B.1. Shell and Basic Commands
In the Unix world, every administrator has to use the command line sooner or later; for example, when the system fails to start properly and only provides a command-line rescue mode. Being able to handle such an interface, therefore, is a basic survival skill for these circumstances.
This section only gives a quick peek at the commands. They all have many options not described here; accordingly, they also have abundant documentation in their respective manual pages.
B.1.1. Browsing the Directory Tree and Managing Files
Once a session is open, the pwd
command (print working directory) displays the current location in the filesystem. The current directory is changed with the cd directory
command (cd
is for change directory). The parent directory is always called ..
(two dots), whereas the current directory is also known as .
(one dot). The ls
command allows listing the contents of a directory. If no parameters are given, it operates on the current directory.
$
pwd
/home/rhertzog
$
cd Desktop
$
pwd
/home/rhertzog/Desktop
$
cd .
$
pwd
/home/rhertzog/Desktop
$
cd ..
$
pwd
/home/rhertzog
$
ls
Desktop Downloads Pictures Templates
Documents Music Public Videos
A new directory can be created with mkdir directory
, and an existing (empty) directory can be removed with rmdir directory
. The mv
command allows moving and/or renaming files and directories; removing a file involves rm file
.
$
mkdir test
$
ls
Desktop Downloads Pictures Templates Videos
Documents Music Public test
$
mv test new
$
ls
Desktop Downloads new Public Videos
Documents Music Pictures Templates
$
rmdir new
$
ls
Desktop Downloads Pictures Templates Videos
Documents Music Public test
B.1.2. Displaying and Modifying Text Files
The cat file
command (intended to concatenate files on its standard output) reads a file and displays its contents in the terminal. If the file is too big to fit on a screen, use a pager such as less
(or more
) to display it page by page.
The editor
command always points at a text editor (such as vi
or nano
) and allows creating, modifying and reading text files. The simplest files can sometimes be created directly from the command interpreter thanks to redirection: echo "text
" >file
creates a file named file
with “text
” as its contents. Adding a line at the end of this file is possible too, with a command such as echo "line
" >>file
.
B.1.3. Searching for Files and within Files
The find directory
criteria
command looks for files in the hierarchy under directory
according to several criteria. The most commonly used criterion is -name name
: it allows looking for a file by its name.
The
grep expression
files
command searches the contents of the files and extracts the lines matching the regular expression (see sidebar
BACK TO BASICS Regular expression). Adding the
-r
option enables a recursive search on all files contained in the directory passed as a parameter. This allows looking for a file when only a part of the contents are known.
B.1.4. Managing Processes
The ps aux
command lists the processes currently running and allows identifying them by their pid (process id). Once the pid of a process is known, the kill -signal
pid
command allows sending it a signal (if the process belongs to the current user). Several signals exist; most commonly used are TERM
(a request to terminate) and KILL
(a heavy-handed kill).
The command interpreter can also run programs in the background if the command ends with “&”. By using the ampersand, the user resumes control of the shell immediately even though the command is still running (hidden from the user; as a background process). The jobs
command lists the processes running in the background; running fg %job-number
(for foreground) restores a job to the foreground. When a command is running in the foreground (either because it was started normally, or brought back to the foreground with fg
), the Control+Z key pair pauses the process and resumes control of the command-line. The process can then be restarted in the background with bg %job-number
(for background).
B.1.5. System Information: Memory, Disk Space, Identity
The free
command displays information on memory; df
(disk free) reports on the available disk space on each of the disks mounted in the filesystem. Its -h
option (for human readable) converts the sizes into a more legible unit (usually mebibytes or gibibytes). In a similar fashion, the free
command understands the -m
and -g
options, and displays its data either in mebibytes or in gibibytes, respectively.
$
free
total used free shared buffers cached
Mem: 1028420 1009624 18796 0 47404 391804
-/+ buffers/cache: 570416 458004
Swap: 2771172 404588 2366584
$
df
Filesystem 1K-blocks Used Available Use% Mounted on
/dev/sda2 9614084 4737916 4387796 52% /
tmpfs 514208 0 514208 0% /lib/init/rw
udev 10240 100 10140 1% /dev
tmpfs 514208 269136 245072 53% /dev/shm
/dev/sda5 44552904 36315896 7784380 83% /home
The id
command displays the identity of the user running the session, along with the list of groups they belong to. Since access to some files or devices may be limited to group members, checking available group membership may be useful.
$
id
uid=1000(rhertzog) gid=1000(rhertzog) groups=1000(rhertzog),24(cdrom),25(floppy),27(sudo),29(audio),30(dip),44(video),46(plugdev),108(netdev),109(bluetooth),115(scanner)