cd / chdir The cd command in an rc session running on Plan 9 from Bell Labs
| Developer(s) | AT&T Bell Laboratories, MetaComCo, Microsoft,
IBM, DR, Novell, HP, JP Software, ReactOS
Contributors
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Operating system | Unix, Unix-like, V,
DOS, MSX-DOS, FlexOS, OS/2, TRIPOS,
Windows, MPE/iX, Plan 9,
Inferno, ReactOS, KolibriOS, SymbOS
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Platform | Cross-platform
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Type | Command
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The cd command, also known as chdir (change directory), is a command-line shell command used to change the current
working directory in various operating systems. It can be used in shell scripts and batch files. Implementations[edit]The command has been implemented in operating systems such as Unix, DOS,
IBM OS/2,[1] MetaComCo
TRIPOS,[2] AmigaOS[3] (where if a bare
path is given, cd is implied), Microsoft Windows, ReactOS,[4] and
Linux. On MS-DOS, it is available in versions 2 and later.[5] DR DOS 6.0 also includes an implementation of
the cd and chdir commands.[6] The command is also available in the open source MS-DOS emulator
DOSBox and in the EFI shell.[7] It is named chdir in
HP MPE/iX.[8] The command is analogous to the
Stratus OpenVOS change_current_dir command.[9] cd is frequently included built directly into a command-line interpreter. This is the case in most of the
Unix shells (Bourne shell, tcsh, bash, etc.), cmd.exe on Microsoft
Windows NT/2000+ and Windows PowerShell on Windows 7+ and COMMAND.COM on DOS/ Microsoft
Windows 3.x-9x/ME.
The system call that effects the command in most operating systems is chdir
that is defined by POSIX. Command line shells on Windows usually use the Windows API to change the current working directory, whereas on Unix systems cd calls the chdir() POSIX
C function. This means that when the command is executed, no new process is created to migrate to the other directory as is the case with other commands such as ls. Instead, the shell itself executes this command. This is because, when a new
process is created, child process inherits the directory in which the parent process was created. If the cd command inherits the parent process' directory, then the objective of the command cd
will never be achieved. Windows PowerShell, Microsoft's object-oriented command line shell and scripting language, executes the cd command (cmdlet) within the shell's process. However, since PowerShell is based on the
.NET Framework and has a different architecture than previous shells, all of PowerShell's cmdlets like ls , rm etc. run in the shell's process. Of course, this is not true for legacy commands which still run in a separate process. Usage[edit]A directory is a logical section of a file system used to hold files.
Directories may also contain other directories. The cd command can be used to change into a subdirectory, move back into the parent directory, move all the way back to the root directory or move to any given directory. Consider the following subsection of a Unix filesystem, which shows a user's
home directory (represented as ~ ) with a file, text.txt , and three subdirectories. A user's view of the file system in
Unix-like systems begins with the home directory (often abbreviated to ~ ). From there, the tree can spread into more subdirectories and/or files. If the user's current working directory is the home directory (~ ), then entering the command ls followed by cd games might produce the following transcript: user@wikipedia:~$ ls
workreports games encyclopedia text.txt
user@wikipedia:~$ cd games
user@wikipedia:~/games$
The user is now in the "games" directory. A similar session in DOS (though the concept of a "home directory" may not apply,
depending on the specific version[vague]) would look like this: C:\> dir
workreports <DIR> Wed Oct 9th 9:01
games <DIR> Tue Oct 8th 14:32
encyclopedia <DIR> Mon Oct 1st 10:05
text txt 1903 Thu Oct10th 12:43
C:\> cd games
C:\games>
DOS maintains separate working directories for each lettered drive, and also has the concept of a current
working drive. The cd command can be used to change the working directory of the working drive or another lettered drive. Typing the drive letter as a command on its own changes the working drive, e.g. C: ; alternatively, cd with the /d switch may be used to change the working drive and that drive's working directory in one step. Modern versions of Windows simulate this behaviour for backwards compatibility under
CMD.EXE.[10] Note that executing cd from the command line with no arguments has different effects in different operating systems. For example, if cd is executed without arguments in DOS, OS/2, or Windows, the current
working directory is displayed (equivalent to Unix pwd ). If cd is executed without arguments in Unix, the user is returned to the home directory. Executing the cd command within a script or batch file also has different effects in different operating systems. In DOS, the caller's current directory can be directly altered by the
batch file's use of this command. In Unix, the caller's current directory is not altered by the script's invocation of the cd command. This is because in Unix, the script is usually executed within a subshell. Options[edit]Unix, Unix-like[edit]
cd by itself or cd ~ will always put the user in their home directory.cd . will leave the user in the same directory they are currently in (i.e. the current directory won't change). This can be useful if the user's shell's internal code can't deal with the directory they are in being recreated; running cd . will place their shell in the recreated directory.cd ~username will put the user in the username's home directory.cd dir (without a
/ ) will put the user in a subdirectory; for example, if they are in /usr , typing cd bin will put them in /usr/bin , while cd /bin puts them in /bin .cd .. will move the user up one directory. So, if they are /usr/bin/tmp , cd .. moves them to /usr/bin , while cd ../.. moves them to /usr (i.e. up two levels). The user can use this indirection to access subdirectories too. So, from /usr/bin/tmp , they can use cd ../../local to go to /usr/local cd - will
switch the user to the previous directory. For example, if they are in /usr/bin/tmp , and go to /etc , they can type cd - to go back to /usr/bin/tmp . The user can use this to toggle back and forth between two directories.
DOS, OS/2, Windows,
ReactOS[edit]- no attributes print the full path of the current directory.
-p Print the final directory stack, just like dirs.-n Entries are
wrapped before they reach the edge of the screen.-v entries are printed one per line, preceded by their stack positions.cd\ (DOS and Windows only) returns to the root dir. Consequently, command cd\subdir always takes the user to the named subdirectory on the root directory, regardless of where they are located when the command is issued.
Interpreters other than an operating systems
shell[edit]In the File Transfer Protocol, the respective command is spelled CWD in the control stream, but is available as cd in most
client command-line programs. Some clients also have the lcd for changing the working directory locally. The numerical computing environments MATLAB and
GNU Octave include a cd function with similar functionality.[11][12] The command also pertains to command-line interpreters of various other application software. See also[edit]- Directory structure
- pushd and popd
- chroot
- List of command-line interpreters
References[edit]- ^
"JaTomes Help – OS/2 Commands". www.jatomes.com. Archived from the original on 2019-04-14. Retrieved
2019-08-11.
- ^
"Introduction to Tripos" (PDF). Retrieved
2020-05-01.
- ^
Rügheimer, Hannes; Spanik, Christian (May 1, 1988). AmigaDOS quick reference. Grand Rapids, Mi : Abacus. ISBN 9781557550491 – via Internet
Archive.
- ^ "Reactos/reactos". GitHub. 3 January
2022.
- ^ Wolverton, Van (2003). Running MS-DOS Version 6.22 (20th Anniversary Edition), 6th Revised edition. Microsoft Press. ISBN 0-7356-1812-7.
- ^ "DR DOS 6.0 User Guide Optimisation and Configuration Tips" (PDF). Archived from
the original (PDF) on 2019-09-30. Retrieved
2019-08-13.
- ^ "EFI Shells and Scripting". Intel. Retrieved
2013-09-25.
- ^
"MPE/iX Command Reference Manual" (PDF).
- ^ "OpenVOS Commands Reference Manual" (PDF). stratadoc.stratus.com. Retrieved
2020-09-12.
- ^ "October 11, 2010". The Old New
Thing.
- ^
"Change current folder – MATLAB cd".
www.mathworks.com.
- ^
"Function Reference: cd". octave.sourceforge.io.
Further reading[edit]- Wolverton, Van (1990). MS-DOS Commands: Microsoft Quick Reference, 4th Revised edition. Microsoft
Press. ISBN 978-1-55615-289-4.
- John Paul Mueller (2007). Windows Administration at the Command Line for Windows Vista, Windows 2003, Windows XP, and Windows 2000. John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 978-0-470-16579-9.
- Barrett, Daniel J. (2012). Macintosh Terminal Pocket Guide: Take Command of Your Mac. O'Reilly. ISBN 978-1-4493-2898-6.
External
links[edit]- Windows XP > Command-line reference A-Z > Chdir (Cd) from Microsoft
TechNet
cd : change the working directory – Shell and Utilities Reference, The Single UNIX Specification, Version 4 from The Open Group
Which command will change the directory to the user's home?
cd ~ : this command is used to change directory to the home directory.
What command is used to change the working directory?
The pwd command can be used to determine the present working directory. and the cd command can be used to change the current working directory.
What is the command for home directory?
To move around the file system you will use cd. Examples: To navigate into the root directory, use "cd /" To navigate to your home directory, use "cd" or "cd ~"
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