A Unix directory is a file
containing a correspondence between filenames and inodes. A directory is a
special file that the kernel maintains. Only kernel modifies directories, but
processes can read directories. The contents of a directory are a list of
filename and inode number pairs. When new directories are created, kernel makes
two entries named '.' (refers to the directory itself) and '..' (refers to parent
directory).
System call for creating directory is
mkdir (pathname, mode).
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