Pathnames
- A pathname is a list of names that will lead to a file.
- Essentially they are directories, but a file name itself is a path as well
- The concept of a pathname relates to every operating system including Unix, Linux, MS-DOS, MS-Windows, Apple-Macintosh, etc.
# Directory pathname:
/home/username/ics124/assignments/
# File pathname:
/home/username/ops224/assignments/assn1.txt
Absolute vs Relative Pathnames
Absolute Pathname
- A pathname that begins from root.
- The pathname begins with a forward slash, for example:
/home/someuser/unx122
Relative Pathname
- A pathname that is "relative" to the location of the current or "working" directory.
- For example, if we are in your home directory, issuing the command
mkdir uli101
will create the uli101 directory in your home directory. - Rules:
A relative pathname does NOT begin with a slash.
A relative pathname can use the following symbols can be used at the beginning:
..
parent directory (up one directory level).
current directory
Not all relative pathnames begin with
..
When using relative pathname, make sure you know your present working directory.
# Change pwd to location relative to parent directory cd ../ipc144 # copy file sample.c (using location relative to parent) # from joe.doe's home directory to your pwd cp ../joe.doe/sample.c .
Relative-to-Home Pathnames
You can specify a pathname as relative-to-home by using a tilde and slash at the start, e.g. ~/uli101/notes.html
. The tilde ~ is replaced by your home directory (typically home/your.account) to make the pathname absolute. You can immediately place a username after the tilde to represent another user’s home directory, for example:
-
~jane.somebody
expands to/home/jane.somebody
but~
expands to/home/your_home_dir
- similarly
~uli101
expands to/home/uli101
but~/uli101
expands to/home/your_home_dir/uli101
Which Type of Pathname to Use?
So far, we have been given many different types of pathnames that we can use for regular files and directories:
- Absolute pathname (starts with
/
) - Relative pathname (doesn’t start with
/
) - Relative-to-home pathname (starts with
~
)
You can decide which pathname type to use to make it more convenient (eg relative - usually less typing or absolute if you don’t know what directory you are currently located in).
Making Directories
Building directories is similar in approach to building a house:
- Begins from a foundation (eg home directory).
- Need to build in proper order (add on addition to house in right location). Use a logical scheme.
- When building directories from different locations, must provide proper absolute or relative pathname.
Planning Directories
Good directory organization requires planning:
- Group information together logically.
- Plan for the future: use dated directories where appropriate (
~/christmas/2001
,/christmas/2002
) - Too few directories = excessive number of files in each; too many directories = long pathnames.
Where to build directories?
- Want to build a directory called tmp that branches off of your home directory?
- Verify which directory you are located (either look at directory from command prompt or issue the command pwd)
- Type mkdir tmp at the Unix prompt, followed by ENTER
- Optionally you can verify that directory has been created using ls or ls -ld commands)
Creating Parent Directories
By default, a directory cannot be created in a nonexistent location - it needs a parent directory To create directory paths with parent directories that do not exist (using a single command) use the -p
option for the mkdir command
# This would create the parent directory mur and then the child directory dir1.
# The -p means "create all the directories in the Path".
$ mkdir -p mur/dir1
Removing Directories
Removing directories is reverse order of building directories
- Issue command rmdir directory
- rmdir cannot remove directories containing files or other subdirectories.
- rmdir cannot remove directories that are anyone's current directory.
- Need to step back to at least parent directory to remove an empty directory.
Removing Sub-trees
- To remove a sub-tree (a directory and all of its contents including sub-directories) use
rm -r
directory (orrm -R
directory). - The can use the
rm -rf
command (-f = force
) to complete delete files and directories recursiverly, even if they are protected from delete
* Remove files only if you are absolutely sure what you are doing.
- rm -r can erase large numbers of files very quickly. Use with extreme care!
- Backing up your data is a very good idea.
Filename Expansion
- Many of the commands discussed so far make reference to a specific filename - e.g. and regular file to store data, or a directory.
- Sometimes the user may not know the exact name of a file, or the user wants to use a command to apply to a number of files that have a similar name
For example: work.txt, work2.txt, work3.txt
- Special characters can be used to expand a general filename and use them if they match. You may have heard about “Wildcard Characters” - this is a similar concept.
- Symbols:
* (star/asterisk) | Represents zero or more of any characters. |
? (question mark) | Represents any single character. |
[ ] (character class) | Represents a single character, any of the list inside of the brackets. Placing a ! Symbol after first square bracket means “opposite”). Ranges such as [a-z] or [0-3] are supported. |
- To demonstrate filename expansion, let’s assume the following regular files are contained in our current directory:
$ touch work1.txt work2.txt work3.txt work4.c worka.txt working.txt
$ ls
work1.txt work2.txt work3.txt work4.c worka.txt working.txt
- Note the results from using filename expansion:
$ ls work*
work1.txt work2.txt work3.txt work4.c worka.txt working.txt
$ ls work?.txt
work1.txt work2.txt work3.txt worka.txt
$ ls work[1-3].txt
work1.txt work2.txt work3.txt
$ ls work[!1-3].txt worka.txt
UNIX shell
- Command interpreter for UNIX
- Acts as a mediator between user and UNIX kernel
- Processes and/or executes user commands
- More than one command can be executed on one command line when separated by a semi-colon
- You will be learning approx. 30 Unix commands in this course. This is a small, compared to the the 1000+ Unix commands out there
- The term command and utility mean the same in Unix UNIX shell
- There are several kinds of shells available for UNIX
- Most popular shells are:
C shell (this is not the C programming language)
Korn shell - used with Unix
Linux machines most often use the BASH shell (Bourne-Again Shell)
- Each user on one machine can run a different shell
- UNIX scripting = UNIX shell programming
Why command line?
- Why don’t we just use the GUI (KDE, Gnome or some other window manager)? - GUI may not always be available
- What if something is broken?
- What if you are connecting through a terminal remotely? - GUI is for regular users
- Many administrative tools are hard to find in the menus - Command line is more efficient
- Tasks are completed faster
- Less system resources are wasted - Command line allows you to automate repeating tasks through scripting
- Writing scripts requires you to know commands
Command Execution
- While command is being executed the shell waits for it to finish
- This state is called sleep
- When the command finishes executing the shell brings back the prompt
- It is possible to get the command prompt before the command finishes
- This requires executing a process in the background
Command Line Syntax
- A line which includes UNIX commands, program and shell script names and their arguments is called a command line
- Typical command line execution would include:
- Command line parsing
- Breaking it up into tokens
- Executing tokens
- Command line tokens are separated by whitespace
- Command line is actually executed when the Enter key is pressed
Command Editing
- Previously executed commands can be recalled
- The Bourne shell uses the up/down arrow keys to accomplish that
- Other shells may use some other mechanism, for example Korn shell uses vi-style command editing
- Recalled commands can be easily edited before re-executing
- Useful BASH keyboard shortcuts:
Go to the beginning of the line | CTRL+A |
Go to the end of the line | CTRL+E |
Erase Characters | Backspace or CTRL-Backspace or CTRL-h |
Delete a word before the cursor | CTRL-w |
Delete everything from to the beginning of line | CTRL-u |
Clear Screen | CTRL-l |
Search for a keyword in previous commands | CTRL+R |
Auto complete file/directory names | Tab |
Quoting in UNIX
- Sometimes it may be necessary to use characters that have special meaning to the shell
- In such cases such characters may need to be quoted
- There are several ways of quoting special characters in UNIX, including:
Double quotes (“ “) | quote a group of characters |
Single quotes (‘ ‘) | quote a group of characters |
Backslash quote (\ )
|
quote the one character immediately following the backslash |
- Can prevent variable substitution when the $ character is quoted
# shows all filenames in your pwd
$ echo *
# displays the character *
$ echo \*
- To quote a
\
another\
is used, this means\\
' ' Quotes
- Forward single quote - different than the back tick (backward single quote)
- Quotes all that is inside, preventing wildcard and variable substitution
# shows all hidden files in pwd
echo .*
# displays the two characters '.' and '*'
echo '.*'
Double Quoting
- Commands such as echo can have their arguments quoted using double quotes
- Such quoting can preserve and/or include whitespace
- Variable substitution takes place
- Double quotes do not:
- Prevent shell variable substitution
- Stop escape characters interpretation