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  1. 22 lip 2009 · The recommended place to define permanent, system-wide environment variables applying to all users is in: /etc/environment (which is where the default PATH is defined) This will work in desktop or console, gnome-terminal or TTY, rain or shine ;) To edit, open the terminal and type: sudoedit /etc/environment

    • Ian B

      Q&A for Ubuntu users and developers. Stack Exchange Network....

    • Markus Hedlund

      Stack Exchange Network. Stack Exchange network consists of...

    • PATH Environment Variable

      Possible Duplicate: How to add a directory to my path? I...

  2. To change directory to the current directory's parent directory (i.e., the directory that contains it), use: cd .. .. represents the current directory's parent directory. If you are in the root directory (/), there is an exception: .. just represents /. So running cd .. moves up one directory when run anywhere but /; when run in /, you stay in /.

  3. 14 wrz 2017 · According the Filesystem Hierarchy Standard I recommend create a directory inside /var/lib/ with the name of the application, just like this: /var/lib/my-app

  4. 4 sty 2016 · Ubuntu (like all UNIX-like systems) organizes files in a hierarchical tree, where relationships are thought of in teams of children and parent. Directories can contain other directories as well as regular files, which are the "leaves" of the tree.

  5. 18 maj 2012 · Ubuntu (like all UNIX-like systems) organizes files in a hierarchical tree, where relationships are thought of in teams of children and parent. Directories can contain other directories as well as regular files, which are the "leaves" of the tree.

  6. Knowing the default locations for certain files or software, and how your machine locates software using the PATH environment variable can help you troubleshoot many common errors. This blog post will introduce you to the Linux directory structure and discuss the importance of the PATH variable.

  7. The mkdir command allows you to define directory permissions while creating the directory itself. For that, you need to use the -m (mode) flag and then specify the permissions in numerical form as shown:

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