Introduction to Linux in HPC/Directory structure
Introduction to Linux in HPC/Linux Directory Structure /
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Revision as of 09:58, 6 November 2020 by Marc-andre-hermanns-bc32@rwth-aachen.de (talk | contribs) (Fix menu location)
| HPC.NRW | |
|---|---|
| Other HPC Courses | |
| 1. | Gprof Tutorial |
| 2. | OpenMP in Small Bites |
| Introduction to Linux in HPC | |
| 1. | Background and History |
| 2. | The Command Line |
| 3. | Directory structure |
| 4. | Files |
| 5. | Text display and search |
| 6. | Users and permissions |
| 7. | Processes |
| 8. | The vim text editor |
| 9. | Shell scripting |
| 10. | Environment variables |
| 11. | System configuration |
| 12. | SSH Connections |
| 13. | SSH: Graphics and File Transfer |
| 14. | Various tips |
Video
Quiz
1. Which one is the top directory in Linux?
2. The command
cd without arguments : if you start in var/log/ and run cd with no arguments, what do you expect will happen?
| Warning: | no undo and make sure what you want to do (page 48) |
Exercises in Terminal (slide 49)
1. Go to a specific subfolder of a folder (example:cd Documents/courses/) and get back to the home directory usingcdcommand. List 3 different ways to do it using one command. check after every action your path withpwdcommand.
| Answer: |
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2. Go to the directory/tmpand jump between/tmpand your home directory back and forth. check after every action your path withpwdcommand.
| Answer: |
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