Difference between revisions of "BasicLinuxCommands"

(New page: There are some of the basic shell commands that you will need. * ls (list directory contents) ** ls -l (verbose directory listing) ** ls -ltrh (verbose directory listing, sorted in revers...)
 
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** ls -l (verbose directory listing)
 
** ls -l (verbose directory listing)
 
** ls -ltrh (verbose directory listing, sorted in reverse order (r) according to time (t), file sizes displayed in human-readable format (h))
 
** ls -ltrh (verbose directory listing, sorted in reverse order (r) according to time (t), file sizes displayed in human-readable format (h))
**
 
  
 
* cat (concatenate files and print on standard output)
 
* cat (concatenate files and print on standard output)

Revision as of 10:12, 14 August 2007

There are some of the basic shell commands that you will need.

  • ls (list directory contents)
    • ls -l (verbose directory listing)
    • ls -ltrh (verbose directory listing, sorted in reverse order (r) according to time (t), file sizes displayed in human-readable format (h))
  • cat (concatenate files and print on standard output)
    • cat file_name (view the contents of file_name)
    • cat file1 file2 ... (concatenate file1 and file2 and print on standard output)
  • mkdir dir_name (make a directory called dir_name)
  • rmdir dir_name (remove directory dir_name. dir_name must be empty)
  • rm file_name (remove (delete) file_name)
    • rm -f file_name (force delete file_name)
    • rm -rf * (force delete all files and directories)
  • cp file_name copy_file_name (copies file_name to copy_file_name)
    • cp -R * dest (copies all files and directories in the current working directory to a destination directory)
  • pwd (print name of current working directory)


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