-
directories at all or had only a "flat"
directory structure,
meaning subdirectories were not supported;
there was only a
group of top-level directories...
- home
directory (represented as ~) with a file, text.txt, and
three subdirectories. If the user's
current working directory is the home
directory (~),...
- occur. -d 0 sums at the
current level, -d 1 sums at the
subdirectory, -d 2 at sub-
subdirectories, etc. -H,
calculate disk
usage for link
references specified...
-
about both
files and
other directories,
called subdirectories which, in turn, can
point to
other subdirectories, and so on. This is
organized as a tree structure...
- 0,
removing nested subdirectories required removing all of the
files in the
lowest subdirectories, then
removing the
subdirectory itself, then repeating...
-
directory or any of its
subdirectories,
according to the file system's rules, may
contain any
number of
files or
subdirectories.
Practical limits to this...
-
hierarchies by
allowing a
directory to
contain directories,
called subdirectories. The
first file
system to
support arbitrary hierarchies of directories...
- file /etc/xdg/user-dirs.defaults on many
Linux systems defines the
subdirectories created for
users by default.
Creation is
normally done with the first...
- also po****rized the
hierarchical file
system with
arbitrarily nested subdirectories,
originally introduced by Multics.
Other common operating systems of...
- ****ociated with the
directory and
access subdirectories.
Insert (i)
allows a user to add new
files or
subdirectories to the directory.
Delete (d)
allows a...