Linux Root Directory Structure (/)

πŸ“ Linux Root Directory Structure (/)

Directory Purpose
/ The root of the entire file system β€” everything starts here.
/bin Essential user command binaries (e.g. ls, cp, mv) used in single-user mode.
/boot Files needed to boot the system (e.g. grub, vmlinuz, initrd).
/dev Special files that represent hardware devices (e.g. /dev/sda, /dev/null).
/etc System-wide configuration files (e.g. /etc/passwd, /etc/ssh/sshd_config).
/home Default location for user home directories (e.g. /home/alice).
/lib, /lib64 Essential shared libraries needed by binaries in /bin and /sbin.
/media Mount point for removable media (e.g. USB drives, CDs).
/mnt A general-purpose temporary mount point (used by admins for mounting manually).
/opt For optional third-party software or add-on packages.
/proc A virtual filesystem exposing kernel and process info (e.g. /proc/cpuinfo).
/root The home directory for the root user. Not the same as /.
/run Stores runtime data like PIDs and sockets (cleared on reboot).
/sbin Essential system binaries used by root/admin (e.g. fsck, reboot).
/srv Contains data for services (e.g. FTP, web servers). Rarely used by default.
/sys Like /proc, but for exposing kernel/device info (virtual filesystem).
/tmp Temporary files. Usually cleared on reboot.
/usr Contains non-essential system files: user binaries, libraries, docs. See below.
/var Variable data: logs, mail, spool files, caches β€” stuff that changes frequently.

πŸ“‚ More on /usr β€” What’s Inside?

/usr = Unix System Resources, not “user” as some think.

Subdirectory Purpose
/usr/bin Most user command-line binaries (e.g. python, vim)
/usr/sbin System binaries for administrative tasks (e.g. apache2)
/usr/lib, /usr/lib64 Libraries for programs in /usr/bin and /usr/sbin
/usr/share Architecture-independent data like icons, docs, man pages
/usr/local Locally installed software (built from source, custom tools)

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