/usr/local/bin

>/usr/local/bin
>/usr/bin
>/bin
Why the fuck does Linux need more than one recycle bin?

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Other urls found in this thread:

bell-labs.com/usr/dmr/www/notes.html
twitter.com/NSFWRedditGif

those aren't recycle bin directories

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that's an illya

Wrong
To enable organization based on who owned it while it was deleted
>/usr/bin for a specific user file
>/bin/ for root owned file
/usr/local/bin just points to /usr/bin these days

I thought the /bin directories are for putting executables in so they can be accessed from anywhere due to being already set in your path

No /usr/local/bin is a public bin where devices on your LAN can place deleted files if their storage is full

then why are they full of garbage

You sure? systemd is there.

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/usr/local/bin depends on the distro. Server focused distros will usually just leave a symlink, while ones made more for desktops have the LAN feature enabled

/bin is kernel level binaries
/usr/bin is user level binaries

i like systemd

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>2019
>not installing gentoo, the only distro where you can do both at the same time

you're funny

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>/bin is kernel level binaries
False. Kernel binaries are in /boot

I see you're a fan of waiting 1:30 minutes.

Yikes.

windows 7 is the best trash icon

waiting 1:30 for what, is your swap partition not setup correctly in your fstab

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It's not, retard. Bet you took 15m to pick an anime picture and 0s to check where systemd is located.

>using swap

You know the 1:30 minutes I'm talking about. Don't lie you filthy lenart apologist.

waiting for a service on boot or a service or watchdog watchdog on shutdown

Recycle bin on the Windows desktop is a virtual folder containing recycle bin directories from all drives.
Each Windows user have its own Recycle bin virtual and many physical directories.
So loonix bin is just a poor replica of Windows

the only 1:30 i can assume is on booting when you get waiting for device on /dev/blahblahblah which means your fstab is looking for a partition which doesn't exist
whats wrong with swap?
i've legit never had that on any of my systems

>X is stopping

>/unix system resources/bin is user level binaries

I've had that shit happen several times over dhcpd, sorry I forgot to plug the cable fuxk off with the 90 seconds

I'm talking about waiting for "stop jobs" to finish on shutdown.

i use wayland

I don't have this issue

90s is the default timeout on systemd.
Whenever there is a problem, it takes an additional 90s to boot rather than just failing and moving on.

It is meant to be annoying so you notice and fix it.

>It is meant to be annoying so you notice and fix it.
Funny because it's fucking systemd's problem, not mine.

xp comfy bin

# whereis systemctl
systemctl: /usr/bin/systemctl
Thanks faggot, had to get a ISO and fire up a VM to check. Sure you're happy now.

kernel level not kernel binaries
derpass

It's widely known that Linux garbage powered, the more garbage you put in these directories the better it runs, it's called speed-memory tradeoff.

there is also /home/username/.local/bin

>bin
>user bin
>user local bin
>home david dot local bin
>

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vim is also in there

>no windows 7
Good.

Just do a cleanup of your system with "rm -rf /"

One is system trash. The other is user trash. The last one is utter trash.

You left out Windows 7. (yeah yeah, same icon as 8, but who cares)

Attached: luukku.png (190x156, 13K)

>C:\Program Files (x86)
>C:\Program Files
>C:\ProgramData

Why the fuck does windows need more than one place for programs, geeeez!?

Windows also have MULTIPLE recycle bins, namely the Recycle Bin and $RECYCLE.BIN folders on every drive/volume present

bin is for binaries not recycle bins

x86 programs
native programs
program specific configuration and additional files they can't modify running non-elevated in program files but aren't user specific either

it's for recycling

emacs as well

fix it cuck

XP bin looks too small and impractical. Who designed it?

Privileged users need to be able to bin files too, user.

based

Yeah right. Next you will tell me streets aren't for shitting.

it's weird to see that windows 10 trash icon looks very similar to 98

What's sbin for?

usr doesn't stand for user btw

>C:\Program Files
>C:\Program Files (x86)
>C:\Windows
>C:\Windows\System32
>C:\Windows\SysWOW64
>C:\Windows\WinSxS
>%APPDATA%\Local
>%APPDATA%\LocalLow
>%APPDATA%\Roaming

win$hits BTFO

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>/usr/local/bin
Previously for make install style systemwide binaries
>/usr/bin
Now used for the binaries shipped as part of an immutable OSTree image
>/bin
System binaries that need to stay alive during OSTree upgrades (I think)
The systemd binary resides in /lib/systemd

in linux, sure, but not in early unix
>" In particular, in our own version of the system, there is a directory "/usr" which contains all user's directories, and which is stored on a relatively large, but slow moving head disk, while the othe files are on the fast but small fixed-head disk. "
bell-labs.com/usr/dmr/www/notes.html

Home is for user directores now.
USR is unix system ressources

Came here to post this.

in linux, sure, but not in early unix
>" In particular, in our own version of the system, there is a directory "/usr" which contains all user's directories, and which is stored on a relatively large, but slow moving head disk, while the othe files are on the fast but small fixed-head disk. "
bell-labs.com/usr/dmr/www/notes.html

We are obviously talking about linux right now?
If I ask you who the president of the united states is and you answer Nixon it's still wrong.

Pedant

Brainlet

If you don't believe user try deleting /bin...
All the files in it are just symbol links to files that were deleted. If a file in /bin is named for example "vim" it means it was deleted by vim

since this thread is about trash, pic very related, good job

this is correct, bin folders are trash bins
but all executables and binaries you install through your package manager or anything else shipped by your distribution is also placed inside a bin folder because all free software are inherently garbage
proprietary software goes inside the /opt folder that stands for OPTimal or properly OPTimized

Funny enough in early xp luna beta's the recycle bin had a handle.

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that's a cup

/usr stood for "user" in unix history, the usr disk was fairly large. At some point they ran out of space on system disks and added a new disk called /home , transferred over /usr to /home then used usr for more system files. If you get an old enough Unix systems you will find that user home dirs are under /usr

/sbin
/usr/sbin
/usr/local/sbin
/root/.local/bin

/usr/bin and /bin are functionally the same. The new trend is to link them together.

/usr/local/bin is for binaries that were not installed by the distributions package manager.

On NixOs all of these directories are empty except for just a couple files for running old software: /bin/sh and /usr/bin/env

5/10 laugh joke

>Windows 98
THIS IMAGE IS WRONG: THAT RECYCLE BIN IS FROM WINDOWS 95

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using sudo always helped me sklipping that waiting on shutdown

You forgot VirtualStore

The Unix filesystem hierarchy is retarded and only exists because Thompson and Ritchie ran out of space.
Any attempt to explain it is nothing but a pathetic a posteriori rationalization.
But hey, what can you expect from Eunuchs.

System binaries - things essential to keep the system working

That's the excuse they came up with after splitting files into the second drive.

That's like saying your TV is in the trash because your mother accidentally threw the remote controller into the garbage bin when cleaning your cum-crusted bedroom.

>weeb trash
opinion discarded

why does OP need more than one brain cell?

ln -s /dev/null /usr/bin

>Anime website

You had better be baiting OPnig

hi

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one is a directory the other two are shortcuts to it

hi

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ishygddt

i suppose it's just like a fallback

Define your dumbass arbitrary terms, fuckface.
Nothing in /bin executes with kernel privileges, so I sure as hell don't know what the fuck you could possibly mean by "kernel level".
Fuck off retard.

In case one bin get full you have several more.

/bin is a symlink you stupid nigger

What is with the Program Files (x86)? Aren't both of them for x86?

>What is with the Program Files (x86)? Aren't both of them for x86?
on 64bit systems 64bit programs go into Program Files
on 32bit systems 32bit programs go into Program Files
on 64bit systems 32bit programs go into Program Files (x86)
also look up the story behind SysWOW64, it's insanity

What do Microjeets think x86 is?

how the hell did you know i was black?!

>winshit
>C:\$Recycle.Bin
>D:\$Recycle.Bin
>E:\$Recycle.Bin
>every fuckin single flash drive:\$Recycle.Bin
fuckin kys faggot