immuatables be all about /var
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Why is /mnt a "temporary" mounting point? I alwags put my permanent ones there. I'd say /media is temporary...
If my /bin contains exe files, something has gone very wrong somewhere...
Also, all these infographics are a sad casualty of the /usr/bin merge.
Linux file system is ext* tho.
/bin confused me for a while because I thought it meant 'this stuff is trash, don't worry about it'.
huh... an exe in my /bin ?
sus...
Is it just me, or are the definitions for /sys and /proc mixed up?
Nah, it's just that /proc
is incorrect - it contains information about running processes, as well as kernel data structures as visible by the process reading them.
No I thinks is basically right although could be better worded maybe
/sys is virtual file structure for kernel system info
/proc is virtual file structure of kernel process info
My understanding is /proc came first but was abused/free for all and started being used for all sorts of non standard/process kernel access. So /sys was created with stricter rules to make it more standardised.
Not when I use it!
I've been using Linux on and off for years and I've never really understood what these different directories are for. If I don't know where something is I just search for it, though more often than not whatever I'm looking for is somewhere in the home directory. I'm also not sure of the accuracy of this though. I have a VM in /run, and an SSD and thumb drive in /media. I would've expected these to be in /mnt.
Is there a version of this that wasn't awkwardly resized?