root
It is the path as relative to the topmost directory, /. For example, /usr/bin is absolute, but ../bin is relative (Means "the directory 'bin' in the parent of the current directory.")
Not exactly clean what do you mean.1. Which directory are you in: pwd2. Your PATH environment variable: echo $PATH
pwd
You change the current working path directory in Linux by issuing the cd command, followed by the directory you want to change to. For example:cd /dev/inputwould take me to the that directory.
mv file /path/to/directory
pwd
/etc/lilo.conf
Is the path to a Windows or Linux directory on a computer, or something else? More information is needed.
Starting from /home, the path may include up to 4,091 additional characters (that is, Linux supports 4096 characters for the path, with up to 256 characters per file or directory name). This is a limitation of the kernel, and not of the file system. It is technically possible to modify the Linux kernel to support even longer file and path names if a user needed to do so.
Use the following command: cd .. The ".." indicates the parent of the current directory
4096
rm -rf <path to directory>