OpenBCM V1.08-5-g2f4a (Linux)

Packet Radio Mailbox

IZ3LSV

[San Dona' di P. JN]

 Login: GUEST





  
ZL1ABS > LINUX    04.02.08 08:01l 255 Lines 7814 Bytes #999 (0) @ WW
BID : 771521ZL1ABS
Read: GUEST
Subj: commands summary
Path: IZ3LSV<IW2OHX<I0TVL<HS1LMV<CX2SA<VK4TRS<ZL2BAU<ZL1AB
Sent: 080204/0404Z @:ZL1AB.#06.NZL.OC #:9108 [AUCKLAND] FBB7.00i $:771521ZL1ABS
From: ZL1ABS@ZL1AB.#06.NZL.OC
To  : LINUX@WW


THE ONE PAGE LINUX MANUAL

A summary of useful Linux commands

Version 3.0 May 1999 squadron@powerup.com.au

Starting & Stopping

shutdown -h now Shutdown the system now and do not reboot
halt Stop all processes - same as above
shutdown -r 5 Shutdown the system in 5 minutes and reboot
shutdown -r now Shutdown the system now and reboot
reboot Stop all processes and then reboot - same as above
startx Start the X system

Accessing & mounting file systems

mount -t iso9660 /dev/cdrom
/mnt/cdrom
Mount the device cdrom
and call it cdrom under the
/mnt directory
mount -t msdos /dev/hdd
/mnt/ddrive
Mount hard disk “dö as a
msdos file system and call
it ddrive under the /mnt
directory
mount -t vfat /dev/hda1
/mnt/cdrive
Mount hard disk “aö as a
VFAT file system and call it
cdrive under the /mnt
directory
umount /mnt/cdrom Unmount the cdrom

Finding files and text within files

find / -name fname Starting with the root directory, look
for the file called fname
find / -name ö*fname*ö Starting with the root directory, look
for the file containing the string fname
locate missingfilename Find a file called missingfilename
using the locate command - this
assumes you have already used the
command updatedb (see next)
updatedb Create or update the database of files
on all file systems attached to the linux
root directory
which missingfilename Show the subdirectory containing the
executable file called missingfilename
grep textstringtofind
/dir
Starting with the directory called dir ,
look for and list all files containing
textstringtofind

The X Window System

xvidtune Run the X graphics tuning utility
XF86Setup Run the X configuration menu with
automatic probing of graphics cards
Xconfigurator Run another X configuration menu with
automatic probing of graphics cards
xf86config Run a text based X configuration menu
Moving, copying, deleting & viewing files
ls -l List files in current directory using
long format
ls -F List files in current directory and
indicate the file type
ls -laC List all files in current directory in
long format and display in columns
rm name Remove a file or directory called
name
rm -rf name Kill off an entire directory and all it’s
includes files and subdirectories
cp filename
/home/dirname
Copy the file called filename to the
/home/dirname directory
mv filename
/home/dirname
Move the file called filename to the
/home/dirname directory
cat filetoview Display the file called filetoview
man -k keyword Display man pages containing
keyword
more filetoview Display the file called filetoview one
page at a time, proceed to next page
using the spacebar
head filetoview Display the first 10 lines of the file
called filetoview
head -20 filetoview Display the first 20 lines of the file
called filetoview
tail filetoview Display the last 10 lines of the file
called filetoview
tail -20 filetoview Display the last 20 lines of the file
called filetoview

Installing software for Linux

rpm -ihv name.rpm Install the rpm package called name
rpm -Uhv name.rpm Upgrade the rpm package called
name
rpm -e package Delete the rpm package called
package
rpm -l package List the files in the package called
package
rpm -ql package List the files and state the installed
version of the package called
package
rpm -i --force package Reinstall the rpm package called
name having deleted parts of it (not
deleting using rpm -e)
tar -zxvf archive.tar.gz or
tar -zxvf archive.tgz
Decompress the files contained in
the zipped and tarred archive called
archive
./configure Execute the script preparing the
installed files for compiling

User Administration

adduser accountname Create a new user call accountname
passwd accountname Give accountname a new password
su Log in as superuser from current login
exit Stop being superuser and revert to
normal user
Little known tips and tricks
ifconfig List ip addresses for all devices on
the machine
apropos subject List manual pages for subject
usermount Executes graphical application for
mounting and unmounting file
systems
/sbin/e2fsck hda5 Execute the filesystem check utility
on partition hda5
fdformat /dev/fd0H1440 Format the floppy disk in device fd0
tar -cMf /dev/fd0 Backup the contents of the current
directory and subdirectories to
multiple floppy disks
tail -f /var/log/messages Display the last 10 lines of the system
log.
cat /var/log/dmesg Display the file containing the boot
time messages - useful for locating
problems. Alternatively, use the
dmesg command.
* wildcard - represents everything. eg.
cp from/* to will copy all files in the
from directory to the to directory
? Single character wildcard. eg.
cp config.? /configs will copy all files
beginning with the name config. in
the current directory to the directory
named configs.
[xyz] Choice of character wildcards. eg.
ls [xyz]* will list all files in the current
directory starting with the letter x, y,
or z.
linux single At the lilo prompt, start in single user
mode. This is useful if you have
forgotten your password. Boot in
single user mode, then run the
passwd command.
ps List current processes
kill 123 Kill a specific process eg. kill 123
Configuration files and what they do
/etc/profile System wide environment variables for
all users.
/etc/fstab List of devices and their associated mount
points. Edit this file to add cdroms, DOS
partitions and floppy drives at startup.
/etc/motd Message of the day broadcast to all users
at login.
etc/rc.d/rc.local Bash script that is executed at the end of
login process. Similar to autoexec.bat in
DOS.
/etc/HOSTNAME Conatins full hostname including domain.
/etc/cron.* There are 4 directories that automatically
execute all scripts within the directory at
intervals of hour, day, week or month.
/etc/hosts A list of all know host names and IP
addresses on the machine.
/etc/httpd/conf Paramters for the Apache web server
/etc/inittab Specifies the run level that the machine
should boot into.
/etc/resolv.conf Defines IP addresses of DNS servers.
/etc/smb.conf Config file for the SAMBA server. Allows
file and print sharing with Microsoft
clients.
/etc/X11/XF86Config

Config file for X-Windows.

~/.xinitrc Defines the windows manager loaded by
X. ~ refers to user’s home directory.

File permissions

If the command ls -l is given, a long list of file names is
displayed. The first column in this list details the permissions
applying to the file. If a permission is missing for a owner,
group of other, it is represented by - eg. drwxr-x—x
Read = 4
Write = 2
Execute = 1
File permissions are altered by giving the
chmod command and the appropriate
octal code for each user type. eg
chmod 7 6 4 filename will make the file
called filename R+W+X for the owner,
R+W for the group and R for others.
chmod 7 5 5 Full permission for the owner, read and
execute access for the group and others.
chmod +x filename Make the file called filename executable
to all users.

X Shortcuts - (mainly for Redhat)

Control|Alt + or - Increase or decrease the screen
resolution. eg. from 640x480 to
800x600
Alt | escape Display list of active windows
Shift|Control F8 Resize the selected window
Right click on desktop
background

Display menu

Shift|Control Altr Refresh the screen
Shift|Control Altx Start an xterm session
Printing
/etc/rc.d/init.d/lpd start Start the print daemon
/etc/rc.d/init.d/lpd stop Stop the print daemon
/etc/rc.d/init.d/lpd
status
Display status of the print daemon
lpq Display jobs in print queue
lprm Remove jobs from queue
lpr Print a file
lpc Printer control tool
man subject | lpr Print the manual page called subject
as plain text
man -t subject | lpr Print the manual page called subject
as Postscript output
printtool Start X printer setup interface
~/.Xdefaults Define configuration for some Xapplications.
~ refers to user’s home
directory.


Read previous mail | Read next mail


 03.11.2024 14:29:46lGo back Go up