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Learning Red Hat Linux (3rd Edition) [Electronic resources] - نسخه متنی

Bill McCarty

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Appendix D. Linux Command Quick Reference


The
following list describes some of the most useful and popular Linux
commands. Consult the manpage for each command to learn about
additional arguments and details of operation.

adduser userid

Creates a new userid, prompting for necessary
information (requires root privileges).

alias name='command'

Defines name as an alias for the specified command.

apropos keyword

Searches the manual pages for occurrences of the specified keyword
and prints short descriptions from the beginning of matching manual
pages.

at time

at -f file time

Executes commands entered via STDIN (or by using the alternative
form, the specified file) at the specified time. The time can be
specified in a variety of ways; for example, in hour and minute
format (hh:mm) or in hour, minute, month, day,
and year format (hh:mm
mm/dd/yy).

atq

Displays descriptions of jobs pending via the at command.

atrm job

Cancels execution of a job scheduled via the at command. Use the atq command to discover the identities of
scheduled jobs.

bg

bg jobs

Places the current job (or by using the
alternative form, the specified jobs) in the background, suspending
its execution so that a new user prompt appears immediately. Use the
jobs command to discover the
identities of background jobs.

cal month year

Displays a calendar for the specified month of the specified year.

cat files

Displays the contents of the specified files.

cd

cd directory

Changes the current working directory to the user's
home directory or the specified directory.

chgrp group files

chgrp -R group files

Changes the group of the specified files to the specified group. The
alternative form of the command operates recursively, changing the
group of subdirectories and files beneath a specified directory. The
group must be named in the /etc/groups file,
maintained by the newgroup command.

chmod mode files

chmod -R mode files

Changes the access mode of the specified files to the specified mode.
The alternative form of the command operates recursively, changing
the mode of subdirectories and files beneath a specified directory.

chown userid files

chown -R userid files

Changes the owner of the specified files to the specified
userid. The alternative form of the command
operates recursively, changing the owner of subdirectories and files
beneath a specified directory

clear

Clears the terminal screen.

cmp file1 file2

Compares two files, reporting all discrepancies. Unlike the diff command, cmp can compare multiple files and binary
files.

cp file1 file2

cp files directory

cp -R files directory

Copies a file to another file or directory or copies a subdirectory
and all its files to another directory.

date

date date

Displays the current date and time or changes the system date and
time to the specified value, of the form
MMddhhmmyy or MMddhhmmyyyy.

df

Displays the amount of free disk space on each mounted filesystem.

diff file1 file2

Compares two files, reporting all discrepancies. Similar to the
cmp command, though the output
format differs.

dmesg

Displays the messages resulting from the most recent system boot.

du

du directories

Displays the amount of disk space used by the current directory (or
the specified directories) and its (their) subdirectories.

echo string

echo -n string

Displays the specified text on the standard output stream. The
-n option causes omission of the
trailing newline character.

fdformat device

Formats the media inserted in the specified floppy disk drive. The
command performs a low-level format only; it does not create a
filesystem. To create a filesystem, issue the mkfs command after formatting the media.

fdisk device

Edits the partition table of the specified hard disk.

fg

fg jobs

Brings the current job (or the specified jobs) to the foreground.

file files

Determines and prints a description of the type of each specified
file.

find path -name pattern -print

Searches the specified path for
files with names matching the specified pattern (usually enclosed in
single quotes) and prints their names. The find command has many other arguments and
functions; see the online documentation.

finger users

Displays descriptions of the specified users.

free

Displays the amount of used and free system memory.

ftp hostname

Opens an FTP connection to the specified host, allowing files to be
transferred. The FTP program provides subcommands for accomplishing
file transfers; see the online documentation.

grep pattern files

grep -i pattern files

grep -n pattern files

grep -v pattern files

Searches the specified files for text matching the specified pattern
(usually enclosed in single quotes) and prints matching lines. The
-i option specifies that matching is
performed without regard to case. The -n option specifies that each line of output is
preceded by the filename and line number. The -v option reverses the matching, causing
nonmatched lines to be printed.

gzip files

gunzip files

Expands or compresses the specified files. Generally, a compressed
file has the same name as the original file, followed by
.gz.

head files

Displays the first several lines of each specified file.

hostname

hostname name

Displays (or sets) the name of the host.

info

Launches the GNU Texinfo help system.

init runlevel

Changes the system runlevel to the specified value (requires
root privileges).

insmod module

Dynamically loads the specified module (requires
root privileges).

ispell files

Checks the spelling of the contents of the specified files.

jobs

Displays all background jobs.

kill process_ids

kill -l

kill -signal process_ids

Kills the specified processes, prints a list of available signals, or
sends the specified processes the specified signal (given as a number
or name).

killall program

killall -signal program

Kills all processes that are instances of the specified program or
sends the specified signal to all processes that are instances of the
specified program.

less file

Lets the user peruse a file too large to be displayed as a single
screen (page) of output. The less
command, which is more powerful than the more command, provides many subcommands that
let the user navigate the file. For example, the spacebar moves
forward one page, the b key moves
back one page, and the q key exits
the program.

links URL

Views the specified web page.

ln old new

ln -s old new

Creates a hard (or soft) link associating a new name with an existing
file or directory.

locate pattern

Locates files with names containing the specified pattern. Uses the
database maintained by the updatedb
command.

lpq

Displays the entries of the print queue.

lpr files

Displays the specified files.

lprm job

Cancels printing of the specified print queue entries. Use lpq to determine the contents of the print
queue.

ls

ls files

ls -a files

ls -l files

ls -lR files

Lists (nonhidden) files in the current directory or the specified
files or directories. The -a option
lists hidden files as well as nonhidden files. The -l option causes the list to include
descriptive information, such as file size and modification date. The
-R option recursively lists the
subdirectories of the specified directories.

mail

Launches a simple mail client that permits sending and receiving
email messages.

man title

man section title

Displays the specified manpage.

mkdir directories

mkdir -p directories

Creates the specified directories. The -p option causes creation of any parent
directories needed to create a specified directory.

mkfs -t type device

Creates a filesystem of the specified type (such as
ext3 or msdos) on the
specified device (requires
root privileges).

mkswap device

Creates a Linux swap space on the specified hard disk partition
(requires root privileges).

more file

Lets the user peruse a file too large to be displayed as a single
screen (page) of output. The more
command provides many subcommands that let the user navigate the
file. For example, the spacebar moves forward one page, the b key moves back one page, and the q key exits the program.

mount

mount device directory

mount -o option -t type device directory

Displays the mounted devices or mounts the specified device at the
specified mount point (generally a subdirectory of
/mnt). The mount command consults
/etc/fstab to determine standard options
associated with a device. The command generally requires
root privileges. The -o option allows specification of a variety of
options, for example, ro for
read-only access. The -t option
allows specification of the filesystem type (for example,
ext3, msdos, or
iso9660, the filesystem type generally used for
CD-ROMs).

mv paths target

Moves the specified files or directories to the specified target.

newgroup group

Creates the specified group.

passwd

passwd user

Changes the current user's password or that of the
specified user (requires root privileges). The
command prompts for the new password.

pico

pico file

Launch pico to edit the specified
file, if any.

ping -n ip_address

ping host

Sends an echo request via TCP/IP to the specified host. A response
confirms that the host is operational.

pr files

Formats the specified files for printing, by inserting page breaks
and so on. The command provides many arguments and functions.

ps

ps -aux

Displays the processes associated with the current
userid or displays a description of each
process.

pwd

Displays the absolute path corresponding to the current working
directory.

reboot

Reboots the system (requires root privileges).

reset

Clears the terminal screen and resets the terminal status.

rm files

rm -f files

rm -i files

rm -if files

rm -rf files

Deletes the specified files or (when the -r option is specified) recursively deletes all
subdirectories of the specified files and directories. The -f option suppresses confirmation; the
-i option causes the command to
prompt for confirmation. Because deleted files cannot generally be
recovered, the -f option should be
used only with extreme care, particularly when used by the
root user.

rmdir directories

rmdir -p directories

Deletes the specified empty directories or (when the -p option is specified) the empty directories
along the specified path.

scp host1:file host2:

Copies file from host1 to
host2, via SSH.

shutdown minutes

shutdown -h minutes

shutdown -r minutes

Shuts down the system after the specified number of minutes elapses
(requires root privileges). The -r option causes the system to be rebooted once
it has shut down. If the -r option
is absent, the system is halted and powered off; the -h option also halts and shuts down the system.
Alternatively, now can be used
instead of minutes, which forces an immediate
reboot or halt of the system.

sleep time

Causes the command interpreter to pause for the specified number of
seconds.

sort files

Sorts the specified files. The command has many useful arguments; see
the online documentation.

split file

Splits a file into several smaller files. The command has many
arguments; see the online documentation.

ssh host -l userid

Logs in to host via SSH, using the specified
userid.

su

su user

su -

su - user

Changes the current userid to
root or to the specified
userid (the latter requires
root privileges). The - option establishes a default environment for
the new userid.

swapoff device

Disables use of the specified device for swapping (requires
root privileges).

swapon device

Enables use of the specified device for swapping (requires
root privileges).

sync

Completes all pending input/output
operations (requires root privileges).

tail file

tail -f file

tail -n file

Displays the last several lines of the specified files. The
-f option causes the command to
continuously print additional lines as they are written to the file.
The -n option specifies the number
of lines to be printed.

talk user

Launches a program that allows a chatlike dialog with the specified
user.

tar cvf tar_file files

tar zcvf tar_file files

Creates a tar file with the specified name, containing the specified
files and their subdirectories. The z option specifies that the tarfile will be
compressed.

tar xvf tar_file

tar zxvf tar_file

Extracts the contents of the specified tarfile. The z option specifies that the tarfile has been
compressed.

telnet host

Opens a login session on the specified host.

time

Times the execution of a job.

top

Displays a display of system processes that's
continually updated until the user presses the q key.

touch file

Changes file access time. If the specified file
does not exist, the command creates an empty (new) file.

traceroute host

Uses echo requests to determine and print a network path to the host.

umask mask

Specifies default permissions assigned to created directories and
files.

umount device

Unmounts the specified filesystem (generally requires
root privileges).

uname -a

Displays information about the system.

unzip file

Unzips a compressed file.

uptime

Displays the system uptime.

w

Displays the current system users.

wall

Displays a message to each user except those who've
disabled message reception. Type Ctrl-D to end the message.

wc files

Displays the number of characters, words, and lines in the specified
files.

who

Displays information about system users.

zip file

Compresses the specified file.

Table D-1 identifies Linux commands that perform
functions similar to MS-DOS commands. The operation of the Linux
command is not generally identical to that of the corresponding
MS-DOS command. See the index to this book or the Linux online
documentation for further information about Linux commands.












































































Table D-1. MS-DOS commands and related Linux commands

MS-DOS


Linux


ATTRIB


chmod


CD


cd


CHKDSK


df, du


DELTREE


rm -R


DIR


ls -l


DOSKEY


(built-in; no need to launch separately)


EDIT


pico, vi, and so on


EXTRACT


tar


FC


cmp, diff


FDISK


fdisk


FIND


grep


FORMAT


fdformat


MORE


more


MOVE


mv


SORT


sort


START


at, bg


XCOPY, XCOPY32


cp

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