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Revision as of 20:34, 11 September 2006

Some basic unix commands

Want more? Try the excellent tutorials at FreeEngineer.org, Mayo, UnixGeeks.org or Idaho state

Command Meaning
man function show the manual page for a function
top shows currently running processes - do not leave this running for more than 30sec (ctrl-c)
ps show the names of all running processes
mkdir dir_name create a sub-directory of the current directory
rmdir dir_name remove a directory. You must remove files in the directory first.
cp source dest copy a file or directory from source to dest
rm file_name remove a file (permanent!)
chmod xxx file_name change the file permissions:

Three numbers indicate the permissions for the owner, the group and the world.

1 - execute permission
2 - write permission
4 - read permission

You can add these permissions together, for example:

7 - read, write, execute
6 - read and write (not execute)
5 - read and execute (not write)
chmod 777 filename

  • Give all users read, write and execute

chmod 744 filename

  • owner read, write, execute
  • group members and all others read only

chmod 755 filename

  • owner read, write, execute
  • all other read and execute (but not write)

chmod 700 filename

  • owner read, write execute
  • others: no access

chmod -R will make these changes to all of the files in any sub-directories, as well.

ls list contents of current directory
ls -l list the contents of the directory (long form, showing sizes)
ls dir_name list the contents of the named directory
cd dir_name change to the named directory
pwd show the name of the current directory
. the current directory
.. the parent directory of this directory
more file_name print out the contents of the named (text) file
df show the free space on the present disk
du show the disk usage on the system
* unix wild card - matches all file names (except those beginning with '.')

e.g. rm * will remove all files from the current directory!

<blink>You will absolutely never type 'rm *'. Ever.</blink>

Always type something like "ls *" first to verify what such a wildcard will match

xemacs file_name

textedit file_name
nedit file_name

vi file_name
These are all text editors that are found commonly on unix systems.
Most people seem to prefer xemacs, but each has its adherents.
? matches any single character