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Lista de Comandos Uteis Linux (Linux Usefull Commands)

This document provides a list of Linux commands organized into categories such as system commands, hardware related commands, statistics and analyze commands, users commands, file commands, process related commands, file permission related commands, network commands, compression/archives commands, install package commands, search commands, login commands, file transfer commands, disk usage commands, directory commands, and keyboard shortcuts. It describes over 50 common Linux commands and their usage.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
25 views5 pages

Lista de Comandos Uteis Linux (Linux Usefull Commands)

This document provides a list of Linux commands organized into categories such as system commands, hardware related commands, statistics and analyze commands, users commands, file commands, process related commands, file permission related commands, network commands, compression/archives commands, install package commands, search commands, login commands, file transfer commands, disk usage commands, directory commands, and keyboard shortcuts. It describes over 50 common Linux commands and their usage.

Uploaded by

umtuga
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 5

Linux-Commands

System Commands ........................................................................................... 2


Hardware related.............................................................................................. 2
Statistics and Analyze ....................................................................................... 2
Users ................................................................................................................. 2
File Commands ................................................................................................. 3
Process Related ................................................................................................ 3
File Permission Related ..................................................................................... 3
Network ............................................................................................................ 3
Compression / Archives .................................................................................... 4
Install Package .................................................................................................. 4
Search ............................................................................................................... 4
Login (ssh and telnet) ....................................................................................... 5
File transfer....................................................................................................... 5
Disk Usage ........................................................................................................ 5
Directory ........................................................................................................... 5
Keyboard shortcuts ........................................................................................... 5

1
System Commands
$ uname –a - display linux system information
$ uname –r - display kernel release information
$ uptime - show how long system running + load
$ hostname - show system host name
$ hostname -i - display the IP address of the host
$ last reboot - show system reboot history
$ date - show the current date and time
$ cal - show this month calendar
$ w - display who is online
$ whoami - who you are logged in as
$ finger user - display information about user

Hardware related
$ dmesg - detected hardware and boot messages
$ cat /proc/cpuinfo - CPU model
$ cat /proc/meminfo - hardware memory
$ cat /proc/interrupts - lists the number of interrupts per CPU per I/O device
$ lshw - displays information on hardware configuration of the system
$ lsblk - displays block device related information in Linux
$ free -m - used and free memory (-m for MB)
$ lspci -tv - show PCI devices
$ lsusb -tv - show USB devices
$ lshal - show a list of all devices with their properties
$ dmidecode - show hardware info from the BIOS
$ hdparm -i /dev/sda -show info about disk sda
$ hdparm -tT /dev/sda - do a read speed test on disk sda
$ badblocks -s /dev/sda - test for unreadable blocks on disk sda

Statistics and Analyze


$ top - display and update the top cpu processes
$ mpstat 1 - display processors related statistics
$ vmstat 2 - display virtual memory statistics
$ iostat 2 - display I/O statistics (2sec Intervals)
$ tail -n 500 /var/log/syslog - last 10 kernel/syslog messages
$ tcpdump -i eth1 - capture all packets flows on interface eth1
$ tcpdump -i eth0 'port 80' - monitor all traffic on port 80 ( HTTP )
$ lsof - list all open files belonging to all active processes
$ lsof -u testuser - list files opened by specific user
$ free –m - show amount of RAM
$ watch df –h - watch changeable data continuously

Users
$ id - show the active user id with login and group
$ last - show last logins on the system
$ who - show who is logged on the system
$ groupadd admin - add group "admin" (force add existing group)
$ useradd -c "Joe Smith" -g admin -m joe
- Create user "joe" and add to group "admin"
$ userdel joe - delete user joe (force,file removal)
$ adduser joe - add user "joe"
$ usermod - modify user information

2
File Commands
$ ls –al - display all information about files / directories
$ ls -alR - display all information about files / directories recursively
$ pwd - show current directory path
$ mkdir directory-name - create a directory
$ rm file-name - delete file
$ rm -r directory-name - delete directory recursively
$ rm -f file-name - forcefully remove file
$ rm -rf directory-name - forcefully remove directory recursively
$ cp file1 file2 - copy file1 to file2
$ cp -r dir1 dir2 - copy dir1 to dir2, create dir2 if it doesn’t exist
$ mv file1 file2 - move files from one place to another
$ ln –s /path/to/file-name link-name - create symbolic link to file-name
$ touch file - create or update file
$ cat > file - place standard input into file
$ more file - output the contents of file
$ head file - output the first 10 lines of file
$ tail file - output the last 10 lines of file
$ tail -f file - output the contents of file as it grows, starts w/ last 10 lines
$ gpg -c file - encrypt file
$ gpg file.gpg - decrypt file

Process Related
$ ps - display your currently active processes
$ ps aux | grep 'telnet' - find all process id related to telnet process
$ pmap - memory map of process
$ top - display all running processes
$ kill pid - kill process with mentioned pid id
$ killall proc - kill all processes named proc
$ pkill processname - send signal to a process with its name
$ bg - resumes suspended jobs without bringing them to foreground
$ fg - brings the most recent job to foreground
$ fg n - brings job n to the foreground

File Permission Related


$ chmod octal file-name - change the permissions of file to octal , which can be
found separately for user, group and world;
octal value 4 -read 2 –write 1 –execute
$ chown owner-user file - change owner of the file
$ chown owner-user:owner-group file-name - change owner and group owner of the
file
$ chown owner-user:owner-group directory - change owner and group owner of the
directory

Network
$ ifconfig –a - display all network ports and ip address
$ ifconfig eth1 mtu 9000 up - set mtu to 9000
$ ifconfig eth0 - display specific ethernet port ip address and details
$ ifconfig -a | grep HWaddr - display MAC address

change MAC address:


# ifconfig eth0 down
# ifconfig eth0 hw ether 00:80:48:BA:d1:30
# ifconfig eth0 up
$ ip addr show - display all network interfaces and ip address (available in
iproute2 package,powerful than ifconfig)
$ ip address add 192.168.0.1 dev eth0 - set ip address
$ ethtool eth0 - linux tool to show ethernet status (set full duplex , pause
parameter)
$ mii-tool eth0 - linux tool to show ethernet status (more or like ethtool)
3
$ ping host - send echo request to test connection (learn sing enhanced ping tool)
$ whois domain - get who is information for domain
$ dig domain - get DNS information for domain (screenshots with other available
parameters)
$ dig -x host - reverse lookup host
$ host google.com - lookup DNS ip address for the name
$ hostname –i - lookup local ip address (set hostname too)
$ wget file - download file (very useful other option)
$ netstat -tupl - listing all active listening ports(tcp,udp,pid)

WiFi related:
$ iwconfig wlan0 essid "mynetworkESSID" - specify ESSID for the WLAN
$ dhclient wlan0 - to receive an IP address, netmask, DNS server and default
gateway from the Access Point
$ iwconfig wlan0 mode managed key [WEP key] - 128 bit WEP use 26 hex characters,
64 bit WEP uses 10
$ iwconfig wlan0 mode master - set the card to act as an access point mode
$ iwconfig wlan0 mode managed - set card to client mode on a network with an
access point
$ iwconfig wlan0 mode ad-hoc - set card to peer to peer networking or no access
point mode
$ iwconfig wlan0 mode monitor - set card to RFMON mode
$ iwconfig wlan0 essid any - with some cards you may disable the ESSID checking
$ iwconfig wlan0 key 1111-1111-1111-1111 - set 128 bit WEP key
$ iwconfig wlan0 key off - disable WEP key
$ iwconfig wlan0 key open - sets open mode, no authentication is used and card may
accept non-encrypted sessions
$ iwlist wlan0 scan - give the list of Access Points and Ad-Hoc cells in range
(ESSID, Quality, Frequency, Mode etc.)
$ iwlist wlan0 power - list the various Power Management attributes and modes of
the device
$ iwlist wlan0 txpower - list the various Transmit Power available on the device
$ iwlist wlan0 retry - list the transmit retry limits and retry lifetime on the
device

Compression / Archives
$ tar cf test.tar test - create tar named test.tar containing test/
$ tar xf test.tar - extract the files from test.tar
$ tar czf test.tar.gz test - create a tar with gzip compression
$ gzip test - compress file and renames it to test.gz

Install Package
$ rpm -i pkgname.rpm - install rpm based package
$ rpm -e pkgname - remove package
Install from source
$ ./configure
$ make
$ make install
$ apt-get update - re-synchronize the package index files from their sources
$ apt-get upgrade - install the newest versions of all packages currently
installed on the system from the sources
$ apt-get install package - install package
$ apt-get remove package - remove package
$ apt-cache search package - search for package

Search
$ grep pattern files - search for pattern in files
$ grep -r pattern dir - search recursively for pattern in dir
$ locate file - find all instances of file
$ find /home/tom -name 'index*' - find files names that start with "index"
$ find /home -size +10000k - find files larger than 10000k in /home

4
Login (ssh and telnet)
$ ssh user@host - connect to host as user
$ ssh -p port user@host - connect to host using specific port
$ telnet host - connect to the system using telnet port

File transfer
scp
$ scp file.txt server2:/tmp - secure copy file.txt to remote host /tmp folder
$ scp gordon@server2:/www/*.html /www/tmp - copy *.html files from remote host to
current system /www/tmp folder
$ scp -r gordon@server2:/www /www/tmp - copy all files and folders recursively
from remote server to the current system /www/tmp folder

rsync
$ rsync -a /home/apps /backup/ - synchronize source to destination
$ rsync -avz /home/apps [email protected]:/backup - synchronize
files/directories between the local and remote system with compression enabled

Disk Usage
$ df –h - show free space on mounted filesystems
$ df -i - show free inodes on mounted filesystems
$ fdisk -l - show disks partitions sizes and types
$ du -ah - display disk usage in human readable form
$ findmnt - displays target mount point for all filesystem
$ mount device-path mount-point - mount a device

Directory
$ cd .. - go up one level of the directory tree
$ cd - go to $HOME directory
$ cd /test - change to /test directory

Keyboard shortcuts
Alt+Ctrl+T - open Terminal Window
Alt+Ctrl+L - lock the screen
Alt+Ctrl+Del - logoff
Alt+F4 - close current window
Alt+F2 - pop up command window (for quickly running commands)
Super-W - show all windows in the current workspace
Ctrl+Super+D - show desktop
Ctrl+A - select all items on list or text
Ctrl+C - copy all selected items to clipboard
Ctrl+X - cut all selected items to clipboard
Ctrl+V or Mouse middle button click - paste all selected items to clipboard
PrintScr - takes screenshot
Alt+PrintScr - takes screenshot of windows
Shift+PrintScr - takes screenshot of selected window area

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