesystem that is your
very own, to store your files (especially the shell setup files (Section 3.3) and rc files
(Section 3.20) that you use to customize the rest of
your environment) -- is called your home
directory.
Home directories were originally stored in a directory called
/usr (and still are on some systems), but are
now often stored in other directories, such as
/home. Within the Linux Filesystem Hierarchy
Standard (FHS), the home directory is always at
/home, as configuration files are always in
/etc and so on.
To change your current directory
(Section 1.16) to your home, type
cd with no pathname; the shell will assume you
mean your home directory.
Within the Mac OS X environment, home is in the
/Users/username directory by default.
-- TOR
1.14. The Tree Structure of the Filesystem1.16. Making Pathnames
Copyright © 2003 O'Reilly & Associates. All rights reserved.
Wyszukiwarka
Podobne podstrony:
ch01ch01ch01ch01ch01ch01ch01ch01ch01ch01 (2)ch01Ch01 2ch01ch01ch01ch01ch01ch01 (3)ch01więcej podobnych podstron