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For other uses, see Root (disambiguation). In computer file systems, the root directory is the first or top-most directory in a hierarchy. It can be likened to the root of a tree - the starting point where all branches originate.
[edit] MetaphorTo use the example of a physical file cabinet, if the separate drawers in the file cabinet are represented as the highest level of sub-directories in the file system or system prompt, then the room the file cabinet is in, may be represented as the root directory. That is, the other directories may be inside it, but the root directory cannot go in any other directories, at least in that file system. In most operating systems, files can be placed inside the root directory, as well in its sub-directories. One may envision this as placing paper files anywhere in the room, or into any file cabinet within the room. [edit] Multiple root directoriesUnix abstracts the nature of this tree hierarchy entirely, and in Unix and Unix-like systems, the root directory is denoted Under DOS and Microsoft Windows, each partition has a drive letter assignment (labeled In UNIX-like operating systems, each process has its own idea of what the root directory is. For most processes this is the same as the system's actual root directory, but it can be changed by calling the [edit] /rootOn many Unixes, there is also a directory which is named /root. Confusingly, it is not a root directory in the sense of this article, but rather the home directory of the Superuser (conventionally known as "root"). [edit] VMSIn the VMS operating system, the term "root directory" is used to refer to the directory in which all the user's files are stored, which is what Unix calls the "home directory". The equivalent of a MSDOS per-disk "root directory" in VMS is referred to as a "Master File Directory" and is specified as [edit] See also[edit] External links
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