Differences between revisions 204 and 205
Revision 204 as of 2009-03-07 01:57:06
Size: 100003
Editor: OsamuAoki
Comment:
Revision 205 as of 2009-03-07 02:52:59
Size: 99989
Editor: OsamuAoki
Comment:
Deletions are marked like this. Additions are marked like this.
Line 1371: Line 1371:
Multiple files ("{{{file1}}}", "{{{file2}}}", and "{{{file3}}}") can be processed with regular expression similarly with {{{vim}}}(1) or {{{perl}}}(1): Multiple files ("{{{file1}}}", "{{{file2}}}", and "{{{file3}}}") can be processed with regular expressions similarly with {{{vim}}}(1) or {{{perl}}}(1):
Line 1384: Line 1384:
|| {{{ed}}}(1) || BRE || read from "{{{stdin}}}" || about 50KB || only {{{libc}}} with 1.3MB ||
|| {{{vim}}}(1) || BRE || can be as a part of the argument || about 1900KB || many libraries with over 7.3MB ||
|| {{{perl}}}(1) || ERE || can be as a part of the argument || about 7KB || many libraries with 3.
5MB ||
|| {{{ed}}}(1) || BRE || read from "{{{stdin}}}" || about 50KB || about 1300KB (only {{{libc}}}) ||
|| {{{vim}}}(1) || BRE || can be as a part of the argument || about 1900KB || about 7300KB total ||
|| {{{perl}}}(1) || ERE || can be a
s a part of the argument || about 7KB || about 3500KB total ||

Do not use Edit(GUI) button.

?TableOfContents(4)

Copyright 2007, 2008 Osamu Aoki GPL, (Please agree to GPL, GPL2, and any version of GPL which is compatible with DSFG if you update any part of wiki page)

Generated HTML is at "[http://people.debian.org/~osamu/pub/getwiki/html/ch02.en.html Debian Reference: Chapter 2. GNU/Linux tutorials]".

I welcome your contributions to update this wiki page. You must follow these rules:

  • Do not use Edit(GUI) button of MoinMoin.

  • You can update anytime for:
    • grammar errors
    • spelling errors
    • moved URL location
    • package name transition adjustment (emacs23 etc.)
    • clearly broken script.
  • Before updating this wiki content:

GNU/Linux tutorials

I think learning a computer system is like learning a new foreign language. Although tutorial books and documentation are helpful, you have to practice it yourself. In order to help you get started smoothly, I will elaborate a few basic points.

The powerful design of [http://www.debian.org Debian] [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GNU GNU]/[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Linux Linux] comes from the [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unix Unix] operating system, i.e., a [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Multi-user multiuser], [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Computer_multitasking multitasking] operating system. You must learn to take advantage of the power of these features and the similarities between Unix and GNU/Linux.

Don't shy away from Unix oriented texts and don't rely solely on GNU/Linux texts, as this will rob you of much useful information.

"[http://packages.debian.org/search?keywords=rutebook Rute User's Tutorial and Exposition]", in the Debian non-free archive as the rutebook package (popcon: @@@pop-rutebook@@@), provides a good online resource to the generic system administration.

(!) If you have been using any [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unix-like Unix-like] system for a while with command line tools, you probably know everything I explain here. Please use this as a reality check and refresher.

Console basics

The shell prompt

Upon starting the system, you are presented with the character based login screen if you did not install [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/X_Window_System X Window System] with the display manager such as gdm. Suppose your hostname is foo, the login prompt looks like:

foo login:

If you did install a [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Graphical_user_interface GUI] environment such as [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gnome Gnome] or [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/KDE KDE], then you can get to a prompt by Ctrl-Alt-F1, and you can return to the GUI screen via Alt-F7 (see Virtual Consoles below for more information).

Following what you selected during the installation process, you type your username, e.g. penguin, and press the Enter-key, then type your password and press the Enter-key again.

(!) Following the Unix tradition, the username and password of the Debian system are case sensitive. The username is usually chosen only from the lowercase.

Now you are in the [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shell_(computing) shell]. The shell interprets your commands. The system starts with the greeting message stored in "/etc/motd" (Message Of The Day) and with the command prompt as:

Debian GNU/Linux lenny/sid foo tty1
foo login: penguin
Password:
Last login: Sun Apr 22 09:29:34 2007 on tty1
Linux snoopy 2.6.20-1-amd64 #1 SMP Sun Apr 15 20:25:49 UTC 2007 x86_64

The programs included with the Debian GNU/Linux system are free software;
the exact distribution terms for each program are described in the
individual files in /usr/share/doc/*/copyright.

Debian GNU/Linux comes with ABSOLUTELY NO WARRANTY, to the extent
permitted by applicable law.
foo:~$

Here, the main part of the greeting message can be customized by editing the "/etc/motd.tail" file. The first line is generated from the system information using "uname -snrvm".

The shell prompt under X

If you installed [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/X_Window_System X Window System] with a display manager such as [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gnome Gnome]'s gdm by selecting "Desktop environment" task during the installation, you will be presented with the graphical login screen upon starting your system. You type your username and your password to login to the non-privileged user account. Use tab to navigate between username and password, or use the mouse and primary click.

You can gain the shell prompt under X by starting a x-terminal-emulator program such as gnome-terminal(1), rxvt(1) or xterm(1). Under the Gnome Desktop environment, clicking "Applications" -> "Accessories" -> "Terminal" does the trick.

You can also see the section below @{@virtualconsoles@}@.

Under some other Desktop systems (like fluxbox), there may be no obvious starting point for the menu. If this happens, just try (right) clicking the center of the screen and hope for a menu to pop-up.

The root account

The root account is also called [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Superuser superuser] or privileged user. From this account, you can perform the following system administration activities:

  • read, write, and remove any files on the system irrespective of their file permissions
  • set file ownership and permissions of any files on the system
  • set the password of any non-privileged users on the system
  • login to any accounts without their passwords

This unlimited power of root account requires you to be considerate and responsible when using it.

/!\ Never share the root password with others.

(!) File permissions of a file (including hardware devices such as CD-ROM etc. which are just another file for the Debian system) may render it unusable or inaccessible by non-root users. Although the use of root account is a quick way to test this kind of situation, its resolution should be done through proper setting of file permissions and user's group membership (see @{@filesystempermissions@}@).

The root shell prompt

Here are a few basic methods to gain the root shell prompt by using the root password:

  • At the character based login prompt, you simply type root.

  • Under the Gnome Desktop environment, click "Applications" -> "Accessories" -> "Root Terminal".

  • From any user shell prompt, type "su -l". (This does not preserve the environment of the current user)

  • From any user shell prompt, type "su". (This preserves most of the environment of the current user)

GUI system administration tools

When your desktop menu does not start GUI system administration tools automatically with the appropriate privilege, you can start them from the root shell prompt of the X terminal emulator, such as gnome-terminal(1), rxvt(1), or xterm(1). See @{@therootshellprompt@}@ and @{@runningxclientsasroot@}@.

/!\ Never start the X display/session manager under the root account by typing in root to the prompt of the display manager such as gdm(1).

/!\ Never run untrusted remote GUI program under X window when critical information is displayed since it may eavesdrop your X screen.

Virtual consoles

In the default Debian system, there are six switchable [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/VT100 VT100-like] character consoles available to start the command shell directly on the Linux host. Unless you are in a GUI environment, you can switch between the virtual consoles by pressing the Left-Alt-key and one of the F1--F6 keys simultaneously. Each character console allows independent login to the account and offers the multiuser environment. This multiuser environment is a great Unix feature, and very addictive.

If you are under the X Window System, you gain access to the character console 1 by pressing Ctrl-Alt-F1 key, i.e., the left-Ctrl-key, the left-Alt-key, and the F1-key are pressed together. You can get back to the X Window System, normally running on the virtual console 7, by pressing Alt-F7.

You can alternatively change to another virtual console, e.g. to the console 1, by the command:

# chvt 1

How to leave the command prompt

You type Ctrl-D, i.e., the left-Ctrl-key and the d-key pressed together, at the command prompt to close the shell activity. If you are at the character console, you will return to the login prompt with this. Even though these control characters are referred as "control D" with the upper case, you do not need to press the Shift-key. The short hand expression, ^D, is also used for Ctrl-D. Alternately, you can type "exit".

If you are at x-terminal-emulator(1), you can close x-terminal-emulator window with this.

How to shutdown the system

Just like any other modern OS where the file operation involves [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cache caching data] in memory for improved performance, the Debian system needs the proper shutdown procedure before power can safely be turned off. This is to maintain the integrity of files, by forcing all changes in memory to be written to disk. If the software power control is available, the shutdown procedure automatically turns off power of the system. (Otherwise, you may have to press power button for few seconds after the shutdown procedure.)

Under the normal multiuser mode, use following from the root command prompt to shutdown the system:

# shutdown -h now

Under the single-user mode, use following from the root command prompt to shutdown the system:

# poweroff -i -f

Alternatively, you may type Ctrl-Alt-Delete (The left-Ctrl-key, the left-Alt-Key, and the Delete are pressed together) to shutdown if "/etc/inittab" contains "ca:12345:ctrlaltdel:/sbin/shutdown -t1 -a -h now" in it. See inittab(5) for details.

Recovering a sane console

When the screen goes berserk after doing some funny things such as "cat <some-binary-file>", type "reset" at the command prompt. You may not be able to see the command echoed as you type. You may also issue "clear" to clean up the screen.

Additional package suggestions for the newbie

Although even the minimal installation of the Debian system without any desktop environment tasks provides the basic Unix functionality, it is a good idea to install few additional commandline and curses based character terminal packages such as mc and vim with aptitude(8) for beginners to get started. From the shell prompt as root:

# aptitude update
...
# aptitude install mc vim sudo
...

If you already had these packages installed, nothing will be installed.

List of interesting text-mode program packages.

1

2

3

package

popcon

size

description

mc

5740

-

A text-mode full-screen file manager

sudo

-

-

A program to allow limited root privileges to users

vim

15655

-

Unix text editor Vi IMproved, a programmers text editor (standard version)

vim-tiny

-

-

Unix text editor Vi IMproved, a programmers text editor (compact version)

emacs21

-

-

GNU project Emacs, the Lisp based extensible text editor (version 21)

emacs22

-

-

GNU project Emacs, the Lisp based extensible text editor (version 22)

w3m

6313

-

Text-mode WWW browsers

gpm

2542

-

The Unix style cut-and-paste on the text console (daemon)

It may be a good idea to read some informative documentations.

List of informative documentation packages.

1

2

3

package

popcon

size

description

doc-debian

*42664

-

Debian Project documentation, (Debian FAQ) and other documents

debian-policy

*2288

-

Debian Policy Manual and related documents

developers-reference

*1058

-

Guidelines and information for Debian developers

maint-guide

*896

-

Debian New Maintainers' Guide

debian-history

-

-

History of the Debian Project

debian-faq

-

-

Debian FAQ

doc-linux-text

*42187

-

Linux HOWTOs and FAQ (text)

doc-linux-html

613

-

Linux HOWTOs and FAQ (html)

sysadmin-guide

*283

-

The Linux System Administrators' Guide

rutebook

182

-

Linux: Rute User's Tutorial and Exposition (non-free)

You can install some of these packages by issuing the following command from the root shell prompt:

# aptitude install package_name

An extra user account

If you do not want to use your main user account for the following training activities, you can create a training user account, e.g. fish. Type at root shell prompt:

# adduser fish
  • answer all the questions

This will create a new account named as fish. After your practice, you can remove this user account and its home directory by:

# deluser --remove-home fish

sudo configuration

For the typical single user workstation such as the desktop Debian system on the laptop PC, it is common to deploy simple configuration of sudo(8) as follows to let the non-privileged user, e.g. penguin, to gain administrative privilege just with his user password (not with the root password).

# echo "penguin  ALL=(ALL) ALL" >> /etc/sudoers

Since sudo(8) normally use normal user's environment variables to execute commands and normal user's "$PATH" variable is set to "/usr/local/bin:/usr/bin:/bin:/usr/games" by the system default, you should also adjust "$PATH" variable as:

$ echo 'PATH=$PATH:/usr/sbin:/sbin' >> ~/.bashrc

This trick should only be used for the single user workstation which you administer and where you are the only user.

/!\ Do not set up accounts of regular users on multiuser workstation like this because it would be very bad for system security.

<!> The password and the account of the penguin in the above example requires as much protection as the root password and the root account.

<!> Administrative privilege in this context belongs to someone authorized to perform the system administration task on the workstation. Never give some manager in the Admin department of your company or your boss such privilege unless they are authorized and capable.

(!) For providing access privilege to limited devices and limited files, you should consider to use group to provide limited access instead of using the root privilege via sudo(8).

(!) With more thoughtful and careful configuration, sudo(1) can grant limited administrative privileges to other users on a shared system without sharing the root password. This can help with accountability with hosts with multiple administrators so you can tell who did what. On the other hand, you might not want anyone else to have such privileges.

Play time

Now you are ready to play with the Debian system without risks as long as you use the non-privileged user account.

This is because the Debian system is, even after the default installation, configured with proper file permissions which prevent non-privileged users from damaging the system. Of course, there may still be some holes which can be exploited but those who worry about these issues should not be reading this section but should be reading [http://www.debian.org/doc/manuals/securing-debian-howto/ Securing Debian Manual].

We will learn the Debian system as a [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unix-like Unix-like] system with:

  • @{@unixlikefilesystem@}@ (basic concept),
  • @{@midnightcommandermc@}@ (survival method),
  • @{@thebasicunixlikeworkenvironment@}@ (basic method),
  • @{@thesimpleshellcommand@}@ (shell mechanism), and
  • @{@unixliketextprocessing@}@ (text processing method).

Unix-like filesystem

In GNU/Linux and other [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unix-like Unix-like] operating systems, [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Computer_file files] are organized into [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Directory_(file_systems) directories]. All files and directories are arranged in one big tree, the file hierarchy, rooted at "/". It's called a tree because if you draw the file system, it looks like a tree (upside down).

These files and directories can be spread out over several devices. mount(8) serves to attach the file system found on some device to the big file tree. Conversely, umount(8) will detach it again. On recent Linux kernels, mount(8) with "--bind" or "--rbind" option can bind part of the file hierarchy somewhere else or can mount filesystem as shared, private, slave, or unbindable. Supported mount options for each filesystem are available in "/share/doc/linux-doc-2.6.*/Documentation/filesystems/".

Directories on Unix systems are called folders on some other systems. Please also note that there is no concept for drive such as "A:" on any Unix system. There is one file system, and everything is included. This is a huge advantage compared to Windows, so consider yourself lucky.

Unix file basics

Here are Unix file basics:

  • Filenames are case sensitive. That is, "MYFILE" and "MyFile" are different files.

  • The root directory is referred to as simply "/". Don't confuse this with the root user or the home directory for the root user: "/root". Note that both entities are commonly referred to as "root". The context of the usage should make it clear which is meant.

  • Every directory has a name which can contain any letters or symbols except "/". The root directory is an exception; its name is "/" (pronounced "slash" or "the root directory") and it cannot be renamed.

  • Each file or directory is designated by a fully-qualified filename, absolute filename, or path, giving the sequence of directories which must be passed through to reach it. The three terms are synonymous.

  • All fully-qualified filenames begin with the "/" directory, and there's a "/" between each directory or file in the filename. The first "/" is the top level directory, and the other "/"'s separate successive subdirectories, until we reach the last entry which is the name of the actual file. The words used here can be confusing. Take the following fully-qualified filename as an example: "/usr/share/keytables/us.map.gz". However, people will also refer to its basename "us.map.gz" alone as a filename.

  • The root directory has a number of branches, such as "/etc/" and "/usr/". These subdirectories in turn branch into still more subdirectories, such as "/etc/init.d/" and "/usr/local/". The whole thing viewed collectively is called the directory tree. You can think of an absolute filename as a route from the base of the tree ("/") to the end of some branch (a file). You will also hear people talk about the directory tree as if it were a family tree: thus subdirectories have parents, and a path shows the complete ancestry of a file. There are also relative paths that begin somewhere other than the root directory. You should remember that the directory "../" refers to the parent directory. This also applies to other directory like structures, such as data structures or other tree hierarchical organized entities.

  • There's no special directory path name component that corresponds to a physical device, such as your hard disk. This differs from [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RT-11 RT-11], [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CP/M CP/M], [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OpenVMS OpenVMS], [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MS-DOS MS-DOS], [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AmigaOS AmigaOS], and [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Microsoft_Windows Microsoft Windows], where the path contains a device name such as "C:\". (However, directory entries do exist that refer to physical devices as a part of the normal filesystem. See @{@filesysteminternals@}@.)

(!) While you can use almost any letters or symbols in a file name, in practice it is a bad idea to do so. It is better to avoid any characters that often have special meanings on the command line, including spaces, tabs, newlines, and other special characters:  { } ( ) [ ] ' ` " \ / > < | ; !  # & ^ * % @ $  . If you want to separate words in a name, good choices are the period, hyphen, and underscore. You could also capitalize each word, "LikeThis". Experienced Linux users tend to avoid spaces in filenames.

(!) The word path is used not only for fully-qualified filename as above but also for the command search path. The intended meaning is usually clear from the context.

The detailed best practices for the file hierarchy are described in the Filesystem Hierarchy Standard ("/usr/share/doc/debian-policy/fhs/fhs-2.3.txt.gz" and hier(7)). You should remember the following facts as the starter:

List of usage of key directories.

directory

usage

/

A simple "/" represents the root directory.

/etc/

This is the place for the system wide configuration files.

/var/log/

This is the place for the system log files.

/home/

This is the directory which contains all the home directories for all non-privileged users.

Filesystem internals

Following the Unix tradition, the Debian GNU/Linux system provides the [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File_system filesystem] under which physical data on harddisks and other storage devices reside, and the interaction with the hardware devices such as console screens and remote serial consoles are represented in an unified manner under "/dev/".

Each file, directory, named pipe (a way two programs can share data), or physical device on a Debian GNU/Linux system has a data structure called an [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inode inode] which describes its associated attributes such as the user who owns it (owner), the group that it belongs to, the time last accessed, etc. If you are really interested, see "/usr/include/linux/fs.h" for the exact definition of "struct inode" in the Debian GNU/Linux system. The idea of representing just about everything in the file system was a Unix innovation, and modern Linux kernels have developed this idea ever further. Now, even information about processes running in the computer can be found in the file system.

This abstract and unified representation of physical entities and internal processes is very powerful since this allows us to use the same command for the same kind of operation on many totally different devices. It is even possible to change the way the kernel works by writing data to special files that are linked to running processes.

{i} If you need to identify the correspondence between the file tree and the physical entity, execute mount(8) with no arguments.

Filesystem permissions

[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File_system_permissions Filesystem permissions] of [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unix-like Unix-like] system are defined for three categories of affected users:

  • the user who owns the file (u),

  • other users in the group which the file belongs to (g), and

  • all other users (o) also referred to as "world" and "everyone".

For the file, each corresponding permission allows:

  • read (r): to examine contents of the file,

  • write (w): to modify the file, and

  • execute (x): to run the file as a command.

For the directory, each corresponding permission allows:

  • read (r): to list contents of the directory,

  • write (w): to add or remove files in the directory, and

  • execute (x): to access files in the directory.

Here, the execute permission on a directory means not only to allow reading of files in that directory but also to allow viewing their attributes, such as the size and the modification time.

ls(1) is used to display permission information (and more) for files and directories. When it is invoked with the "-l" option, it displays the following information in the order given:

  • the type of file (first character)

  • the access permission of the file (nine characters, consisting of three characters each for user, group, and other in this order)

  • the number of hard links to the file

  • the name of the user who owns the file

  • the name of the group which the file belongs to

  • the size of the file in characters (bytes)

  • the date and time of the file (mtime)

  • the name of the file.

List of the first character of "ls -l" output

character

meaning

-

normal file

d

directory

l

symlink

c

character device node

b

block device node

p

named pipe

s

socket

chown(1) is used from the root account to change the owner of the file. chgrp(1) is used from the file's owner or root account to change the group of the file. chmod(1) is used from the file's owner or root account to change file and directory access permissions. Basic syntax to manipulate a foo file is:

# chown <newowner> foo
# chgrp <newgroup> foo
# chmod  [ugoa][+-=][rwxXst][,...] foo

For example, in order to make a directory tree to be owned by a user foo and shared by a group bar, issue the following commands from the root account:

# cd /some/location/
# chown -R foo:bar .
# chmod -R ug+rwX,o=rX .

There are three more special permission bits:

  • set user ID (s or S instead of user's x),

  • set group ID (s or S instead of group's x), and

  • sticky bit (t or T instead of other's x).

Here the output of "ls -l" for these bits is capitalized if execution bits hidden by these outputs are unset.

Setting set user ID on an executable file allows a user to execute the executable file with the owner ID of the file (for example root). Similarly, setting set group ID on an executable file allows a user to execute the executable file with the group ID of the file (for example root). Because these settings can cause security risks, enabling them requires extra caution.

Setting set group ID on a directory enables the [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Berkeley_Software_Distribution BSD-like] file creation scheme where all files created in the directory belong to the group of the directory.

Setting the sticky bit on a directory prevents a file in the directory from being removed by a user who is not the owner of the file. In order to secure the contents of a file in world-writable directories such as "/tmp" or in group-writable directories, one must not only reset the write permission for the file but also set the sticky bit on the directory. Otherwise, the file can be removed and a new file can be created with the same name by any user who has write access to the directory.

Here are a few interesting examples of file permissions.

$ ls -l /etc/passwd /etc/shadow /dev/ppp /usr/sbin/exim4
crw------- 1 root root   108, 0 2007-04-29 07:00 /dev/ppp
-rw-r--r-- 1 root root     1427 2007-04-16 00:19 /etc/passwd
-rw-r----- 1 root shadow    943 2007-04-16 00:19 /etc/shadow
-rwsr-xr-x 1 root root   700056 2007-04-22 05:29 /usr/sbin/exim4
$ ls -ld /tmp /var/tmp /usr/local /var/mail /usr/src
drwxrwxrwt 10 root root  4096 2007-04-29 07:59 /tmp
drwxrwsr-x 10 root staff 4096 2007-03-24 18:48 /usr/local
drwxrwsr-x  4 root src   4096 2007-04-27 00:31 /usr/src
drwxrwsr-x  2 root mail  4096 2007-03-28 23:33 /var/mail
drwxrwxrwt  2 root root  4096 2007-04-29 07:11 /var/tmp

There is an alternative numeric mode to describe file permissions with chmod(1). This numeric mode uses 3 to 4 digit wide octal (radix=8) numbers.

The numeric mode for file permissions in chmod(1) commands.

digit

meaning

1st optional digit

sum of set user ID (=4), set group ID (=2), and sticky bit (=1)

2nd digit

sum of read (=4), write (=2), and execute (=1) permissions for user

3rd digit

ditto for group

4th digit

ditto for other

This sounds complicated but it is actually quite simple. If you look at the first few (2-10) columns from "ls -l" command output and read it as a binary (radix=2) representation of file permissions ("-" being "0" and "rwx" being "1"), the last 3 digit of the numeric mode value should make sense as an octal (radix=8) representation of file permissions to you. For example, try:

$ touch foo bar
$ chmod u=rw,go=r foo
$ chmod 644 bar
$ ls -l foo bar
-rw-r--r-- 1 penguin penguin 17 2007-04-29 08:22 bar
-rw-r--r-- 1 penguin penguin 12 2007-04-29 08:22 foo

{i} If you need to access information displayed by "ls -l" in shell script, you should use pertinent commands such as test(1), stat(1) and readlink(1). The shell builtin such as "[" or "test" may be used too.

Control of permissions for newly created files: umask

What permissions are applied to a newly created file or directory is restricted by the umask shell builtin command. See dash(1), bash(1), and builtins(7).

 (file permissions) = (requested file permissions) & ~(umask value)

The umask value examples.

umask

usage

file permissions created

directory permissions created

0022

writable only by the user

-rw-r--r--

-rwxr-xr-x

0002

writable by the group

-rw-rw-r--

-rwxrwxr-x

The Debian system uses a user private group (UPG) scheme as its default. A UPG is created whenever a new user is added to the system. A UPG has the same name as the user for which it was created and that user is the only member of the UPG. UPGs makes it is safe to set umask to 0002 since every user has their own private group. (In some Unix variants, it is quite common to setup all normal users belonging to a single users group and is good idea to set umask to 0022 for security in such cases.)

Permissions for groups of users (group)

In order to make group permissions to be applied to a particular user, that user needs to be made a member of the group using "sudo vigr".

(!) Alternatively, you may dynamically add users to groups during the authentication process by adding "auth optional pam_group.so" line to "/etc/pam.d/common-auth" and setting "/etc/security/group.conf". (See @{@authentication@}@.)

The hardware devices are just another kind of file on the Debian system. If you have problems accessing devices such as CD-ROM and USB memory stick from a user account, you should make that user a member of the relevant group.

Some notable system-provided groups allow their members to access particular files and devices without root privilege.

List of example system-provided groups for file access.

group

accessible files and devices

dialout

Full and direct access to serial ports ("/dev/ttyS[0-3]").

dip

Limited access to serial ports for Dialup IP connection to trusted peers.

cdrom

CD-ROM, DVD+/-RW drives.

audio

An audio device.

video

A video device.

scanner

Scanner(s).

adm

System monitoring logs.

staff

Some directories for junior administrative work: "/usr/local", "/home".

{i} You need to belong to the dialout group to reconfigure modem, dial anywhere, etc. But if root creates pre-defined configuration files for trusted peers in "/etc/ppp/peers/", you only need to belong to the dip group to create Dialup IP connection to those trusted peers using pppd(8), pon(1), and poff(1) commands.

Some notable system provided groups allow their members to execute particular commands without root privilege.

List of notable system provided groups for particular command executions.

group

accessible commands

sudo

execute sudo without their password.

lpadmin

execute commands to add, modify, and remove printers from printer databases.

plugdev

execute pmount(1) for removable devices such as USB memories.

For the full listing of the system provided users and groups, see the recent version of the "Users and Groups" document in "/usr/share/doc/base-passwd/users-and-groups.html" provided by the base-passwd package.

See passwd(5), group(5), shadow(5), newgrp(1), vipw(8), vigr(8), and pam_group(8) for the management commands of the user and group system.

Timestamps

There are three types of timestamps for a GNU/Linux file.

List of types of timestamps.

type

meaning

mtime

the file modification time (ls -l)

ctime

the file status change time (ls -lc)

atime

the last file access time (ls -lu)

Note that ctime is not file creation time.

  • Overwriting a file will change all of the mtime, ctime, and atime attributes of the file.

  • Changing ownership or permissions of a file will change the ctime and atime attributes of the file.

  • Reading a file will change the atime of the file.

Note that even simply reading a file on the Debian system will normally cause a file write operation to update atime information in the inode. Mounting a filesystem with the "noatime" option will let the system skip this operation and will result in faster file access for the read. This is often recommended for laptops, because it reduces hard drive activity and saves power. See mount(8).

Use touch(1) command to change timestamps of existing files.

For timestamps, the ls command outputs different strings under the modern English locale ("en_US.UTF-8") from under the old one ("C").

$ LANG=en_US.UTF-8  ls -l foo
-rw-r--r-- 1 penguin penguin 3 2008-03-05 00:47 foo
$ LANG=C  ls -l foo
-rw-r--r-- 1 penguin penguin 3 Mar  5 00:47 foo

{i} See @{@customizeddisplayoftimeanddate@}@ to cutomize "ls -l" output.

There are two methods of associating a file "foo" with a different filename "bar".

See the following example for the changes in link counts and the subtle differences in the result of the rm command.

$ echo "Original Content" > foo
$ ls -li foo
2398521 -rw-r--r-- 1 penguin penguin 17 2007-04-29 08:15 foo
$ ln foo bar     # hard link
$ ln -s foo baz  # symlink
$ ls -li foo bar baz
2398521 -rw-r--r-- 2 penguin penguin 17 2007-04-29 08:15 bar
2398538 lrwxrwxrwx 1 penguin penguin  3 2007-04-29 08:16 baz -> foo
2398521 -rw-r--r-- 2 penguin penguin 17 2007-04-29 08:15 foo
$ rm foo
$ echo "New Content" > foo
$ ls -li foo bar baz
2398521 -rw-r--r-- 1 penguin penguin 17 2007-04-29 08:15 bar
2398538 lrwxrwxrwx 1 penguin penguin  3 2007-04-29 08:16 baz -> foo
2398540 -rw-r--r-- 1 penguin penguin 12 2007-04-29 08:17 foo
$ cat bar
Original Content
$ cat baz
New Content

The hardlink can be made within the same file system and shares the same inode number which the "-i" option with ls(1) reveals.

The symlink always has nominal file access permissions of "rwxrwxrwx", as shown in the above example, with the effective access permissions dictated by permissions of the file that it points to.

<!> It is generally good idea not to create complicated symbolic links or hardlinks at all unless you have a very good reason. It may cause nightmares where the logical combination of the symbolic links results in loops in the filesystem.

(!) It is generally preferable to use symbolic links rather than hardlinks unless you have a good reason for using a hardlink.

The "." directory links to the directory that it appears in, thus the link count of any new directory starts at 2. The ".." directory links to the parent directory, thus the link count of the directory increases with the addition of new subdirectories.

If you are just moving to Linux from Windows, it will soon become clear how well-designed the filename linking of Unix is, compared with the nearest Windows equivalent of "shortcuts". Because it is implemented in the file system, applications can't see any difference between a linked file and the original. In the case of hardlinks, there really is no difference.

Named pipes (FIFOs)

A [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Named_pipe named pipe] is a file that acts like a pipe. You put something into the file, and it comes out the other end. Thus it's called a FIFO, or First-In-First-Out: the first thing you put in the pipe is the first thing to come out the other end.

If you write to a named pipe, the process which is writing to the pipe doesn't terminate until the information being written is read from the pipe. If you read from a named pipe, the reading process waits until there is something to read before terminating. The size of the pipe is always zero --- it does not store data, it just links two processes like the shell "|". However, since this pipe has a name, the two processes don't have to be on the same command line or even be run by the same user. Pipes were a very influential innovation of Unix.

You can try it by doing the following:

$ cd; mkfifo mypipe
$ echo "hello" >mypipe & # put into background
[1] 8022
$ ls -l mypipe
prw-r--r-- 1 penguin penguin 0 2007-04-29 08:25 mypipe
$ cat mypipe
hello
[1]+  Done                    echo "hello" >mypipe
$ ls mypipe
mypipe
$ rm mypipe

Sockets

Sockets are used extensively by all the Internet communication, databases, and the operating system itself. It is similar to the named pipe (FIFO) and allows processes to exchange information even between different computers. For the socket, those processes do not need to be running at the same time nor to be running as the children of the same ancestor process. This is the endpoint for [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inter-process_communication the inter process communication (IPC)]. The exchange of information may occur over the network between different hosts. The two most common ones are [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Internet_socket the Internet socket] and [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unix_domain_socket the Unix domain socket].

{i} "netstat -an" will provide a very useful overview of the sockets that are open on a given system.

Device files

[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Device_file Device files] refer to physical or virtual devices on your system, such as your hard disk, video card, screen, or keyboard. An example of a virtual device is the console, represented by "/dev/console".

The device types.

device type

meaning

character device

This can be accessed one character at a time, that is, the smallest unit of data which can be written to or read from the device is a character (byte).

block device

This must be accessed in larger units called blocks, which contain a number of characters. Your hard disk is a block device.

You can read and write device files, though the file may well contain binary data which may be an incomprehensible-to-humans gibberish. Writing data directly to these files is sometimes useful for the troubleshooting of hardware connections. For example, you can dump a text file to the printer device "/dev/lp0" or send modem commands to the appropriate serial port "/dev/ttyS0". But, unless this is done carefully, it may cause a major disaster. So be cautious.

(!) For the normal access to a printer, use lp(1).

The device node number are displayed by executing ls(1) as:

$ ls -l /dev/hda /dev/ttyS0 /dev/zero
brw-rw---- 1 root cdrom   3,  0 2007-04-29 07:00 /dev/hda
crw-rw---- 1 root dialout 4, 64 2007-04-29 07:00 /dev/ttyS0
crw-rw-rw- 1 root root    1,  5 2007-04-29 07:00 /dev/zero

Here,

  • "/dev/hda" has the major device number 3 and the minor device number 0. This is read/write accessible by the user who belongs to disk group,

  • "/dev/ttyS0" has the major device number 4 and the minor device number 64. This is read/write accessible by the user who belongs to dialout group, and

  • "/dev/zero" has the major device number 1 and the minor device number 5. This is read/write accessible by anyone.

In the Linux 2.6 system, the filesystem under "/dev/" is automatically populated by the udev(7) mechanism.

Special device files

There are some special device files.

List of special device files.

device file

action

response

/dev/null

read

it returns "end-of-file (EOF) character".

/dev/null

write

it is a bottomless data dump pit.

/dev/zero

read

it returns "the \0 (NUL) character" (not the same as the number zero ASCII).

/dev/random

read

it returns random characters from a true random number generator, delivering real entropy. (slow)

/dev/urandom

read

it returns random characters from a cryptographically secure pseudorandom number generator.

/dev/full

write

it returns the disk-full (ENOSPC) error.

These are frequently used in conjunction with the shell redirection (see @{@typicalcommandseshellredirection@}@).

procfs and sysfs

The [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Procfs procfs] and [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sysfs sysfs] mounted on "/proc" and "/sys" are the pseudo-filesystem and expose internal data structures of the kernel to the userspace. In other word, these entries are virtual, meaning that they act as a convenient window into the operation of the operating system.

The directory "/proc" contains (among other things) one subdirectory for each process running on the system, which is named after the process ID (PID). System utilities that access process information, such as ps(1), get their information from this directory structure.

The directories under "/proc/sys/" contain interface to change certain kernel parameters at run time. (You may do the same through specialized sysctl(8) command or its preload/configuration file "/etc/sysctrl.conf".)

(!) The Linux kernel may complain "Too many open files". You can fix avoid this by executing "echo "65536"  > /proc/sys/fs/file-max" from the root shell to increase "file-max" value.

People frequently panic when they notice one file in particular - "/proc/kcore" - which is generally huge. This is (more or less) a copy of the contents of your computer's memory. It's used to debug the kernel. It is a virtual file that points to computer memory, so don't worry about its size.

The directory under "/sys" contains exported kernel data structures, their attributes, and the linkages between them. It also contains interface to change certain kernel parameters at run time.

See "proc.txt(.gz)", "sysfs.txt(.gz)" and other related documents in the Linux kernel documentation ("/usr/share/doc/linux-doc-2.6.*/Documentation/filesystems/*") provided by the linux-doc-2.6.* package.

Midnight Commander (MC)

[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Midnight_Commander Midnight Commander (MC)] is a GNU "Swiss army knife" for the Linux console and other terminal environments. This gives newbie a menu driven console experience which is much easier to learn than standard Unix commands.

You may need to install the Midnight Commander package which is titled "mc".

$ sudo aptitude install mc

Use the mc(1) command to explore the Debian system. This is the best way to learn. Please explore few interesting locations just using the cursor keys and Enter key:

  • "/etc" and its subdirectories.

  • "/var/log" and its subdirectories.

  • "/usr/share/doc" and its subdirectories.

  • "/sbin" and "/bin"

Customization of MC

In order to make MC to change working directory upon exit and cd to the directory, I suggest to modify "~/.bashrc" to include:

. /usr/share/mc/bin/mc.sh                                                                                                        

See mc(1) (under the "-P" option) for the reason. (If you do not understand what exactly I am talking here, you can do this later.)

Starting MC

MC can be started by:

$ mc

MC takes care of all file operations through its menu, requiring minimal user effort. Just press F1 to get the help screen (see next paragraph if this doesn't work). You can play with MC just by pressing cursor-keys and function-keys.

In some consoles such as gnome-terminal(1), key strokes of function-keys may be stolen by the console program. You can disable these features by "Edit" -> "Keyboard Shortcuts" for gnome-terminal. In particular, consider removing the mapping of F1 to Gnome Terminal Help; doing so will allow F1 to show Midnight Commander help.

If you encounter character encoding problem which displays garbage characters, adding "-a" to MC's command line may help prevent problems.

If this doesn't clear up your display problems with MC, see @{@theterminalconfiguration@}@.

File manager in MC

The default is two directory panels containing file lists. Another useful mode is to set the right window to "information" to see file access privilege information, etc. Following are some essential keystrokes. With the gpm(8) daemon running, one can use a mouse on Linux character consoles, too. (Make sure to press the shift-key to obtain the normal behavior of cut and paste in MC.)

The key bindings of MC.

key

key binding

F1

Help menu

F3

Internal file viewer

F4

Internal editor

F9

Activate pull down menu

F10

Exit Midnight Commander

Tab

Move between two windows

Insert or Ctrl-T

Mark file for a multiple-file operation such as copy

Del

Delete file (be careful---set MC to safe delete mode)

Cursor keys

Self-explanatory

Command-line tricks in MC

  • Any cd command will change the directory shown on the selected screen.

  • Ctrl-Enter or Alt-Enter will copy a filename to the command line. Use this with cp(1) and mv(1) commands together with command-line editing.

  • Alt-Tab will show shell filename expansion choices.

  • One can specify the starting directory for both windows as arguments to MC; for example, "mc /etc /root".

  • Esc + n-key == Fn (i.e., Esc + 1 = F1, etc.; Esc + 0 = F10)

  • Pressing Esc before the key has the same effect as pressing the Alt and the key together.; i.e., type Esc + c for Alt-C. Esc is called meta-key and sometimes noted as "M-"

The internal editor in MC

The internal editor has an interesting cut-and-paste scheme. Pressing F3 marks the start of a selection, a second F3 marks the end of selection and highlights the selection. Then you can move your cursor. If you press F6, the selected area will be moved to the cursor location. If you press F5, the selected area will be copied and inserted at the cursor location. F2 will save the file. F10 will get you out. Most cursor keys work intuitively.

This editor can be directly started on a file:

$ mc -e filename_to_edit
$ mcedit filename_to_edit

This is not a multi-window editor, but one can use multiple Linux consoles to achieve the same effect. To copy between windows, use Alt-F<n> keys to switch virtual consoles and use "File->Insert file" or "File->Copy to file" to move a portion of a file to another file.

This internal editor can be replaced with any external editor of choice.

Also, many programs use the environment variables "$EDITOR" or "$VISUAL" to decide which editor or viewer to use. If you are uncomfortable with vim(1) or nano(1) initially, you may set these to "mcedit" by adding these lines to "~/.bashrc":

...
export EDITOR=mcedit
export VISUAL=mcedit
...

I do recommend setting these to "vim" if possible.

If you are uncomfortable with vim(1), you can keep using mcedit(1) for most system maintenance tasks.

The internal viewer in MC

Very smart viewer. This is a great tool for searching words in documents. I always use this for files in the "/usr/share/doc" directory. This is the fastest way to browse through masses of Linux information. This viewer can be directly started like so:

$ mc -v path/to/filename_to_view
$ mcview path/to/filename_to_view

Auto-start features of MC

Press Enter on a file, and the appropriate program will handle the content of the file (see @{@customizingprogramtobestarted@}@). This is a very convenient MC feature.

The reaction to the enter key in MC.

file type

reaction to enter key

executable file

Execute command

man file

Pipe content to viewer software

html file

Pipe content to web browser

"*.tar.gz" and "*.deb" file

Browse its contents as if subdirectory

In order to allow these viewer and virtual file features to function, viewable files should not be set as executable. Change their status using chmod(1) or via the MC file menu.

FTP virtual filesystem of MC

MC can be used to access files over the Internet using FTP. Go to the menu by pressing F9, then type "p" to activate the FTP virtual filesystem. Enter a URL in the form "username:passwd@hostname.domainname", which will retrieve a remote directory that appears like a local one.

Try "[http.us.debian.org/debian]" as the URL and browse the Debian archive.

The basic Unix-like work environment

Although MC enables you to do almost everything, it is very important for you to learn how to use the command line tools invoked from the shell prompt and become familiar with the Unix-like work environment.

The login shell

You can select your login shell with chsh(1).

List of shell programs.

1

2

3

package

popcon

size

POSIX shell

description

bash

38091

-

Yes

[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bash Bash]: the GNU Bourne Again SHell. (de facto standard)

tcsh

6855

-

No

[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tcsh TENEX C Shell]: an enhanced version of [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/C_shell Berkeley csh].

dash

2624

-

Yes

The Debian [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Almquist_shell Almquist Shell]. Good for shell script.

zsh

1639

-

Yes

[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Z_shell Z shell]: the standard shell with many enhancements.

pdksh

290

-

Yes

A public domain version of the [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Korn_shell Korn shell].

csh

256

-

No

[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OpenBSD OpenBSD] C Shell, a version of [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/C_shell Berkeley csh].

sash

?

-

Yes

[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stand-alone_shell Stand-alone shell] with builtin commands. (Not meant for standard "/bin/sh".)

ksh

161

-

Yes

The real, AT&T version of the [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Korn_shell Korn shell].

rc

?

-

No

An implementation of the [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plan_9_from_Bell_Labs AT&T Plan 9] [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rc rc shell].

posh

?

-

Yes

Policy-compliant Ordinary SHell. A pdksh derivative.

In this tutorial chapter, the interactive shell always means bash.

Customizing bash

You can customize bash(1) behavior by "~/.bashrc". For example, I added followings to "~/.bashrc":

# CD upon exiting MC
. /usr/share/mc/bin/mc.sh

# set CDPATH to good one
CDPATH=.:/usr/share/doc:~/Desktop/src:~/Desktop:~
export CDPATH

PATH="${PATH}":/usr/sbin:/sbin
# set PATH so it includes user's private bin if it exists
if [ -d ~/bin ] ; then
  PATH=~/bin:"${PATH}"
fi
export PATH

EDITOR=vim
export EDITOR

{i} You can find more bash customization tips, such as @{@colorizedcommands@}@, in @{@systemtips@}@.

Special key strokes

In the [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unix-like Unix-like] environment, there are few key strokes which have special meanings. Please note that on a normal Linux character console, only the left-hand Ctrl and Alt keys work as expected. Here are few notable key strokes to remember.

List of key bindings for bash.

key

key binding

Ctrl-U

Erase line before cursor.

Ctrl-H

Erase a character before cursor.

Ctrl-D

Terminate input. (exit shell if you are using shell)

Ctrl-C

Terminate a running program.

Ctrl-Z

Temporarily stop program by moving it to the background job

Ctrl-S

Halt output to screen.

Ctrl-Q

Reactivate output to screen.

Ctrl-Alt-Del

Reboot/halt the system, see inittab(5).

Left-Alt-key (optionally, Windows-key)

Meta-key for Emacs and the similar UI.

Up-arrow

Start command history search under bash.

Ctrl-R

Start incremental command history search under bash.

Tab

Complete input of the filename to the command line under bash.

Ctrl-V Tab

Input Tab without expansion to the command line under bash.

{i} The terminal feature of Ctrl-S can be disabled using stty(1).

Unix style mouse operations

Unix style mouse operations are based on the 3 button mouse system.

List of Unix style mouse operations.

action

response

Left-click-and-drag mouse

Select and copy to the clipboard.

Left-click

Select the start of selection.

Right-click

Select the end of selection and copy to the clipboard.

Middle-click

Paste clipboard at the cursor.

The center wheel on the modern wheel mouse is considered middle mouse button and can be used for middle-click. Clicking left and right mouse buttons together serves as the middle-click under the 2 button mouse system situation. In order to use a mouse in Linux character consoles, you need to have gpm(8) running as daemon.

The pager

less(1) is the enhanced pager (file content browser). Hit "h" for help. It can do much more than more(1) and can be supercharged by executing "eval $(lesspipe)" or "eval $(lessfile)" in the shell startup script. See more in "/usr/share/doc/lessf/LESSOPEN". The "-R" option allows raw character output and enables ANSI color escape sequences. See less(1).

The text editor

You should become proficient in one of the variants of [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vim_(text_editor) Vim] or [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emacs Emacs] programs which are popular in the Unix-like system.

I think getting used to Vim commands is the right thing to do, since Vi-editor is always there in the Linux/Unix world. (Actually, original vi or new nvi are the programs you find everywhere. I chose Vim instead for newbie since it offers you help through F1 key while it is similar enough and more powerful.)

If you chose either [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emacs Emacs] or [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/XEmacs XEmacs] instead as your choice of the editor, that is another good choice indeed, particularly for programming. Emacs has a plethora of other features as well, including functioning as a newsreader, directory editor, mail program, etc.. When used for programming or editing shell scripts, it intelligently recognizes the format of what you are working on, and tries to provide assistance. Some people maintain that the only program they need on Linux is Emacs. Ten minutes learning Emacs now can save hours later. Having the gnu Emacs manual for reference when learning Emacs is highly recommended.

All these programs usually come with tutoring program for you to learn them by practice. Start Vim by typing "vim" and press F1-key. You should at least read the first 35 lines. Then do the online training course by moving cursor to "|tutor|" and pressing Ctrl-].

(!) Good editors, such as Vim and Emacs, can be used to handle UTF-8 and other exotic encoding texts correctly with proper option in the x-terminal-emulator on X under UTF-8 locale with proper font settings. Please refer to their documentation on multibyte text.

Setting a default text editor

Debian comes with a number of different editors. We recommend to install the vim package, as mentioned above.

Debian provides unified access to the system default editor via command "/usr/bin/editor" so other programs (e.g., reportbug(1)) can invoke it. You can change it by:

$ sudo update-alternatives --config editor

The choice "/usr/bin/vim.basic" is the recommendation for newbies by the author. This supports syntax highlighting.

{i} Many programs use the environment variables "$EDITOR" or "$VISUAL" to decide which editor to use (see @{@theinternaleditorinmc@}@ and @{@customizingprogramtobestarted@}@).

Customizing vim

You can customize vim(1) behavior by "~/.vimrc". For example, I use:

" -------------------------------
" Local configuration
"
set nocompatible
set nopaste
set pastetoggle=<f2>
syn on
if $USER == "root"
 set nomodeline
 set noswapfile
else
 set modeline
 set swapfile
endif
" filler to avoid the line above being recognized as a modeline
" filler
" filler

Recording the shell activities

The output of the shell command may roll off your screen and may be lost forever. It is good practice to log shell activities into the file for you to review them later. This kind of record is essential when you perform any system administration tasks.

The basic method of recording the shell activity is to run it under script(1).

$ script
Script started, file is typescript
  • do whatever shell commands ...
  • press Ctrl-D to exit script.

$ vim typescript

See @{@recordingtheshelctivitiescleanly@}@ .

Basic Unix commands

Let's learn the basic Unix commands. Here I use "Unix" in its generic sense. Any Unix clone OSs usually offer the equivalent commands. The Debian system is no exception. Do not worry if some commands do not work as you wish now. If alias is used in the shell, its corresponding command outputs are different. These examples are not meant to be executed in this order.

Try all the following commands from the non-privileged user account:

List of basic Unix commands.

command

description

pwd

Display name of current/working directory.

whoami

Display current user name.

id

Display current user identity (name, uid, gid, and associated groups).

file <foo>

Display a type of file for the file "<foo>".

type -p <commandname>

Display a file location of command "<commandname>".

which <commandname>

, ,

type <commandname>

Display information on command "<commandname>".

apropos <key-word>

Find commands related to "<key-word>".

man -k <key-word>

, ,

whatis <commandname>

Display one line explanation on command "<commandname>".

man -a <commandname>

Display explanation on command "<commandname>". (Unix style)

info <commandname>

Display rather long explanation on command "<commandname>". (GNU style)

ls

List contents of directory. (non-dot files and directories)

ls -a

List contents of directory. (all files and directories)

ls -A

List contents of directory. (almost all files and directories, i.e., skip ".." and ".")

ls -la

List all contents of directory with detail information.

ls -lai

List all contents of directory with inode number and detail information.

ls -d

List all directories under the current directory.

tree

Display file tree contents.

lsof <foo>

List open status of file "<foo>".

lsof -p <pid>

List files opened by the process ID: "<pid>".

mkdir <foo>

Make a new directory "<foo>" in the current directory.

rmdir <foo>

Remove a directory "<foo>" in the current directory.

cd <foo>

Change directory to the directory "<foo>" in the current directory or in the directory listed in the variable "$CDPATH".

cd /

Change directory to the root directory.

cd

Change directory to the current user's home directory.

cd /<foo>

Change directory to the absolute path directory "/<foo>".

cd ..

Change directory to the parent directory.

cd ~<foo>

Change directory to the home directory of the user "<foo>".

cd -

Change directory to the previous directory.

</etc/motd pager

Display contents of "/etc/motd" using the default pager.

touch <junkfile>

Create a empty file "<junkfile>".

cp <foo> <bar>

Copy a existing file "<foo>" to a new file "<bar>".

rm <junkfile>

Remove a file "<junkfile>".

mv <foo> <bar>

Rename an existing file "<foo>" to a new name "<bar>". The directory "<bar>" must not exist.

mv <foo> <bar>

Move an existing file "<foo>" to a new location "<bar>/<foo>". The directory "<bar>" must exist.

mv <foo> <bar>/<baz>

Move an existing file "<foo>" to a new location with a new name "<bar>/<baz>". The directory "<bar>" must exist but the directory "<bar>/<baz>" must not exist.

chmod 600 <foo>

Make an existing file "<foo>" to be non-readable and non-writable by the other people. (non-executable for all)

chmod 644 <foo>

Make an existing file "<foo>" to be readable but non-writable by the other people. (non-executable for all)

chmod 755 <foo>

Make an existing file "<foo>" to be readable but non-writable by the other people. (executable for all)

find .  -name <pattern>

find matching filenames using shell "<pattern>". (slower)

locate -d .  <pattern>

find matching filenames using shell "<pattern>". (quicker using regularly generated database)

grep -e "<pattern>" *.html

Find a "<pattern>" in all of the files ending with ".html" in current directory and display them all.

top

Display process information using full screen. Type "q" to quit.

ps aux | pager

Display information on all the running processes using BSD style output.

ps -ef | pager

Display information on all the running processes using Unix system-V style output.

ps aux | grep -e "[e]xim4*"

Display all processes running "exim" and "exim4".

ps axf | pager

Display information on all the running processes with ASCII art output.

kill <1234>

Kill a process identified by the process ID: "<1234>".

gzip <foo>

Compress "<foo>" to create "<foo>.gz" using the Lempel-Ziv coding (LZ77).

gunzip <foo>.gz

Decompress "<foo>.gz" to create "<foo>".

bzip2 <foo>

Compress "<foo>" to create "<foo>.bz2" using the Burrows-Wheeler block sorting text compression algorithm, and Huffman coding. (Better compression than gzip)

bunzip2 <foo>.bz2

Decompress "<foo>.bz2" to create "<foo>".

tar -xvf <foo>.tar

Extract files from "<foo>.tar" archive.

tar -xvzf <foo>.tar.gz

Extract files from gzipped "<foo>.tar.gz" archive.

tar -xvf -j <foo>.tar.bz2

Extract files from "<foo>.tar.bz2" archive.

tar -cvf <foo>.tar <bar>/

Archive contents of folder "<bar>/" in "<foo>.tar" archive.

tar -cvzf <foo>.tar.gz <bar>/

Archive contents of folder "<bar>/" in compressed "<foo>.tar.gz" archive.

tar -cvjf <foo>.tar.bz2 <bar>/

Archive contents of folder "<bar>/" in "<foo>.tar.bz2" archive.

zcat README.gz | pager

Display contents of compressed "README.gz" using the default pager.

zcat README.gz > foo

Create a file "foo" with the decompressed content of "README.gz".

zcat README.gz >> foo

Append the decompressed content of "README.gz" to the end of the file "foo". (If it does not exist, create it first.)

(!) Unix has a tradition to hide filenames which start with ".". They are traditionally files that contain configuration information and user preferences.

(!) For cd command, see builtins(7).

(!) The default pager of the bare bone Debian system is more(1) which cannot scroll back. By installing the less package using command line "aptitude install less", less(1) becomes default pager and you can scroll back with cursor keys.

(!) The "[" and "]" in the regular expression of the "ps aux | grep -e "[e]xim4*"" command above enable grep to avoid matching itself. The "4*" in the regular expression means 0 or more repeats of character "4" thus enables grep to match both "exim" and "exim4". Although "*" is used in the shell filename glob and the regular expression, their meanings are different in the regular expression. Learn the regular expression from grep(1).

Please traverse directories and peek into the system using the above commands as training. If you have questions on any of the console commands, please make sure to read the manual page. For example, these commands are the good start:

$ man man
$ man bash
$ man builtins
$ man grep
$ man ls

The style of man pages may be a little hard to get used to, because they are rather terse, particularly the older, very traditional ones. But once you get used to it, you come to appreciate their succinctness.

Please note that many Unix-like commands including ones from GNU and BSD will display brief help information if you invoke them in one of the following ways (or without any arguments in some cases):

$ <commandname> --help
$ <commandname> -h

The simple shell command

Now you have some feel on how to use the Debian system. Let's look deep into the mechanism of the command execution in the Debian system. Here, I have simplified reality for the newbie. See bash(1) for the exact explanation.

A simple command is a sequence of

  1. variable assignments (optional)
  2. command name
  3. arguments (optional)
  4. redirections (optional: > , >> , < , << , etc.)

  5. control operator (optional: && , || ; <newline> , ; , & , ( , ) )

Command execution and environment variable

The values of some [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Environment_variable environment variables] change the behavior of some Unix commands.

The default values of environment variables are initially set by the PAM system and then some of them may be reset by some application programs:

  • the display manager such as gdm, and

  • the shell in its start up codes "~/bash_profile" and "~/.bashrc".

"$LANG" variable

The full locale value given to "$LANG" variable consists of 3 parts: "xx_YY.ZZZZ".

3 parts of locale value.

locale value

meaning

xx

[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ISO_639 ISO 639 language codes (lower case) such as "en"]

YY

[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ISO_3166-3 ISO 3166 country codes (upper case) such as "US"] 

ZZZZ

[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Codeset codeset, always set to "UTF-8"]

For language codes and country codes, see pertinent description in the "info gettext".

For the codeset on the modern Debian system, you should always set it to UTF-8 unless you specifically want to use the historic one with good reason and background knowledge.

For fine details of the locale configuration, see @{@thelocale@}@.

(!) The "LANG=en_US" is not "LANG=C" nor "LANG=en_US.UTF-8". It is "LANG=en_US.ISO-8859-1" (see @{@basicsofencoding@}@).

List of locale recommendations.

Language (area)

locale recommendation

English(USA)

en_US.UTF-8

English(Great_Britain)

en_GB.UTF-8

French(France)

fr_FR.UTF-8

German(Germany)

de_DE.UTF-8

Italian(Italy)

it_IT.UTF-8

Spanish(Spain)

es_ES.UTF-8

Catalan(Spain)

ca_ES.UTF-8

Swedish(Sweden)

sv_SE.UTF-8

Portuguese(Brasil)

pt_BR.UTF-8

Russian(Russia)

ru_RU.UTF-8

Chinese(P.R._of_China)

zh_CN.UTF-8

Chinese(Taiwan_R.O.C.)

zh_TW.UTF-8

Japanese(Japan)

ja_JP.UTF-8

Korean(Republic_of_Korea)

ko_KR.UTF-8

Vietnamese(Vietnam)

vi_VN.UTF-8

Typical command execution uses a shell line sequence like the following:

$ date
Sun Jun  3 10:27:39 JST 2007
$ LANG=fr_FR.UTF-8 date
dimanche 3 juin 2007, 10:27:33 (UTC+0900)

Here, the program date(1) is executed in the foreground job. The environment variable "$LANG" is:

Most command executions usually do not have preceding environment variable definition. For the above example, you can alternatively execute:

$ LANG=fr_FR.UTF-8
$ date
dimanche 3 juin 2007, 10:27:33 (UTC+0900)

As you can see here, the output of command is affected by the environment variable to produce French output. If you want the environment variable to be inherited to the subprocesses (e.g., when calling shell script), you need to "export" it instead by using:

$ export LANG

{i} When filing a bug report, running the command under "LANG=en_US.UTF-8" is good idea if you use non-English environment.

See locale(5) and locale(7) for "$LANG" and related environment variables.

(!) I recommend you to configure the system environment just by the "$LANG" variable and to stay away from "$LC_*" variables unless it is absolutely needed.

"$PATH" variable

When you type a command into the shell, the shell searches the command in the list of directories contained in the "$PATH" environment variable. The value of the "$PATH" environment variable is also called the shell's search path.

In the default Debian installation, the "$PATH" environment variable of user accounts may not include "/sbin". For example, The ifconfig command needs to be issued with full path as "/sbin/ifconfig".

You can change the "$PATH" environment variable by "~/.bash_profile" or "~/.bashrc" files.

"$HOME" variable

Many commands stores user specific configuration in the home directory and changes their behavior by their contents. The home directory is identified by the environment variable "$HOME":

List of "$HOME" values.

situation

value of "$HOME"

program run by the init process (daemon)

/

program run from the normal root shell

/root

program run from the normal user shell

/home/<normal_user>

program run from the normal user GUI desktop menu

/home/<normal_user>

program run as root with "sudo program"

/home/<normal_user>

program run as root with "sudo -H program"

/root

{i} Shell expands "~/" to current user’s home directory, i.e., "$HOME/". Shell expands "~foo/" to foo’s home directory, i.e., "/home/foo/".

Command line options

Some commands take arguments. Arguments starting with "-" or "--" are called options and control the behavior of the command.

$ date
Mon Oct 27 23:02:09 CET 2003
$ date -R
Mon, 27 Oct 2003 23:02:40 +0100

Here the command-line argument "-R" changes date(1) behavior to output [http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc2822 RFC2822] compliant date string.

Shell glob

Often you want a command to work with a group of files without typing all of them. The filename expansion pattern using the shell glob, (sometimes referred as wildcards), facilitate this need.

Shell glob patterns.

shell glob pattern

match

*

This matches filename (segment) not started with ".".

.*

This matches filename (segment) started with ".".

?

This matches exactly one character.

[...]

This matches exactly one character with any character enclosed in brackets.

[a-z]

This matches exactly one character with any character between "a" and "z".

[^...]

This matches exactly one character other than any character enclosed in brackets (excluding "^").

For example, try the following and think for yourself:

$ mkdir junk; cd junk; .[^.]*touch 1.txt 2.txt 3.c 4.h .5.txt ..6.txt
$ echo *.txt
1.txt 2.txt
$ echo *
1.txt 2.txt 3.c 4.h
$ echo *.[hc]
3.c 4.h
$ echo .*
. .. .5.txt ..6.txt
$ echo .*[^.]*
.5.txt ..6.txt
$ echo [^1-3]*
4.h
$ cd ..; rm -rf junk

See glob(7) for more.

(!) Unlike normal filename expansion by the shell, the shell pattern "*" tested in find(1) with "-name" test etc., matches the initial "." of the filename. (New [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/POSIX POSIX] feature)

(!) BASH can be tweaked to change its glob behavior with its shopt builtin options such as "dotglob", "noglob", "nocaseglob", "nullglob", "nocaseglob", "extglob", etc. See bash(1).

Return value of the command

Each command returns its exit status (variable: "$?") as the return value.

Command exit codes.

command exit status

numeric return value

logical return value

success

zero, 0

TRUE

error

non-zero, -1

FALSE

Thus:

$ [ 1 = 1 ] ; echo $?
0
$ [ 1 = 2 ] ; echo $?
1

(!) Please note that, in the logical context for the shell, success is treated as the logical TRUE which has 0 (zero) as its value. This is somewhat non-intuitive and needs to be reminded here.

Typical command sequences and shell redirection

Let's try to remember following shell command idioms.

Shell command idioms.

command idiom (type in one line)

description

command &

The command is executed in the subshell in the background.

command1 | command2

The standard output of command1 is piped to the standard input of command2 . Both commands may be running concurrently.

command1 2>&1 | command2

Both standard output and standard error of command1 are piped to the standard input of command2. Both commands may be running concurrently.

command1 ; command2

The command1 and command2 are executed sequentially.

command1 && command2

The command1 is executed. If successful, command2 is also executed sequentially. Return success if both command1 and command2 are successful.

command1 || command2

The command1 is executed. If not successful, command2 is also executed sequentially. Return success if command1 or command2 are successful.

command > foo

Redirect standard output of command to a file foo. (overwrite)

command 2> foo

Redirect standard error of command to a file foo. (overwrite)

command >> foo

Redirect standard output of command to a file foo. (append)

command 2>> foo

Redirect standard error of command to a file foo. (append)

command > foo 2>&1

Redirect both standard output and standard error of command to a file "foo".

command < foo

Redirect standard input of command to a file foo.

command << delimiter

Redirect standard input of command to the following lines until "delimiter" is met. (Here documents)

command <<- delimiter

Redirect standard input of command to the following lines until "delimiter" is met. The leading tab characters are stripped from input lines. (Here documents)

The Debian system is a multi-tasking system. Background jobs allow users to run multiple programs in a single shell. The management of the background process involves the shell builtins: jobs, fg, bg, and kill. Please read the sections of bash(1) under "SIGNALS", and "JOB CONTROL", and builtins(1).

Let's try simple examples of redirection:

$ </etc/motd pager

$ pager </etc/motd

$ pager /etc/motd

$ cat /etc/motd | pager

Although all 4 examples display the same thing, the last example runs an extra cat command and wastes resources with no reason.

The shell allows you to open files using the exec builtin with an arbitrary file descriptor.

$ echo Hello >foo
$ exec 3<foo 4>bar  # open files
$ cat <&3 >&4       # redirect stdin to 3, stdout to 4
$ exec 3<&- 4>&-    # close files
$ cat bar
Hello

Here, "n<&-" and "n>&-" mean to close the file descriptor "n".

The file descriptor 0-2 are predefined:

Predefined file descriptors.

device

description

file descriptor

stdin

standard input

0

stdout

standard output

1

stderr

standard error

2

Command alias

You can set an alias for the frequently used command. For example:

$ alias la='ls -la'

Now, "la" works as a short hand for "ls -la" which lists all files in the long listing format.

You can list any existing aliases:

$ alias

You can identity exact path or identity of the command using type builtins command. For example:

$ type ls
ls is hashed (/bin/ls)
$ type la
la is aliased to ls -la
$ type echo
echo is a shell builtin
$ type file
file is /usr/bin/file

Here ls was recently searched while "file" was not, thus "ls" is "hashed", i.e., the shell has an internal record for the quick access to the location of the "ls" command.

{i} See @{@colorizedcommands@}@.

Unix-like text processing

In Unix-like work environment, text processing is done by piping text through chains of standard text processing tools. This was another crucial Unix innovation.

Unix text tools

There are few standard text processing tools which are used very often on the Unix-like system.

  • No regular expression is used:
    • cat(1) concatenates files and outputs the whole content.

    • tac(1) concatenates files and outputs in reverse.

    • cut(1) selects parts of lines and outputs.

    • head(1) outputs the first part of files.

    • tail(1) outputs the last part of files.

    • sort(1) sorts lines of text files.

    • uniq(1) removes duplicate lines from a sorted file.

    • tr(1) translates or deletes characters.

    • diff(1) compares files line by line.

  • Basic regular expression (BRE) is used:

    • grep(1) matches text with the pattern.

    • ed(1) is a primitive line editor.

    • sed(1) is a stream editor.

    • vim(1) is a screen editor.

    • emacs(1) is a screen editor. (somewhat extended BRE)

  • Extended regular expression (ERE) is used:

    • egrep(1) matches text with pattern.

    • awk(1) does simple text processing.

    • tcl(3tcl) does every conceivable type of text processing: re_syntax(3). Often used with tk(3tk).

    • perl(1) does text processing, is capable of network programming, and much more. perlre(1).

    • pcregrep(1) from the pcregrep package matches text with [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Perl_Compatible_Regular_Expressions Perl Compatible Regular Expressions (PCRE)] pattern.

    • python(1) with the re module does every conceivable text processing. See "/usr/share/doc/python/html/index.html".

If you are not sure what exactly these commands do, please use "man command" to figure it out by yourself.

(!) Sort order and range expression are locale dependent. If you wish to obtain traditional behavior for a command, use C locale instead of UTF-8 ones by prepnding command with "LANG=C" (see @{@langvariable@}@ and @{@thelocale@}@).

(!) [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Perl Perl] regular expressions (perlre(1)), [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Perl_Compatible_Regular_Expressions Perl Compatible Regular Expressions (PCRE)], and [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Python_(programming_language) Python] regular expressions offered by the re module have many common extensions to the normal ERE.

Regular expressions

[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Regular_expression Regular expressions] are used in many text processing tools. They are analogous to the shell globs, but they are both more complicated and more powerful.

The regular expression describes the matching pattern and is made up of text characters and metacharacters.

The metacharacter is just a character with a special meaning. There are 2 major styles, BRE and ERE, depending on the text tools as described above.

Metacharacters for BRE and ERE.

BRE

ERE

The meaning of the regular expression

 \ .  [ ] ^ $ *  

 \ .  [ ] ^ $ * 

common metacharacters

 \+ \? \( \) \{ \} \| 

BRE only "\" quoted metacharacters

 + ? ( ) { } | 

ERE only non-"\" quoted metacharacters

c

c

This matches the non-metacharacter "c".

\c

\c

This sequence matches the literal character "c" even if "c" is metacharacter by itself.

.

.

This matches any character including newline.

^

^

This matches the beginning of a string.

$

$

This matches the end of a string.

\<

\<

This matches the beginning of a word.

\>

\>

This matches the end of a word.

\[abc...\]

[abc...]

This character list matches any of the characters "abc...".

\[^abc...\]

[^abc...]

This negated character list matches any of the characters except "abc...".

r*

r*

This matches zero or more regular expressions identified by "r".

r\+

r+

This matches one or more regular expressions identified by "r".

r\?

r?

This matches zero or one regular expressions identified by "r".

r1\|r2

r1|r2

This matches one of the regular expressions identified by "r1" or "r2".

\(r1\|r2\)

(r1|r2)

This matches one of the regular expressions identified by "r1" or "r2" and treats it as a bracketed regular expression.

The regular expression of emacs is basically BRE but has been extended to treat "+"and "?" as the metacharacters as in ERE. Thus, there are no needs to quote them with "\" in the regular expression of emacs.

For example, grep(1) can be used to perform the text search using the regular expression:

$ egrep 'GNU.*LICENSE|Yoyodyne' /usr/share/common-licenses/GPL
GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE
GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE
Yoyodyne, Inc., hereby disclaims all copyright interest in the program

{i} See @{@colorizedcommands@}@.

Replacement expressions

For the replacement expression, following characters have special meanings:

The replacement expression.

character

meaning

&

This represents what the regular expression matched. (use \& in emacs)

\n

This represents what the n-th bracketed regular expression matched. ("n" being number)

For Perl replacement string, "$n" is used instead of "\n" and "&" has no special meaning.

For example:

$ echo zzz1abc2efg3hij4 | \
sed -e 's/\(1[a-z]*\)[0-9]*\(.*\)$/=&=/'
zzz=1abc2efg3hij4=
$ echo zzz1abc2efg3hij4 | \
sed -e 's/\(1[a-z]*\)[0-9]*\(.*\)$/\2===\1/'
zzzefg3hij4===1abc
$ echo zzz1abc2efg3hij4 | \
perl -pe 's/(1[a-z]*)[0-9]*(.*)$/$2===$1/'
zzzefg3hij4===1abc
$ echo zzz1abc2efg3hij4 | \
perl -pe 's/(1[a-z]*)[0-9]*(.*)$/=&=/'
zzz=&=

Here please pay extra attention to the style of the bracketed regular expression and how the matched strings are used in the text replacement process on different tools.

These regular expressions can be used for the cursor movements and the text replacement actions in the editors too.

The back slash "\" at the end of line in the shell commandline escapes newline as a white space character and continues shell command line input to the next line.

Please read all the related manual pages to learn these commands.

Global substitution with regular expressions

The ed(1) command can replace all instances of "FROM_REGEX" with "TO_TEXT" in "file" by:

$ ed file <<EOF
,s/FROM_REGEX/TO_TEXT/g
w
q
EOF

The vim(1) command can replace all instances of "FROM_REGEX" with "TO_TEXT" in "file" by using ex(1) commands:

$ vim '+%s/FROM_REGEX/TO_TEXT/gc' '+w' '+q' file

{i} The "c" flag in the above ensures interactive confirmation for each substitution.

Multiple files ("file1", "file2", and "file3") can be processed with regular expressions similarly with vim(1) or perl(1):

$ vim '+argdo %s/FROM_REGEX/TO_TEXT/g|update' '+q' file1 file2 file3

$ perl -i -p -e 's/FROM_REGEX/TO_TEXT/g;' file1 file2 file3

In the perl(1) example, "-i" is for in-place editing, "-p" is for implicit loop over files. If the substitution is complex, you can make recovery from errors easier by using the parameter "-i.bak" instead of "-i"; this will keep each original file, adding ".bak" as a file extension.

The comparison of commands used for in-place editing.

command

regex

script

binary size

library size

ed(1)

BRE

read from "stdin"

about 50KB

about 1300KB (only libc)

vim(1)

BRE

can be as a part of the argument

about 1900KB

about 7300KB total

perl(1)

ERE

can be as a part of the argument

about 7KB

about 3500KB total

Extract data from text file table

Let's consider a text file called DPL in which some pre-2004 Debian project leader's names and their initiation days are listed in a space-separated format.

Ian     Murdock   August  1993
Bruce   Perens    April   1996
Ian     Jackson   January 1998
Wichert Akkerman  January 1999
Ben     Collins   April   2001
Bdale   Garbee    April   2002
Martin  Michlmayr March   2003

{i} See [http://www.debian.org/doc/manuals/project-history/index.en.html "A Brief History of Debian"] for the latest [http://www.debian.org/doc/manuals/project-history/ch-leaders.en.html Debian leadership history].

Awk is frequently used to extract data from these types of files.

$ awk '{ print $3 }' <DPL                   # month started
August
April
January
January
April
April
March
$ awk '($1=="Ian") { print }' <DPL          # DPL called Ian
Ian     Murdock   August  1993
Ian     Jackson   January 1998
$ awk '($2=="Perens") { print $3,$4 }' <DPL # When Perens started
April 1996

Shells such as Bash can be also used to parse this kind of file:

$ while read first last month year; do
    echo $month
  done <DPL
  • same output as the first Awk example.

Here, the read builtin command uses the characters in "$IFS" (internal field separators) to split lines into words.

If you change "$IFS" to ":", you can parse "/etc/passwd" with shell nicely:

$ oldIFS="$IFS"   # save old value
$ IFS=':'
$ while read user password uid gid rest_of_line; do
    if [ "$user" = "bozo" ]; then
      echo "$user's ID is $uid"
    fi
  done < /etc/passwd
bozo's ID is 1000
$ IFS="$oldIFS"   # restore old value

(If Awk is used to do the equivalent, use "FS=':'" to set the field separator.)

IFS is also used by the shell to split results of parameter expansion, command substitution, and arithmetic expansion. These do not occur within double or single quoted words. The default value of IFS is <space>, <tab>, and <newline> combined.

Be careful about using this shell IFS tricks. Strange things may happen, when shell interprets some parts of the script as its input.

$ IFS=":,"                        # use ":" and "," as IFS
$ echo IFS=$IFS,   IFS="$IFS"     # echo is a Bash builtin
IFS=  , IFS=:,
$ date -R                         # just a command output
Sat, 23 Aug 2003 08:30:15 +0200
$ echo $(date -R)                 # sub shell --> input to main shell
Sat  23 Aug 2003 08 30 36 +0200
$ unset IFS                       # reset IFS to the default
$ echo $(date -R)
Sat, 23 Aug 2003 08:30:50 +0200

Script snippets for piping commands

The following scripts will do nice things as a part of a pipe.

List of script snippets for piping commands.

script snippet (type in one line)

effect

find /usr -print

find all files under "/usr" (see @{@idiomsfortheselectionoffiles@}@)

seq 1 100

print 1 to 100

 | xargs -n 1 <command>

run command repeatedly with each item from pipe as its argument (see @{@repeatingacommandloopingoverfiles@}@)

 | xargs -n 1 echo

split white-space-separated items from pipe into lines

 | xargs echo

merge all lines from pipe into a line

 | grep -e <regex_pattern>

extract lines from pipe containing <regex_pattern>

 | grep -v -e <regex_pattern>

extract lines from pipe not containing <regex_pattern>

 | cut -d: -f3 -

extract third field from pipe separated by ":" (passwd file etc.)

 | awk '{ print $3 }'

extract third field from pipe separated by whitespaces

 | awk -F'\t' '{ print $3 }'

extract third field from pipe separated by tab

 | col -bx

remove backspace and expand tabs to spaces

 | expand -

expand tabs

 | sort| uniq

sort and remove duplicates

 | tr 'A-Z' 'a-z'

convert uppercase to lowercase

 | tr -d '\n'

concatenate lines into one line

 | tr -d '\r'

remove CR

 | sed 's/^/# /'

add "#" to the start of each line

 | sed 's/\.ext//g'

remove ".ext"

 | sed -n -e 2p

print the second line

 | head -n 2 -

print the first 2 lines

 | tail -n 2 -

print the last 2 lines

When using the shell interactive mode becomes too complicated, please consider to write a shell script (see @{@theshellscript@}@).