If you’re coming from Windows, the Linux file system
structure can seem particularly alien. The C:\ drive and drive letters are
gone, replaced by a / and cryptic-sounding directories, most of which have
three letter names.
The Filesystem Hierarchy Standard (FHS) defines the
structure of file systems on Linux and other UNIX-like operating systems.
However, Linux file systems also contain some directories that aren’t yet
defined by the standard.
/ – The Root Directory
Everything on your Linux system is located under the /
directory, known as the root directory. You can think of the / directory as
being similar to the C:\ directory on Windows – but this isn’t strictly true,
as Linux doesn’t have drive letters. While another partition would be located
at D:\ on Windows, this other partition would appear in another folder under /
on Linux.
/bin – Essential User Binaries
The /bin directory contains the essential user binaries
(programs) that must be present when the system is mounted in single-user mode.
Applications such as Firefox are stored in /usr/bin, while important system programs
and utilities such as the bash shell are located in /bin. The /usr directory
may be stored on another partition – placing these files in the /bin directory
ensures the system will have these important utilities even if no other file
systems are mounted. The /sbin directory is similar – it contains essential
system administration binaries.
/boot – Static Boot Files
The /boot directory contains the files needed to boot the
system – for example, the GRUB boot loader’s files and your Linux kernels are stored
here. The boot loader’s configuration files aren’t located here, though –
they’re in /etc with the other configuration files.
/cdrom – Historical Mount Point for CD-ROMs
The /cdrom directory isn’t part of the FHS standard, but
you’ll still find it on Ubuntu and other operating systems. It’s a temporary
location for CD-ROMs inserted in the system. However, the standard location for
temporary media is inside the /media directory.
/dev – Device Files
Linux exposes devices as files, and the /dev directory
contains a number of special files that represent devices. These are not actual
files as we know them, but they appear as files – for example, /dev/sda
represents the first SATA drive in the system. If you wanted to partition it,
you could start a partition editor and tell it to edit /dev/sda.
This directory also contains pseudo-devices, which are
virtual devices that don’t actually correspond to hardware. For example, /dev/random
produces random numbers. /dev/null is a special device that produces no output
and automatically discards all input – when you pipe the output of a command to
/dev/null, you discard it.
/etc – Configuration Files
The /etc directory contains configuration files, which can
generally be edited by hand in a text editor. Note that the /etc/ directory
contains system-wide configuration files – user-specific configuration files
are located in each user’s home directory.
/home – Home Folders
The /home directory contains a home folder for each user.
For example, if your user name is bob, you have a home folder located at
/home/bob. This home folder contains the user’s data files and user-specific
configuration files. Each user only has write access to their own home folder
and must obtain elevated permissions (become the root user) to modify other
files on the system.
/lib – Essential Shared Libraries
The /lib directory contains libraries needed by the
essential binaries in the /bin and /sbin folder. Libraries needed by the
binaries in the /usr/bin folder are located in /usr/lib.
/lost+found – Recovered Files
Each Linux file system has a lost+found directory. If the
file system crashes, a file system check will be performed at next boot. Any
corrupted files found will be placed in the lost+found directory, so you can
attempt to recover as much data as possible.
/media – Removable Media
The /media directory contains subdirectories where removable
media devices inserted into the computer are mounted. For example, when you
insert a CD into your Linux system, a directory will automatically be created
inside the /media directory. You can access the contents of the CD inside this
directory.
/mnt – Temporary Mount Points
Historically speaking, the /mnt directory is where system
administrators mounted temporary file systems while using them. For example, if
you’re mounting a Windows partition to perform some file recovery operations,
you might mount it at /mnt/windows. However, you can mount other file systems anywhere
on the system.
/opt – Optional Packages
The /opt directory contains subdirectories for optional
software packages. It’s commonly used by proprietary software that doesn’t obey
the standard file system hierarchy – for example, a proprietary program might
dump its files in /opt/application when you install it.
/proc – Kernel & Process Files
The /proc directory similar to the /dev directory because it
doesn’t contain standard files. It contains special files that represent system
and process information.
/root – Root Home Directory
The /root directory is the home directory of the root user.
Instead of being located at /home/root, it’s located at /root. This is distinct
from /, which is the system root directory.
/run – Application State Files
The /run directory is fairly new, and gives applications a
standard place to store transient files they require like sockets and process
IDs. These files can’t be stored in /tmp because files in /tmp may be deleted.
/sbin – System Administration Binaries
The /sbin directory is similar to the /bin directory. It
contains essential binaries that are generally intended to be run by the root
user for system administration.
/selinux – SELinux Virtual File System
If your Linux distribution uses SELinux for security (Fedora
and Red Hat, for example), the /selinux directory contains special files used
by SELinux. It’s similar to /proc. Ubuntu doesn’t use SELinux, so the presence
of this folder on Ubuntu appears to be a bug.
/srv – Service Data
The /srv directory contains “data for services provided by
the system.” If you were using the Apache HTTP server to serve a website, you’d
likely store your website’s files in a directory inside the /srv directory.
/tmp – Temporary Files
Applications store temporary files in the /tmp directory.
These files are generally deleted whenever your system is restarted and may be
deleted at any time by utilities such as tmpwatch.
/usr – User Binaries & Read-Only Data
The /usr directory contains applications and files used by
users, as opposed to applications and files used by the system. For example,
non-essential applications are located inside the /usr/bin directory instead of
the /bin directory and non-essential system administration binaries are located
in the /usr/sbin directory instead of the /sbin directory. Libraries for each
are located inside the /usr/lib directory. The /usr directory also contains
other directories – for example, architecture-independent files like graphics
are located in /usr/share.
The /usr/local directory is where locally compiled
applications install to by default – this prevents them from mucking up the
rest of the system.
/var – Variable Data Files
The /var directory is the writable counterpart to the /usr
directory, which must be read-only in normal operation. Log files and
everything else that would normally be written to /usr during normal operation
are written to the /var directory. For example, you’ll find log files in
/var/log.
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