Information about UNIX
UNIX is an operating system which was first developed in the
1960s, and has been under constant development ever since. By operating system,
we mean the suite of programs which make the computer work. It is a stable,
multi-user, multi-tasking system for servers, desktops and laptops.
UNIX systems also have a graphical user interface (GUI) similar
to Microsoft Windows which provides an easy to use environment. However,
knowledge of UNIX is required for operations which aren't covered by a
graphical program, or for when there is no windows interface available, for
example, in a telnet session.
Types
of UNIX
There are many
different versions of UNIX, although they share common similarities. The most
popular varieties of UNIX are Sun Solaris, GNU/Linux, and MacOS X.
Here in the School, we use Solaris on our servers and
workstations, and Fedora Linux on the servers and desktop PCs.
The UNIX operating
system
The UNIX operating system is made up of three parts; the kernel,
the shell and the programs.
The kernel
The kernel of UNIX is the hub of the operating system: it
allocates time and memory to programs and handles the filestore and
communications in response to system calls.
As an illustration of the way that the shell and the kernel work
together, suppose a user types rm myfile (which has the effect of removing the filemyfile). The shell searches the filestore for the file
containing the program rm, and then requests the kernel, through
system calls, to execute the program rm on myfile. When the process rm myfile has finished running, the shell then returns the UNIX prompt %
to the user, indicating that it is waiting for further commands.
The shell
The shell acts as an interface between the user and the kernel.
When a user logs in, the login program checks the username and password, and
then starts another program called the shell. The shell is a command line
interpreter (CLI). It interprets the commands the user types in and arranges
for them to be carried out. The commands are themselves programs: when they terminate,
the shell gives the user another prompt (% on our systems).
The adept user can customise his/her own shell, and users can
use different shells on the same machine. Staff and students in the school have
thetcsh shell by default.
The tcsh shell has certain features to help the user inputting
commands.
Filename Completion - By typing part of the name of a command,
filename or directory and pressing the [Tab]
key, the tcsh shell will complete the rest of the name automatically. If the
shell finds more than one name beginning with those letters you have typed, it
will beep, prompting you to type a few more letters before pressing the tab key
again.
History - The shell keeps a list of the commands you have typed
in. If you need to repeat a command, use the cursor keys to scroll up and down
the list or type history for a list of previous commands.
Files and processes
Everything in UNIX is either a file or a process.
A process is an executing program identified by a unique PID
(process identifier).
A file is a collection of data. They are created by users using
text editors, running compilers etc.
Examples of files:
- a document
(report, essay etc.)
- the text of
a program written in some high-level programming language
- instructions
comprehensible directly to the machine and incomprehensible to a casual
user, for example, a collection of binary digits (an executable or binary
file);
- a directory,
containing information about its contents, which may be a mixture of other
directories (subdirectories) and ordinary files.
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