I thought I’ll make this thread for all of you out there who have questions but are afraid to ask them. This is your chance!
I’ll try my best to answer any questions here, but I hope others in the community will contribute too!
I thought I’ll make this thread for all of you out there who have questions but are afraid to ask them. This is your chance!
I’ll try my best to answer any questions here, but I hope others in the community will contribute too!
What is the system32 equivalent in linux
/bin, since that will include any basic programs (bash, ls, cd, etc.).
As in, the directory in which much of the operating system’s executable binaries are contained in?
They’ll be spread between /bin and /sbin, which might be symlinks to /usr/bin and /usr/sbin. Bonus points is /boot.
For the memes:
This deletes everything and is the most popular linux meme
The same “expected” functionality:
This deletes the main binaries. You kinda can recover here but I have never done it.
There is no direct equivalent, system32 is just a collection of libraries, exes, and confs.
Some of what others have said is accurate, but to explain a bit further:
Longer explanation:
spoiler
system32 is just some folder name the MS engineers came up back in the day.
Linux on the other hand has many distros, many different contributors, and generally just encourages a … better … separation for types of files, imho
The linux filesystem is well defined if you are inclined to research more about it.
Understanding the core principals will make understanding virtually everything else about “linux” easier, imho.
https://tldp.org/LDP/intro-linux/html/sect_03_01.html
tl;dr; “On a UNIX system, everything is a file; if something is not a file, it is a process.”
The basics:
ls
,mv
, things like thatparted
,reboot
, etc/lib/modules/*
, similar tosystem32
’s function of holding critical librariesBonus:
/srv/db
for database volumes,/srv/www
for web-data volumes,/srv/Media
for large-file storage, etc, etcFor completeness:
/var/log
Oooh. I always wondered where I would put my docker bind shares in. I currently have them point to /Media but /srv makes so much more sense.
Don’t think there is.
system32 holds files that are in various places in Linux, because Windows often puts libraries with binaries and Linux shares them.
The bash in /bin depends on libraries in /lib for example.
/usr/lib or /usr/lib64 or /lib (some distros) or /lib64
Some things (like hosts file) are in /etc. /etc mostly contains configs.
What is system32? Outdated 32bit binaries?
A weird catch-all folder for “most important Windows system stuff”. It’s not 32bit, just named like that in typical Windows fashion for backwards compatibility.
Would probably be
/usr
and/bin
, while some apps get installed to/opt
or even/local
or/var