Difference between revisions of "Command line tutorial"
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Revision as of 15:24, 6 August 2009
Help! My Dreamhack has a command line!
If you've never used a Unix-based operating system before, the command line can be intimidating. Fear not! Working with files and data on the command line is actually fairly easy, and once you get used to it, you'll wonder how you ever lived without it.
The key thing to remember in unix commands is that they date from the days when vowels were an endangered species they are often shortened, contracted, or otherwise non-obvious at first glance. This is to make them easier to type -- the general theory is that it's nicer to type 'ls' sixteen thousand times a day than it is to type 'list'. They're generally designed to be typed quickly on a QWERTY keyboard.
To execute a command, you type the command and hit enter/return. The command won't execute until you hit enter.
Contents
- 1 Connecting
- 2 Directories
- 3 Command prompt
- 4 Command flags
- 5 Tab complete
- 6 Don't use spaces
- 7 Listing files and directories
- 8 Moving from directory to directory
- 9 Copying files
- 10 Moving files
- 11 Deleting files
- 12 Making new directories
- 13 Deleting directories
- 14 Skimming through files
- 15 Wildcards
- 16 Redirecting output
- 17 Searching files
- 18 Processes and jobs
- 19 Getting help
- 20 Outside Resources
Connecting
The window where you connect to your Dreamhack and type commands is also known as a 'shell window', for reasons that don't need explaining at this juncture in time. In order to connect to your Dreamhack, you'll need a program capable of doing SSH (Secure Shell) connections. For Windows, the best program is PuTTY. If you're on a Mac you won't need a separate program; the Terminal (Applications/Utilities/Terminal) will let you connect.
Details on connecting to your Dreamhack can be found in Dreamhack getting started.
Directories
Everything in Unix is either a process (a running program), a file, or a directory. Files live in directories, which can themselves contain directories, and so on.
When you first log into your Dreamhack, you'll be in your home directory. This is a special directory that stores all of your files and folders, and serves as the root for a lot of commands if you don't otherwise specify an argument. Your home directory is also known as "~" for short.
On the Dreamhack system, your home directory is located in /dreamhack/home/8XXX-yourusername. For instance, if my Dreamhack username is 'dh-rahaeli', and my assigned number is 8083, my home directory is located at /dreamhack/home/8083-rahaeli.
Directory paths are given with slashes separating the directory tree -- each slash represents another directory down the tree. If the directory path starts with a slash, it is an absolute path: it's counted from the root of the machine, the directory that holds all other directories. If a directory path doesn't have a slash before it, it's a relative path, and is usually counted from the directory you're in at the moment. (There are some exceptions to this, but I'll get into that in a bit.)
Command prompt
The command prompt is where you type in what you want the system to do. On a Dreamhack, it looks like this:
dh-rahaeli@hack:~$
Breaking that down into component pieces, it's: your username @ the machine you're on : (your present working directory). So, if you're in the ~/dw/cvs/dw-free directory (and remember, ~ means your home directory, so in this case it's shorthand for '/dreamhack/home/8083-rahaeli'), your prompt will look like:
dh-rahaeli@hack:~/dw/cvs/dw-free$
It's useful to have a long command line like that, because it'll remind you where you are, who you're logged in as, and what directory you're in. (Those of us who often have five or six shell windows open all the time, to various machines, sometimes get lost.)
Command flags
There are generally other options to a command -- things that make the command behave differently -- and those are known as 'flags'. To use a command with a flag, you type the flag after the command name, with a dash in front of it.
As we go through the tutorial, you'll see commands with flags for some other options. Flags are generally single letters, and remembering what single letter stands for what can often be annoying, but as time goes on you'll start to remember them.
Some commands have both flags and "long options" that are aliases of each other. Long options are full-word options, and they're called with two dashes instead of a single dash. (You generally won't need to know this, but you might see references to this style of option in tutorials elsewhere.)
Tab complete
If you have a file called thisisareallylongandridiculousfilenametobetyping.txt, or a directory called thisisaridiculousdirectoryname, the good news is that you don't need to type it out every time you need to refer to it. The Dreamhack shell offers tab completion. Type a few characters and hit tab, and the machine will complete the name for you.
If you get a beep and nothing happens, it means that there are multiple matches that don't have any text in common past the point you typed. For instance, if you have the files "update.bml", "update.bml.txt", and "uploadpic.bml.text", and you type "up" and hit tab, it'll beep and do nothing: it doesn't know which one you mean.
If you get a beep and part of the filename fills in, but not all, it means there are multiple matches that have some text in common past the point you typed, but not all. It will fill in as much as it can and then wait for you to either hit return or type more of the filename. For instance, if you have the files "update.bml", "update.bml.txt", and "uploadpic.bml.text", and you type "upd" and hit tab, it'll beep and fill in "update.bml", then wait to see if you mean "update.bml" or "update.bml.txt".
Tab complete only works for files and directories, not for commands.
Don't use spaces
You can't use spaces in Unix directory or filenames. If you try to, the system will think you mean two separate files or directories.
Listing files and directories
To list files:
ls
This returns all the files in a directory, formatted like this:
dh-rahaeli@hack:~$ ls README apache bin crontab-import dw
On Dreamhacks, the output is color-coded, so directories are blue, executable files are green, and plain files are white. (More about permissions and the difference between executable and non-executable files in a bit.)
By default, 'ls' doesn't show you all the files in a directory, though. Any file that starts with a period (sometimes known as a dot-file) is a "hidden", system file. They're usually used for autogenerated preferences files. You generally shouldn't need to mess with them, but there are times when you explicitly want to set your preferences for something, or want to see what the hidden files in a directory are.
To show all files in a directory, use the -a flag (for "all"):
dh-rahaeli@hack:~$ ls -a . .bash_logout .joe_state .vim apache .. .bash_profile .nano_history .viminfo bin .bash_aliases .bashrc .plan .vimrc crontab-import .bash_history .forward .subversion README dw
You can also get more information about a file, in a "long form" directory listing. This includes information like who owns the file, what the permissions on the file are, and when it was last changed. (Permissions and ownership are something you shouldn't have to worry much about, but 'last changed' can be useful.) To get the long form, use the -l flag:
dh-rahaeli@hack:~$ ls -l total 32 -rw-r--r-- 1 dh-rahaeli dreamhack 3542 Feb 13 11:53 README drwxr-xr-x 5 dh-rahaeli dreamhack 4096 Jul 28 2008 apache drwxr-xr-x 2 dh-rahaeli dreamhack 4096 Jul 20 04:40 bin -rw-r--r-- 1 dh-rahaeli dreamhack 1617 Feb 20 13:42 crontab-import drwxr-xr-x 16 dh-rahaeli dreamhack 4096 Jul 20 04:40 dw
The output of the -l flag is, in order: permissions, block size (ignore this), owner, group owner, file size (in bytes), date last modified, and the file name.
You can combine those two flags to get "long form listing of all files" by using "ls -al".
If you find the raw byte file size to be hard to read, you can use the flags -lh instead of just -l. This shows you the size in human-readable form:
dh-rahaeli@hack:~$ ls -lh total 32K -rw-r--r-- 1 dh-rahaeli dreamhack 3.5K Feb 13 11:53 README drwxr-xr-x 5 dh-rahaeli dreamhack 4.0K Jul 28 2008 apache drwxr-xr-x 2 dh-rahaeli dreamhack 4.0K Jul 20 04:40 bin -rw-r--r-- 1 dh-rahaeli dreamhack 1.6K Feb 20 13:42 crontab-import drwxr-xr-x 16 dh-rahaeli dreamhack 4.0K Jul 20 04:40 dw
Moving from directory to directory
Moving from directory to directory is done with the 'cd' command, for 'change directory'. It takes the argument of the directory you want to move into. For instance, if I'm in my home directory and I want to move into the 'dw' directory, I type:
dh-rahaeli@hack:~$ cd dw dh-rahaeli@hack:~/dw$
(Notice that the prompt changes to reflect what directory I'm in right now.)
There's an easy shortcut for "directory above the directory I'm in right now" so you don't have to type out the absolute path, which is '../'. If you type that, it brings you to the directory above the directory you're in:
dh-rahaeli@hack:~/dw$ cd ../ dh-rahaeli@hack:~$
You can combine directories to go through multiple levels at once, too. If I wanted to cd from my home directory into the ~/dw/cvs/dw-free directory, I don't have to do it one level at a time; I can just type:
dh-rahaeli@hack:~$ cd dw/cvs/dw-free dh-rahaeli@hack:~/dw/cvs/dw-free$
And you can go up and then over, using the ../ reference multiple times to mean "directory above the directory above", etc. If I'm in the ~/dw/cvs/dw-free/htdocs/manage/settings directory, and I want to go to the ~/dw/htdocs/manage/settings directory, that would look like:
dh-rahaeli@hack:~/dw/cvs/dw-free/htdocs/manage/settings$ cd ../../../../../htdocs/manage/settings dh-rahaeli@hack:~/dw/htdocs/manage/settings$
If you just type 'cd' without any arguments, it brings you to your home directory.
You can combine using relative directory paths with listing files, copying files, removing files, etc. For instance, if you were in your home directory, and you want to list the contents of the ~/dw/cvs/ directory in long mode, you could type:
ls -l dw/cvs
If you were in the ~/dw/cvs/dw-free directory, and wanted to list the contents of the ~/dw/cvs/dw-nonfree directory, that would look like:
dh-rahaeli@hack:~/dw/cvs/dw-free$ ls ../dw-nonfree bin cgi-bin cvs etc htdocs
Copying files
To copy one file to a new file name, the command is 'cp'. If I have a file named "file.txt", and I want to make a copy to "file.txt.backup", it would look like this:
dh-rahaeli@hack:~$ ls README apache bin crontab-import dw file.txt dh-rahaeli@hack:~$ cp file.txt file.txt.backup dh-rahaeli@hack:~$ dh-rahaeli@hack:~$ ls README apache bin crontab-import dw file.txt file.txt.backup
This will overwrite anything that already exists in file.txt.backup. If you're can't remember whether or not you already have a "file.txt.backup" file, and you want it to check before doing the moving, use the -i flag, which will ask you if you want to overwrite it:
dh-rahaeli@hack:~$ ls README apache bin crontab-import dw file.txt file.txt.backup dh-rahaeli@hack:~$ cp -i file.txt file.txt.backup cp: overwrite `file.txt.backup'? n dh-rahaeli@hack:~$
You can combine using directory paths with copying files. If you're in your home directory, and you want to copy "file.txt" to ~/dw/cvs/dw-free, you can do that like this:
cp file.txt dw/cvs/dw-free
(If you specify a directory for the destination, it will copy it into the directory. If you specify a file for the destination, it will overwrite that file. It's a good idea to use the -i flag if you're copying things around, in case you get the directory structure wrong.)
If the directory path you specify doesn't exist, you'll get an error message:
dh-rahaeli@hack:~$ cp file.txt dw/cvs/dw-missing/foo/bar/blah cp: cannot create regular file `dw/cvs/dw-missing/foo/bar/blah': No such file or directory
This just means that you got your directory structure wrong.
Moving files
The command to move or rename files is 'mv'. It works exactly like 'cp', only instead of copying the source file to the destination file, it renames it.
You can use it to rename files:
dh-rahaeli@hack:~$ ls README apache bin crontab-import dw file.txt dh-rahaeli@hack:~$ mv file.txt newfilename.txt dh-rahaeli@hack:~$ ls README apache bin crontab-import dw newfilename.txt dh-rahaeli@hack:~$
You can also use it to move files from one directory to another:
dh-rahaeli@hack:~$ ls README apache bin crontab-import dw newfilename.txt dh-rahaeli@hack:~$ ls dw LICENSE bin cvs etc locks src t test README cgi-bin doc htdocs logs ssldocs temp var dh-rahaeli@hack:~$ mv newfilename.txt dw dh-rahaeli@hack:~$ ls dw LICENSE bin cvs etc locks newfilename.txt ssldocs temp var README cgi-bin doc htdocs logs src t test dh-rahaeli@hack:~$ ls README apache bin crontab-import dw
If you want to combine moving a file from one directory to another and changing the file name, you need to specify the new file name and the directory location all at once when you move it:
dh-rahaeli@hack:~$ ls README apache bin crontab-import dw filename.txt dh-rahaeli@hack:~$ mv filename.txt dw/newfilename.txt dh-rahaeli@hack:~$ ls README apache bin crontab-import dw dh-rahaeli@hack:~$ ls dw LICENSE bin cvs etc locks newfilename.txt ssldocs temp var README cgi-bin doc htdocs logs src t test dh-rahaeli@hack:~$
Deleting files
The first thing you need to remember is that on a Unix machine, there is no undo for deleting files. You're probably used to "delete" on your home machine meaning "move to Trash" or "move to the Recycle Bin", so if you screw up and delete the wrong thing, you can fish it back out of the Trash. You can't do that on your Dreamhack. Once you hit 'return' on the delete command, the file is gone and you can't get it back.
Now that I've scared you...
The command to delete a file is 'rm', for 'remove':
dh-rahaeli@hack:~$ ls README apache bin crontab-import dw newfilename.txt dh-rahaeli@hack:~$ rm newfilename.txt dh-rahaeli@hack:~$ ls README apache bin crontab-import dw dh-rahaeli@hack:~$
If you want the system to ask you whether or not you're really sure, use the -i flag:
dh-rahaeli@hack:~$ ls README apache bin crontab-import dw newfilename.txt dh-rahaeli@hack:~$ rm -i newfilename.txt rm: remove regular file `newfilename.txt'? Y dh-rahaeli@hack:~$ ls README apache bin crontab-import dw dh-rahaeli@hack:~$
Like everything else, you can use relative directory paths to delete files, so you don't need to be in the directory that the file you want to delete is in.
Making new directories
To make a new directory, the command is "mkdir":
dh-rahaeli@hack:~$ ls README apache bin crontab-import dw dh-rahaeli@hack:~$ mkdir new-directory dh-rahaeli@hack:~$ ls README apache bin crontab-import dw new-directory dh-rahaeli@hack:~$
Deleting directories
To delete a directory, the command is 'rmdir':
dh-rahaeli@hack:~$ ls README apache bin crontab-import dw new-directory dh-rahaeli@hack:~$ rmdir new-directory dh-rahaeli@hack:~$ ls README apache bin crontab-import dw dh-rahaeli@hack:~$
A directory has to be empty before you delete it, or else you get an error message:
dh-rahaeli@hack:~$ rmdir new-directory rmdir: failed to remove `new-directory': Directory not empty
If you get this error message, and you're absolutely positively sure that you want to delete the directory, you can use the 'rm' command with the -rf (recursive, force) commands. This is not a good idea, especially if you're also using wildcard matching (see below). Everyone, and I do mean everyone, has a horror story about being in the wrong directory when they do an rm -rf and losing years of data. (Mine involved all my saved email from 1992-1999. No, I didn't have backups. Sigh.)
If you're really really really sure you want to do this, it would look like this:
dh-rahaeli@hack:~$ rm -rf new-directory dh-rahaeli@hack:~$ ls README apache bin crontab-import dw dh-rahaeli@hack:~$
Be really really really sure.
Skimming through files
If you want to see whether a file you're looking at is really the file you think it is, you can call it up on your screen and page through it with the 'less' command:
less filename.txt
To get out of the pager, hit q.
Wildcards
Redirecting output
Searching files
Processes and jobs
Getting help
If you ever get stuck and can't remember how to work a command, you can get help on it. The help files are known as 'man pages' (for manual), and are accessed with the 'man' command. For instance, to get help on the help command, you'd type:
man man
To exit the help viewer, hit q. Not all of the man pages for the basic utilities are necessarily helpful, but in a pinch they might give you a hand. (They're mostly useful for remembering what the heck the eighty billion flags a command can take happen to be.)
Outside Resources
Good tutorials on Unix/Linux work: