Wednesday, 23 May 2012

3.1.1.2. Sorts of files


3.1.1.2. Sorts of files
Most files are just files, called regular files; they contain normal data, for example text files, executable files or programs, input for or output from a program and so on.
While it is reasonably safe to suppose that everything you encounter on a Linux system is a file, there are some exceptions.
  • Directories: files that are lists of other files.
  • Special files: the mechanism used for input and output. Most special files are in /dev, we will discuss them later.
  • Links: a system to make a file or directory visible in multiple parts of the system's file tree. We will talk about links in detail.
  • (Domain) sockets: a special file type, similar to TCP/IP sockets, providing inter-process networking protected by the file system's access control.
  • Named pipes: act more or less like sockets and form a way for processes to communicate with each other, without using network socket semantics.
The -l option to ls displays the file type, using the first character of each input line:
jaime:~/Documents>ls -l
total 80
-rw-rw-r--   1 jaime   jaime   31744 Feb 21 17:56 intro Linux.doc
-rw-rw-r--   1 jaime   jaime   41472 Feb 21 17:56 Linux.doc
drwxrwxr-x   2 jaime   jaime    4096 Feb 25 11:50 course/
This table gives an overview of the characters determining the file type:

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