% Unix/Linux Command List You Must Know (Weekly Cumulative) % Ian! D. Allen - - [www.idallen.com] % Fall 2016 - September to December 2016 - Updated 2017-01-20 00:48 EST - [Course Home Page] - [Course Outline] - [All Weeks] - [Plain Text] Unix/Linux Command List You Must Know (Weekly Cumulative) ========================================================= This is a list of Unix/Linux command names used in this course and (eventually) the week number in which they were first introduced and described. A missing week number means the command hasn't been formally introduced yet. This page is updated weekly as new commands are introduced. Almost all these command names have manual pages. Command names that are built-in to the shell (e.g. `cd`, `exit`, `pwd`, `history`, etc.) are described somewhere in the man page for the `bash` shell and you can also use the BASH shell built-in `help` command to get information about built-in commands, e.g. `help help` and `help pwd`, etc. > This list only gives the names of the commands, not what the commands do or > how to use them. As each command is introduced, you must keep your own > notebook with these command names in it and a short description of what > each command does; you will be required to learn and remember at least some > of what each of these commands can do. Solutions to assignments in this course use only these command names. If you want to use other command names, clear it with your instructor first. WK Topic covered -- ---------------------------------------------------------------------- 01 How the course works; submitting to Blackboard; course information. 01 Remote Login to the Course Linux Server and simple commands 01 Recall terminal command line history using UpArrow DownArrow keys 02 Simple command line Output Redirection using >file.txt 02 File Transfer to/from the CLS 02 Using Copy and Paste in PuTTY via mouse drag and right-click 02 Basic Terminal Control Characters: ^C ^L ^W ^U ^R 02 More Terminal Control Characters: ^D ^Z 02 RTFM Manual Pages 02 Absolute and Relative pathnames 02 Setting the BASH shell prompt: PS1='[\u@\h \W]$ ' 03 Finding files and basic commands 04 GLOB characters: * ? [...], aliases 04 Text Editors: basic VIM, nano 04 I/O Redirection: stdin, stdout, stderr, < > | 2>&1, Pipes 05 Start-up files (.bashrc .bash_profile) 05 Shell local and environment variables, export, printenv 05 Search $PATH 05 Quoting 06 Midterm Test #1 45 min Wednesday October 12 2016 07 Midterm Test #1 analysis (marks) 07 Linux File System 07 Inodes and hard links, ln 07 Disk Usage, du, quota, symbolic links 07 Permissions: whoami, id, groups 08 Permissions: chmod, umask 08 Compression, archives, difference: gzip, tar, diff 08 system logs, dmesg, syslog 09 Processes, Jobs, Background, Foreground, Kill, Signals 09 Scheduling with crontab, at 09 Shell scripts 10 Midterm #2 45 min Wednesday November 9 2016 10 *** Final Withdrawal Date Friday November 11 (Week 10) *** 10 Shell command Substitution 10 Shell control statements, the "test" helper command 11 Midterm #2 analysis (review) 12 Shell control statements 13 Shell control statements; shell script problems 15 Final Exam (three hours) 11:30am Thursday December 15 in T117/119 WK Command name first introduced (read the course notes) -- ---------------------------------------------------------------------- 13 && (shell built-in) 13 || (shell built-in) 12 $(( (shell built-in) 12 : (shell built-in) 03 alias (shell built-in) 09 at 09 atq 09 atrm 05 awk '{print $1}' (also $2, $NF, etc.) 05 bash 09 bg (shell built-in) 08 bunzip2 08 bzip2 08 bzcat, bzless, bzfgrep, bzgrep, bzdiff, etc. 02 cal (9 1752) 12 case (shell built-in) 02 cat 02 cd (shell built-in) 08 chmod ( -R ugo[-+=]rwx octal_number ) 03 clear (see also ^L) 01 cmatrix 03 cp ( -a -r -p ) 09 crontab 05 cut 01 date 07 df 08 diff 08 dmesg 12 do (shell built-in) 07 du 02 echo (shell built-in and external) 12 elif (shell built-in) 04 elinks ( -dump -no-numbering -no-references ) 10 else (shell built-in) 12 esac (shell built-in) 01 exit (shell built-in) 05 export (shell built-in) 12 expr (shell built-in) 10 false (shell built-in) 02 fg (shell built-ini: use after ^Z stops a process) 03 fgrep (same as grep -F) ( -i -v -w ) 10 fi (shell built-in) 02 figlet 02 file 03 find ( -name -user -inum -size -print -ls ) 12 for (shell built-in) 13 function (shell built-in) 03 grep (use fgrep instead until you learn regular expressions next term) 07 groups 08 gunzip 08 gzip 03 head 03 help (shell built-in) 02 history (shell built-in) 05 hostname 07 id 10 if (shell built-in) 09 jobs (shell built-in) 09 kill (shell built-in) 09 killall 02 less (similar to "more"; used by "man") 12 let (shell built-in) 07 ln ( -s ) 03 locate ( see slocate ) 02 ls ( -l -i -a -d -L ) 09 mail ( -s ) 02 man ( -k ) 03 mkdir ( -p ) 03 more (similar to "less") 03 mv 04 nano [*** USE VIM INSTEAD ***] 04 nl (same as "cat -n") 02 passwd ( username ) 05 printenv 09 ps ( uaxww -efww ) 09 pstree 02 pwd (shell built-in and also external) 07 quota -v 13 read (shell built-in) 03 rm ( -r -f ) 03 rmdir 05 set (shell built-in) 12 shift (shell built-in) 05 shopt (shell built-in) 01 sl 03 sleep (60) 03 slocate 04 sort ( -f -n -r ) (see the weekly notes) 03 sum 03 tail 08 tar 10 test (shell built-in and also external) also known as [ 10 then (shell built-in) 02 toilet ( --gay ) 03 touch 04 tr 10 true (shell built-in) 03 tree 08 umask ( octal_number ) (shell built-in) 03 unalias ( -a ) (shell built-in) 04 uniq ( -c ) (see the weekly notes) 08 unzip 02 users 04 vi / vim / vimtutor 02 wc ( -l -w -c ) 05 whereis 05 which 12 while (shell built-in) 02 who 07 whoami 03 whois (see the weekly notes) 08 zip 08 zcat, zless, zfgrep, zgrep, zdiff, etc. > Keep a notebook with these command names in it and a short description of > what each command does; you will be required to learn and remember at least > some of what each of these commands can do. ![Remember] -- | Ian! D. Allen, BA, MMath - idallen@idallen.ca - Ottawa, Ontario, Canada | Home Page: http://idallen.com/ Contact Improv: http://contactimprov.ca/ | College professor (Free/Libre GNU+Linux) at: http://teaching.idallen.com/ | Defend digital freedom: http://eff.org/ and have fun: http://fools.ca/ [Plain Text] - plain text version of this page in [Pandoc Markdown] format [www.idallen.com]: http://www.idallen.com/ [Course Home Page]: .. [Course Outline]: course_outline.pdf [All Weeks]: indexcgi.cgi [Plain Text]: 900_unix_command_list.txt [Remember]: data/remember.jpg "Remember" [Pandoc Markdown]: http://johnmacfarlane.net/pandoc/