Monday, 12 December 2011

BASIC LINUX COMMANDS

1. tty - reveals the current terminal
2. whoami - reveals the currently logged-in user
3. which - reveals where in the search path a program is located
4. echo - prints to the screen
   a. echo $PATH - dumps the current path to STDOUT
   b. echo $PWD - dumps ths contents of the $PWD variable
   c. echo $OLDPWD - dumps the most recently visited directory
5. set - prints and optionally sets shell variables
6. clear - clears the screen or terminal
7. reset - resets the screen buffer
8. history - reveals your command history
   a. !690 - executes the 690th command in our history
   b. command history is maintained on a per-user basis via:
   ~/.bash_history
   ~ = users's $HOME directory in the BASH shell
9. pwd - prints the working directory
10. cd - changes directory to desired directory
   a. 'cd ' with no options changes to the $HOME directory
   b. 'cd ~' changes to the $HOME directory
   c. 'cd /' changes to the root of the file system
   d. 'cd Desktop/' changes us to the relative directory 'Desktop'
   e. 'cd ..' changes us one-level up in the directory tree
   f. 'cd ../..' changes us two-levels up in the directory tree
11. Arrow keys (up and down) navigates through your command history
12. BASH supports tab completion:
 a. type unique characters in the command and press 'Tab' key
13. You can copy and paste in GNOME terminal windows using:
  a. left button to block
  b. right button to paste OR Ctrl-Shift-v to paste
14. ls - lists files and directories
 a. ls / - lists the contents of the '/' mount point
 b. ls -l - lists the contents of a directory in long format:
 Includes: permissions, links, ownership, size, date, name
 c. ls -ld /etc - lists properties of the directory '/etc', NOT the contents of '/etc'
 d. ls -ltr - sorts chronologically from older to newer (bottom)
 e. ls --help - returns possible usage information
 f. ls -a - reveals hidden files. e.g. '.bash_history'
Note: files/directories prefixed with '.' are hidden. e.g. '.bash_history'
15. cat - catenates files
   a. cat 123.txt - dumps the contents of '123.txt' to STDOUT
   b. cat 123.txt 456.txt dumps both files to STDOUT
   c. cat 123.txt 456.txt > 123456.txt - creates new catenated file
16. mkdir - creates a new directory
 a. mkdir testRH5 - creates a 'testRH5' directory
17. cp - copies files
 a. cp 123.txt testRH5/
By default, 'cp' does NOT preserve the original modification time
 b. cp -v 456.txt testRH5/
18. mv - moves files
 a. mv 123456.txt testRH5/ - moves the file, preserving timestamp
19. rm - removes files/directories
 a. rm 123.txt
 b. rm -rf 456.txt - removes recursively and enforces
20. touch - creates blank file/updates timestamp
 a. touch test.txt - will create a zero-byte file, if it doesn't exist
 b. touch 123456.txt - will update the timestamp
 c. touch -t 200801091530 123456.txt - changes timestamp
21. stat - reveals statistics of files
 a. stat 123456.txt - reveals full attributes of the file
22. find - finds files using search patterns
 a. find / -name 'fstab'
Note: 'find' can search for fields returned by the 'stat' command
23. alias - returns/sets aliases for commands
 a. alias - dumps current aliases
 b. alias copy='cp -v'

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