question.
Greg Hunt
hunt at dg-rtp.rtp.dg.com
Wed Oct 24 00:47:59 AEST 1990
In article <9409 at helios.TAMU.EDU>, c029nit at utarlg.utarl.edu (NITEEN
DAMLE) writes:
> I am a novice to the UNIX and I hv a question which u people might be
able
> to answer.
> Last night I was browsing through the directories using ls command
with -l
> option. In dev directory I found letters s, c, b for some of the names
in place
> of d.
> I want to know what these letters stand for.
> Only I know that d means directory.
> l " link. [am I correct? ]
> - " file.
Yup, l means the file is a symbolic link and - means it is a regular
file. A b means it is a block special file (to be read and written
in blocks - usually 512 bytes at a chunk) and c means it is a character
special file (to be read and written a character at a time). These two
are usually applied to devices, like disks and terminals, which is
why you found their entries in /dev. I don't know what the s stands
for.
You can find more details in the man page for ls, which you can read
with the command "man ls". Enjoy!
--
Greg Hunt Internet: hunt at dg-rtp.rtp.dg.com
DG/UX Kernel Development UUCP: {world}!mcnc!rti!dg-rtp!hunt
Data General Corporation
Research Triangle Park, NC These opinions are mine, not DG's.
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