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DRAFT

The Linux command line is very popular because you have more commands and options at your fingertips than with your desktop applications and you can script repetitive tasks, create aliases and write shell functions. You can also use the bash command line in the Windows Subsystem for Linux.

If you know what you want to do but can't remember the command you need, use apropos. Typing apropos followed by whatever you're interested in, like "printing" or "remote connection", lists all the commands associated with that topic. For example, “apropos printing” will list all the commands about printing. Other resources:

6 Linux Terminal Mistakes Beginners Make

Command Line for Beginners

10 Basic Linux Commands for Beginners

37 Important Linux Commands You Should Know

Linux Commands Cheat Sheet

 

Synthasix:

Linux is case sensitive. We keep capital letters for variables.

No accent or space is used. 

Under Linux all is file and there is no extension

We do not see the partitions, there is only one file system

It is possible to group the parameters  ls -lisa -color=tty (equivalent to ls -l -i -s -a -color=tty)

Joker : * and ? (one character)

&& allows to chain commands

 

Navigation - Commands:

- Cd ~ ⇒ go to my home folder

- Cd toto ⇒ relative addressing

- Cd /home/henchoz-d/toto ⇒ absolute addressing

- Cd . ⇒ Where I am

- Cd .. ⇒ back to where I came from (parent directory on the top floor) don't forget the space

- Cd / ⇒ return root

Example: Three ways to go from /usr/local/doc to /usr/X11R6/doc. 

1.

- cd ..  

- cd ..  

- cd X11R6  

- cd doc

2.

- cd ../../X11R6/doc

3.

- cd /usr/X11R6/doc

 

Home folder = /root

~ (tilde) indicates home folder

My folder = /home/henchoz-d

Files starting with "." are hidden

 

Navigation - File Structure:

AD_4nXcHLlwX2EUF91yGO3P2ts5QNRAxoXOpqbs_IHjeA2oEpOuIEM9ZSxKz33Np88QPFQt5-y4UI2O1OGe4a_EmHx9WvjyP4yNg_DrhexUTbJuqgSe6sHOWGteH6zYq2myxA681FoYr9r8E59R9hYU-EmwbffSO?key=Yvh-3o7cJZKNxzK1NEGh0g

 

"bin" contains commands necessary for system startup. 

"sbin" contains commands needed for system startup, reserved for the system administrator or superuser

"etc" contains all configurations of all applications, general configuration files, commands to be executed at system startup, system startup mode

"proc" is virtual, created in memory

"tmp" temporary

"usr" for applications Multi-purpose directory, the main ones being : 

/usr/bin Commands usable by all users, and not necessary during system startup. 

/usr/sbin Commands reserved for the super-user, and not necessary during system startup. 

/usr/man Contains man pages 

/usr/doc Contains many documentation and information sources. 

/usr/X11R6 Contains all files related to the X-Window graphics layer 

/usr/local Place where files specific to the installed system are stored. 

"home" personal folders of all users

"lib" and "lib64" (equivalent to dll?)

"media" and "mnt" (mount) are places where removable media and network shares are attached

"srv" server-specific information and programs

"sys" system

"var Log files. Contains data updated by various programs during the operation of the system. 

/var/lock Blocking files, for example to prevent two simultaneous uses of the modem. 

/var/spool Directories used for organizing the work of printers, e-mail, etc. 

/var/log Contains log files from various points on the system. 

"dev This directory contains all the special files used to access the hardware, whether it is the keyboard, the hard disk, the sound card... 

 

Important files

/etc/passwd ⇒ The users file 

/etc/group ⇒ The group file 

Structure : Name:Password:User number:Group number:Special field: Home directory:Startup program 

/etc/inittab ⇒ Specifies the system boot mode and associated actions. 

/etc/fstab ⇒ Lists the partitions used by the system and how it uses them. 

XF86Config ⇒ Can be located in different places (but often under /etc/X11) depending on the distribution used. Contains the configuration of the graphics layer 

vmlinuz... ⇒ Is usually located either under the root (/) or under /boot. It is the system itself! 

 

Prompt :

henchoz-d@vador:/$  username@machinename:currentfolder 

#  ⇒  indicates that you are root

$  ⇒ indicates that you are user

 

Redirection

Send the display to a folder  rpm -qa > all_packages.txt

Redirections can be done in the other direction. Take what is in a file

mail untel at tel.adresse < message.txt

 

Commands

[] optional

{} choose one of these options

 

Commands under bash (there are 400 basic bash or sh commands):

Type a letter then TAB TAB to see the commands

Cat (catalog) ⇒ displays the contents of the file 

Chmod - sets file permissions (see paragraph at the bottom of the document)

Clear ⇒ clears the screen

Cmp ⇒ allows to compare files

DD instead of cp ⇒ allows a bit by bit copy (including the size of the partition so expand the partition with expandfs)

Diff - compares two files and shows their differences? 

Df -h ⇒ allows to know the total disk space occupied and remaining on the partitions of your system

Dmesg ⇒ kernel log

Du ⇒ show the disk space used by the files in a directory

echo $PATH ⇒  to see the environment variables

export PATH="$PATH:/foldername" ⇒ to add a variable

find ⇒  find files 

ex : find / -name core finds from the root the files named core

ex : find / -mtime -2 finds files modified within two days

find /volume1/Personnel -maxdepth 15 | grep -P '\/

\/{143,}^\/' (finds all filenames longer than 143 char)

 

Grep - searches files for matches. grep 'string to search' file ⇒ searches the file if it contains the string to search

ex : grep 'string to search' foldera/* folderb/*  searches in the files belonging to foldera and folderb if they contain the string to search (-i to ignore the box)

Groups ⇒  to display the groups you belong to

Gzip ⇒  to compress files

ip addr - find your ip address

Ifconfig ⇒ equivalent to ipconfig

Join ⇒ mix two files on the screen

Kill ⇒  interacts with procedures 

Ex : kill -1 process number allows to reset a process

Ex : kill -15 process number allows to stop a process gently

Ex : kill -9 processnumber allows to force a process to stop

 

Less ⇒ allows to display a file on the screen (like more but better)

Ln ⇒ creation of a link

Ex : ln tata tatacopie creates a "hard" link. Both files point to the same place, deleting one does not affect the other

Ex : ln -s tata tatacopie creates a "symbolic" link. Both files point to the same place, deleting the original one makes it impossible to open the symbolic link. A symbolic link is indicated by -> by doing ls-l

Ls ⇒  list sort (equivalent to MS-DOS dir) -a with hidden files; -l with details; -R with subdirectories; -color=tty with colors (remember to do an apt-get install tree)

Ls -al ⇒  lists the files, including hidden ones, with details (allows to see the permissions)

Ls -Al ⇒  lists the files, without hidden ones, with details (allows to see the permissions)

Ls -p ⇒  adds the / indicator to directories

Ls -g ⇒ groups directories before files

Ls -al |less ⇒ pause screen (space bar to continue)

Ls -al | less grep texmf ⇒  lists only what contains texmf

Man command ⇒  manual (equivalent to /h) q to quit, preferable to help

Command -help ⇒ to get help on a command

More ⇒ to display a file on the screen

Ps a ⇒ to get a list of all processes

Ps -ef | grep processname ⇒  to know the status of a given process

Pwd ⇒ displays the tree of the current directory

Reboot ⇒  restarts

Service --status-all ⇒  list the services and display their status

Shutdown -h now ⇒  stops 

Smbclient //machine/directory -U administrator -l 192.168.1.1 ⇒ access the share

Startx ⇒ start a graphical session on a remote server

Stat ⇒ allows to have detailed information about a file (creation, modification)

Su (sudo) ⇒ become super user - allows a user to run a program as the root user

tar ⇒ to archive files

Traceroute ⇒ equivalent of MAS-DOS tracert

Uname -a  ⇒ system info

Userdel ⇒  delete a user account

WhoAmI

Who ⇒ displays the current users

Some commands (especially administration commands) are not available to users.

 

Pipes:

|(pipe) ⇒ passes the result of the previous command

This mechanism allows to chain the execution of several commands

Example, the following two commands:

- ls -alR / > all_files (lists all files on the system and sends the result to the "all files" file)

- grep doc all_files (searches for "doc" in the "all files" file)

becomes

- ls -alR / | grep doc

 

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The chmod command sets file attributes, much like the Windows attrib command does. On Linux you can set permissions for reading files, writing to files, and executing files, with a different set of attributes for the file owner, the user group the file belongs to, and everyone else. These attributes can also be applied to directories.

 

0: No permission

1: Execute permission

2: Write permission

3: Write and execute permissions

4: Read permission

5: Read and execute permissions

6: Read and write permissions

7: Read, write and execute permissions

 

The file "howtogeek.txt" has full permissions set for everyone. We'll change that to full permissions for the owner (7), read and write (6) for the group, and read (4) for all others.

chmod 764 howtogeek.txt

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Here are some training videos that might interest you

Linux Commands

Linux Features

 


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Page last modified on Tuesday March 4, 2025 09:57:00 GMT-0000 by admin.
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