Difference between revisions of "Introduction to Linux in HPC/Linux Directory Structure"
Introduction to Linux in HPC/Linux Directory Structure
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|| Explanation: The tree structure for directory is used in Linux system. Therefore the top directory in Linux is /. The /home directory may be an upper level directory for all non-root users. The last option C:\ represents the C drive on Windows. | || Explanation: The tree structure for directory is used in Linux system. Therefore the top directory in Linux is /. The /home directory may be an upper level directory for all non-root users. The last option C:\ represents the C drive on Windows. | ||
− | - | + | - /home |
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− | - | + | - C:\ |
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</quiz> | </quiz> | ||
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{{Warning|mode=warn|text= '''no undo and make sure what you want to do (page 16)'''}} | {{Warning|mode=warn|text= '''no undo and make sure what you want to do (page 16)'''}} | ||
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=== Exercises in Terminal (slide 49)=== <!--T:5--> | === Exercises in Terminal (slide 49)=== <!--T:5--> |
Revision as of 17:50, 1 October 2020
Video
Linux Introduction Slides 33 - 48 (16 pages)
Slide Layout
page 1: Windows: drive letter + backslash (C:) Linux: standard tree directory structure Absolute path: starts with / Relative path: w.r.t. working directory page 2 - 11: Animation for directory structure example directories page 12: everything is a file: /dev and /proc program/script can be found with which special directories: ., .. and ~ page 13: cd command page 14: 40 sec ls command page 15: specific commands: Ctrl+key (C, Z, D), exit and clear page 16: no undo make sure what you want to do
Quiz
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2. The command 'cd ' without arguments : if you start in var/log/ and run cd with no arguments, what do you expect will happen?
Info: | no tips in this section |
Warning: | no undo and make sure what you want to do (page 16) |
Exercises in Terminal (slide 49)
1. Go to a specific subfolder of a folder (example: cd Documents/courses/ ) and get back to the home directory using cd command. List 3 different ways to do it using one command. check after every action your path with pwd command.
ExpandAnswer: |
2. Go to the directory /tmp and jump between /tmp and your home directory back and forth. check after every action your path with pwd command.
ExpandAnswer: |