File Manipulation & Directory Commands
pwd
To check the
present working directory.
ex:pwd
ls
To see
content of directory.
ls -l
:To see more details including
the permissions regarding the contents of directory.
ls -a :
to see contents including hidden files of directory.
ls ???* : to
see a file whose length is more than 3 characters.
ls –la : To see the file permissions, owners, and
sizes of all files, enter:
cat
cat is used
to create a file and see the content of
file.
cat > filename :to create a file and write
content in that.
To append
file1 onto the end of file2, enter:
cat file1 >> file2
To view the
contents of a file named myfile, enter:
cat myfile
mkdir
Create a
directory.
Ex: mkdir directoryname
cd
To
change directory.
This command
changes the current directory location. By default, the Unix login session
begins in the home directory.
(i).To switch to a subdirectory (of the current directory) named
myfiles, enter: cd myfiles
(ii).To
switch to a directory named /home/wissen/sdm_docs, enter:
cd
/home/wissen/sdm_docs
(iii).To move
to the parent directory of the current directory, enter: cd ..
(iv).To move
to the root directory, enter: cd /
(v).To return
to the home directory, enter: cd
rm
This
command will remove (destroy) a file. We should enter this command with the
-i option, so that we'll be asked to confirm each file deletion.
(i)rm –i filename
(ii).rm
–rf <file or Directory>
cp
Copy
files from one location to another location.
Ex:
cp file1 file2
(i).cp –I
file1 file2
mv
Move
files from source to destination. and for rename also.
Ex: mv file1
file2
sort
Display
the content ascending order.
Ex: sort
filename.
head
Display
first 10 lines in a file
Ex: head filename
tail
Display
last 10 lines in a file
Ex: tail filename
find
The find command lists all of the
files within a directory and its
subdirectories that match a set of conditions. This command is most
commonly used to find all of the files that have a certain name.
Example :To
find all of the files named myfile.txt in the current directory and all of its
subdirectories, enter:
find . -name myfile.txt -print
To
look in the current directory and its subdirectories for all of the files that
end in the extension .txt , enter:
find . -name "*.txt" -print
less
This utility displays the contents of a text file one screen
at a time, waiting for we to press the
Spacebar between screens. This lets we read text without it scrolling quickly
off the screen.
Example
:To read the contents of a file named
textfile in the current directory, enter:
$ less textfile
The
less utility is often used for reading the output of other commands.
For example, to read the output of the ls
command one screen at a time, enter:
$
ls -la | less
To
exit less after viewing the file, press q .
scp
Copy files or directories from one host to
another host
rcp
Remote
file copy host on network.
gzip
Compress
or extract files.
Tar
Create Tape ARchives (TAR)
and add or extract files.
Ex: tar -cvwf file.tar
myfile.txt
Ex: tar -xvwf myfile.tar
!!
To
execute last commands.
nohup
Nohup
utility which allows to run command./process or shell script that can continue running in the background after
you log out from a shell
nohup command-name &
which
Displays
the full path of the file
pscp
This commands is used to copy the files
from windows to unix
Syntax:
pscp <sourcefile> username@hostname:<destinationpath>
grep
This is used to search a particular
pattern(string) in a file
Ex: grep java filename
Ex: ps -ef | grep java àjava
related processes are displaying
cmp
This command is used to compare the two files
byte by byte.
Ex:cmp file1
file2
We can
compare directories also by using cmpdir.
Ex:dircmp
-r /home/test1 /home/test2
diff
This command is used to compare the two files
line by line.
Ex: diff
file1 file2
sdiff
Side by side compare
vi
This is text editor used to create ,edit a file
$ vi filename
To quit without
savingà: q!
To save and executeà: x (or): wq
0àmove
to the beginning of the line
$-->move to the end of the line
Ctrl-fàscroll
forward
Ctrl-bàscroll
backward
chsh
To Change
shell
Ex:
chsh –s ksh <username>
User & User Group Commands
w
Who
logged on system what they are doing.
Id
Display current user and group id names.
Who
Displays current logged in user information
Finger
Display current logged in user with full
information(including logged time, name)
Whoami
Displays current user.
Logout
Terminate
the session
Users
Print the username of the users
currently logged in to the current host
Groups
Print the groups a user is in.
Chown
Ex: Change
the owner of
/var/run/httpd.pid
to 'root'
chown root /var/run/httpd.pid
Disk & Memory Commands
mount
Mounting is done with the
mount
command
$ mount /dev/fd0 /mnt/floppy
unmount
Unmounting is done with the
umount
command
umount /mnt/floppy
chmod
To give
file permission
Ex:
chmod 777 filename
du
Display disk used spaces
df
Display
disk free spaces
free
It displays status of memories.
Sar(System Activity Report)
Displays the swap, disk space, I/O,
system and cpu status.
Troubleshooting Commands
ps
Displays Running process with PID
·
ps - a:
·
ps
-u:
·
ps –ef:
Wall
Displays the contents of a file or standard
input to all logged-in users.
Hostname
Displays host name.
telnet
Communicating with other host. Uses the telnet protocol to
connect to another remote computer.
Syntax: telnet [ host [ port ]
]
Ex:telnet ipaddress/hostname
History
Displays the
list what are the commands you are executed. List of all the commands that you
have entered. Each command is given a number according to the order it was
entered.
Locate
find files by name
Kill
Terminates a process.
§ kill -9
<process id>
§ Kill -3
<process id>àthis is for
thread dump
Ping
Sends ICMP ECHO_REQUEST packets to network hosts.
Ex:ping
<ipaddress>
Script
Used to record interactive session.
Ex:
script –a –f filename
netstat
Displays network information
env
Displays the environment variable
echo
Displays the variable in the standard
out put
Ex: $echo
$PATH à Displays Path value
export
Used to set environment variable
Ex: export PATH=<path>
Pidof
Pidof finds
the process id (pids) of the named programs.
Fuser
Fuser Displays
the pids of processes using the specified files or file systems
Ex: fuser
<file name>
Fuser
7001/tcp
à
it
will display process id associated with port 7001
Ifconfig
Configures or displays network
interface parameters for a network using TCP/IP
Nslookup
Queries
a name server for a host or domain lookup
Ex: nslookup 204.228.150.3
tracert / traceroute
The traceroute command traces the
network path of Internet routers that packets
take as they are forwarded from your computer to a destination address
Ex:
tracert www.google.com
Date
Displays
the current date of the system
FAQs (?) :-
What tools or commands are recommended to troubleshoot performance
related problems?A: Following are the basic or essential tools that every Linux or UNIX system admin should be aware of:
a) top
b) sar
c) vmstat
d) iostat
e) free
Command to display the Linux processes in a
hierarchical format i.e. Parent and child format
·
Process list based on process id -- pstree <PID>
·
Process list based on username -- pstree <user name>
How to browse through directory structure
·
tree -d will display only the directories. i.e Files will not be
displayed.
·
tree -a will display hidden files along with directories and files.
·
tree -s will display the file size. While using this option, it
prints out the size of the files along with the file names.
·
tree -p will display the permissions along with the files.
How can we open files having
different file formats?
By using “less” we can see the contents of a file
·
less filename.pdf
·
less filename.doc
·
less filename.tar
·
less filename.zip
·
less filename.iso
·
less filename.rpm
How to Find Files Based on Access / Modification /
Change Time
You can find files based on
following three file time attribute.
Access time of the file. Access
time gets updated when the file accessed.
Modification time of the file.
Modification time gets updated when the file content modified.
Change time of the file. Change
time gets updated when the inode data changes.
min argument treats its argument as minutes.
time argument treats its argument as 24 hours.
Example 1: Find files whose content got
updated within last 1 hour
Following example will find files
in the current directory and sub-directories, whose content got updated within last 1 hour (60
minutes)
find . -mmin -60
In the same way, following example
finds all the files (under root file system /) that got updated within the last
24 hours (1 day).
find / -mtime -1
Example 2: Find files which got accessed
before 1 hour
To find the files based up on the
file access time, the option -amin, and -atime is used.
find -amin -60
find / -atime -1
Example 3: Find files which got
changed exactly before 1 hour
To find the files based up on the
file inode change time, the option -cmin, and -ctime is used.
find . -cmin -60
find / -ctime -1
Example 4: Restricting the find
output only to files. (Display only files as find command results)
The following find command displays files that are
accessed in the last 30 minutes.
find /etc/sysconfig -amin -30
[Note: The above output contains
both files and directories]
find /etc/sysconfig -amin -30 -type
f
How Do I Make Backups?
A: You can back up a directory hierarchy or complete file system to any media using GNU tar or cpio, the standard *nix tools for this purpose. tar seems to be the more commonly used program currently, and includes command line options to make compressed, incremental, and multi-volume backups.
How Do I Add Temporary
Swap Space?
A:
In
addition to a swap partition, Linux can also use a swap file. Some programs,
like g++, can use huge amounts of virtual memory, requiring the temporary
creation of extra space. To install an extra 64 MB of swap space, for example,
use the following shell commands:
# dd
if=/dev/zero of=/swap bs=1024 count=65535
#
mkswap /swap
#
swapon /swap
|
The
count= argument to dd determines how big the swap file will be.
In this example the swap file's name is /swap, but the name and location are,
generally, arbitrary, depending only on the file system's available space and
your having write permissions in the directory.
When
you don't need the swap space any more, remove it with the following
statements:
#
swapoff /swap
# rm
/swap
|
What Is a core File?
A:
A
core file is created when a program terminates unexpectedly, due to a bug, or a
violation of the operating system's or hardware's protection mechanisms. The
operating system kills the program and creates a core file that programmers can
use to figure out what went wrong. It contains a detailed description of the
state that the program was in when it died.
If
would like to determine what program a core file came from, use the file
command, like this:
$ file core
|
That
will tell you the name of the program that produced the core dump. You may want
to write the maintainer(s) of the program, telling them that their program dumped
core.
[Eric
Hanchrow]
A:
By
using the ulimit command in bash, the limit command in tcsh,
or the rlimit command in ksh. See the appropriate manual page for
details.
This
setting affects all programs run from the shell (directly or indirectly), not
the whole system.
If
you wish to enable or disable core dumping for all processes by default, you
can change the default setting in linux/sched.h. Refer to definition of
INIT_TASK, and look also in linux/resource.h.
A:
$ top
How do I find out
Linux CPU Utilization individually?
A:$ mpstat
How can I find out Linux Resource utilization using
vmstat command?
vmstat
command reports information about processes, memory, paging, block IO, traps,
and cpu activity
$ vmstat -S M
How to watch the log file in real time?
A: tail –f <log_file_name>
How to Find Out Virtual Memory PAGESIZE?
A: $ getconf PAGESIZE or
getconf PAGE_SIZE
How much RAM does my Linux desktop PC have?
A:
$
free –m
OR
$ free –mt
How to find process id of
running program?
A:
Pidof finds
the process id (pids) of the named programs (
Make sure you can see PID of your service)
$ pidof <service-name>
How can
we resolve hostname?
A: # dig your-domain.com
# nslookup gw.isp.com
# nslookup gw.isp.com
How to find out the total amount of free and
used physical and swap memory in the system?
A: $free
What is
the command to see whether the host is alive or dead?
A: $ ping <ip-address>
How to get Information about Active / Inactive
Memory Pages?
A: $ vmstat –a
What is the command to know how long the system is
up and running?
A: $ uptime
How to find
out process memory usage?
A: $ pmap –d PID
How to check out how much hard drive space is left?
A: $ df –h
How to list
all the files that are currently open on system?
A: $ lsof
What is the command to find where the binary is
stored and its library?
A: $ whereis <name of the binary>
How to get the Command line parameters of a process?
ps -fp <pid>
cat /proc/<pid>/cmdline
How to know which process is using a particular
port?
Netstat –ap | grep 7001
Command to display the Process hierarchy?
$ ps -e -o pid, args --forest
How to take thread dump?
Find java process
·
Ps –ef | grep java
Take thread dump
·
Kill -3
<pid>
Check connectivity between two systems?
Ping <ipaddress or Host name>
Print list of file/files are consuming more disk space?
Find .
–type f –exec ls –sh {} \; | sort –n –r
How do I find out the cpu architecture information
under Linux OS?
A: $ proc/cpuinfo
Or
$ less
proc/cpuinfo
Or
$ lscpu à
It lists cpu architecture information
How to display currently running process?
$ ps -ef
Where
- -e to display
all the processes.
- -f to display
full format listing
How to List the Process
based on the UID?
$ ps -f -u wwwrun,postfix
How to get the Linux version?
$ Uname -a
List down all the Environment variables?
$ env
How to get size of the folder ..?
$du –ch <foldername> | grep total
Example: [sdadmin@hostserver application]$ du -ch
CDIAD | grep total
1.7G total
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