Museum

Home

Lab Overview

Retrotechnology Articles

Online Manuals

⇒ ls(1) — 4D1 2.0

Media Vault

Software Library

Restoration Projects

Artifacts Sought

Related Articles

chmod(1)

find(1)



     LS(1)                                                       LS(1)



     NAME
          ls - list contents of directory

     SYNOPSIS
          ls [ -RadCLHxmlnogrtucpFbqisf ] [names]

     DESCRIPTION
          For each directory argument, ls lists the contents of the
          directory; for each file argument, ls repeats its name and
          any other information requested.  The output is sorted
          alphabetically by default.  When no argument is given, the
          current directory is listed.  When several arguments are
          given, the arguments are first sorted appropriately, but
          file arguments appear before directories and their contents.

          There are three major listing formats.  The default format
          is to list one entry per line, the -C and -x options enable
          multi-column formats, and the -m option enables stream
          output format.  In order to determine output formats for the
          -C, -x, and -m options, ls uses an environment variable,
          COLUMNS, to determine the number of character positions
          available on one output line.  If this variable is not set,
          the terminfo(4) database is used to determine the number of
          columns, based on the environment variable TERM.  If this
          information cannot be obtained, 80 columns are assumed.

          The ls command has the following options:

          -R   Recursively list subdirectories encountered.

          -a   List all entries, including those that begin with a dot
               (.), which are normally not listed.

          -d   If an argument is a directory, list only its name (not
               its contents); often used with -l to get the status of
               a directory.

          -C   Multi-column output with entries sorted down the
               columns.

          -L   If the file is a symbolic link, list the file that the
               link references.

          -H   If the file is a symbolic link, list the file itself.

          -x   Multi-column output with entries sorted across rather
               than down the page.

          -m   Stream output format; files are listed across the page,
               separated by commas.

          -l   List in long format, giving mode, number of links,



     Page 1                                        (last mod. 8/20/87)





     LS(1)                                                       LS(1)



               owner, group, size in bytes, and time of last
               modification for each file (see below).  If the file is
               a special file, the size field will instead contain the
               major and minor device numbers rather than a size.

          -n   The same as -l, except that the owner's UID and group's
               GID numbers are printed, rather than the associated
               character strings.

          -o   The same as -l, except that the group is not printed.

          -g   The same as -l, except that the owner is not printed.

          -r   Reverse the order of sort to get reverse alphabetic or
               oldest first as appropriate.

          -t   Sort by time stamp (latest first) instead of by name.
               The default is the last modification time.  (See -n and
               -c.)

          -u   Use time of last access instead of last modification
               for sorting (with the -t option) or printing (with the
               -l option).

          -c   Use time of last modification of the i-node (file
               created, mode changed, etc.) for sorting (-t) or
               printing (-l).

          -p   Put a slash (/) after each filename if that file is a
               directory.

          -F   Put a slash (/) after each filename if that file is a
               directory,
                put an asterisk (*) after each filename if that file
               is executable, and put an ampersand (@) after each file
               that is a link.

          -b   Force printing of non-graphic characters to be in the
               octal \ddd notation.

          -q   Force printing of non-graphic characters in file names
               as the character (?).

          -i   For each file, print the i-number in the first column
               of the report.

          -s   Give size in blocks, including indirect blocks, for
               each entry.

          -f   Force each argument to be interpreted as a directory
               and list the name found in each slot.  This option
               turns off -l, -t, -s, and -r, and turns on -a; the



     Page 2                                        (last mod. 8/20/87)





     LS(1)                                                       LS(1)



               order is the order in which entries appear in the
               directory.

          The mode printed under the -l option consists of ten
          characters.  The first character may be one of the
          following:

               d   the entry is a directory;
               b   the entry is a block special file;
               c   the entry is a character special file;
               p   the entry is a fifo (a.k.a. "named pipe") special
                   file;
               -   the entry is an ordinary file.

          The next 9 characters are interpreted as three sets of three
          bits each.  The first set refers to the owner's permissions;
          the next to permissions of others in the user-group of the
          file; and the last to all others.  Within each set, the
          three characters indicate permission to read, to write, and
          to execute the file as a program, respectively.  For a
          directory, "execute" permission is interpreted to mean
          permission to search the directory for a specified file.

          ls -l (the long list) prints its output as follows:

              -rwxrwxrwx  1 smith  dev    10876  May 16 9:42 part2

          This horizontal configuration provides a good deal of
          information.  Reading from right to left, you see that the
          current directory holds one file, named "part2."  Next, the
          last time that file's contents were modified was 9:42 A.M.
          on May 16.  The file is moderately sized, containing 10,876
          characters, or bytes.  The owner of the file, or the user,
          belongs to the group "dev" (perhaps indicating
          "development"), and his or her login name is "smith."  The
          number, in this case "1," indicates the number of links to
          file "part2."  Finally, the row of dash and letters tell you
          that user, group, and others have permissions to read,
          write, execute "part2."

          The execute (x) symbol here occupies the third position of
          the three-character sequence.  A - in the third position
          would have indicated a denial of execution permissions.

          The permissions are indicated as follows:

               r   the file is readable
               w   the file is writable
               x   the file is executable
               -   the indicated permission is not granted
               l   mandatory locking will occur during access (the
                   set-group-ID bit is on and the group execution bit



     Page 3                                        (last mod. 8/20/87)





     LS(1)                                                       LS(1)



                   is off)
               s   the set-user-ID or set-group-ID bit is on, and the
                   corresponding user or group execution bit is also
                   on
               S   undefined bit-state (the set-user-ID bit is on and
                   the user execution bit if off)
               t   the 1000 (octal) bit, or sticky bit, is on (see
                   chmod(1)), and execution is on
               T   the 1000 bit is turned on, and execution is off
                   (undefined bit-state)

          For user and group permissions, the third position is
          sometimes occupied by a character other than x or -.  s also
          may occupy this position, referring to the state of the
          set-ID bit, whether it be the user's or the group's.  The
          ability to assume the same ID as the user during execution
          is, for example, used during login when you begin as root
          but need to assume the identity of the user stated at
          "login."

          In the case of the sequence of group permissions, l may
          occupy the third position.  l refers to mandatory file and
          record locking.  This permission describes a file's ability
          to allow other files to lock its reading or writing
          permissions during access.


          For others permissions, the third position may be occupied
          by t or T.  These refer to the state of the sticky bit and
          execution permissions.

     EXAMPLES
          The first set of examples refers to permissions:

               -rwxr--r--

          This describes a file that is readable, writable, and
          executable by the user and readable by the group and others.

               -rwsr-xr-x

          The second example describes a file that is readable,
          writable, and executable by the user, readable and
          executable by the group and others, and allows its user-ID
          to be assumed, during execution, by the user presently
          executing it.

               -rw-rwl---

          This example describes a file that is readable and writable
          only by the user and the group and can be locked during
          access.



     Page 4                                        (last mod. 8/20/87)





     LS(1)                                                       LS(1)



               ls -a

          This command will print the names of all files in the
          current directory, including those that begin with a dot
          (.), which normally do not print.

               ls -aisn

          This command will provide you with quite a bit of
          information including all files, including non-printing ones
          (a), the i-number-the memory address of the i-node
          associated with the file-printed in the left-hand column
          (i); the size (in blocks) of the files, printed in the
          column to the right of the i-numbers (s); finally, the
          report is displayed in the numeric version of the long list,
          printing the UID (instead of user name) and GID (instead of
          group name) numbers associated with the files.

          When the sizes of the files in a directory are listed, a
          total count of blocks, including indirect blocks, is
          printed.

     FILES
          /etc/passwd    user IDs for ls -l and ls -o
          /etc/group     group IDs for ls -l and ls -g
          /usr/lib/terminfo/?/*
                         terminal information database

     SEE ALSO
          chmod(1), find(1).

     NOTES
          In a Remote File Sharing environment, you may not have the
          permissions that the output of the ls -l command leads you
          to believe.  For more information see the "Mapping Remote
          Users" section of Chapter 10 of the System Administrator's
          Guide.

     BUGS
          Unprintable characters in file names may confuse the
          columnar output options.

     ORIGIN
          AT&T V.3











     Page 5                                        (last mod. 8/20/87)



Typewritten Software • bear@typewritten.org • Edmonds, WA 98026