Essential Linux Commands and Files Guide
Essential Linux Commands and Files Guide
This is my own summary of useful Linux abbreviations, directories, files, and commands. I use my own annotations to recall useful
options and arguments that are not necessarily documented in easy-to-find places. I quite often call up this file when I can't remember
the syntax of a command that I use often (but not often enough to remember the syntax!). I also editorialize on the relative usefulness
of different types of programs.
This document is work in progress. Send suggested changes and corrections to [Link]@[Link]
O'Reilly has just published online an alphabetical list of commands from Linux in a Nutshell. It is available here. It contains more
detailed explanations of many of the commands listed here.
Some of these are specific to the bash shell. I have not experimented enough with other shells to know which are common to all shells.
See also the ``Bash Reference Card'', SSC (2000), available online.
/ - root directory
./ - current directory
./command_name - run a command in the current directory when the current directory is not on the path
../ - parent directory
~ - home directory
$ - typical prompt when logged in as ordinary user
# - typical prompt when logged in as root or superuser
! - repeat specified command
!! - repeat previous command
^^ - repeat previous command with substitution
& - run a program in background mode
[Tab][Tab] - prints a list of all available commands. This is just an example of autocomplete with no restriction on the
first letter.
x[Tab][Tab] - prints a list of all available completions for a command, where the beginning is ``x''
[Alt][Ctrl][F1] - switch to the first virtual text console
[Alt][Ctrl][Fn] - switch to the nth virtual text console. Typically, there are six on a Linux PC system.
[Alt][Ctrl][F7] - switch to the first GUI console, if there is one running. If the graphical console freezes, one can
switch to a nongraphical console, kill the process that is giving problems, and switch back to the graphical console using
this shortcut.
[ArrowUp] - scroll through the command history (in bash)
[Shift][PageUp] - scroll terminal output up. This also works at the login prompt, so you can scroll through your boot
messages.
[Shift][PageDown] - scroll terminal output down
[Ctrl][Alt][+] - switch to next X server resolution (if the server is set up for more than one resolution)
[Ctrl][Alt][-] - change to previous X server resolution
[Ctrl][Alt][BkSpc] - kill the current X server. Used when normal exit is not possible.
[Ctrl][Alt][Del] - shut down the system and reboot
[Ctrl]c - kill the current process
[Ctrl]d - logout from the current terminal
[Ctrl]s - stop transfer to current terminal
[Ctrl]q - resume transfer to current terminal. This should be tried if the terminal stops responding.
[Ctrl]z - send current process to the background
reset - restore a terminal to its default settings
[Leftmousebutton] - Hold down left mouse button and drag to highlight text. Releasing the button copies the region
to the text buffer under X and (if gpm is installed) in console mode.
[Middlemousebutton] - Copies text from the text buffer and inserts it at the cursor location. With a two-button
mouse, click on both buttons simultaneously. It is necessary for three-button emulation to be enabled, either under gpm or
in XF86Config.
3 Typical Dot Files
There is some redundancy across these programs. For example, the look and behavior of emacs can be customized by usinng the
.emacs file, but also by adding the appropriate modifications to the .Xdefaults file. Default versions of these files are often installed in
users' home directories when the software packages that use them are installed. If a program doesn't find its configuration file in the
user's home directory, it will often fall back on a sytem-wide default configuration file installed in one of the subdirectories that the
package lives in.
4 Useful Files
/boot/vmlinuz - the typical location and name of the Linux kernel. In the Slackware distribution, the kernel is located at
/vmlinuz.
/dev/fd0 - first floppy disk drive
/dev/fd0H1440 - driver for the first floppy drive in high density mode. Generally, this is invoked when formatting a floppy
drive for a particular density. Slackware comes with drivers that allow for formatting a 3.5" diskette with up to 1.7MB of
space. Red Hat and Mandrake do not contain these device driver files by default.
/dev/fd1 - second floppy disk drive
/dev/hda - first IDE hard drive
/dev/hdc - on many machines, the IDE cdrom drive. Most often, there is a symbolic link called /dev/cdrom which is just a
link to the true cdrom driver file.
/dev/null - used when you want to send output into oblivion
/etc/aliases - file containing aliases used by sendmail and other MTAs (mail transport agents). After updating this file, it is
necessary to run the newaliases utility for the changes to be passed to sendmail.
/etc/bashrc - system-wide default functions and aliases for the bash shell
/etc/[Link] - aliases and options for configurable modules
/etc/crontab - shell script to run different commands periodically (hourly, daily, weekly, monthly, etc.)
/etc/DIR_COLORS - used to store colors for different file types when using ls command. The dircolors command uses this
file when there is not a .dir_colors file in the user's home directory. Used in conjunction with the eval command (see
below).
/etc/exports - specifies hosts to which file systems can be exported using NFS. Man exports contains information on how to
set up this file for remote users.
/etc/fstab - contains information on partitions and filesystems used by system to mount different partitions and devices on
the directory tree
/etc/HOSTNAME - stores the name of the host computer
/etc/hosts - contains a list of host names and absolute IP addresses.
/etc/[Link] - hosts allowed (by the tcpd daemon) to access Internet services
/etc/[Link] - hosts forbidden (by the tcpd daemon) to access Internet services
/etc/group - similar to /etc/passwd but for groups
/etc/[Link] - configures the inetd daemon to tell it what TCP/IP services to provide (which daemons to load at boot
time). A good start to securing a Linux box is to turn off these services unless they are necessary.
/etc/inittab - runs different programs and processes on startup. This is typically the program which is responsible for,
among other things, setting the default runlevel, running the [Link] script contained in /etc/rc.d, setting up virtual login
terminals, bringing down the system in an orderly fashion in response to [Ctrl][Alt][Del], running the rc script in
/etc/rc.d, and running xdm for a graphical login prompt (only if the default runlevel is set for a graphical login).
/etc/issue - pre-login message. This is often overwitten by the /etc/rc.d/rc.S script (in Slackware) or by the /etc/rc.d/[Link]
script (in Mandrake and Red Hat, and perhaps other rpm-based distributions). The relevant lines should be commented out
(or changed) in these scripts if a custom pre-login message is desired.
/etc/[Link] - configuration file for lilo boot loader
/etc/motd - message of the day file, printed immediately after login. This is often overwritten by /etc/rc.d/rc.S (Slackware)
or /etc/rc.d/[Link] (Mandrake/Red Hat) on startup. See the remarks in connection with /etc/issue.
/etc/mtab - shows currently mounted devices and partitions and their status
/etc/passwd - contains passwords and other information concerning users who are registered to use the system. For obvious
security reasons, this is readable only by root. It can be modified by root directly, but it is preferable to use a configuration
utility such as passwd to make the changes. A corrupt /etc/passwd file can easily render a Linux box unusable.
/etc/printcap - shows the setup of printers
/etc/profile - sets system-wide defaults for bash shell. It is this file in Slackware that sets up the DIR_COLORS
environment variable for the color ls command. Also sets up other system-wide environment variables.
/etc/[Link] - contains a list of domain name servers used by the local machine
/etc/securetty - contains a list of terminals on which root can login. For security reasons, this should not include dialup
terminals.
/etc/termcap - ASCII database defining the capabilities and characteristics of different consoles, terminals, and printers
/etc/X11/XF86Config - X configuration file. The location in Slackware is /etc/XF86Config.
/proc/cpuinfo - cpu information
/proc/filesystems - prints filesystems currently in use
/proc/interrupts - prints interrupts currently in use
/proc/ioports - contains a list of the i/o addresses used by various devices connected to the computer
/proc/kcore - The command ls -l /proc/kcore will give the amount of RAM on the computer. It's also possible to use the
free command to get the same information (and more).
/proc/version - prints Linux version and other info
/var/log/messages - used by syslog daemon to store kernel boot-time messages
/var/log/lastlog - used by system to store information about last boot
/var/log/wtmp - contains binary data indicating login times and duration for each user on system
5 Important Directories
Different distributions have different directory structures, despite attempts at standardization such as the the Linux Filesystem
Hierarchy Standard (FHS) organization.
/bin - essential UNIX commands such as ls, etc. Should contain all binaries needed to boot the system or run it in single-
user mode
/boot - files used during booting and possibly the kernel itself are stored here
/dev - contains device files for various devices on system
/etc - files used by subsystems such as networking, NFS, and mail. Includes tables of disks to mount, processes to run on
startup, etc.
/etc/profile.d - contains scripts that are run by /etc/profile upon login.
/etc/rc.d - contains a number of shell scripts that are run on bootup at different run levels. There is also typically an rc.inet1
script to set up networking (in Slackwar), an [Link] script to load modular device drivers, and an [Link] script that
can be edited to run commands desired by the administrator, along the lines of [Link] in DOS.
/etc/rc.d/init.d - contains most of the initialization scripts themselves on an rpm-based system.
/etc/rc.d/rc*.d - where ``*'' is a number corresponding to the default run level. Contains files for services to be started and
stopped at that run level. On rpm-based systems, these files are symbolic links to the initialization scripts themselves,
which are in /etc/rc.d/init.d.
/etc/skel - directory containing several example or skeleton initialization shells. Often contains subdirectories and files used
to populate a new user's home directory.
/etc/X11 - configuration files for the X Window system
/home - home directories of individual users
/lib - standard shared library files
/lib/modules - modular device driver files, most with .o extensions
/mnt - typical mount point for many user-mountable devices such as floppy drives, cd-rom readers, etc. Each device is
mounted on a subdirectory of /mnt.
/proc - virtual file system that provides a number of system statistics
/root - home directory for root
/sbin - location of binaries used for system administration, configuration, and monitoring
/tmp - directory specifically designed for programs and users to store temporary files.
/usr - directory containing a number of subdirectory with programs, libraries, documentation, etc.
/usr/bin - contains most user commands. Should not contain binaries necessary for booting the system, which go in /bin.
The /bin directory is generally located on the same disk partition as /, which is mounted in read-only mode during the boot
process. Other filesystems are only mounted at a later stage during startup, so putting binaries essential for boot here is not
a good idea.
/usr/bin/X11 - most often a symbolic link to /usr/X11R6/bin, which contains executable binaries related to the X Window
system
/usr/doc - location of miscellaneous documentation, and the main location of program documentation files under Slackware
/usr/include - standard location of include files used in C programs such as stdio.h
/usr/info - primary location of the GNU info system files
/usr/lib - standard library files such as libc.a. Searched by the linker when programs are compiled.
/usr/lib/X11 - X Window system distribution
/usr/local/bin - yet another place to look for comon executables
/usr/man - location of manual page files
/usr/sbin - other commands used by superuser for system administration
/usr/share - contains subdirectories where many installed programs have configuration, setup and auxiliary files
/usr/share/doc - location of program documentation files under Mandrake and Red Hat
/usr/src - location of source programs used to build system. Source code for programs of all types are often unpacked in
this directory.
/usr/src/linux - often a symbolic link to a subdirectory whose name corresponds to the exact version of the Linux kernel
that is running. Contains the kernel sources.
/var - administrative files such as log files, used by various utilities
/var/log/packages - contains files, each of which has detailed information on an installed package in Slackware. The same
file can also be found at /var/adm/packages, since the adm subdirectory is a symbolic link to log. Each package file
contains a short description plus a list of all installed files.
/var/log/scripts - package installation scripts in Slackware are stored here. You can inspect these scripts to see what special
features are included in individual packages.
/var/spool - temporary storage for files being printed, mail that has not yet been picked up, etc.
These variables are most often inherited or declared when a shell is started. A great reference for bash shell variable, bash builtin
commands, and bash in general is SSC (2000).
These are programs or processes which are run at boot time. Some remain in memory to execute various tasks when required
(daemons). Most are started and stopped with scripts in the /etc/rc.d/init.d directory (see above). The exact contents of this directory
will depend on which packages from a particular distribution are installed. For example, installing the Apache package will cause an
httpd script to be placed in /etc/rc.d/init.d.
There are man pages on most of these. The Red Hat program tksysv (ntsysv is the non graphical version) allows root to automatically
configure which of these are started automatically at boot time. The linuxconf program does the same thing, although I haven't tried it.
The utility chkconfig is also designed to query and configure runtime services for different runlevels. The
[Link] site has a good page on common services/daemons, especially those included in recent versions of the
Mandrake distribution.
A good source of information on daemons and services is the ``Linux Devices, Daemons, Services'' chapter of the CTDP (2000a)
document.
amd - runs the automount daemon for remote filesystem mounting such as nfs
anacron - checks delayed `cron' tasks (see below) at boot time and executes them. Useful if you have cron jobs scheduled
but don't run your machine all the time.
apmd - Advanced Power Management BIOS daemon. For use on machines, especially laptops, that support apm. Monitors
battery status and can shut down the system if power is too low.
arpwatch - keeps watch for ethernet IP address pairings that are resolved using the ARP protocol.
atd - runs jobs queued by `at'
autofs - control the operation of automount daemons, used to mount and unmount devices on demand
bootparamd - allows computers to boot from a Linux machine using the BOOTP network protocol. A server process that
provides information to diskless clients necessary for booting
crond - automatic task scheduler. Manages the execution of tasks that are executed at regular but infrequent intervals, such
as rotating log files, cleaning up /tmp directories, etc.
cups - daemon for print services under the Common Unix Printer System, a replacement for lpd
dhcpd - implements the Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol (DHCP) and the Internet Bootstrap Protocol (BOOTP).
Used to lease out IP addresses to remote machines.
drakfont - font server in Mandrake
fetchmail - daemon to fetch mail at regular intervals from mail servers
ftpd - ftp server daemon
gated - routing daemon that handles multiple routing protocols and replaces routed and egpup
gpm - useful mouse server for applications running on the Linux console.
httpd - the Apache webserver hypertext transfer protocol daemon
identd - The identd server provides a means to determine the identity of a user of a particular TCP connection. Given a
TCP port number pair, it returns a character string which identifies the owner of that connection on the server's system.
inetd - listens for service requests on network connections, particularly dial-in services. This daemon can automatically
load and unload other daemons (ftpd, telnetd, etc.), thereby economizing on system resources. In the latest version of Red
Hat (7.0 at the time of writing), it has been replaced by xinetd. A partial list of services controlled by inetd is listed below.
Under many distributions, inetd will execute scripts in the file /etc/[Link].
innd - Usenet news server daemon
ipchains - daemon for packet forwarding. Used for configuring a gateway/firewall.
isdn provides ISDN network interfacing services
isdn4linux - for users of ISDN cards
kerneld - automatically loads and unloads kernel modules
keytable - loads the appropriate keyboard map from /etc/sysconfig/ keyboard
kheader -
kudzu - detects and configures new or changed hardware during boot
linuxconf - ``startup hook'' needed for the linuxconf system configuration tool
lpd - line printer and print spooler daemon
mcserv - server program for the Midnight Commander networking file system. It provides access to the host file system to
clients running the Midnight file system (currently, only the Midnight Commander file manager). If the program is run as
root the program will try to get a reserved port otherwise it will use 9876 as the port. If the system has a portmapper
running, then the port will be registered with the portmapper and thus clients will automatically connect to the right port. If
the system does not have a portmapper, then a port should be manually specified with the -p option (see below).
mysql - database server daemon
named - provides DNS services
netfs - network filesystem mounter. Used for mounting nfs, smb and ncp shares on boot.
network -activates all network interfaces at boot time by calling scripts in /etc/sysconfig/network-scripts
nfsd - used for exporting nfs shares when requested by remote systems
nfslock - starts and stops nfs file locking service
numlock - locks numlock key at init runlevel change
pcmcia - generic services for pcmcia cards in laptops
portmap - needed for Remote Procedure Calls
postfix - mail transport agent which is a replacement for sendmail. Now the default on desktop installations of Mandrake.
postgresql - database server daemon
random - random number generating daemon, related to security and encryption
routed - manages routing tables
rstatd - kernel statistics server. Allows users on a network to get performance statistics for any connected machine.
rusersd - provides services that allow users to find one another over the network
rwalld - allows users to use rwall to write messages on remote terminals
rwhod - server which maintains the database used by the rwho(1) and ruptime(1) programs. Its operation is predicated on
the ability to broadcast messages on a network.
sendmail - mail transfer agent. This is the agent that comes with Red Hat. Others, such as smtpd, are not included.
smb - needed for running SAMBA
snmpd - provides Simple Network Management Protocol support
sound - daemon for managing sound
squid - web page proxy server daemon
syslogd - manages system log files
smtpd - Simple Mail Transfer Protocol, designed for the exchange of electronic mail messages. Several daemons that
support SMTP are available, including sendmail, smtpd, rsmtpd, qmail, zmail, etc.
tcpd - from the tcp_wrappers package. Intercepts requests normally handled by inetd and filters them through the files
[Link] and [Link] files, which can restrict access to services based on type of service, origin of request,
destination, etc. Requests are intercepted because calls to particular services are replaced with calls to tcpd in
/etc/[Link].
telnetd - telnet server daemon
usb - daemon for devices on Universal Serial Bus
xfs - X font server
xinetd - more modern replacement for inetd. It apparently allows for similar kinds of access filters to the ones used by tcpd
in conjunction with inetd. xinetd replaces inetd as the default network services daemon in Red Hat 7.0.
xntpd - Network Time Protocol daemon. Provides a means to syncronize time over the network.
webmin - daemon for webmin web-based system administration program
ypbind - NIS binder. Needed if computer is part of Network Information Service domain.
8 Window Managers
The ``Window Managers for X'' site is extremely useful for keeping track of new Linux window managers. See
[Link]
Afterstep - Based on Fvwm. Designed to give a similar look and feel to the NextStep interface.
AnotherLevel - a custom configuration for fvwm2 which mimics the look and feel of Windows95.
Blackbox - a light, fast, window manager. It doesn't clutter the screen with too much junk, but it gets the job done
efficiently.
CDE - Common Desktop Environment. This is the default window manager on many commercial Unix systems. There is
no free version.
Enlightenment - Very configurable, and probably the coolest looking window manager, but a bit of a resource hog.
Flwm - Fast, Light Window Manager. It has very few features, but is very small.
Fvwm - F (?) Virtual Window Manager. This, along with Fvwm2, are old standbies in the Linux world. They are quite
configurable, but configuration involves editing text files which are sometimes obscure.
Fvwm2 - newer version of above.
Fvwm95 - implementation of Fvwm2 configured to look and feel like Windows 95.
Gnome - Gnome desktop environment. A themable collection of desktop utilities that can be used with different window
managers. The current default window manager for a gnome session is Sawfish.
Icewm - Ice Window Manager. Very small, very fast, quite configurable. On low memory/small hard drive machines, this
one is my favorite. Configuration involves editing text files, but the syntax is extremely easy to understand. There are also
a couple of third-party programs available which allow the user to configure Icewm using a graphical interface.
KDE - K Desktop Environment. Many of the desktop utilities can be run under different window managers. I may be
wrong, but I believe kikbd is the only program out there that allows the user to reconfigure the keyboard layout to different
national keyboards on the fly, with one-click switching from one to the other. Unfortunately, this utility is no longer
available under KDE 2.x.
Kwm - the window manager that comes with the KDE desktop environment.
Mwm - Motif window manager.
Olwm - Open Look window manager.
Sawfish - a small, efficient, configurable window manager that is now the default window manager with Gnome.
Twm - Tab window manager.
UDE - Unix Desktop Environment. In early development stages. An attempt to create a new type of desktop environment
for Unix machines, including Linux.
Windowmaker - One of the more popular window managers. Highly configurable and themable.
XFce - ``Cholesterol-Free Desktop Environment''. Includes its own window manager, a toolbar, a sound manager, a
background manager, and a file manager. It has tearoff menus, up to twelve virtual desktops, etc. It is completely
configurable with menus. Its toolbar looks like the one in CDE. I find it easy to use and to configure, and easy on system
resources.
In the following command list, the distinction between upper case and lower case letters is important. Most of the commands are
utilities that are run by invoking their own executable files. In some cases, they are commands which are internal to a shell such as
bash (shell builtins). The shell builtins are indicated. There are now many utilities that are included with either the Gnome or the KDE
desktop environments, so many that it would be difficult to include them all here. In many cases, they duplicate the functionality of
one or more of the programs listed below. I would suggest consulting the online documentation for these packages.
Another good source of information on commands is the CTDP (2000b) document. There are different chapters which group
commands in different categories.
On rpm-based systems, to find out which package owns the command foo (where foo is a standalone executable), use the command
rpm -q -f foo.
so that you can't recursively delete your /dev directory without telling the system you're sure you want to do it.
alien - utility to convert to and from different Linux package formats. Can handle Debian (deb), Stampede (stp), Red Hat
(rpm) and Slackware (tgz) packages.
apropos - display command names based on keyword search
o usage: apropos keyword
apsfilter - printer filter called by lpd to deal with printing different types of files. This is a fairly sophisticated print filter. It
is not set up by default in Slackware. It used to be available on the second cd of a Slackware distribution. Since 4.0, it is
available as one of the main packages in the ap set. Read the mail that the installation program sends to the root user. I
believe that Red Hat uses its own printer filters.
ar - create, modify and extract from archives
arch - print machine architecture type
as - the portable GNU assembler
asapm - AfterStep laptop advanced power management utility
ash - a shell, a very simple shell program sometimes used on boot diskettes since it takes up much less space than bash,
tcsh, zsh, etc.
asload - AfterStep cpu load monitor
asmail - AfterStep mail checking utility
asmodem - AfterStep utility to monitor modem status
aspell - a spell checking program along the lines of ispell
aspostit - X Window postit note utility
at - executes a shell script at specified time. Use atq to show pending jobs, and atrm to remove jobs from the queue.
o usage: at time
o or: at -f file time
atq - shows pending jobs queued by at. If run by root, shows everybody's pending jobs.
atrm - removes pending jobs queued by at. Use atq to determine the identities of various jobs.
o usage: atrm job
awk - searches for and process patterns in a file
banner - print banner to standard output. Syntax is
o banner [option] [characters]
bash - Bourne again shell. This is the default shell in the Red Hat installation.
batch - queue, examine, or delete jobs for later execution. See at.
bc - a language (compiler) similar to C, with unlimited precision arithmetic
bg PID - send process with pid ``PID'' to the background. This is the same as executing [Ctrl]z while interacting with
the running process. This is a shell builtin.
bh - puts a job in the background. This is a shell builtin.
biff - mail notification utility. Notifies user of mail arrival and sender's name.
bind - displays or redefines key bindings. This is a shell builtin.
bison - parser generator similar to yacc
bru - a powerful backup utility program. Commercial. Demonstration versions are often included with Linux distributions
such as Red Hat.
bsh - equivalent to ash
bunzip2 - used to uncompress files compressed with bzip2
byacc - parser generator
bzip2 - compresses with algorithm different from gzip
bzless - view bzipped files
c++ - invokes GNU C and C++ compiler
cal - displays a 12-month calendar for the given year or a one-month calendar of the given month
o usage: cal month year
cat - combine, copy standard input to standard output. Used to join or display files.
cd - change working directory. This is a shell builtin in bash, tcsh and zsh.
cdplay - command line utility for playing audio cds
cfdisk - similar to fdisk, but menu-driven
chat - used to interact with a modem via a chat script
chgrp - changes group associated with file. Can be used to change the group associated with subdirectories and files of a
directory.
o usage: chgrp group files
o or: chgrp -R group files
chkconfig - Query or update system services/daemons for different runlevels. Manipulates the various symbolic links in
/etc/rc.d. This utility is included with many rpm-based distributions such as RedHat and Mandrake. It is designed to work
with System V initialization scripts. Graphical tools for configuring system services include ntsysv, tksysv and ksysv (the
latter is a KDE utility).
chmod - set permissions (modes) of files or directories. A value of 4 is used for read permission. A value of 2 is used for
write permission. A value of 1 is used for execute permission. See umask for default file permissions upon file creation.
Chmod can also be used to change the suid bit on files. The syntax for the symbolic version is
o chmod [options] who operation permission file-list
o chmod u +s file-name
o chmod g +s file-name
There are lots of security issues related to allowing a program to have root's permissions when run by an ordinary user. I
don't pretend to understand all of these issues.
The cpio command will prompt the user to insert more diskettes as they are needed. The command for mirroring a
directory structure is the following:
The ibs and bs options specify the block sizes for input and for both input and output. A boot disk image can be directly
copied to a floppy using the second of the two dd commands above.
declare - declares attributes for a variable (same as typeset). This is a shell builtin.
df - displays capacity and free capacity on different physical devices such as hard drive partitions and floppy drives that are
mounted on the file system. Gives free space in blocks. With the (undocumented) option -h, the program gives free space
in Mb or Gb. This is useful for those accustomed to thinking of the capacity of a high-density 3.5 inch diskette as 1440k.
diff - displays differences between two files
o usage: diff file1 file2
diff3 - compares three files and reports on differences
dip - used to set up a SLIP or PPP connection. It can be used to set up an outgoing SLIP connection or an incoming
connection.
diplogin - used for setting up incoming dip connections. See the man page for dip.
dir - a variation of the GNU ls command that defaults to printing file names in columns
dircolors - set colors for GNU ls command. In Slackware, this command is run by the /etc/profile script. Then, whenever
xterm is run with the -ls (login shell) option, ls displays different colors for different types of files. Typical usage is eval
`dircolors -b`. In Red Hat and Mandrake, I get color directories by aliasing the ls command (see below).
display - set display for output of programms under X Windows. Can be used to run a program on a remote machine while
displaying the output on a local machine. The remote machine must have permission to send output to the local machine.
This is actually an environment variable. See the more detailed discussion in connection with the xhost command below.
dmesg - displays messages from /var/log relative to the most recent boot
dos - invoke the DOSEMU DOS emulator
du - displays information on disk usage. The command
o du / -bh | less
will display detailed disk usage for each subdirectory starting at root, giving files sizes in bytes.
dumpkeys - print information about the keyboard driver's translation tables to standard output
dvilj - send a dvi file to a Laserjet printer. There are specialized versions for individual models of Laserjet printer.
dvilj2p - specialized version of dvilj for the IIp series of printers. See above.
dvips - send a dvi file to a Postscript printer, to a Postscript capable Laserjet printer, or to a file (with the -o option). There
is a switch to print only a subset of the pages, and another switch to print in landscape mode. Use -t landscape, which is
one of the arguments to the paper type switch. If you have one page of a document that is a wide table, and you wish to
print this in landscape mode, use
o dvips filename -pp pagenumber -t landscape
e2fsck - check an ext2 filesystem. The syntax is
o e2fsck /dev/devicename
where the filesystem is on /dev/devicename. The device should not be mounted, and this program must be run as root.
echo - write arguments to standard output. One use is to print out information about environment variables, as in
o echo $PATH - list paths to search
o echo $HOME or echo ~ - list name of home directory
editres - a dynamic resource editor for X Toolkit applications. Allows the user to change X resources for individual
applications.
efax - fax program
efix - convert between fax, text, bit-map and gray-scale formats
egrep - search files for lines that match regular expressions. Runs faster than grep and fgrep.
elm - an interactive mail system
elvis - a version of the vi text editor
emacs - screen oriented text editor
env - desplay the current environment or set a variable equal to a new value
eval - scans and evaluates the command line. See dircolors command. This is a shell builtin.
ex - interactive command-based editor. The man page lists it as being the same as vim, an improved version of vi.
exec - system call which creates a subshell to execute a binary or a script. This is a shell builtin.
execve - a variation of the exec command.
exit - exit a shell. This is a shell builtin.
expand - convert tabs in files to spaces and write to standard output
expect - a program that ``talks'' to other interactive programs according to a script. Following the script, Expect knows
what can be expected from a program and what the correct response should be. An interpreted language provides branching
and high-level control structures to direct the dialogue. In addition, the user can take control and interact directly when
desired, afterward returning control to the script.
export - place the value of a variable in the calling environment (makes it global). This is a shell builtin.
expr - utility evaluates an expression and displays the result
f2c - FORTRAN to C translator
f77 - FORTRAN 77 compiler
false - null command that returns an unsuccessful exit status
fax - simple user interface to efax and efix programs
fc - views, edits, and executes commands for the history list. This is a shell builtin.
fdformat - low level format of a floppy device
fetchmail - retrieve mail from a remote mail server and pass it to local SMTP agents on the local machine
fdisk - used to partition hard drives
o usage: fdisk device
fg PID - bring a background or stopped process with pid ``PID'' to the foreground. This is a shell builtin. If only one
process is running in background mode, fg with no argument is sufficient to bring it to the foreground
fgrep - search for patterns in files
file - displays classification of a file or files according to the type of data they contain
find - find files according to a large variety of search criteria. The find command that I use the most is
o find . -name filename -print
in order to find files matching a particular name on the working directory and all subdirectories. Find can be incredibly
powerful, but it is incredibly obscure.
did work. The single quotes are necessary. The files necessary to run grub are normally located in /boot/grub. Once the file
[Link] has been edited and appropriated entries added to boot the different operating systems on one's hard disk(s), the
following sequence of commands can be used to install grub in the master boot record (MBR) sector of the hard disk:
o root (hd0,x)
o setup (hd0)
Here, the x should be replaced by the partition where the /boot/grub directory is located, which is probably the root
partition of the Linux system. Note that grub has its own conventions for naming devices and numbering partitions, so that
for example a partition which is called hda6 under Linux will be called (hd0,5) by grub.
grub-install - command to install grub on the hard drive (or floppy drive).
gunzip - used to uncompress files compressed with gzip
gv - PostScript and PDF previewer, based on ghostview
gvim - see vi
gzexe - compresses executables
gzip - used to compress or decompress files
halt - shut down system as root, without reboot, immediately
hash - remembers the location of commands in the search path. This is a shell builtin.
head - displays first part of a file
history - command for viewing and manipulating the shell command history list
host - look up host names using domain server
hostname - used to get or set hostname. Typically, the host name is stored in the file /etc/HOSTNAME.
hwclock - used to query and set the hardware clock
hylafax - commercial fax program
id - display userid and groupid
inetd - daemon which starts up other daemons on demand. Configured in /etc/[Link].
ifconfig - display (as root) information on network interfaces that are currently active. First ethernet interface should be
listed as eth0, second as eth1, etc. First modem ppp connection should be listed as ppp0, etc. The ``lo'' connection is
``loopback'' only.
ifdown - shut down the network interface
ifup [interface_name] - start up the interface
info - display system information. This is the GNU hypertext reader.
init - the mother of all processes, run at bootup, executes commands in /etc/inittab. Can be used (with root privileges) to
change the system run level.
o usage: init run_level
insmod - used (by root) to install modular device drivers
installpkg - Slackware command to install one of the packages from the program sets
intr - interrupt key, usually [Ctrl-C]
ispell - checks files for spelling errors
o usage: ispell files
jed - programmer's file editor. Behaves like emacs. Has modes for TEX, FORTRAN, C, etc.
jobs - displays list of current jobs in the background. This is a shell builtin.
joe - simple WordStar-like text editor. It can be invoked in emacs emulation mode with jemacs and in WordStar emulation
mode with jstar.
jove - Joseph's Own Version of Emacs. A simple emacs clone.
kbd_mode - print current keyboard mode
kernelcfg - GUI to add/remove kernel modules (as root in X terminal).
kerneld - kernel daemon, a process that stays in memory and does all sorts of useful stuff, like automatic loading of device
driver modules
kikbd - a utility program that comes with KDE that allows users to switch on the fly among different international
keyboards. It can be used under different window managers than kfm.
kill - sends a signal to (especially to terminate) a job or process. This is a shell builtin in bash, tcsh and zsh.
killall - kill processes by name. Kill all processes which are instances of the speciffied program. Also used to send signals
to processes or restart them.
killall5 - kill all processes except the ones on which it depends
last - generate a listing of user logins
lastlog - prints the last login times of all users
latex - compile a LATEX file
ldconfig - creates the necessary links and cache (for use by the run-time linker, [Link]) to the most recent shared libraries
found in the directories specified on the command line, in the file /etc/[Link], and in the trusted directories (/usr/lib
and /lib). Ldconfig checks the header and file names of the libraries it encounters when determining which versions should
have their links updated. Ldconfig ignores symbolic links when scanning for libraries.
ldd - list the shared libraries on which a given executable depends, and where they are located
leave - display reminder at specified time
less - Linux alternative to ``more'' command. Displays text files, one screenful at a time. When less pauses, there is a large
number of available commands to tell it what to do next. One can scroll both forwards and backwards.
let - evaluates a numeric expression. This is a shell builtin.
lilo - installs boot loader on the boot sector of a hard drive, of a diskette, or in another location. My 486 has a hard drive
that is too large for the machine's BIOS, so I have to boot from a floppy. To create a boot diskette, I do the following (as
root):
o /sbin/fdformat /dev/fd0H1440
o /sbin/mkfs.ext2 /dev/fd0
o mount -t ext2 /dev/fd0 /mnt/floppy
o cp -dp /boot/* /mnt/floppy
o /sbin/lilo -C /etc/[Link]
The -C option to lilo has lilo use the [Link] file instead of the default [Link].
linuxconf - interactive tool for configuring Linux system. Uses X if loaded. This is a Gnome tool. It comes with my Red
Hat distribution, and is not included with Slackware. It would seem to be the easiest way to configure Linux under
Slackware. Version 1.15 is available for Slackware. There is a pretty good introduction to the use of linuxconf in the Red
Hat 5.2 installation manual, which is available online at their web site.
ln - creates a link to a file. Used to create hard links and, with the -s option, symbolic links which can link files on different
disk partitions. The syntax is
o ln [options] source [dest]
locate filename - find the file name which contains the string ``filename''. The syntax is easier than the find command.
lock - temporarily lock terminal
lockfile - create semaphore file(s), used to limit access to a file
- log in to system
logname - consult /etc/utmp for user's login name
logout - execute logout as individual user and bring up login: prompt
look - look for strings in files
lpq - show print jobs that are waiting
lpr - send file to be printed
lprm - cancel a job from print queue
ls - list directory contents. To get colored directory listings under Red Hat, Mandrake, etc., use
o ls -color
will give directory listings in color, with file sizes in kilobytes, and append a character to the file to indicate its type.
The default device for execution of these commands is /dev/fd0 and can be referred to as ``a:''.
The user's home directory on the remote system must contain the file .rhosts with a list of users (preceded by the full
domain name or exact IP address of their machine) with access privileges.
o localhostname username
rcs - creates or changes the attributes of an RCS file. Stands for Revision Control System.
rdev - query/set image root device, swap device, RAM disk size, or video mode in kernel
read - reads line from standard input. This is a shell builtin.
readonly - declares a variable to be read only. This is a shell builtin.
reboot - in Slackware, reboots the system. Seems to be equivalent to shutdown -r now in generic Linux.
renice program_name - resets the priority of process ``program_name''.
reset - used to reset the screen characteristics. This is useful if the screen gets messed up from, for example, trying to
display a binary file in an xterm.
return - exits from a function. This is a shell builtin.
rlog - prints a summary of the history of an RCS file
rlogin - log in to remote computer. The general syntax is as follows, using the UQAM Nobel machine as an example:
o rlogin -l userid [Link]
The remote computer must recognize the local user and the local machine. See the rcp command for how to set up the
.rhosts file on the remote machine.
rm - remove files or directories. With the -r (recursive) option (very dangerous!), can be used to remove the contents of a
specified directory including all subdirectories.
rmail - interpret and handle remote mail received via uucp
rmdir - remove empty directories
rmmod - used to remove modular device drivers
route -n - show routing table. The n option returns numerical addresses rather than names.
rpm - invokes the Red Hat package manager in command line mode. I often use this command in query mode to query
packages about what files they contain and to find out which package owns a particular file. Examples are
o rpm -qil foo. Gives package information and a file list for the package foo.
o rpm -qfil foo. Gives package information and a file list for the package that owns the file foo. Foo must be in
the working directory, or the full path to foo must be specified.
We need to find out about installing the rpm package on a Slackware box. It's probably better to use a package converter
such as alien.
rpm2tgz - an extremely useful utility on Slackware systems that converts rpm packages to tgz format. They can then be
installed using the installpkg command (or pkgtool).
rsh - execute shell command on a remote computer. See rcp and rlogin.
rstat - summarize host's status: uptime, load averages, and current time
ruptime - show host status of local machines
rusers - list who is logged on local machines
rwall - write to all users over a network
rwho - show who is logged in on a LAN. The rwho service must be enabled for this command to run. If it isn't, run ``setup''
as root. I don't understand this last remark, which comes from ``Linux Newbie Administrator Guide''.
rxvt - a terminal program similar to xterm, but which has less features and uses less memory
sed - edits a file (not interactively). Also a tool for processing text files.
set - set or display value of shell variables. This is a shell builtin. The command
o set | less
prints the current user environment, giving the values of currently defined variables.
To create a tarball from files in a given directory and its subdirectories, use
Sourcename can be the name of a single file, a wildcard such as *, or the name of a subdirectory. There seem to be two
different conventions concerning gzipped tarballs. One often encounters .[Link]. The other popular choice is .tgz. Slackware
packages use the latter convention. The command can also be used to archive a file, a group of files, or a directory (with its
subdirectories) on tape or onto floppies. If the material to be archived exceeds the capacity of the backup medium, the
program will prompt the user to insert a new tape or diskette. Use the following command to back up to floppies:
Tar can be used for other things. To mirror all the files and subdirectories in from-stuff to to-stuff, use the commands
o cd from-stuff
o tar cf - . | (cd ../to-stuff; tar xvf -)
No tar file is ever written to disk. The data is sent by pipe from one tar process to another. This example is taken from
Running Linux, p.177. To list the table of contents of a tar archive, use
where files is the list of files to extract. When extracting files, tar creates missing subdirectories underneath the current
directory in which the cammand is invoked.
The system subtracts x, y and z from the owner, group and other file permissions that it would otherwise assign to new
files. This is a shell builtin.
umount [device] - finish writing to the device and remove it from the active filesystem. The command umount -a will
(re)mount all file systems listed in /etc/fstab.
unalias - remove name previously defined by alias. This is a shell builtin.
uname - displays information about the system. With no arguments, it displays the name of the operating system. With the
-a option, it displays information about the operating system, the host name, and hardware.
uniq - displays lines of a file that are unique
unset - removes a variable or function. This is a shell builtin.
unzip - uncompress files compressed with the zip utility, compatible with DOS PKzip
updatedb - update file database used by locate command
uptime - shows the time, how long the system has been up, the number of users, and average load.
useradd - same as adduser
userdel - remove an account (as root). The user's home directory and undelivered mail must be dealt with separately.
users - prints list of users on the system
vdir - variant of the GNU version of the ls command. Defaults to printing out the long version of directory entries.
vi - standard screen oriented Unix editor
view - vi in read-only mode
vim - improved vi editor
vrfy - query remote host to verify the accuracy of an email address
w - display info about userids and active processes
wait - waits for a background process to terminate. This is a shell builtin.
wc - displays number of lines, characters and words in a file
Wharf - the AfterStep application dock module
whatis - display one-line summary of specified command
whereis - use to find utilities in standard locations
which - used to find utilities in search path. Will return the absolute directory path of the named utility program.
who - display information about currently logged in userids
whoami - display information about userid that is currently logged in
wish - front end to tk, an X window extension of tcl
workbone - console based cd player
workman - graphical cd player program
write - send messages to another local user
X - starts up the X server. Can be invoked with
o X -quiet -query remotemachineaddress
in order to get a graphical login screen on the remote machine. See the discussion in connection with xdm below.
See the man pages for X, xdm, and Xserver. As usual, the man pages are pretty obscure. The best single source seems to be
the Xserver man pages. After X is configured, X needs to be started at bootup with the command (in /etc/rc.d/init.d/xterm):
If the address of a nameserver is not configured, then the numeric address of the remote machine rather than its name
should be entered. If the machines are connected through ethernet cards and the net, then obviously basic networking has to
be set up. Gnome and KDE come with their own versions of X display/login managers, called respectively gdm and kdm.
xdvi - view a dvi file compiled under LATEX
xedit - a simple text editor for X
xf86config - graphical configuration tool for X
XF86Setup - graphical configuration tool for X
xfd - display an available font in X. Creates a grid in an x-term with one character per rectangle.
xfig - utility for interactive generation of figures
xfm - graphical file manager for X
xhost - tell X server that remote computer has access to your machine and that you will use the remote computer. This can
be used to set up remote X sessions. To set up a remote X session on the UQAM Nobel machine, run the following
command on the local machine (one doesn't have to be root to do this)
o xhost +[Link]
Then, log onto the remote machine using rlogin (see above) or telnet. Once logged in, use the following command to get
the remote X server to open an X terminal on the local machine:
This is valid for csh, which is the default login shell on Nobel. For ksh, (and I think bash) replace with
o DISPLAY=localhostname:0
o export DISPLAY ; xterm
Other X-based programs such as Netscape or Gauss (graphical version) can also be run on a remote machine with display
on the local machine with little trouble. The local X server is the program that has all of the information concerning the
properties of the graphics card and terminal, so it must be necessary to have X running on the local machine. The following
should also work. After using xhost to give permission to the remote machine to display on the local machine, use
Question: can one start the X session on the local machine and then run a remote copy of a window manager?
xinit - start X Window. The command startx is a front end to xinit in Linux, including Slackware.
xload - displays a graphic of the system load
xlpq - graphical interface to print manager. This is included on one of the XFCE menus, but does not seem to be a part of
the base Red Hat distribution.
xlsfonts - list fonts available under the X Window system.
xman - browsable command reference. Displays manual pages under X.
xmh - graphical front end under X to the nmh mail handling system. This program is part of the XFree86 package in Red
Hat.
xmodmap - utility for modifying keymaps and pointer button mappings in X. Can be used to install a French Canadian
keyboard. Download the [Link] file from [Link], and insert the command
o xmodmap /etc/X11/[Link] &
into the .xession (with xdm) or the .xinitrc (with startx) file.
xosview - displays bar graphs of system load, load average, memory usage, and swap usage
xpaint - simple paint program for X
xpdf - GPL'd utility for previewing dvi files. Doesn't seem to work too well on texts with a lot of math.
xplaycd - X Window audio cd player utility
xsetroot - utility to configure root window of an X terminal
xsysinfo - graphical display of load and memory usage
xterm - start an X Window terminal session
xterm-color - color version of xterm
xv - utility for viewing and manipulating many types of image files. This is a shareware program.
xvidtune - utility for fine tuning of monitor settings under X
yacc - parser generator
ytalk - multi-user program similar to talk
zcat - read one or more files that have been compressed with gzip or compress and write to standard output
zcmp - read compressed files and pass them to cmp
zdiff - read compressed files and pass them to diff
zgrep - read compressed files and pass them to grep
Zharf - AfterStep button panel module
zip - zip utility compatible with DOS PKzip
zless - view zipped files
zmore - print contents of compressed files one screen at a time
znew - uncompress Z files and recompress in .gz format
Eventually, we want to be able to distinguish between commands that are an intrinsic part of the kernel, commands that are executable
binaries that come with every distribution of Linux, executable binaries that are not provided with all distributiions of Linux, and
executable shell scripts. We also want to point out the typical location of these commands on different Linux distributions. Finally, we
want to distinguish between shell commands and Linux commands.
10 Notes on Applications
The Linux distributions I know come with sendmail, except for Mandrake, which as of version 7.1 uses Postfix as its default MTA.
There are several competing programs available. Even the simplest don't seem to be that easy to configure.
Exim -
Fetchmail - seemingly one of the few ways (Pine is able to do this as well) to download mail automatically from a POP or
IMAP server and pass it to local mail handling agents. Use the following line in /.fetchmailrc:
o poll [Link] proto pop3 user USERNAME pass PASSWORD
Use the following to have fetchmail loaded as a daemon that will download mail at regular intervals:
o fetchmail -d 6000
The interval is specified in seconds. Fetchmail will poll all of the pop servers listed in /.fetchmailrc.
The problem comes from the fact that, as a user on a local network, I don't have my own domain name. I want return mail
to be routed to UQAM's mail server and I want the server to handle all my mail for me, even mail to other UQAM users. If
I send mail to UQAM users using their normalized usernames, the net does not know who or where they are. I have
managed to get a configuration that works by writing a [Link] file and processing it with the m4 macro interpreter,
following the Address-Rewriting mini-HOWTO. I now have something that works, but which mysteriously complains
about ``dangerous write permissions'' every time the system boots up.
Smail - seems to be a popular choice on smaller systems. It would appear that at one point in its history, Red Hat shipped
with smail, but this has been replaced with sendmail.
Zmailer - apparently designed for mail servers with a large number of users.
Acmemail - Web-based mail agent. Allows you to access your mail with any browser. Involves setting up a Perl CGI script
on the server side.
Archimedes - A successor program to XFmail (see below)
Arrow -
Balsa - the default Gnome mail program
Blitzmail -
Elm -
Emumail - Web-based mail agent. Allows you to use any browser to check your POP mail account. The Web site of the
company that makes this one can be used to check your mail on a Unix system without setting up any CGI script on the
server side.
Evolution - mail reader and contact manager/calendar designed for use under Gnome
Exmh - graphical front end for Mh
Kmail - mail reading program included with KDE
M - for ``Mahogany''. Seems similar to XFmail (see below). I haven't been able to figure out from the description whether
it runs independently of or in conjunction with sendmail and procmail.
Mh -
Mumail -
Mutt - text based mail program, which is highly configurable.
Nmh - mail handling system. This system includes a large number of binary commands that are kept in /usr/bin. See the
man page for nmh for details. Red Hat 5.1 and 5.2 come with exmh and xmh, which are graphical front ends for nmh. The
exmh front end is a separate package, while xmh is owned by XFree86.
Pine - text based mail and news utility. Features now include:
o MIME support
o ability to read and post network news
o maintenance of an address book of mail recipients
o spell checking during message composition
o mouse support when using xterm on an X Window system
o a highly configurable environment
Pine can be used to download mail from one or more POP3 mail servers. See Tip of the Week
([Link] for the fourth week of February 1999. First, set up multiple configuration
files (pine -p localmail, pine -p popserver 1, pine -p popserver 2, etc.). Then, to configure Pine to use a POP3 server, use
the Setup Config command. Set something like this in the inbox-path:
o {[Link]/pop3/user=myid}INBOX
When Pine is restarted, it should ask for your password, connect to the remote server, and use it is if it were accessing local
mail. The article is unclear on whether there is the option of leaving copies of the downloaded mail on the server.
Sylpheed -
XCmail -
XFmail - This one seems very promising. It's a GUI-based mail tool that seems to offer most of the features of Netscape's
mail module. It runs without using sendmail and procmail, which is a major advantage.
10.3 Editors
10.4 Other
dfm - Desktop File Manager. Allows the user to place program icons on the desktop.
gmc - Gnome Midnight Commander. Gnome version of Midnight Commander. Includes a graphical interface and allows
the user to place icons on the desktop.
mc - Midnight Commander file manager. Runs in console mode and in an xterm.
scilab - a free matrix programming language. May be a good substitute for GAUSS and/or MATLAB.
Windows: where do you want to go today? Linux: where do you want to go tomorrow?
This program has performed an illegal operation and will be shut down: please reboot using Linux.
``When you say `I wrote a program that crashed Windows', people just stare at you blankly and say `Hey, I got those with the system,
for free'.'' - Linus Torvalds
Your mouse has moved. Windows NT must be restarted for the change to take effect. Reboot now [OK]?
Linux: transforms your microcomputer into a workstation. Windows NT: transforms your workstation into a microcomputer.