Difficulty: Easy
Correct Answer: All of the above
Explanation:
Introduction / Context:
The long listing format (ls -l) is the most common way to inspect filesystem metadata quickly. Being able to read its columns helps you understand permissions, ownership, size, and timestamps at a glance.
Given Data / Assumptions:
ls implementation (e.g., GNU coreutils).ls -l shows by default.
Concept / Approach:
The output columns include: file type and permissions, link count, owner (user), group, size in bytes, last modification time, and name. Optional flags (-h, -n, --time-style) change formatting but not the presence of core fields. Hence, owner, group, and size/time are all present.
Step-by-Step Solution:
ls -l in any directory.Observe columns: perms, links, owner, group, size, date/time, filename.Confirm that owner and group names appear (or numeric IDs with -n).Confirm size and last modification time are shown.
Verification / Alternative check:
Use stat filename for a more detailed view; it corroborates the same metadata shown in summarized form by ls -l.
Why Other Options Are Wrong:
ls -l shows all these fields.
Common Pitfalls:
Confusing last access time with last modification time; misreading human-readable sizes with -h; overlooking the link count column; forgetting that timezone and format may vary.
Final Answer:
All of the above
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