I'm only new to using SSH, but when I log in I end up in the directory ~, which in general is the same directory when FTPing in. I can still go to /, but I don't know what the ~ means. Home? Where is it in relation to /, or how could I find out?
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~ is an alias to the currently logged in users home directory. To find out where that really is, type
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~ is your home directory, yes. Which is very nice since your home directory is not always where you think it should be (/home/). Also, fun fact: You can use "cd ~myuser" to get to the home directory of the user "myuser". |
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Yes, it is the home directory of the user you logged in as. You can use the command |
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And home, in relation to /, isn't necessarily always in the same place. That's why the ~ shortcut is so useful. The path to home should be in $HOME. Try typing
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/ is the root of the file system ~/ or ~ is the root of your profile, ~/ is always /home/username |
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Home directory need not necessarily be under /home as kigurai has pointed out. |
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As others have commented, the tilde indicates your current For most people, Quote from section 2.6.1 'Tilde Expansion' of POSIX.1-2008:
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~ expands to your home directory, as has been pointed out, but I think it's worth noting that isn't a feature of ssh itself. ssh (among many other wonderful features!) lets you establish a remote shell, and this shell can provided by many different pieces of software. On a *nix system, your account will be associated with a particular shell, GNU bash is a popular choice. And it so happens than in bash, and most other POSIX compliant shells, the tilde character expands as a shortcut to your home directory. |
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You can try realpath
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Different shells may or may not handle this differently, but Johnathan got the closest without coming out and saying it. The shell expands "~" to whatever's stored in the $HOME environment variable. The shell expands ~username to whatever's listed in the shell field of /etc/passwd for the given username. If you don't override it, the shell (or ssh, depending on the implementation) will set $HOME to be the home field from /etc/passwd, so they're both the same (assuming you're "username") until you change one. As to why you see a ~ in ssh... The prompt says "~" is your current directory most likely because you're using Bash as your shell, and the value of $PS1 (the prompt string you see - it's set in /etc/profile or /etc/profile.d/*, more than likely) contains a \w or a \W somewhere. The \w string in the prompt shows the current directory, and collapses to a "~" when you're in the directory specified by $HOME. Here's a little demo starting in my homedir - note how the "\w" gets replaced with either the current directory or with a ~, based on what the value of HOME is set to. Also note that the trailing slash doesn't work - HOME can't end with a slash for this to work. :)
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~ is your home directory. To see the path type:
in the terminal |
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