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Guide To UNIX Using Linux Third Edition

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1 Guide To UNIX Using Linux Third Edition
Chapter 2: Exploring the UNIX/Linux File Systems and File Security Guide To UNIX Using Linux Third Edition

2 Objectives Discuss UNIX/Linux file systems
Explain partitions and inodes Understand the elements of the root hierarchy Use the mount command Explain and use paths, pathnames, and prompts Guide to UNIX Using Linux, Third Edition

3 Objectives (continued)
Navigate the file system Create and remove directories Copy and delete files Configure file permissions Guide to UNIX Using Linux, Third Edition

4 Understanding UNIX/Linux File Systems
File: basic component for data storage UNIX/Linux considers everything to be a file A file system is UNIX/Linux’s way of organizing files on mass storage devices A physical file system is a section of the hard disk that has been formatted to hold files The file system is organized in a hierarchical structure (inverted tree) Guide to UNIX Using Linux, Third Edition

5 Understanding UNIX/Linux File Systems (continued)
Guide to UNIX Using Linux, Third Edition

6 Understanding the Standard Tree Structure
The structure starts at the root level Root is the name of the file at this basic level and it is denoted by the slash character (/) Directory: file that can contain other files and directories Subdirectory: directory within a directory The subdirectory is considered the child of the parent directory Guide to UNIX Using Linux, Third Edition

7 Using UNIX/Linux Partitions
The section of the disk that holds a file system is called a partition When installing UNIX/Linux, one of the first tasks is deciding how to partition a storage device, or hard disk Hard disks may have many partitions UNIX/Linux partitions are given names LINUX uses hda1 and hda2 Guide to UNIX Using Linux, Third Edition

8 Using UNIX/Linux Partitions (continued)
Storage devices are called peripheral devices Peripheral devices connect to the computer through electronic interfaces IDE: Integrated Drive Electronics SCSI: Small Computer System Interface Guide to UNIX Using Linux, Third Edition

9 Guide to UNIX Using Linux, Third Edition

10 Setting Up Hard Disk Partitions
Partitioning your hard disk provides organized space for file systems At least 3 partitions (root, swap, /boot) often recommended Root partition holds root file system directory (/), size depends on installation but often ranges between 1.2 to 5+ GB Guide to UNIX Using Linux, Third Edition

11 Setting Up Hard Disk Partitions (continued)
Swap partition acts as a memory extension, often has same size as RAM, enables virtual memory /boot partition used to store os files comprising kernel, relatively small Other often used partitions include /usr, /home, /var Guide to UNIX Using Linux, Third Edition

12 Using Inodes Inodes are associated with directories and files in ufs and ext file systems An inode contains the name, general information, and location information (a pointer) for a file or directory A superblock contains information about about block layout on a specific partition Guide to UNIX Using Linux, Third Edition

13 Exploring the Root Hierarchy
UNIX/Linux must mount a file system before any programs can access files on it To mount a file system is to connect it to the directory tree structure The root file system is mounted by the kernel when the system starts Guide to UNIX Using Linux, Third Edition

14 Exploring the Root Hierarchy (continued)
The root directory contains sub-directories that contain files: /bin contains binaries, or executables needed to start the system and perform system tasks /boot contains files needed by the bootstrap loader as well as kernel images /dev contains system device reference files Guide to UNIX Using Linux, Third Edition

15 Guide to UNIX Using Linux, Third Edition

16 Exploring the Root File Hierarchy (continued)
Root subdirectories continued: /etc contains configuration files that the system uses when the computer starts /lib contains kernel modules, security information, and the shared library images /mnt contains mount points for temporary mounts by the system administrator /proc is a virtual file system allocated in memory only Guide to UNIX Using Linux, Third Edition

17 Exploring the Root File Hierarchy (continued)
Root subdirectories continued: /root is the home directory of the root user, or the system administrator /sbin contains essential network programs used only by the system administrator /tmp is a temporary place to store data during processing cycles /var contains subdirectories which have sizes that often change, such as error logs Guide to UNIX Using Linux, Third Edition

18 Using the mount Command
Users can access mounted file systems which they have permission to access Additional file systems can be mounted at any time using the mount command To ensure system security, only the root user uses the mount command Guide to UNIX Using Linux, Third Edition

19 Using Paths, Pathnames, and Prompts
To specify a file or directory, use its pathname, which follows the branches of the file system to the desired file A forward slash (/) separates each directory name The UNIX/Linux command prompt may indicate your location within the file system Use the UNIX/Linux pwd command to display the current path name Guide to UNIX Using Linux, Third Edition

20 Guide to UNIX Using Linux, Third Edition

21 Guide to UNIX Using Linux, Third Edition

22 Navigating the File System
To navigate the UNIX/Linux directory structure, use the cd (change directory) command UNIX/Linux refers to a path as either: Absolute - begins at the root level and lists all subdirectories to the destination file Relative - begins at your current working directory and proceeds from there Guide to UNIX Using Linux, Third Edition

23 Using Dot and Dot Dot Addressing Techniques
UNIX/Linux interpret a single dot (.) to mean the current working directory Two dots (..) mean the parent directory cd .. moves you up a level in the directory structure Guide to UNIX Using Linux, Third Edition

24 Listing Directory Contents
The ls (list) command displays a directory’s contents, including files and subdirectories Guide to UNIX Using Linux, Third Edition

25 Using Wildcards A wildcard is a special character that is used as a placeholder The * wildcard represents any group of characters in a file name The ? wildcard represents a single character in a file name Guide to UNIX Using Linux, Third Edition

26 Creating and Removing Directories and Files
mkdir (make directory) command Create a new directory rmdir (make directory) command Delete an empty directory cp (copy) command Copy files from one directory to another rm (remove) command Delete files Guide to UNIX Using Linux, Third Edition

27 Configuring File Permissions for Security
Guide to UNIX Using Linux, Third Edition

28 Configuring File Permissions for Security (continued)
Owner has read w Owner has write x Owner has execute Group has read - Group does not have write Group has execute Others have read Others do not have write Others have execute Guide to UNIX Using Linux, Third Edition

29 Configuring File Permissions for Security (continued)
chmod command To set file permissions Settings are read (r), write (w), execute (x) The three types of users are owners, groups, and others Setting permissions to directories Use the execute (x) to grant access Guide to UNIX Using Linux, Third Edition

30 Chapter Summary In UNIX/Linux, a file is the basic component for data storage and UNIX and Linux consider everything a file A file system is UNIX/Linux’s way of organizing files on mass storage devices and each file is referenced using a correct and unique pathname The section of the mass storage device that holds a file system is a partition Guide to UNIX Using Linux, Third Edition

31 Chapter Summary (continued)
You can customize your command prompt to display the current working directory name, the current date and time, and several other items The ls command displays the names of files and directories contained in a directory Use the chmod command to set permissions such as read (r), write (w), execute (x) for files that you own Guide to UNIX Using Linux, Third Edition


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