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Linux is an operating system that many developers will use.
Therefore, it’s a good idea to learn some Linux commands.
In this article, we’ll look at some useful Linux commands we should know.
uname
The uname
command lets us print details about the current machine and OS running on it.
We can use the -m
switch to show the hardware name.
The -p
switch prints the processor architecture.
The -s
switch prints the OS name.
-r
prints the release and -v
prints the version.
The -n
prints the node network name.
-a
print prints everything.
man
man
lets us open the help page for a given command.
We run man <command>
to get help with a command.
Man pages are divided into 7 different groups, identified by a number:
-
1
is user commands -
2
is kernel system calls -
3
is C library functions -
4
is devices -
5
is files formats and filesystems -
6
is games -
7
is miscellaneous commands, conventions and overviews -
8
is superuser and system administrator commands
grep
The grep
command lets us search for text with a pattern/
For instance, we run:
grep -n document index.md
to search for the document
keyword in the index.md
file.
The -n
switch lets us show the line numbers of the result.
We can also use grep
to filter the output of another command.
To do this, we run:
less index.md | grep -n document
We open the index.md
file with less
, then we pipe the outline to the grep
command to search for the word document
in index.md
.
Also, we can invert the result with the -v
option to exclude a particular string.
umask
The umask
command lets us set default permissions for files.
Running umask
without arguments will show us the current mask.
The mask is the octal number representing the current permissions.
umask -S
shows us the permissions with human-readable notation.
The digits return means the following:
-
0
— read, write, execute -
1
— read and write -
2
— read and execute -
3
— read-only -
4
— write and execute -
5
— write-only -
6
— execute only -
7
— no permissions
We can set a new value by passing it in as an argument:
umask 002
We can also specify the permission by role:
umask g+r
du
We can run the du
command to calculate the space usage of files and directories.
We run it to tet the list of items and their sizes in bytes.
The -a
switch lets us print the size of each file in the directories.
We can sort the results with the sort
:
du -h <directory> | sort -nr
history
The history
command lets us view the command line history.
We can also use !<commnand number>
to repeat the command with the given number from the history
output.
To clear the command history, we run history -c
.
Conclusion
We can list files, search outputs, and command history with various Linux commands.
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