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3.3. The /etc
directory
The /etc
maintains a lot
of files. Some of them are described below. For others, you
should determine which program they belong to and read the manual
page for that program. Many networking configuration files are
in /etc
as well, and are described in the
Networking Administrators' Guide.
/etc/rc
or/etc/rc.d
or/etc/rc?.d
Scripts or directories of scripts to run at startup or when changing the run level. See Section 2.3.1 for further information.
/etc/passwd
The user database, with fields giving the username, real name, home directory, and other information about each user. The format is documented in the passwd manual page.
/etc/shadow
/etc/shadow
is an encrypted file the holds user passwords./etc/fdprm
Floppy disk parameter table. Describes what different floppy disk formats look like. Used by setfdprm . See the setfdprm manual page for more information.
/etc/fstab
Lists the filesystems mounted automatically at startup by the mount -a command (in
/etc/rc
or equivalent startup file). Under Linux, also contains information about swap areas used automatically by swapon -a . See Section 5.10.7 and the mount manual page for more information. Alsofstab
usually has its own manual page in section 5./etc/group
Similar to
/etc/passwd
, but describes groups instead of users. See thegroup
manual page in section 5 for more information./etc/inittab
Configuration file for init.
/etc/issue
Output by getty before the login prompt. Usually contains a short description or welcoming message to the system. The contents are up to the system administrator.
/etc/magic
The configuration file for file. Contains the descriptions of various file formats based on which file guesses the type of the file. See the
magic
and file manual pages for more information./etc/motd
The message of the day, automatically output after a successful login. Contents are up to the system administrator. Often used for getting information to every user, such as warnings about planned downtimes.
/etc/mtab
List of currently mounted filesystems. Initially set up by the bootup scripts, and updated automatically by the mount command. Used when a list of mounted filesystems is needed, e.g., by the df command.
/etc/login.defs
Configuration file for the login command. The
login.defs
file usually has a manual page in section 5./etc/printcap
Like
/etc/termcap
/etc/printcap
, but intended for printers. However it uses different syntax. Theprintcap
has a manual page in section 5./etc/profile
,/etc/bash.rc
,/etc/csh.cshrc
Files executed at login or startup time by the Bourne, BASH , or C shells. These allow the system administrator to set global defaults for all users. Users can also create individual copies of these in their home directory to personalize their environment. See the manual pages for the respective shells.
/etc/securetty
Identifies secure terminals, i.e., the terminals from which root is allowed to log in. Typically only the virtual consoles are listed, so that it becomes impossible (or at least harder) to gain superuser privileges by breaking into a system over a modem or a network. Do not allow root logins over a network. Prefer to log in as an unprivileged user and use su or sudo to gain root privileges.
/etc/shells
Lists trusted shells. The chsh command allows users to change their login shell only to shells listed in this file. ftpd, is the server process that provides FTP services for a machine, will check that the user's shell is listed in
/etc/shells
and will not let people log in unless the shell is listed there./etc/termcap
The terminal capability database. Describes by what ``escape sequences'' various terminals can be controlled. Programs are written so that instead of directly outputting an escape sequence that only works on a particular brand of terminal, they look up the correct sequence to do whatever it is they want to do in
/etc/termcap
. As a result most programs work with most kinds of terminals. See thetermcap
, curs_termcap, andterminfo
manual pages for more information.