3.1.1.1. General
A simple description of the UNIX system, also applicable to
Linux, is this:
"On a UNIX system, everything is a file; if
something is not a file, it is a process."
This statement is true because there are special files that are
more than just files (named pipes and sockets, for instance), but
to keep things simple, saying that everything is a file is an
acceptable generalization. A Linux system, just like UNIX, makes no
difference between a file and a directory, since a directory is
just a file containing names of other files. Programs, services,
texts, images, and so forth, are all files. Input and output
devices, and generally all devices, are considered to be files,
according to the system.
In order to manage all those files in an orderly fashion, man
likes to think of them in an ordered tree-like structure on the
hard disk, as we know from MS-DOS
(Disk Operating System) for instance. The large branches contain
more branches, and the branches at the end contain the tree's
leaves or normal files. For now we will use this image of the tree,
but we will find out later why this is not a fully accurate
image.