UNIX COMMANDS:
Man ual command.
man man This is help command, and will explains you about online manual pages you can also use man in conjunction with any command to learn more about that command for example.
man man This is help command, and will explains you about online manual pages you can also use man in conjunction with any command to learn more about that command for example.
- man
ls
will explain about the ls command and how you can use it.
- man
-k pattern command will search for the pattern in given
command.
Banner
command.
banner prints characters in a sort of ascii art poster, for example to print wait in big letters. I will type
banner wait at unix command line or in my script. This is how it will look.
banner prints characters in a sort of ascii art poster, for example to print wait in big letters. I will type
banner wait at unix command line or in my script. This is how it will look.
#
# ## #
#####
# #
# # #
#
#
# # #
# #
# ## #
###### # #
##
## # #
# #
#
# # #
# #
Cal
command
cal command will print the calander on current month by default. If you want to print calander of august of 1965. That's eightht month of 1965.
cal 8 1965 will print following results.
cal command will print the calander on current month by default. If you want to print calander of august of 1965. That's eightht month of 1965.
cal 8 1965 will print following results.
August 1965
S M
Tu W Th
F S
1
2 3 4
5 6 7
8 9 10
11 12 13 14
15 16
17 18 19 20 21
22 23
24 25 26 27 28
29 30
31
Clear
command
clear command clears the screen and
puts cursor at beginning of first line.
Calendar command
calendar command reads your calendar file and displays only lines with current day.
For example in your calendar file if you have this
calendar command reads your calendar file and displays only lines with current day.
For example in your calendar file if you have this
12/20 Test new software.
1/15 Test newly developed 3270 product.
1/20 Install memory on HP 9000 machine.
On dec 20th the first line will be displayed. you can use this
command with your crontab file or in your login files.
Nohup
command.
nohup command if added in front of any command will continue running the command or process even if you shut down your terminal or close your session to machine. For exmaple, if I want to run a job that takes lot of time and must be run from terminal and is called update_entries_tonight .
nohup update_entries_tonight will run the job even if terminal is shut down in middle of this job.
nohup command if added in front of any command will continue running the command or process even if you shut down your terminal or close your session to machine. For exmaple, if I want to run a job that takes lot of time and must be run from terminal and is called update_entries_tonight .
nohup update_entries_tonight will run the job even if terminal is shut down in middle of this job.
Options
- -l will
print the synchronous line number.
- -s will
return only the codes: 0 (a terminal), 1 (not a terminal), 2 (invalid
options) (good for scripts)
Pwd
command.
pwd command will print your home directory on screen, pwd means print working directory.
pwd command will print your home directory on screen, pwd means print working directory.
/u0/ssb/sandeep
is output for the command when I use pwd in
/u0/ssb/sandeep directory.
Ls command
ls command is most widely used command and it displays the contents of directory.
ls command is most widely used command and it displays the contents of directory.
options
- ls
will list all the files in your home directory, this command has many
options.
- ls -l will list all the file names,
permissions, group, etc in long format.
- ls -a will list all the files including hidden
files that start with . .
- ls -lt will list all files names based on the
time of creation, newer files bring first.
- ls -Fxwill list files and directory names will
be followed by slash.
- ls -Rwill lists all the files and files in the
all the directories, recursively.
- ls -R | more will list all the files and files in all
the directories, one page at a time.
Cd command.
cd sandeep will change directory from current directory to sandeep directory.
Use pwd to check your current directory and ls to see if sandeep directory is there or not.
You can then use cd sandeep to change the directory to this new directory.
cd sandeep will change directory from current directory to sandeep directory.
Use pwd to check your current directory and ls to see if sandeep directory is there or not.
You can then use cd sandeep to change the directory to this new directory.
Cat command
cat cal.txt cat command displays the contents of a file here cal.txt on screen (or standard out).
cat cal.txt cat command displays the contents of a file here cal.txt on screen (or standard out).
Head
command.
head filename by default will display the first 10 lines of a file.
If you want first 50 lines you can use head -50 filename or for 37 lines head -37 filename and so forth.
head filename by default will display the first 10 lines of a file.
If you want first 50 lines you can use head -50 filename or for 37 lines head -37 filename and so forth.
Tail command.
tail filename by default will display the last 10 lines of a file.
If you want last 50 lines then you can use tail -50 filename.
tail filename by default will display the last 10 lines of a file.
If you want last 50 lines then you can use tail -50 filename.
More
command. more command will display a page at a time and then wait for input
which is spacebar. For example if you have a file which is 500 lines and you
want to read it all. So you can use
more filename
Wc
command
wc command counts the characters, words or lines in a file depending upon the option.
wc command counts the characters, words or lines in a file depending upon the option.
Options
- wc
-l filename will print total number of lines in a
file.
- wc
-w filename will print total number of words in a
file.
- wc
-c filename will print total number of characters in
a file.
File
command.
File command displays about the contents of a given file, whether it is a text (Ascii) or binary file. To use it type
file filename. For example I have cal.txt which has ascii characters about calander of current month and I have resume1.doc file which is a binariy file in microsoft word. I will get
file resume.doc
File command displays about the contents of a given file, whether it is a text (Ascii) or binary file. To use it type
file filename. For example I have cal.txt which has ascii characters about calander of current month and I have resume1.doc file which is a binariy file in microsoft word. I will get
file resume.doc
resume1.doc: data
file cal.txt
cal.txt: ascii text
Cp
command.
cp command copies a file. If I want to copy a file named oldfile in a current directory to a file named newfile in a current directory.
cp oldfile newfile
If I want to copy oldfile to other directory for example /tmp then
cp oldfile /tmp/newfile. Useful options available with cp are -p and -r . -p options preserves the modification time and permissions, -r recursively copy a directory and its files, duplicating the tree structure.
cp command copies a file. If I want to copy a file named oldfile in a current directory to a file named newfile in a current directory.
cp oldfile newfile
If I want to copy oldfile to other directory for example /tmp then
cp oldfile /tmp/newfile. Useful options available with cp are -p and -r . -p options preserves the modification time and permissions, -r recursively copy a directory and its files, duplicating the tree structure.
Rcp command.
rcp command will copy files between two unix systems and works just like cp command (-p and -i options too).
For example you are on a unix system that is called Cheetah and want to copy a file which is in current directory to a system that is called lion in /usr/john/ directory then you can use rcp command
rcp filename lion:/usr/john
You will also need permissions between the two machines. For more infor type man rcp at command line.
rcp command will copy files between two unix systems and works just like cp command (-p and -i options too).
For example you are on a unix system that is called Cheetah and want to copy a file which is in current directory to a system that is called lion in /usr/john/ directory then you can use rcp command
rcp filename lion:/usr/john
You will also need permissions between the two machines. For more infor type man rcp at command line.
Mv
command.
mv command is used to move a file from one directory to another directory or to rename a file.
mv command is used to move a file from one directory to another directory or to rename a file.
Some
examples:
- mv
oldfile newfile will rename oldfile to newfile.
- mv
-i oldfile newfile for confirmation prompt.
- mv
-f oldfile newfile will force the rename even if target file
exists.
- mv
* /usr/bajwa/ will move all the files in current
directory to /usr/bajwa directory.
Ln
command.
Instead of copying you can also make links to existing files using ln command.
If you want to create a link to a file called coolfile in /usr/local/bin directory then you can enter this command.
ln mycoolfile /usr/local/bin/coolfile
Instead of copying you can also make links to existing files using ln command.
If you want to create a link to a file called coolfile in /usr/local/bin directory then you can enter this command.
ln mycoolfile /usr/local/bin/coolfile
Some
examples:
- ln
-s fileone filetwo will create a symbolic link and can exist
across machines.
- ln
-n
option will not overwrite existing files.
- ln
-f will
force the link to occur.
Rm command.
To delete files use rm command.
To delete files use rm command.
Options:
- rm
oldfile will delete file named oldfile.
- rm
-f
option will remove write-protected files without prompting.
- rm
-r
option will delete the entire directory as well as all the subdirectories,
very dangerous command.
Rmdir
command.
rmdir command will remove directory or directories if a directory is empty.
rmdir command will remove directory or directories if a directory is empty.
Options:
- rm
-r directory_name will remove all files even if directory
is not empty.
- rmdir
sandeep is how you use it to remove sandeep
directory.
- rmdir
-p
will remove directories and any parent directories that are empty.
- rmdir
-s
will suppress standard error messages caused by -p.
Diff
command.
diff command will compare the two files and print out the differences between.
Here I have two ascii text files. fileone and file two.
Contents of fileone are
diff command will compare the two files and print out the differences between.
Here I have two ascii text files. fileone and file two.
Contents of fileone are
This
is first file
this
is second line
this
is third line
this
is different as;lkdjf
this
is not different
filetwo contains
This
is first file
this
is second line
this
is third line
this
is different xxxxxxxas;lkdjf
this
is not different
diff fileone filetwo will give following output
4c4
<
this is different as;lkdjf
---
>
this is different xxxxxxxas;lkdjf
Cmp command.
cmp command compares the two files. For exmaple I have two different files fileone and filetwo.
cmp fileone filetwo will give me
cmp command compares the two files. For exmaple I have two different files fileone and filetwo.
cmp fileone filetwo will give me
fileone
filetwo differ: char 80, line 4
if I run cmp command on similar files nothing is returned.
-s command can be used to return exit codes. i.e. return 0 if files are identical, 1 if files are different, 2 if files are inaccessible.
This following command prints a message 'no changes' if files are same
cmp -s fileone file1 && echo 'no changes' .
no
changes
Dircmp
Command.
dircmp command compares two directories. If i have two directories in my home directory named
dirone and dirtwo and each has 5-10 files in it. Then
dircmp dirone dirtwo will return this
dircmp command compares two directories. If i have two directories in my home directory named
dirone and dirtwo and each has 5-10 files in it. Then
dircmp dirone dirtwo will return this
Dec 9
16:06 1997 dirone only and dirtwo only
Page 1
./cal.txt ./fourth.txt
./dohazaar.txt ./rmt.txt
./four.txt ./te.txt
./junk.txt ./third.txt
./test.txt
Grep
Command
grep command is the most useful search command. You can use it to find processes running on system, to find a pattern in a file, etc. It can be used to search one or more files to match an expression.
It can also be used in conjunction with other commands as in this following example, output of ps command is passed to grep command, here it means search all processes in system and find the pattern sleep.
ps -ef | grep sleep will display all the sleep processes running in the system as follows.
grep command is the most useful search command. You can use it to find processes running on system, to find a pattern in a file, etc. It can be used to search one or more files to match an expression.
It can also be used in conjunction with other commands as in this following example, output of ps command is passed to grep command, here it means search all processes in system and find the pattern sleep.
ps -ef | grep sleep will display all the sleep processes running in the system as follows.
ops 12964 25853 0 16:12:24 ttyAE/AAES 0:00 sleep 60
dxi 12974 15640 0 16:12:25 ttyAH/AAHP 0:00 sleep 60
ops 12941 25688 0 16:12:21 ttyAE/AAEt 0:00 sleep 60
ops 12847 25812 0 16:11:59 ttyAH/AAH6 0:00 sleep 60
ops 12894 25834 0 16:12:12 ttyAE/AAEX 0:00 sleep 60
dxi 13067 27253 2 16:12:48 ttyAE/ABEY 0:00 sleep 1
ops 13046 25761 0 16:12:44 ttyAE/AAE0 0:00 sleep 60
dxi 12956 13078 0 16:12:23 ttyAG/AAG+ 0:00 sleep 60
ops 12965 25737 0 16:12:24 ttyAE/AAEp 0:00 sleep 60
ops 12989 25778 0 16:12:28 ttyAH/AAHv 0:00 sleep 60
ssb 13069 26758 2 16:12:49 ttyAH/AAHs 0:00 grep sleep
pjk 27049
3353 0 15:20:23 ? 0:00 sleep 3600
Options:
- -b option
will precede each line with its block number.
- -c option
will only print the count of matched lines.
- -i ignores
uppercase and lowercase distinctions.
- -l lists
filenames but not matched lines.
other associated commands with grep are egrep and fgrep.
egrep typically runs faster. for more information type
man egrep or
man fgrep in your system.
Find
command.
Find command is a extremely useful command. you can search for any file anywhere using this command provided that file and directory you are searching has read write attributes set to you ,your, group or all. Find descends directory tree beginning at each pathname and finds the files that meet the specified conditions. Here are some examples.
Some Examples:
find $HOME -print will lists all files in your home directory.
find /work -name chapter1 -print will list all files named chapter1 in /work directory.
find / -type d -name 'man*' -print will list all manpage directories.
find / -size 0 -ok rm {} \; will remove all empty files on system.
Find command is a extremely useful command. you can search for any file anywhere using this command provided that file and directory you are searching has read write attributes set to you ,your, group or all. Find descends directory tree beginning at each pathname and finds the files that meet the specified conditions. Here are some examples.
Some Examples:
find $HOME -print will lists all files in your home directory.
find /work -name chapter1 -print will list all files named chapter1 in /work directory.
find / -type d -name 'man*' -print will list all manpage directories.
find / -size 0 -ok rm {} \; will remove all empty files on system.
conditions of find
- -atime +n
|-n| n will find files that were last accessed
more than n or less than -n days or n days.
- -ctime +n or
-n will find that were changed +n -n or n
days ago.
- -depth descend the
directory structure, working on actual files first and then directories.
You can use it with cpio command.
- -exec commad
{} \; run the Unix command on each file
matched by find. Very useful condition.
- -print print or
list to standard output (screen).
- -name
pattern find the pattern.
- -perm nnnfind files
whole permission flags match octal number nnn.
- -size n find files
that contain n blocks.
- -type c Find file
whole type is c. C could be b or block, c Character special
file, d directory, p fifo or named pipe, l symbolic
link, or f plain file.
Cut command.
cut command selects a list of columns or fields from one or more files.
Option -c is for columns and -f for fields. It is entered as
cut options [files]
for example if a file named testfile contains
cut command selects a list of columns or fields from one or more files.
Option -c is for columns and -f for fields. It is entered as
cut options [files]
for example if a file named testfile contains
this
is firstline
this
is secondline
this
is thirdline
Examples:
cut -c1,4 testfile will print this to standard output (screen)
cut -c1,4 testfile will print this to standard output (screen)
ts
ts
ts
It is printing columns 1 and 4 of this file which contains t and s
(part of this).
Options:
- -c
list cut the column positions identified in
list.
- -f
list will cut the fields identified in list.
- -s
could
be used with -f to suppress
lines without delimiters.
Paste
Command.
paste command merge the lines of one or more files into vertical columns separated by a tab.
for example if a file named testfile contains
paste command merge the lines of one or more files into vertical columns separated by a tab.
for example if a file named testfile contains
this
is firstline
and a file named testfile2 contains
this
is testfile2
then running this command
paste testfile testfile2 > outputfile
will put this into outputfile
paste testfile testfile2 > outputfile
will put this into outputfile
this
is firstline this is testfile2
it contains contents of both files in columns.
who | paste - - will list users in two columns.
who | paste - - will list users in two columns.
Options:
- -d'char'
separate columns with char instead of a tab.
- -s merge
subsequent lines from one file.
Sort
command.
sort command sort the lines of a file or files, in alphabetical order. for example if you have a file named testfile with these contents
sort command sort the lines of a file or files, in alphabetical order. for example if you have a file named testfile with these contents
zzz
aaa
1234
yuer
wer
qww
wwe
Then running
sort testfile
will give us output of
sort testfile
will give us output of
1234
aaa
qww
wer
wwe
yuer
zzz
Options:
- -b ignores
leading spaces and tabs.
- -c checks
whether files are already sorted.
- -d ignores
punctuation.
- -i ignores
non-printing characters.
- -n sorts in
arithmetic order.
- -ofile put output
in a file.
- +m[-m] skips n
fields before sorting, and sort upto field position m.
- -r
reverse
the order of sort.
- -u identical
lines in input file apear only one time in output.
Uniq
command.
uniq command removes duplicate adjacent lines from sorted file while sending one copy of each second file.
Examples
sort names | uniq -d will show which lines appear more than once in names file.
uniq command removes duplicate adjacent lines from sorted file while sending one copy of each second file.
Examples
sort names | uniq -d will show which lines appear more than once in names file.
Options:
- -c print
each line once, counting instances of each.
- -d print
duplicate lines once, but no unique lines.
- -u
print
only unique lines.
Awk and
Nawk command.
awk is more like a scripting language builtin on all unix systems. Although mostly used for text processing, etc.
Here are some examples which are connected with other commands.
Examples:
df -t | awk 'BEGIN {tot=0} $2 == "total" {tot=tot+$1} END {print (tot*512)/1000000}' Will give total space in your system in megabytes.
Here the output of command df -t is being passed into awk which is counting the field 1 after pattern "total" appears. Same way if you change $1 to $4 it will accumulate and display the addition of field 4
which is used space.
for more information about awk and nawk command in your system enter man awk or man nawk.
awk is more like a scripting language builtin on all unix systems. Although mostly used for text processing, etc.
Here are some examples which are connected with other commands.
Examples:
df -t | awk 'BEGIN {tot=0} $2 == "total" {tot=tot+$1} END {print (tot*512)/1000000}' Will give total space in your system in megabytes.
Here the output of command df -t is being passed into awk which is counting the field 1 after pattern "total" appears. Same way if you change $1 to $4 it will accumulate and display the addition of field 4
which is used space.
for more information about awk and nawk command in your system enter man awk or man nawk.
Sed command.
sed command launches a stream line editor which you can use at command line.
you can enter your sed commands in a file and then using -f option edit your text file. It works as
sed [options] files
sed command launches a stream line editor which you can use at command line.
you can enter your sed commands in a file and then using -f option edit your text file. It works as
sed [options] files
options:
- -e
'instruction' Apply the editing instruction to the files.
- -f
script Apply the set of instructions from the
editing script.
- -n
suppress
default output.
for more information about sed, enter man sed at command line in your system.
Vi
editor.
vi command launches a vi sual editor. To edit a file type
vi filename
vi editor is a default editor of all Unix systems. It has several modes. In order to write characters you will need to hit i to be in insert mode and then start typing. Make sure that your terminal has correct settings, vt100 emulation works good if you are logged in using pc.
Once you are done typing then to be in command mode where you can write/search/ you need to hit :w filename to write
and in case you are done writing and want to exit
:w! will write and exit.
vi command launches a vi sual editor. To edit a file type
vi filename
vi editor is a default editor of all Unix systems. It has several modes. In order to write characters you will need to hit i to be in insert mode and then start typing. Make sure that your terminal has correct settings, vt100 emulation works good if you are logged in using pc.
Once you are done typing then to be in command mode where you can write/search/ you need to hit :w filename to write
and in case you are done writing and want to exit
:w! will write and exit.
options:
- i for insert
mode.
- I inserts
text at the curson
- A
appends
text at the end of the line.
- a
appends
text after cursor.
- O
open
a new line of text above the curson.
- o open a new
line of text below the curson.
- :
for
command mode.
- <escape> to invoke
command mode from insert mode.
- :!sh to run
unix commands.
- x to delete
a single character.
- dd to delete
an entire line
- ndd to delete
n number of lines.
- d$ to delete
from cursor to end of line.
- yy to copy a
line to buffer.
- P to paste
text from buffer.
- nyy copy n
number of lines to buffer.
- :%s/stringA/stringb
/g to replace stringA with stringB in
whole file.
- G to go to
last line in file.
- 1G to go to
the first line in file.
- w to move
forward to next word.
- b to move
backwards to next word.
- $ to move to
the end of line.
- J join a
line with the one below it.
- /string to search
string in file.
- n to search
for next occurence of string.
Shell
programming concepts and commands.
Shell programming is integral part of Unix operating systems. Shell is command line userinterface to Unix operating system, User have an option of picking an interface on Unix such as ksh, csh, or default sh., these are called shells(interface). Shell programming is used to automate many tasks. Shell programming is not a programming language in the truest sense of word since it is not compiled but rather an interpreted language. Unix was written in C language and thus c language is integral part of unix and available on all versions. Shells, like ksh and csh are popular shells on unix although there are 5 or 6 different shells available but I will only be discussing ksh and csh as well as sh. Common features among all shells are job control, for example if I am running a processes which is searching the whole system for .Z files and output is directed to a file named compressedfiles.
Shell programming is integral part of Unix operating systems. Shell is command line userinterface to Unix operating system, User have an option of picking an interface on Unix such as ksh, csh, or default sh., these are called shells(interface). Shell programming is used to automate many tasks. Shell programming is not a programming language in the truest sense of word since it is not compiled but rather an interpreted language. Unix was written in C language and thus c language is integral part of unix and available on all versions. Shells, like ksh and csh are popular shells on unix although there are 5 or 6 different shells available but I will only be discussing ksh and csh as well as sh. Common features among all shells are job control, for example if I am running a processes which is searching the whole system for .Z files and output is directed to a file named compressedfiles.
example:
- find
/ -name *.Z -print > compressedfiles
then after entering this command hitting - <control
z>
key will suspend this job, then entering - bg
at command line will put this job in background, entering - fg
will put this job in foreground. Entering - jobs
at command line will show me all my concurrent jobs that are running.
Other common features
- > will
redirect output from standard out (screen) to file or printer or whatever
you like.
- >>
filename will append at the end of a file called
filename.
- < will
redirect input to a process or commnand.
- | pipe
output, or redirect output, good for joining commands, i.e. find command
with cpio, etc.
- & at the end
of command will run command in background.
- ;
will
separate commands on same line.
- * will match
any characters in a file or directories. junk* will match all files with
first 4 letters
- ? will match
single characters in a file.
- []
will
match any characters enclosed.
- ()
execute
in subshell.
- `
` to
run a command inside another command and use its output.
- "
" partial quote for variables.
- '
' full
quote for variables.
- # begin
comment (if #/bin/ksh or csh or sh is entered at first line of script it
runs script in that shell)
- bg
background
execution.
- break break from
loop statements.
- continue Resume a
program loop.
- Kill
pid number will terminate running jobs
- stop will stop
background job.
- suspend will
suspend foreground job.
- wait will wait
for a background job to finish.
Bourne
Shell (sh shell).
sh or Bourne shell is default shell of Unix operating systems and is the most simplest shell in Unix systems.
sh or Bourne shell is default shell of Unix operating systems and is the most simplest shell in Unix systems.
Examples:
- cd;
ls execute
one after another.
- (date;who;pwd)>
logifile will redirect all the output from three
commands to a filenamed logfile.
- sort
file | lp will first sort a file and then print it.
- alias
[options] [name[='command']] will let you create your own commands.
i.e.
- alias
ll="ls -la" will execute `ls -la` command whenever
ll is entered.
- let
expressions
is syntax of let statement.
- let
i=i+1
will work as a counter with i incrementing each time this statement is
encountered.
- for
x[in list] do commands done is syntax
for for do loop.
- function name {commands;} is the
syntax of a function which can be called from anywhere in program.
- if condition1 then commands1 elif
condition2
then commands2
... ... ... else commands3 fi
Ksh
shell (Korn).
Ksh or Korn shell is widely used shell.
Ksh or Korn shell is widely used shell.
Csh or C
shell
csh is second most used shell.
csh is second most used shell.
Echo
command
echo command in shell programming.
echo command in shell programming.
Line
command.
line command in shell programming.
line command in shell programming.
Sleep
command.
sleep command in shell programming.
sleep command in shell programming.
Test
Command.
test command in shell programming.
test command in shell programming.
CC
compiler (c programming language compiler).
Since Unix is itself written in C programming language, most Unix operating systems come with c compiler called cc.
Since Unix is itself written in C programming language, most Unix operating systems come with c compiler called cc.
Cu
command.
cu command is used for communications over a modem or direct line with another Unix system.
Syntax is
cu options destination
cu command is used for communications over a modem or direct line with another Unix system.
Syntax is
cu options destination
Options
- -bn process
lines using n-bit characters (7 or 8).
- -cname Search
UUCP's device file and select local area network that matches name.
- -d Prints
diagnostics.
- -e
sends
even parity data to remote system
- -lline communicate
on this device (line=/dev/tty001, etc)
- -n prompts for
a telephone number.
- -sn set
transmission rate to n(e.g 1200,2400,9600, BPS)
Destination
- telno is the
telephone number of the modem to connect to.
- system is call the
system known to uucp.
- aadr is an
address specific to LAN.
Ftp
command (protocol).
ftp command is used to execute ftp protocol using which files are transferred over two systems.
Syntax is
ftp options hostname
ftp command is used to execute ftp protocol using which files are transferred over two systems.
Syntax is
ftp options hostname
options
- -d enable
debugging.
- -g
disable
filename globbing.
- -i turn off
interactive prompts.
- -v verbose on.
show all responses from remote server.
ftp hostname by default will connect you to the system, you must
have a login id to be able to transfer the files. Two types of files can be
transferred, ASCII or Binary. bin at ftp> prompt will set the transfer to
binary. Practice FTP by ftping to nic.funet.fi loggin in as anomymous
with password being your e-mail address.
Login
command.
login command invokes a login session to a Unix system, which then authenticates the login to a system. System prompts you to enter userid and password.
login command invokes a login session to a Unix system, which then authenticates the login to a system. System prompts you to enter userid and password.
Rlogin
command.
rlogin command is used to log on to remote Unix systems, user must have permissions on both systems as well as same userid, or an id defined in .rhosts file. Syntax is
rlogin options host
rlogin command is used to log on to remote Unix systems, user must have permissions on both systems as well as same userid, or an id defined in .rhosts file. Syntax is
rlogin options host
options
- -8 will allow
8 bit data to pass, instead of 7-bit data.
- -e
c will let you use escape character c.
- -l
user will let you to login as user to remote
host, instead of same as local host.
Talk
command.
talk command is used to invoke talk program available on all unix system which lets two users exchange information back and forth in real time. Syntax is
talk userid@hostname
talk command is used to invoke talk program available on all unix system which lets two users exchange information back and forth in real time. Syntax is
talk userid@hostname
Telnet
command.
Telnet command invokes a telnet protocol which lets you log on to different unix, vms or any machine connected over TCP/IP protocol, IPx protocol or otherwise. Syntax is
telnet hostname
Telnet command invokes a telnet protocol which lets you log on to different unix, vms or any machine connected over TCP/IP protocol, IPx protocol or otherwise. Syntax is
telnet hostname
Vacation command.
vacation command is used when you are out of office. It returns a mail message to sender announcing that you are on vacation. to disable this feature, type mail -F " " .
syntax is
vacation options
vacation command is used when you are out of office. It returns a mail message to sender announcing that you are on vacation. to disable this feature, type mail -F " " .
syntax is
vacation options
Options
- -d will append
the date to the logfile.
- -F user
will forward mail to user when unable to send mail to mailfile.
- -l
logfile will record in the logfile the names of
senders who received automatic reply.
- -m
mailfile will save received messages in mailfile.
Compress command.
Compress command compresses a file and returns the original file with .z extension, to uncompress this filename.Z file use uncompress filename command. syntax for compress command is
compress options files
Compress command compresses a file and returns the original file with .z extension, to uncompress this filename.Z file use uncompress filename command. syntax for compress command is
compress options files
Options
- -bn limit
the number of bits in coding to n.
- -c write to
standard output (do not change files).
- -f
compress
conditionally, do not prompt before overwriting files.
- -v Print the
resulting percentage of reduction for files.
Uncompress command.
Uncompress file uncompresses a file and return it to its original form.
syntax is
uncompress filename.Z this uncompresses the compressed file to its original name.
Uncompress file uncompresses a file and return it to its original form.
syntax is
uncompress filename.Z this uncompresses the compressed file to its original name.
Options
- -c
write to standard output without changing
files
Cpio
command.
cpio command is useful to backup the file systems. It copy file archives in from or out to tape or disk, or to another location on the local machine. Its syntax is
cpio flags [options]
cpio command is useful to backup the file systems. It copy file archives in from or out to tape or disk, or to another location on the local machine. Its syntax is
cpio flags [options]
It
has three flags, -i,
-o, -p
- cpio
-i [options] [patterns]
- cpio
-i
copy in files who names match selected patterns.
- If no
pattern is used all files are copied in.
- It is used
to write to a tape.
cpio -o
- Copy out a
list of files whose name are given on standard output.
cpio -p
- copy files
to another directory on the same system.
Options
- -a reset
access times of input files.
- -A append
files to an archive (must use with -o).
- -b
swap
bytes and half-words. Words are 4 bytes.
- -B block
input or output using 5120 bytes per record.
- -c Read or
write header information as Ascii character.
- -d
create
directories as needed.
- -l
link
files instead of copying.
- -o
file direct output to a file.
- -r
rename
files interactively.
- -R
ID reassign file ownership and group
information to the user's login ID.
- -V print a
dot for each file read or written.
- -s
swap
bytes.
- -S swap half
bytes.
- -v
print
a list of filenames.
Examples
- find
. -name "*.old" -print | cpio -ocvB > /dev/rst8 will backup
all *.old files to a tape in /dev/rst8
- cpio
-icdv "save"" < /dev/rst8 will
restore all files whose name contain "save"
- find
. -depth -print | cpio -padm /mydir will move a directory tree.
Dump
command is useful to backup the file systems.
dump command copies all the files in filesystem that have been changed after a certain date. It is good for incremental backups. This information about date is derived from /var/adm/dumpdates and /etc/fstab .
syntax for HP-UX dump is
/usr/sbin/dump [option [argument ...] filesystem]
dump command copies all the files in filesystem that have been changed after a certain date. It is good for incremental backups. This information about date is derived from /var/adm/dumpdates and /etc/fstab .
syntax for HP-UX dump is
/usr/sbin/dump [option [argument ...] filesystem]
Options
- 0-9 This
number is dump level. 0 option causes entire filesystem to be dumped.
- b blocking
factor taken into argument.
- d density of
tape default value is 1600.
- f place the
dump on next argument file instead of tape.
- This example
causes the entire file system (/mnt) to be dumped on /dev/rmt/c0t0d0BEST
and specifies that the density of the tape is 6250 BPI.
- /usr/sbin/dump
0df 6250 /dev/rmt/c0t0d0BEST /mnt
- for more
info type man dump at command
line.
Pack
command.
pack command compacts each file and combine them together into a filename.z file. The original file is replaced. Pcat and unpack will restore packed files to their original form.
Syntax is
Pack options files
pack command compacts each file and combine them together into a filename.z file. The original file is replaced. Pcat and unpack will restore packed files to their original form.
Syntax is
Pack options files
Options
- -
Print
number of times each byte is used, relative frequency and byte code.
- -f
Force
the pack even when disk space isn't saved.
- To display
Packed files in a file use pcat command
pcat filename.z - To unpack a
packed file use unpack command as unpack filename.z .
Tar
command.
tar command creates an archive of files into a single file.
Tar copies and restore files to a tape or any storage media. Synopsis of tar is
tar [options] [file]
Examples:
tar cvf /dev/rmt/0 /bin /usr/bin creates an archive of /bin and /usr/bin, and store on the tape in /dev/rmt0.
tar tvf /dev/rmt0 will list the tape's content in a /dev/rmt0 drive.
tar cvf - 'find . -print' > backup.tar will creates an archive of current directory and store it in file backup.tar.
tar command creates an archive of files into a single file.
Tar copies and restore files to a tape or any storage media. Synopsis of tar is
tar [options] [file]
Examples:
tar cvf /dev/rmt/0 /bin /usr/bin creates an archive of /bin and /usr/bin, and store on the tape in /dev/rmt0.
tar tvf /dev/rmt0 will list the tape's content in a /dev/rmt0 drive.
tar cvf - 'find . -print' > backup.tar will creates an archive of current directory and store it in file backup.tar.
Functions:
- c creates a
new tape.
- r append
files to a tape.
- t print the
names of files if they are stored on the tape.
- x extract
files from tape.
Options:
- b n use
blocking factor of n.
- l print
error messages about links not found.
- L follow
symbolic links.
- v print
function letter (x for extraction or a for archive) and name of files.
Mt command is used for tape and other device functions like
rewinding, ejecting, etc. It give commands to tape device rather than tape
itself. Mt command is BSD command and is seldom found in system V unix
versions.
syntax is
mt [-t tapename] command [count]
syntax is
mt [-t tapename] command [count]
mt
for HP-UX accept following commands
- eof write count
EOF marks.
- fsf
Forward
space count files.
- fsr
Forward
space count records.
- bsf
Backward
space count files.
- bsr Backward
space count records.
- rew
Rewind
tape.
- offl
Rewind
tape and go offline.
- eod Seek to end
of data (DDS and QIC drives only).
- smk Write count
setmarks (DDS drives only).
- fss
Forward
space count setmarks (DDS drives only).
- bss
Backward
space count setmarks (DDS drives only).
- Examples
- mt
-t /dev/rmt/0mnb rew will rewind the tape in this device.
- mt
-t /dev/rmt/0mnb offl will eject the tape in this device.
At command.
at command along with crontab command is used to schedule jobs.
at options time [ddate] [+increment] is syntax of at command.
for example if I have a script named usersloggedin which contains.
at command along with crontab command is used to schedule jobs.
at options time [ddate] [+increment] is syntax of at command.
for example if I have a script named usersloggedin which contains.
#!/bin/ksh
who |
wc -l
echo
"are total number of people logged in at this time."
and I
want to run this script at 8:00 AM. So I will first type at
8:00 %lt;enter>
usersloggedin %lt;enter>
I will get following output at 8:00 AM
usersloggedin %lt;enter>
I will get following output at 8:00 AM
30
are
total number of people logged in at this time.
Options:
- -f
file will execute commands in a file.
- -m will send
mail to user after job is completed.
- -l will report
all jobs that are scheduled and their jobnumbers.
- -r
jobnumber will remove specified jobs that were
previously scheduled.
Chmod
command.
chmod command is used to change permissions on a file.
for example if I have a text file with calender in it called cal.txt.
initially when this file will be created the permissions for this file depends upon umask set in your profile files. As you can see this file has 666 or -rw-rw-rw attributes.
ls -la cal.txt
chmod command is used to change permissions on a file.
for example if I have a text file with calender in it called cal.txt.
initially when this file will be created the permissions for this file depends upon umask set in your profile files. As you can see this file has 666 or -rw-rw-rw attributes.
ls -la cal.txt
-rw-rw-rw- 1 ssb
dxidev 135 Dec 3 16:14 cal.txt
In this line above I have -rw-rw-rw- meaning respectively that owner
can read and write file, member of the owner's group can read and write this
file and anyone else connected to this system can read and write this file.,
next ssb is owner of this file dxidev is the group of this file, there are 135
bytes in this file, this file was created on December 3 at time16:14 and at the
end there is name of this file. Learn to read these permissions in binary,
like this for example Decimal 644 which is 110 100 100 in binary meand
rw-r--r-- or user can read,write this file, group can read only, everyone else
can read only. Similarly, if permissions are 755 or 111 101 101 that means
rwxr-xr-x or user can read, write and execute, group can read and execute,
everyone else can read and execute. All directories have d in front of
permissions. So if you don't want anyone to see your files or to do anything
with it use chmod command and make permissions so that only you can read and
write to that file, i.e.
chmod 600 filename.
chmod 600 filename.
Chgrp
command.
chgrp command is used to change the group of a file or directory.
You must own the file or be a superuser.
chgrp [options] newgroup files is syntax of chgrp.
Newgroup is either a group Id or a group name located in /etc/group .
chgrp command is used to change the group of a file or directory.
You must own the file or be a superuser.
chgrp [options] newgroup files is syntax of chgrp.
Newgroup is either a group Id or a group name located in /etc/group .
Options:
- -h will change
the group on symbolic links.
- -R recursively
descend through directory changing group of all files and subdirectories.
Chown
command.
chown command to change ownership of a file or directory to one or more users.
Syntax is
chown options newowner files
chown command to change ownership of a file or directory to one or more users.
Syntax is
chown options newowner files
Options
- -h will change
the owner on symbolic links.
- -R
will
recursively descend through the directory, including subdirectories and
symbolic links.
Crontab command.
crontab command is used to schedule jobs. You must have permission to run this command by unix Administrator. Jobs are scheduled in five numbers, as follows.
crontab command is used to schedule jobs. You must have permission to run this command by unix Administrator. Jobs are scheduled in five numbers, as follows.
Minutes 0-59
Hour 0-23
Day
of month 1-31
month 1-12
Day
of week 0-6 (0 is sunday)
so for example you want to schedule a job which runs from script
named backup_jobs in /usr/local/bin directory on sunday (day 0) at 11.25
(22:25) on 15th of month. The entry in crontab file will be. * represents all
values.
25 22
15 * 0 /usr/local/bin/backup_jobs
The * here tells system to run this each month.
Syntax is
crontab file So a create a file with the scheduled jobs as above and then type
crontab filename .This will scheduled the jobs.
Syntax is
crontab file So a create a file with the scheduled jobs as above and then type
crontab filename .This will scheduled the jobs.
Sun
Dec 7 14:23:08 EST 1997
is similar to what you should see on screen.
Df
command.
df command displays information about mounted filesystems. It reports the number of free disk blocks. Typically a Disk block is 512 bytes (or 1/2 Kilobyte).
syntax is
df options name
df command displays information about mounted filesystems. It reports the number of free disk blocks. Typically a Disk block is 512 bytes (or 1/2 Kilobyte).
syntax is
df options name
Options
- -b will print
only the number of free blocks.
- -e will print
only the number of free files.
- -f will report
free blocks but not free inodes.
- -F
type will report on an umounted file system
specified by type.
- -k
will
print allocation in kilobytes.
- -l will report
only on local file systems.
- -n will print
only the file system name type, with no arguments it lists type of all
filesystems
Du
command.
du command displays disk usage.
du command displays disk usage.
Env
command.
env command displays all the variables.
env command displays all the variables.
Finger
command.
finger command.
finger command.
PS command
ps command is probably the most useful command for systems administrators. It reports information on active processes.
ps options
ps command is probably the most useful command for systems administrators. It reports information on active processes.
ps options
options.
- -a Lists all
processes in system except processes not attached to terminals.
- -e Lists all
processes in system.
- -f Lists a
full listing.
- -j
print
process group ID and session ID.
options.
- -a include
user even if they've been idle for more than one hour.
- -l sort by
load average.
- -r reverse the
sort order.
- -t sort by
uptime.
- -i
sort
by number of users.
Shutdown command.
Shutdown command can only be executed by root. To gracefully bring down a system, shutdown command is used.
Shutdown command can only be executed by root. To gracefully bring down a system, shutdown command is used.
options.
- -gn use a
grace-period of n seconds (default is 60).
- -ik
tell
the init command to place system in a state k.
- s
single-user state (default)
- 0 shutdown
for power-off.
- 1 like s,
but mount multi-user file systems.
- 5 stop
system, go to firmware mode.
- 6 stop
system then reboot.
- -y suppress
the default prompt for confirmation.
Stty
command
stty command sets terminal input output options for the current terminal. without options stty reports terminal settings.
stty options modes < device
stty command sets terminal input output options for the current terminal. without options stty reports terminal settings.
stty options modes < device
options
- -a report all
options.
- -g report
current settings.
Modes
- 0 hang up
phone.
- n set
terminal baud.
- erase
keyname, will change your keyname to be
backspace key.
Who command
who command displays information about the current status of system.
who options file
Who as default prints login names of users currently logged in.
who command displays information about the current status of system.
who options file
Who as default prints login names of users currently logged in.
Options
- -a use all
options.
- -b Report
information about last reboot.
- -d
report
expired processes.
- -H
print
headings.
- -p report
previously spawned processes.
- -u
report
terminal usage.
Advance unix command concepts
Put advance commands utilities,
redirection, etc here.
cal > cal.txt To
create a new file called cal.txt that has calendar for current month. > sign
redirects output from stdout (screen) to a file.
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