Made Easy Unix For Beginners
Made Easy Unix For Beginners
ls (list)
When you first login, your current working directory is your home directory. Your
home directory has the same name as your user-name, for example, ee91ab, and
it is where your personal files and subdirectories are saved.
% ls
There may be no files visible in your home directory, in which case, the UNIX
prompt will be returned. Alternatively, there may already be some files inserted by
the System Administrator when your account was created.
ls does not, in fact, cause all the files in your home directory to be listed, but only
those ones whose name does not begin with a dot (.) Files beginning with a dot (.)
are known as hidden files and usually contain important program configuration
information. They are hidden because you should not change them unless you are
very familiar with UNIX!!!
To list all files in your home directory including those whose names begin with a
dot, type
% ls -a
We will now make a subdirectory in your home directory to hold the files you will be
creating and using in the course of this tutorial. To make a subdirectory called
unixstuff in your current working directory type
% mkdir unixstuff
% ls
1.3 Changing to a different directory
cd (change directory)
% cd unixstuff
Exercise 1a
% ls -a
As you can see, in the unixstuff directory (and in all other directories), there are
two special directories called (.) and (..)
% cd .
This may not seem very useful at first, but using (.) as the name of the current
directory will save a lot of typing, as we shall see later in the tutorial.
The parent directory (..)
% cd ..
will take you one directory up the hierarchy (back to your home directory). Try it
now.
Note: typing cd with no argument always returns you to your home directory. This
is very useful if you are lost in the file system.
1.5 Pathnames
Pathnames enable you to work out where you are in relation to the whole file-
system. For example, to find out the absolute pathname of your home-directory,
type cd to get back to your home-directory and then type
% pwd
/home/its/ug1/ee51vn
which means that ee51vn (your home directory) is in the sub-directory ug1 (the
group directory),which in turn is located in the its sub-directory, which is in the
home sub-directory, which is in the top-level root directory called " / " .
Exercise 1b
Use the commands cd, ls and pwd to explore the file system.
Understanding pathnames
% ls unixstuff
Now type
% ls backups
% ls unixstuff/backups
Home directories can also be referred to by the tilde ~ character. It can be used to
specify paths starting at your home directory. So typing
% ls ~/unixstuff
will list the contents of your unixstuff directory, no matter where you currently are
in the file system.
% ls ~
would list?
% ls ~/..
would list?
Summary
Command Meaning
cd change to home-directory
cd ~ change to home-directory
cp (copy)
cp file1 file2 is the command which makes a copy of file1 in the current
working directory and calls it file2
What we are going to do now, is to take a file stored in an open access area of the
file system, and use the cp command to copy it to your unixstuff directory.
% cd ~/unixstuff
% cp /vol/examples/tutorial/science.txt .
Note: Don't forget the dot . at the end. Remember, in UNIX, the dot means the
current directory.
The above command means copy the file science.txt to the current directory,
keeping the name the same.
Exercise 2a
mv (move)
To move a file from one place to another, use the mv command. This has the effect
of moving rather than copying the file, so you end up with only one file rather than
two.
It can also be used to rename a file, by moving the file to the same directory, but
giving it a different name.
We are now going to move the file science.bak to your backup directory.
First, change directories to your unixstuff directory (can you remember how?).
Then, inside the unixstuff directory, type
% mv science.bak backups/.
% cp science.txt tempfile.txt
% ls
% rm tempfile.txt
% ls
You can use the rmdir command to remove a directory (make sure it is empty
first). Try to remove the backups directory. You will not be able to since UNIX will
not let you remove a non-empty directory.
Exercise 2b
Create a directory called tempstuff using mkdir , then remove it using the rmdir
command.
Before you start the next section, you may like to clear the terminal window of the
previous commands so the output of the following commands can be clearly
understood.
% clear
This will clear all text and leave you with the % prompt at the top of the window.
cat (concatenate)
The command cat can be used to display the contents of a file on the screen. Type:
% cat science.txt
As you can see, the file is longer than than the size of the window, so it scrolls past
making it unreadable.
less
The command less writes the contents of a file onto the screen a page at a time.
Type
% less science.txt
Press the [space-bar] if you want to see another page, and type [q] if you want to
quit reading. As you can see, less is used in preference to cat for long files.
head
The head command writes the first ten lines of a file to the screen.
% head science.txt
Then type
% head -5 science.txt
tail
The tail command writes the last ten lines of a file to the screen.
% tail science.txt
Using less, you can search though a text file for a keyword (pattern). For example,
to search through science.txt for the word 'science', type
% less science.txt
then, still in less, type a forward slash [/] followed by the word to search
/science
As you can see, less finds and highlights the keyword. Type [n] to search for the
next occurrence of the word.
grep is one of many standard UNIX utilities. It searches files for specified words or
patterns. First clear the screen, then type
As you can see, grep has printed out each line containg the word science.
Or has it ????
Try typing
The grep command is case sensitive; it distinguishes between Science and science.
To search for a phrase or pattern, you must enclose it in single quotes (the
apostrophe symbol). For example to search for spinning top, type
Try some of them and see the different results. Don't forget, you can use more
than one option at a time. For example, the number of lines without the words
science or Science is
wc (word count)
A handy little utility is the wc command, short for word count. To do a word count
on science.txt, type
% wc -w science.txt
% wc -l science.txt
Summary
Command Meaning
Most processes initiated by UNIX commands write to the standard output (that is,
they write to the terminal screen), and many take their input from the standard
input (that is, they read it from the keyboard). There is also the standard error,
where processes write their error messages, by default, to the terminal screen.
We have already seen one use of the cat command to write the contents of a file to
the screen.
% cat
Then type a few words on the keyboard and press the [Return] key.
Finally hold the [Ctrl] key down and press [d] (written as ^D for short) to end the
input.
If you run the cat command without specifing a file to read, it reads the standard
input (the keyboard), and on receiving the 'end of file' (^D), copies it to the
standard output (the screen).
In UNIX, we can redirect both the input and the output of commands.
3.2 Redirecting the Output
We use the > symbol to redirect the output of a command. For example, to create
a file called list1 containing a list of fruit, type
Then type in the names of some fruit. Press [Return] after each one.
pear
banana
apple
^D {this means press [Ctrl] and [d] to stop}
What happens is the cat command reads the standard input (the keyboard) and the
> redirects the output, which normally goes to the screen, into a file called list1
% cat list1
Exercise 3a
Using the above method, create another file called list2 containing the following
fruit: orange, plum, mango, grapefruit. Read the contents of list2
The form >> appends standard output to a file. So to add more items to the file
list1, type
peach
grape
orange
^D (Control D to stop)
% cat list1
You should now have two files. One contains six fruit, the other contains four fruit.
We will now use the cat command to join (concatenate) list1 and list2 into a new
file called biglist. Type
What this is doing is reading the contents of list1 and list2 in turn, then outputing
the text to the file biglist
% cat biglist
% sort
Then type in the names of some animals. Press [Return] after each one.
dog
cat
bird
ape
^D (control d to stop)
Using < you can redirect the input to come from a file rather than the keyboard.
For example, to sort the list of fruit, type
3.4 Pipes
% who
This is a bit slow and you have to remember to remove the temporary file called
names when you have finished. What you really want to do is connect the output of
the who command directly to the input of the sort command. This is exactly what
pipes do. The symbol for a pipe is the vertical bar |
% who | sort
will give the same result as above, but quicker and cleaner.
To find out how many users are logged on, type
% who | wc -l
Exercise 3b
Using pipes, display all lines of list1 and list2 containing the letter 'p', and sort the
result.
Summary
Command Meaning
cat file1 file2 > file0 concatenate file1 and file2 to file0
The * wildcard
The character * is called a wildcard, and will match against none or more
character(s) in a file (or directory) name. For example, in your unixstuff directory,
type
% ls list*
This will list all files in the current directory starting with list....
Try typing
% ls *list
This will list all files in the current directory ending with ....list
The ? wildcard
% ls ?list
project.txt project
File names conventionally start with a lower-case letter, and may end with a dot
followed by a group of letters indicating the contents of the file. For example, all
files consisting of C code may be named with the ending .c, for example, prog1.c .
Then in order to list all files containing C code in your home directory, you need
only type ls *.c in that directory.
On-line Manuals
There are on-line manuals which gives information about most commands. The
manual pages tell you which options a particular command can take, and how each
option modifies the behaviour of the command. Type man command to read the
manual page for a particular command.
For example, to find out more about the wc (word count) command, type
% man wc
Alternatively
% whatis wc
gives a one-line description of the command, but omits any information about
options etc.
Apropos
% apropos keyword
will give you the commands with keyword in their manual page header. For
example, try typing
% apropos copy
Summary
Command Meaning
You will see that you now get lots of details about the contents of your directory,
similar to the example below.
Each file (and directory) has associated access rights, which may be found by
typing ls -l. Also, ls -lg gives additional information as to which group owns the
file (beng95 in the following example):
• The left group of 3 gives the file permissions for the user that owns the file (or
directory) (ee51ab in the above example);
• the middle group gives the permissions for the group of people to whom the file (or
directory) belongs (eebeng95 in the above example);
• the rightmost group gives the permissions for all others.
The symbols r, w, etc., have slightly different meanings depending on whether they
refer to a simple file or to a directory.
• r (or -), indicates read permission (or otherwise), that is, the presence or absence of
permission to read and copy the file
• w (or -), indicates write permission (or otherwise), that is, the permission (or
otherwise) to change a file
• x (or -), indicates execution permission (or otherwise), that is, the permission to
execute a file, where appropriate
So, in order to read a file, you must have execute permission on the directory
containing that file, and hence on any directory containing that directory as a
subdirectory, and so on, up the tree.
Some examples
-rwxrwxrwx a file that everyone can read, write and execute (and delete).
a file that only the owner can read and write - no-one else
-rw------- can read or write and no-one has execution rights (e.g. your
mailbox file).
5.2 Changing access rights
Only the owner of a file can use chmod to change the permissions of a file. The
options of chmod are as follows
Symbol Meaning
u User
g Group
o Other
a All
r Read
+ add permission
For example, to remove read write and execute permissions on the file biglist for
the group and others, type
Exercise 5a
Try changing access permissions on the file science.txt and on the directory
backups
Use ls -l to check that the permissions have changed.
% ps
Some processes take a long time to run and hold up the terminal. Backgrounding a
long process has the effect that the UNIX prompt is returned immediately, and
other tasks can be carried out while the original process continues executing.
To background a process, type an & at the end of the command line. For example,
the command sleep waits a given number of seconds before continuing. Type
% sleep 10
This will wait 10 seconds before returning the command prompt %. Until the
command prompt is returned, you can do nothing except wait.
% sleep 10 &
[1] 6259
The & runs the job in the background and returns the prompt straight away,
allowing you do run other programs while waiting for that one to finish.
The first line in the above example is typed in by the user; the next line, indicating
job number and PID, is returned by the machine. The user is be notified of a job
number (numbered from 1) enclosed in square brackets, together with a PID and is
notified when a background process is finished. Backgrounding is useful for jobs
which will take a long time to complete.
% sleep 1000
You can suspend the process running in the foreground by typing ^Z, i.e.hold down
the [Ctrl] key and type [z]. Then to put it in the background, type
% bg
% jobs
% fg %jobnumber
% fg %1
To kill a job running in the foreground, type ^C (control c). For example, run
% sleep 100
^C
% kill %jobnumber
% kill %4
To check whether this has worked, examine the job list again to see if the process
has been removed.
ps (process status)
Alternatively, processes can be killed by finding their process numbers (PIDs) and
using kill PID_number
% kill 20077
and then type ps again to see if it has been removed from the list.
% kill -9 20077
Summary
Command Meaning
quota
All students are allocated a certain amount of disk space on the file system for their
personal files, usually about 100Mb. If you go over your quota, you are given 7
days to remove excess files.
To check your current quota and how much of it you have used, type
% quota -v
df
The df command reports on the space left on the file system. For example, to find
out how much space is left on the fileserver, type
% df .
du
The du command outputs the number of kilobyes used by each subdirectory. Useful
if you have gone over quota and you want to find out which directory has the most
files. In your home-directory, type
% du -s *
The -s flag will display only a summary (total size) and the * means all files and
directories.
gzip
This reduces the size of a file, thus freeing valuable disk space. For example, type
% ls -l science.txt
and note the size of the file using ls -l . Then to compress science.txt, type
% gzip science.txt
This will compress the file and place it in a file called science.txt.gz
% gunzip science.txt.gz
zcat
zcat will read gzipped files without needing to uncompress them first.
% zcat science.txt.gz
If the text scrolls too fast for you, pipe the output though less .
file
file classifies the named files according to the type of data they contain, for
example ascii (text), pictures, compressed data, etc.. To report on all files in your
home directory, type
% file *
diff
This command compares the contents of two files and displays the differences.
Suppose you have a file called file1 and you edit some part of it and save it as
file2. To see the differences type
Lines beginning with a < denotes file1, while lines beginning with a > denotes file2.
find
This searches through the directories for files and directories with a given name,
date, size, or any other attribute you care to specify. It is a simple command but
with many options - you can read the manual by typing man find.
To search for all fies with the extention .txt, starting at the current directory (.)
and working through all sub-directories, then printing the name of the file to the
screen, type
To find files over 1Mb in size, and display the result as a long listing, type
history
The C shell keeps an ordered list of all the commands that you have entered. Each
command is given a number according to the order it was entered.
If you are using the C shell, you can use the exclamation character (!) to recall
commands easily.
% set history=100
We have many public domain and commercial software packages installed on our
systems, which are available to all users. However, students are allowed to
download and install small software packages in their own home directory, software
usually only useful to them personally.
Of the above steps, probably the most difficult is the compilation stage.
All high-level language code must be converted into a form the computer
understands. For example, C language source code is converted into a lower-level
language called assembly language. The assembly language code made by the
previous stage is then converted into object code which are fragments of code
which the computer understands directly. The final stage in compiling a program
involves linking the object code to code libraries which contain certain built-in
functions. This final stage produces an executable program.
To do all these steps by hand is complicated and beyond the capability of the
ordinary user. A number of utilities and tools have been developed for programmers
and end-users to simplify these steps.
The make program gets its set of compile rules from a text file called Makefile
which resides in the same directory as the source files. It contains information on
how to compile the software, e.g. the optimisation level, whether to include
debugging info in the executable. It also contains information on where to install
the finished compiled binaries (executables), manual pages, data files, dependent
library files, configuration files, etc.
Some packages require you to edit the Makefile by hand to set the final installation
directory and any other parameters. However, many packages are now being
distributed with the GNU configure utility.
configure
The configure shell script attempts to guess correct values for various system-
dependent variables used during compilation. It uses those values to create a
Makefile in each directory of the package.
The configure utility supports a wide variety of options. You can usually use the --
help option to get a list of interesting options for a particular configure script.
The only generic options you are likely to use are the --prefix and --exec-prefix
options. These options are used to specify the installation directories.
The directory named by the --prefix option will hold machine independent files
such as documentation, data and configuration files.
For this example, we will download a piece of free software that converts between
different units of measurements.
% mkdir download
Download the software here and save it to your new download directory.
% cd download
% ls -l
As you can see, the filename ends in tar.gz. The tar command turns several files
and directories into one single tar file. This is then compressed using the gzip
command (to create a tar.gz file).
First unzip the file using the gunzip command. This will create a .tar file.
% gunzip units-1.74.tar.gz
Again, list the contents of the download directory, then go to the units-1.74 sub-
directory.
% cd units-1.74
The first thing to do is carefully read the README and INSTALL text files (use the
less command). These contain important information on how to compile and run
the software.
The units package uses the GNU configure system to compile the source code. We
will need to specify the installation directory, since the default will be the main
system area which you will not have write permissions for. We need to create an
install directory in your home directory.
% mkdir ~/units174
Then run the configure utility setting the installation path to this.
% ./configure --prefix=$HOME/units174
% echo $HOME
to show the contents of this variable. We will learn more about environment
variables in a later chapter.
If configure has run correctly, it will have created a Makefile with all necessary
options. You can view the Makefile if you wish (use the less command), but do not
edit the contents of this.
Now you can go ahead and build the package by running the make command.
% make
After a minute or two (depending on the speed of the computer), the executables
will be created. You can check to see everything compiled successfully by typing
% make check
% make install
This will install the files into the ~/units174 directory you created earlier.
You are now ready to run the software (assuming everything worked).
% cd ~/units174
If you list the contents of the units directory, you will see a number of
subdirectories.
% ./units
* 1.8288
To view what units it can convert between, view the data file in the share directory
(the list is quite comprehensive).
To read the full documentation, change into the info directory and type
% info --file=units.info
This is useful for the programmer, but unnecessary for the user. We can assume
that the package, once finished and available for download has already been tested
and debugged. However, when we compiled the software above, debugging
information was still compiled into the final executable. Since it is unlikey that we
are going to need this debugging information, we can strip it out of the final
executable. One of the advantages of this is a much smaller executable, which
should run slightly faster.
What we are going to do is look at the before and after size of the binary file. First
change into the bin directory of the units installation directory.
% cd ~/units174/bin
% ls -l
As you can see, the file is over 100 kbytes in size. You can get more information on
the type of file by using the file command.
% file units
To strip all the debug and line numbering information out of the binary file, use the
strip command
% strip units
% ls -l
As you can see, the file is now 36 kbytes - a third of its original size. Two thirds of
the binary file was debug code!!!
% file units
Sometimes you can use the make command to install pre-stripped copies of all the
binary files when you install the package. Instead of typing make install, simply
type make install-strip
UNIX Tutorial Eight
8.1 UNIX Variables
Variables are a way of passing information from the shell to programs when you
run them. Programs look "in the environment" for particular variables and if they
are found will use the values stored. Some are set by the system, others by you,
yet others by the shell, or any program that loads another program.
Standard UNIX variables are split into two categories, environment variables and
shell variables. In broad terms, shell variables apply only to the current instance of
the shell and are used to set short-term working conditions; environment variables
have a farther reaching significance, and those set at login are valid for the
duration of the session. By convention, environment variables have UPPER CASE
and shell variables have lower case names.
% echo $OSTYPE
ENVIRONMENT variables are set using the setenv command, displayed using the
printenv or env commands, and unset using the unsetenv command.
% printenv | less
An example of a shell variable is the history variable. The value of this is how many
shell commands to save, allow the user to scroll back through all the commands
they have previously entered. Type
% echo $history
SHELL variables are both set and displayed using the set command. They can be
unset by using the unset command.
% set | less
Each time the shell variables home, user and term are changed, the corresponding
environment variables HOME, USER and TERM receive the same values. However,
altering the environment variables has no effect on the corresponding shell
variables.
PATH and path specify directories to search for commands and programs. Both
variables always represent the same directory list, and altering either automatically
causes the other to be changed.
Each time you login to a UNIX host, the system looks in your home directory for
initialisation files. Information in these files is used to set up your working
environment. The C and TC shells uses two files called .login and .cshrc (note that
both file names begin with a dot).
.login is to set conditions which will apply to the whole session and to perform
actions that are relevant only at login.
.cshrc is used to set conditions and perform actions specific to the shell and to
each invocation of it.
The guidelines are to set ENVIRONMENT variables in the .login file and SHELL
variables in the .cshrc file.
WARNING: NEVER put commands that run graphical displays (e.g. a web
browser) in your .cshrc or .login file.
% echo $history
However, this has only set the variable for the lifetime of the current shell. If you
open a new xterm window, it will only have the default history value set. To
PERMANENTLY set the value of history, you will need to add the set command to
the .cshrc file.
First open the .cshrc file in a text editor. An easy, user-friendly editor to use is
nedit.
% nedit ~/.cshrc
Save the file and force the shell to reread its .cshrc file buy using the shell source
command.
% source .cshrc
% echo $history
When you type a command, your path (or PATH) variable defines in which
directories the shell will look to find the command you typed. If the system returns
a message saying "command: Command not found", this indicates that either the
command doesn't exist at all on the system or it is simply not in your path.
For example, to run units, you either need to directly specify the units path
(~/units174/bin/units), or you need to have the directory ~/units174/bin in
your path.
You can add it to the end of your existing path (the $path represents this) by
issuing the command:
Test that this worked by trying to run units in any directory other that where units
is actually located.
% cd
% units
To add this path PERMANENTLY, add the following line to your .cshrc AFTER the list
of other commands.