

Why? Becuse someone back in the 1970-ties thought it was a good idea to have aqward names for folders and then things kind of stuck.clif2 wrote:Why are /etc and /usr so called?
That's what I would have thought it stood for/etc is the abreviation for etcetera.
That is where stuff goes that the original people thought had no other good place. Now it is a place for configuration stuff.
Not its not. /usr is short for user. In the early versions of unix, it was used for storing the users files as the post above mentions. Unix System Resources was made up some time later when /usr was no longer used for that purpose.Billy_Witchdoctor wrote:Actually, read the post above yours, usr is not user, it is unix system resources.akvalentine wrote: /usr stands for "user" (as opposed to "system" or "kernel")
That was where the users had their home directories (and other _user_ related files were stored).
"User" is the way I remember it, too. In my old UNIX Version 7 manual, that's what was described. "UNIX System Resources" is some new thing...grover wrote:Not its not. /usr is short for user. In the early versions of unix, it was used for storing the users files as the post above mentions. Unix System Resources was made up some time later when /usr was no longer used for that purpose.Billy_Witchdoctor wrote:Actually, read the post above yours, usr is not user, it is unix system resources.akvalentine wrote: /usr stands for "user" (as opposed to "system" or "kernel")
That was where the users had their home directories (and other _user_ related files were stored).
from In the Beginning was the Command Line:STEDevil wrote:Why? Becuse someone back in the 1970-ties thought it was a good idea to have aqward names for folders and then things kind of stuck.
Neal Stephenson wrote:Note the obsessive use of abbreviations and avoidance of capital letters; this is a system invented by people to whom repetitive stress disorder is what black lung is to miners. Long names get worn down to three-letter nubbins, like stones smoothed by a river.