Linux Commands: Difference between revisions
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</source> |
</source> |
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This copy recursively and preserve attributes <code>-a</code>, and copy the '''content''' with special syntax <code>source/.</code> with trailing dot. |
This copy recursively and preserve attributes <code>-a</code>, and copy the '''content''' with special syntax <code>source/.</code> with trailing dot. |
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To copy a directory recursively, create hard links instead of new copies (but creates new directories, not links): |
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<source lang="bash"> |
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cp -lr <src> <target> |
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</source> |
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See [[#cpg]] for a patch that adds a progress bar. |
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=== cpg === |
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<code>cpg</code> is a patched version of [[cp]] that adds a progress bar, [https://github.com/jarun/advcpmv advcpmv(github)]. |
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<source lang="python"> |
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cpg -ag src1 dst2 # Copy recursively with progress |
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</source> |
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Alternatives are to use <code>rsync --progress</code> (or <code>rsync -P</code>), or [[#gcp]]. |
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=== dd === |
=== dd === |
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mkdir myloop |
mkdir myloop |
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mount $loop myloop |
mount $loop myloop |
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</source> |
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* [https://www.vidarholen.net/contents/blog/?p=479 Useless Use Of dd] |
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<source lang="bash"> |
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# Write myfile.iso to a USB drive |
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# !!! with -a, cp may try to create a new block device! |
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cp myfile.iso /dev/sdb |
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# Rip a cdrom to a .iso file |
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cat /dev/cdrom > myfile.iso |
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# Create a gzipped image |
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# !!! w/o redirection, gzip may skip non-regular file /dev/sdb |
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gzip -9 < /dev/sdb > /tmp/myimage.gz |
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</source> |
</source> |
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</source> |
</source> |
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=== |
=== fd === |
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'''[https://github.com/sharkdp/fd fd]''' is a simple, fast and user-friendly alternative to 'find'. |
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<source lang="bash"> |
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fd |
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fd app |
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fd sh |
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fd sh --type f |
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fd -e md |
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fd -e md --exec wc -l |
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fd --hidden sample |
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</source> |
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=== find === |
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'''Tip:''' Consider using <code>fd</code> as simpler and faster alternative. |
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See [http://www.kalamazoolinux.org/tech/find.html here] for further examples on how to combine '''find''' and '''xargs'''. |
See [http://www.kalamazoolinux.org/tech/find.html here] for further examples on how to combine '''find''' and '''xargs'''. |
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find . -exec echo '{}' \; # semi-colon must be escaped! |
find . -exec echo '{}' \; # semi-colon must be escaped! |
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find . -exec echo one '{}' \; -exec echo two '{}' \; # to execute several commands on one match |
find . -exec echo one '{}' \; -exec echo two '{}' \; # to execute several commands on one match |
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find . -name 'dirname' -prune -o -iname '*.txt' -print |
find . -name 'dirname' -prune -o -iname '*.txt' -print |
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# Find all text files, but exclude any directory named dirname |
# Find all text files, but exclude any directory named dirname |
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find . -name 'dirname' -prune -false -o -iname '*.txt' # ... idem (using -false, but no longer -print) |
find . -name 'dirname' -prune -false -o -iname '*.txt' # ... idem (using -false, but no longer -print) |
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=== [http://www.pixelbeat.org/fslint/ FSlint] === |
=== [http://www.pixelbeat.org/fslint/ FSlint] === |
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'''FSlint''' is a utility to find and clean various forms of lint on a filesystem. I.E. unwanted or problematic cruft in your files or file names. For example, one form of lint it finds is '''duplicate files'''. |
'''FSlint''' is a utility to find and clean various forms of lint on a filesystem. I.E. unwanted or problematic cruft in your files or file names. For example, one form of lint it finds is '''duplicate files'''. |
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=== gcp === |
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A variant of [[cp]], but with progress bar: |
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<source lang="bash"> |
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gcp -pR dir1 . |
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</source> |
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If complains about missing dbus: |
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<source lang="bash"> |
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dbus-launch gcp -pR dir1 . |
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</source> |
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An alternative is to use a patched version of [[cp]]. |
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=== getfattr / setfattr === |
=== getfattr / setfattr === |
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See [http://linuxpoison.blogspot.be/2010/10/recover-deleted-files-from-ntfs.html], [http://www.howtogeek.com/howto/13706/recover-deleted-files-on-an-ntfs-hard-drive-from-a-ubuntu-live-cd/]. |
See [http://linuxpoison.blogspot.be/2010/10/recover-deleted-files-from-ntfs.html], [http://www.howtogeek.com/howto/13706/recover-deleted-files-on-an-ntfs-hard-drive-from-a-ubuntu-live-cd/]. |
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=== par2 === |
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{{deb|par2}} is a very useful program for creating and using PAR2 files to detect damage in data files and repair them if necessary. |
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From the manpage, using an example 800MB {{file|test.mpg}}: |
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<source lang=bash> |
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par2 create test.mpg # Will create *.par2 files, for a total of roughly 40MB (5% redundancy) |
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par2 verify test.mpg.par2 # to verify integrity |
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par2 repair test.mpg.par2 # to repair |
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</source> |
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{{file|*.par2}} files stores error correction informations, in a number of recovery blocks. Repair is possible as long as there are enough recovery blocks available (on Usenet era, it was useful to have {{file|*.par2}} files of increasing size such that to allow users to minimize bandwidth usage). |
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par2 is particularly useful to protect MP3 files on USB sticks (that have frequent FS failure over time): |
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<source lang=bash> |
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par2 create check.par2 *.mp3 # Generate recovery blocks (5% redundancy) |
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par2 verify check.par2 # Verify |
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par2 repair check.par2 # Repair |
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</source> |
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To increase redundancy: |
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<source lang=bash> |
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par2 create -r10 check.par2 *.mp3 # Generate recovery blocks (10% redundancy) |
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</source> |
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Note: to simulate file corruption, we can use: |
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<source lang=bash> |
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# Simulate 25kB corruption, from 10k-th byte. |
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dd if=/dev/zero of=output.mp3 bs=1024 count=25 seek=10 conv=notrunc |
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</source> |
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=== progress === |
=== progress === |
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# On Host B (sender): |
# On Host B (sender): |
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pv </dev/sda | nc hosta 2222 # 111MB avg throughput on direct link (cross-cable), SSD hard disks |
pv </dev/sda | nc hosta 2222 # 111MB avg throughput on direct link (cross-cable), SSD hard disks |
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</source> |
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=== rdfind === |
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'''rdfind''' finds duplicate files, very rapidly. |
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<source lang="bash"> |
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rdfind /foo/dir /bar/dir # Find duplicates in give dir and tell what could be gained |
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rdfind -makehardlinks true /foo/dir /bar/dir # Remove dups by creating hardlinks |
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</source> |
</source> |
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sudo rsync -aHAXS --delete --rsync-path "sudo rsync" --numeric-ids -h -v --exclude='lost+found' user@server:/remote/path /local/path |
sudo rsync -aHAXS --delete --rsync-path "sudo rsync" --numeric-ids -h -v --exclude='lost+found' user@server:/remote/path /local/path |
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</source> |
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More basic use of rsync: |
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<source lang="bash"> |
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sudo rsync -aP src1 dst2 # Copy with progress |
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</source> |
</source> |
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tar -xvzf archive.tgz -C targetdir # ... to specified directory |
tar -xvzf archive.tgz -C targetdir # ... to specified directory |
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tar -tvzf archive.tgz # List the content (equiv. of tar --list -vzf ...) |
tar -tvzf archive.tgz # List the content (equiv. of tar --list -vzf ...) |
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tar cf - --sort=name --owner=root:0 --group=root:0 \ |
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--mtime='UTC 2019-01-01' . | gzip -n > invariant.tgz # Create a stable archive w/o timestamps, etc |
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# https://stackoverflow.com/questions/32997526/how-to-create-a-tar-file-that-omits-timestamps-for-its-contents |
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</source> |
</source> |
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photorec /log /d output_dir /dev/sda1 |
photorec /log /d output_dir /dev/sda1 |
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</source> |
</source> |
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=== ug === |
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'''ug''' or '''ugrep''' is an extremelly fast alternative to ''grep'' (in fact even faster than ''ag'' the silver-searcher, and comparable speed with '''ripgrep''', but with some more powerful search capabilities). |
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See [https://github.com/Genivia/ugrep ugrep on GitHub] (also nice instructions for setup on Vim). |
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=== Miscellaneous === |
=== Miscellaneous === |
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=== autossh === |
=== autossh === |
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See [[SSH Tools#Autossh|Autossh]]. |
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[http://www.harding.motd.ca/autossh/ autossh] - Automatically restart SSH sessions and tunnels. |
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'''autossh''' by default monitors the ssh connection through a dedicated port to see whether the current ssh connection must be restarted. However the simpler is to use the ssh config option ''ServerAliveCountMax'' and ''ServerAliveInterval'' so that ssh exits automatically when the connection is down. In that case, '''autossh''' will then restart ssh automatically without need of additional monitoring. |
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Add to your <tt>~/.ssh/config</tt>: |
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<pre> |
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Host * |
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ServerAliveCountMax 3 # default value actually |
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ServerAliveInterval 15 # ssh will exit after 3 x 15s = 45s |
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</pre> |
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Example of uses: |
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<source lang="bash"> |
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$ autossh -M 0 -f -D 1080 noekeon # -M 0 tells autossh to only restart ssh upon ssh's exit |
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</source> |
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=== dhclient === |
=== dhclient === |
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=== ifconfig === |
=== ifconfig === |
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See [[Linux networking]]. |
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{{red|'''Note''': _ifconfig_ is the old network utility. Modern linux distributions uses '''ip''' nowadays.}} |
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'''ifconfig''' configure a network devices. |
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To view current configuration: |
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ifconfig -l |
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To temporarily setup a network device [https://help.ubuntu.com/lts/serverguide/network-configuration.html]: |
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sudo ifconfig eth0 10.0.0.100 netmask 255.255.255.0 |
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Note that <code>ifconfig</code> is obsolete. Use <code>ip</code> instead [http://blog.bofh.it/debian/id_379], [http://lartc.org/howto/lartc.iproute2.html#LARTC.IPROUTE2.WHY], [http://www.austintek.com/LVS/LVS-HOWTO/HOWTO/LVS-HOWTO.policy_routing.html]. |
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=== ip === |
=== ip === |
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See [[Linux networking]]. |
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'''ip''' show / manipulate routing, devices, policy routing and tunnels. |
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=== iwconfig === |
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;Basic uses |
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See [[Wifi]]. |
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Use <code>ip addr</code> or (shorter) <code>ip a</code> to show ip configuration (roughly equivalent to <code>ifconfig</code>): |
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<source lang="bash"> |
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ip addr |
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# 1: lo: <LOOPBACK,UP,LOWER_UP> mtu 65536 qdisc noqueue state UNKNOWN group default qlen 1 |
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# link/loopback 00:00:00:00:00:00 brd 00:00:00:00:00:00 |
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# inet 127.0.0.1/8 scope host lo |
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# valid_lft forever preferred_lft forever |
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# inet6 ::1/128 scope host |
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# valid_lft forever preferred_lft forever |
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# 2: eth0: <BROADCAST,MULTICAST,UP,LOWER_UP> mtu 1500 qdisc pfifo_fast state UP group default qlen 1000 |
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# link/ether a0:d3:c1:9c:59:56 brd ff:ff:ff:ff:ff:ff |
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# inet 10.137.2.54/23 brd 10.137.3.255 scope global dynamic eth0 |
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# valid_lft 589545sec preferred_lft 589545sec |
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# inet6 fe80::68ea:8b5c:bd71:f190/64 scope link |
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# valid_lft forever preferred_lft forever |
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# ... |
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</source> |
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<source lang="bash"> |
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IPETH0=$(ip addr show eth0 | perl -lne 'print for /inet[^0-9]*([0-9]+\.[0-9]+\.[0-9]+\.[0-9]+)/') # Get local ip address |
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</source> |
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To temporarily configure a device to use dhcp [https://help.ubuntu.com/community/NetworkConfigurationCommandLine/Automatic]: |
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<source lang="bash"> |
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sudo ip link set dev eth0 down |
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sudo dhclient eth0 |
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</source> |
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To use a static address: |
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<source lang="bash"> |
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sudo ip addr add 192.168.1.14/24 dev eth0 |
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sudo ip link set dev eth0 up |
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sudo ip route add default via 192.168.1.1 |
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</source> |
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;ip help |
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* <code>ip help</code> to display help summary. |
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* <code>ip COMMAND help</code> to display detailed help on <code>COMMAND</code>. |
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;shortcuts |
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All <code>ip</code> command can be shortened to their minimal non-ambiguous form. For instance <code>ip a</code> instead of <code>ip addr</code>. |
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<source lang="bash"> |
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ip addr |
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ip a # Idem, shorter |
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</source> |
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;ip rules |
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<code>ip</code> is a policy-based packet router. Policies are defined in rules. |
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Use <code>ip rule</code> to display current rules, by priority order. |
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Each rules gives the corresponding _routing_ table. |
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<source lang=bash> |
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ip rule |
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# 0: from all lookup local |
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# 32766: from all lookup main |
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# 32767: from all lookup default |
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</source> |
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;ip routes |
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<code>ip route</code> shows the <code>main</code> route table. Use <code>ip route list table TABLE</code> to show given _TABLE_. |
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<source lang="bash"> |
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ip route list table local # Show local table |
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ip route list table main # Show main table |
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ip route # ... Same as above |
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ip route list table default # Show default table |
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</source> |
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=== mail === |
=== mail === |
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</source> |
</source> |
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=== |
=== netstat === |
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See [[Linux networking]]. |
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Print network connections, routing tables, interface statistics, masqurade connections, and multicast memberships |
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<source lang="bash"> |
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netstat -utpn #Active ports, tcp, socket program PID, numeric |
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netstat -lutpn #Listen ports, tcp, socket program PID, numeric |
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netstat -autpn #All (active and listen), tcp, socket program PID, numeric |
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netstat -rn #Kernel route table, numeric |
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</source> |
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When listing sockets (default output), you'll get an output like: |
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{| |
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|- |
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| |
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% netstat -at |
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Active Internet connections (servers and established) |
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Proto Recv-Q Send-Q Local Address Foreign Address State |
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tcp 0 0 *:time *:* LISTEN |
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tcp 0 0 localhost:mysql *:* LISTEN |
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tcp 0 0 andLinux.local:43449 windows-host:x11 ESTABLISHED |
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| |
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% netstat -atn |
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Active Internet connections (servers and established) |
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Proto Recv-Q Send-Q Local Address Foreign Address State |
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tcp 0 0 0.0.0.0:37 0.0.0.0:* LISTEN |
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tcp 0 0 127.0.0.1:3306 0.0.0.0:* LISTEN |
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tcp 0 0 192.168.11.150:43449 192.168.11.1:6000 ESTABLISHED |
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|} |
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:;Local Address |
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::'''*''' or '''0.0.0.0''' means that the process accepts connection from any interface. |
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::'''127.0.0.1''' means it only accepts connection on localhost loopback (and so only connection that originates from local PC as well). |
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::Any other IP address means that the process listen on the given port at the given IP address |
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=== nmap === |
=== nmap === |
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=== nmcli === |
=== nmcli === |
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See [[Linux networking]]. |
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'''nmcli''' is the command-line tool for controlling NetworkManager. It can be used to enable / disable wifi, manage wired and wireless connections... |
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<source lang=bash> |
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nmcli # Print usage and available objects |
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nmcli nm # Show network manager status (basically WIFI status) |
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nmcli nm wifi # Show wifi status |
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nmcli nm wifi {off|on} # Disable / enable wifi (as done via the GUI) |
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</source> |
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To view network device configuration, like DHCP client settings: |
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<source lang=bash> |
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nmcli dev show |
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nmcli device show eth0 | grep IP4 # View eth0 configuration (like DHCPclient settings) |
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</source> |
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=== nm-tool === |
=== nm-tool === |
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=== ss === |
=== ss === |
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See [[Linux networking]]. |
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'''ss''' is the newer toolchain for network management, to be preferred over ''netstat'' and co. |
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=== wavemon === |
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<source lang=bash> |
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'''wavemon''' is a top-like monitoring tool for wifi connection. |
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ss -tupan # Roughly equivalent to netstat -lpn |
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To install: |
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<source lang="bash"> |
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sudo apt install wavemon |
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</source> |
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To use: |
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<source lang="bash"> |
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wavemon |
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</source> |
</source> |
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</source> |
</source> |
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=== |
=== loadkeys === |
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'''loadkeys''' loads keyboard translation tables. |
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'''iwconfig''' configures or queries a wireless network interface: |
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Use ''loadkeys'' to change the keyboard layout in console mode (i.e. {{kb|Ctrl-Alt-F1}} console). |
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<source lang=bash> |
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sudo loadkeys be # Load Belgian layout |
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</source> |
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=== lscpu === |
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<source lang="bash"> |
<source lang="bash"> |
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lscpu # Display information about the cpu architecture |
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iwconfig |
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# # iwconfig |
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# lo no wireless extensions. |
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# |
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# eth0 no wireless extensions. |
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# |
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# wlan0 IEEE 802.11abg ESSID:off/any |
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# Mode:Managed Access Point: Not-Associated Tx-Power=15 dBm |
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# Retry long limit:7 RTS thr:off Fragment thr:off |
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# Encryption key:off |
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# Power Management:off |
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</source> |
</source> |
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=== lsmem === |
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<source lang="bash"> |
<source lang="bash"> |
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lsmem # List all ranges of available memory |
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iwconfig wlan0 # Limit to wlan0 |
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</source> |
</source> |
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modprobe -r iwlagn # Remove module from the Linux Kernel |
modprobe -r iwlagn # Remove module from the Linux Kernel |
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modprobe iwlagn 11n_disable=1 # Add module to the Linux Kernel, with specific parameters |
modprobe iwlagn 11n_disable=1 # Add module to the Linux Kernel, with specific parameters |
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</source> |
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=== loadkeys === |
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'''loadkeys''' loads keyboard translation tables. |
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Use ''loadkeys'' to change the keyboard layout in console mode (i.e. {{kb|Ctrl-Alt-F1}} console). |
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<source lang=bash> |
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sudo loadkeys be # Load Belgian layout |
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</source> |
</source> |
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;watch |
;watch |
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:Execute a program periodically, showing output full screen |
:Execute a program periodically, showing output full screen |
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<source lang="bash"> |
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watch -n 0.5 myprog arg1 arg2 # Wait 0.5s between run |
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watch -cn 0.5 myprog arg1 arg2 # ... same with color |
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watch -cn 0.5 myprog \"arg w/ space\" # BEWARE! arg must be "double" quoted |
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watch -cn 0.5 myprog ${*@Q} # Quoted args, in case args are user defined in a script |
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</source> |
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== User / Group Administration == |
== User / Group Administration == |
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<source lang="bash"> |
<source lang="bash"> |
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sudo gpasswd -a $USER fuse # Add self to group 'fuse' |
sudo gpasswd -a $USER fuse # Add self to group 'fuse' |
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</source> |
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To make the new group effective: |
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<source lang=bash> |
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loginctl terminate-user $USERNAME # This will FORCE LOGOUT !!! |
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su - $USERNAME # New shell with new groups |
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</source> |
</source> |
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Line 1,297: | Line 1,290: | ||
# 123 456 |
# 123 456 |
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# 98765 98765 |
# 98765 98765 |
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</source> |
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=== csvquote === |
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'''[https://github.com/dbro/csvquote csvquote]''' is a nice wrapper tool to pre-/post-process CSV files to ease processing by tools like AWK (to handle comma within quotes) |
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<source lang="bash"> |
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csvquote foobar.csv | cut -d ',' -f 5 | sort | uniq -c | csvquote -u |
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cat foobar.csv | csvquote | cut -d ',' -f 7,4,2 | csvquote -u |
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csvquote -t foobar.tsv | wc -l |
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csvquote -q "'" foobar.csv | sort -t, -k3 | csvquote -u |
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csvquote foobar.csv | awk -F, '{sum+=$3} END {print sum}' |
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</source> |
</source> |
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sort file -o file # sort in-place |
sort file -o file # sort in-place |
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sort file | sponge file # soak sorted file and write it back |
sort file | sponge file # soak sorted file and write it back |
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</source> |
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Use <code>LC_ALL=C</code> for '''huge speed improvement'''. Also increasing the internal buffer helps: |
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<source lang="bash"> |
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LC_ALL=C sort -S 2G file |
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</source> |
</source> |
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echo ${newphrase} |
echo ${newphrase} |
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</source> |
</source> |
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tr can also be used to split words into newlines: |
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<source lang=bash> |
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tr ' ' '\n' file |
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</source> |
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=== figlet, toilet... (fun) === |
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Some funny banner-like tool: |
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* <code>figlet</code> [http://www.figlet.org/] |
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* <code>toilet</code> [http://caca.zoy.org/wiki/toilet] |
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* <code>cowsay</code> |
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* <code>ponysay</code> |
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* <code>lolcat</code> |
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== Image manipulation == |
== Image manipulation == |
||
Line 1,388: | Line 1,410: | ||
anytopnm myfile.gif | pnmtopng > myfile.png # Convert a GIF file to PNG |
anytopnm myfile.gif | pnmtopng > myfile.png # Convert a GIF file to PNG |
||
anytopnm oll28.gif | pnmflip -r90 | ppmtogif > oll28-90.gif # Rotate and output GIF |
anytopnm oll28.gif | pnmflip -r90 | ppmtogif > oll28-90.gif # Rotate and output GIF |
||
</source> |
|||
JPEG file manipulation can be done with <code>djpeg</code> and <code>cjpeg</code> from package {{deb|libjpeg-turbo-progs}}: |
|||
<source lang="bash"> |
|||
djpeg foo.jpg | pnmflip -r90 | cjpeg) # Lossy rotate of jpeg |
|||
</source> |
</source> |
||
Line 1,420: | Line 1,448: | ||
Patch can be applied with the command '''patch''' (see below). Be careful regarding file names / directory structures when generating patch files! Sometimes you'll need to edit the generated patch files to fix the directory structure. |
Patch can be applied with the command '''patch''' (see below). Be careful regarding file names / directory structures when generating patch files! Sometimes you'll need to edit the generated patch files to fix the directory structure. |
||
=== ldd === |
|||
'''ldd''' print shared object dependencies. |
|||
See also <code>readelf</code> and <code>lddtree</code> (package {{deb|pax-utils}}). |
|||
<source lang="bash"> |
|||
ldd /bin/ls |
|||
# linux-vdso.so.1 (0x00007ffcc3563000) |
|||
# libselinux.so.1 => /lib64/libselinux.so.1 (0x00007f87e5459000) |
|||
# libcap.so.2 => /lib64/libcap.so.2 (0x00007f87e5254000) |
|||
# libc.so.6 => /lib64/libc.so.6 (0x00007f87e4e92000) |
|||
# libpcre.so.1 => /lib64/libpcre.so.1 (0x00007f87e4c22000) |
|||
# libdl.so.2 => /lib64/libdl.so.2 (0x00007f87e4a1e000) |
|||
# /lib64/ld-linux-x86-64.so.2 (0x00005574bf12e000) |
|||
# libattr.so.1 => /lib64/libattr.so.1 (0x00007f87e4817000) |
|||
# libpthread.so.0 => /lib64/libpthread.so.0 (0x00007f87e45fa000) |
|||
</source> |
|||
=== lddtree === |
|||
lddtree |
|||
=== readelf === |
|||
'''readelf''' displays information on ELF files. |
|||
<source lang="bash"> |
|||
# View libraries linked in .elf (but only directly linked, these may yet load other libs) |
|||
readelf -d obs-ios-camera-source.so | grep NEEDED |
|||
# 0x0000000000000001 (NEEDED) Shared library: [libobs.so.0] |
|||
# 0x0000000000000001 (NEEDED) Shared library: [libavcodec.so.58] |
|||
# ... |
|||
</source> |
|||
=== patch === |
=== patch === |
||
Line 1,510: | Line 1,572: | ||
date +'%s' # Get current epoch time (seconds since 1970-01-01 00:00:00 UTC) |
date +'%s' # Get current epoch time (seconds since 1970-01-01 00:00:00 UTC) |
||
date --date='@1498485311' # Convert epoch to human readable time |
date --date='@1498485311' # Convert epoch to human readable time |
||
</source> |
|||
=== direnv === |
|||
[https://direnv.net/ direnv] is an extension for your shell. It augments existing shells with a new feature that can load and unload environment variables depending on the current directory. |
|||
* Alternatives: https://github.com/gyf304/dotenv |
|||
<source lang="bash"> |
|||
# Create a new folder for demo purposes. |
|||
$ mkdir ~/my-project |
|||
$ cd ~/my-project |
|||
# Show that the FOO environment variable is not loaded. |
|||
$ echo ${FOO-nope} |
|||
nope |
|||
# Create a new .envrc. This file is bash code that is going to be loaded by |
|||
# direnv. |
|||
$ echo export FOO=foo > .envrc |
|||
.envrc is not allowed |
|||
# The security mechanism didn't allow to load the .envrc. Since we trust it, |
|||
# let's allow its execution. |
|||
$ direnv allow . |
|||
direnv: reloading |
|||
direnv: loading .envrc |
|||
direnv export: +FOO |
|||
# Show that the FOO environment variable is loaded. |
|||
$ echo ${FOO-nope} |
|||
foo |
|||
# Exit the project |
|||
$ cd .. |
|||
direnv: unloading |
|||
# And now FOO is unset again |
|||
$ echo ${FOO-nope} |
|||
nope |
|||
</source> |
</source> |
||
Line 1,526: | Line 1,627: | ||
Expect is a tool for automating interactive applications such as telnet, ftp, passwd, fsck, rlogin, tip, etc. |
Expect is a tool for automating interactive applications such as telnet, ftp, passwd, fsck, rlogin, tip, etc. |
||
* See [[SMTP#Expect script for testing SMTP]] |
* See [[SMTP#Expect script for testing SMTP]] |
||
=== hyperfine === |
|||
'''[https://github.com/sharkdp/hyperfine hyperfine]''' is a command-line benchmarking tool (benchmark tool). |
|||
<source lang="bash"> |
|||
hyperfine --warmup 3 'fd -HI "[0-9]\.jpg"' 'find -name "*[0-9].jpg"' |
|||
</source> |
|||
Hyperfine may produce results in CSV, JSON, Markdown. |
|||
=== iconv === |
=== iconv === |
||
Line 1,679: | Line 1,789: | ||
git config --global core.pager 'less -x1,5' # GIT |
git config --global core.pager 'less -x1,5' # GIT |
||
diff -t --tabsize=4 # DIFF - alternate solution |
diff -t --tabsize=4 # DIFF - alternate solution |
||
</source> |
|||
=== tesseract === |
|||
A tool to perform OCR. |
|||
Example of script [https://askubuntu.com/questions/280475/how-can-instantaneously-extract-text-from-a-screen-area-using-ocr-tools AskUbuntu]: |
|||
<source lang="bash"> |
|||
#!/bin/bash |
|||
SCR_IMG=".screentemp.png" |
|||
TEMP_TXT=".screentext.txt" |
|||
gnome-screenshot -a --file=$SCR_IMG |
|||
tesseract $SCR_IMG $TEMP_TXT -l eng |
|||
cat $TEMP_TXT* | xsel -b |
|||
rm $SCR_IMG $TEMP_TXT* |
|||
</source> |
</source> |
||
Line 1,787: | Line 1,914: | ||
play /usr/share/games/xboard/sounds/woodthunk.wav |
play /usr/share/games/xboard/sounds/woodthunk.wav |
||
play --single-threaded /usr/share/games/xboard/sounds/woodthunk.wav # Does not help |
play --single-threaded /usr/share/games/xboard/sounds/woodthunk.wav # Does not help |
||
</source> |
|||
== Python modules == |
|||
Reference: https://til.simonwillison.net/python/stdlib-cli-tools |
|||
=== HTTP server === |
|||
<source lang="bash"> |
|||
python -m http.server |
|||
</source> |
|||
=== Base64 === |
|||
<source lang="bash"> |
|||
python3.11 -m base64 -h |
|||
</source> |
|||
=== JSON === |
|||
<source lang="bash"> |
|||
echo '{"foo": "bar", "baz": [1, 2, 3]}' | python -m json.tool |
|||
</source> |
|||
=== Calendar === |
|||
<source lang="bash"> |
|||
python -m calendar |
|||
</source> |
</source> |
Latest revision as of 05:30, 29 April 2024
References
From The Linux Documentation Project:
File System
ack
ack is a grep-like program specifically for large source trees. It is distributed via package ack-grep. Add a symlink for convenience:
sudo ln -s /usr/bin/ack-grep /usr/local/bin/ack
Features:
- It's blazingly fast because it only searches the stuff you want searched.
- ack ignores most of the crap you don't want to search
- Lets you specify file types to search, as in --perl or --nohtml.
- Color highlighting of search results.
- Uses real Perl regular expressions, not a GNU subset.
# grep pattern $(find . -type f | grep -v '\.svn')
ack pattern # Ack ignore CVS, SVN dir
# grep pattern $(find . -name '*.pl' -or -name '*.pm' -or -name '*.pod' | grep -v .svn)
ack --perl pattern # Specify file type to search
ack -f --perl > all-perl-files # Create rapidly list of files
Supported file types (more here):
--[no]asm .asm .s
--[no]batch .bat .cmd
--[no]binary Binary files, as defined by Perl's -B op (default: off)
--[no]cc .c .h .xs
--[no]cpp .cpp .cc .cxx .m .hpp .hh .h .hxx
--[no]css .css
--[no]hh .h
--[no]html .htm .html .shtml .xhtml
--[no]java .java .properties
--[no]js .js
--[no]make Makefiles (including *.mk and *.mak)
--[no]perl .pl .pm .pod .t
--[no]php .php .phpt .php3 .php4 .php5 .phtml
--[no]python .py
--[no]ruby .rb .rhtml .rjs .rxml .erb .rake .spec
--[no]shell .sh .bash .csh .tcsh .ksh .zsh
--[no]skipped Files, but not directories, normally skipped by ack (default: off)
--[no]text Text files, as defined by Perl's -T op (default: off)
--[no]vim .vim
--[no]xml .xml .dtd .xsl .xslt .ent
ag
ag (home, github, ack.vim, ag.vim) is the silver searcher, and is actually much better than ack, which in turn is much better than grep ;-). Update: turns out that ripgrep is an even faster alternative.
On recent distribution, install from package:
sudo apt install silversearcher-ag
To install from git (see README.md):
sudo apt-get install software-properties-common
sudo apt-get install -y automake pkg-config libpcre3-dev zlib1g-dev liblzma-dev
git clone https://github.com/ggreer/the_silver_searcher.git
cd the_silver_searcher/
./build.sh
sudo make install
- Tips
- Use
/b
to find whole word matches only, or better-w
:
ag "\bWHOLEWORD\b"
ag -w WHOLEWORD
chattr
chattr change file attributes on a Linux file system.
See man chattr
for a list of attributes (immutable...)
cp
To copy content of a directory into another:
cp -a /source/. /dest/
This copy recursively and preserve attributes -a
, and copy the content with special syntax source/.
with trailing dot.
To copy a directory recursively, create hard links instead of new copies (but creates new directories, not links):
cp -lr <src> <target>
See #cpg for a patch that adds a progress bar.
cpg
cpg
is a patched version of cp that adds a progress bar, advcpmv(github).
cpg -ag src1 dst2 # Copy recursively with progress
Alternatives are to use rsync --progress
(or rsync -P
), or #gcp.
dd
Convert and copy a file.
dd returns current copy status when sent an HUP signal. Type in another shell:
while :; sleep 5; do killall -s SIGHUP1 dd; done
This will force dd to update its status every 5sec.
Transfer speed is highly dependent on the block size! So make sure to use -bs=16M
or something like that:
dd if=/dev/sda1 of=backup-sda1 bs=16M
Other recommended values for -bs
are: 1MB
[1], 64k
[2] [3].
Note: to copy a whole file or device cat
or pv
are better alternatives (see Linux Disk Management). cat
is at least faster than dd
with default parameters [4], and pv
looks for optimal block size to get highest speed.
dd if=file1 of=file2 # slow
cat file1 > file2 # fast
dd if=file1 of=file2 bs=16M # faster (maybe)
pv file1 > file2 # fastest
Interesting links:
- dd-opt, an utility to find optimal value for
bs
parameter. - A complete blog post about Tuning dd block size
- Discussions on stackexchange.com, also suggesting that
cat
could be used too. - ... but dd still has many other uses that cat does not provide.
- ... for instance, create sparse files, and mount it as filesystem loopback:
# Create sparse file
dd of=sparse-file bs=1 count=0 seek=10 # SAME AS: truncate -s 10GB sparse-file
# Mount it
loop=`losetup --show -f sparse-file`
mkfs.ext4 $loop
mkdir myloop
mount $loop myloop
# Write myfile.iso to a USB drive
# !!! with -a, cp may try to create a new block device!
cp myfile.iso /dev/sdb
# Rip a cdrom to a .iso file
cat /dev/cdrom > myfile.iso
# Create a gzipped image
# !!! w/o redirection, gzip may skip non-regular file /dev/sdb
gzip -9 < /dev/sdb > /tmp/myimage.gz
entr
entr runs arbitrary commands when files change.
For instance:
find -name *.c | entr make
fatsort
fatsort sorts directory structures of FAT filesystems. Many MP3 hardware players don't sort files automatically but play them in the order they were transmitted to the device. FATSort can help here.
sudo fatsort /dev/sdb1
fd
fd is a simple, fast and user-friendly alternative to 'find'.
fd
fd app
fd sh
fd sh --type f
fd -e md
fd -e md --exec wc -l
fd --hidden sample
find
Tip: Consider using fd
as simpler and faster alternative.
See here for further examples on how to combine find and xargs.
- FREQUENT PITFALLS!
- ESCAPE THE SEMI-COLON — The semi-colon ; must be escaped in Bash !
- USE
-
OR+
WITH NUMERICAL VALUES — for instance-mtime 1
means exactly one day ago, whereas-mtime -1
means within the last day.
find . -name "*.jpg" # find files/directories whose name matches specified pattern
find . -path "*/cur/*" # find files/directories whose path spec matches specified pattern
find . -type d -name "cur" # find only directories whose name matches specified pattern
find . -exec echo '{}' \; # semi-colon must be escaped!
find . -exec echo one '{}' \; -exec echo two '{}' \; # to execute several commands on one match
find . -name 'dirname' -prune -o -iname '*.txt' -print
# Find all text files, but exclude any directory named dirname
find . -name 'dirname' -prune -false -o -iname '*.txt' # ... idem (using -false, but no longer -print)
find . -path './path' -prune -false -o -iname '*.txt' # Find all text files, but exclude path ./path
find . -iname '*.zip' -exec sh -c 'unzip -l "$0" | egrep -o " [0-9]+ file"' '{}' \;
# How to use pipe in -exec.
find www -name '*.pdf' -printf %P\\n # Print PDF files in www/ but remove the leading www/ in output (%P)
Accelerating find:
find / -mount -name "*splash*" # Only search on CURRENT file system (same as find -xdev)
Use also xargs to accelerate find:
find . -name \*.jpg | xargs -r echo # much faster than find -exec
find . -name \*.jpg | xargs -rn 2 echo # limit #args passed to echo to 2 max.
find . -name \*.jpg -print0 | xargs -r0 ls # Use NULL separator if files contains space or special char !!!
# find -exec command \; and xargs -i are equivalent
find . -name "*.txt" -exec echo '{}' is found. \; # ONE at a time, but {} can be anywhere - and MULTIPLE times
find . -name "*.txt" -print0 | xargs -r0 -i echo '{}' is found. # ... same, with xargs
# find -exec command {} + and xargs are equivalent
find . -name "*.txt" -exec echo The files are '{}' + # FASTER - much like xargs. Only append AT THE END!
find . -name "*.txt" -print0 | xargs -r0 echo The files are # ... same with xargs
# With mv, use -t DIRECTORY to give destination directory first
find . -size +100M -print0 | xargs -0 mv -t bigfiles/ # -t DIR inverts usual SOURCE... DESTINATION order
find . -size +100M -exec mv -t bigfiles/ {} + # ... idem, without xargs
FSlint
FSlint is a utility to find and clean various forms of lint on a filesystem. I.E. unwanted or problematic cruft in your files or file names. For example, one form of lint it finds is duplicate files.
gcp
A variant of cp, but with progress bar:
gcp -pR dir1 .
If complains about missing dbus:
dbus-launch gcp -pR dir1 .
An alternative is to use a patched version of cp.
getfattr / setfattr
getfattr and setfattr gets/sets extended attributes of filesystem objects.
!!! These tools are really misleading, and many attributes are hidden. Usually you need to list the attributes explicitly !!!
getfattr -d file # This SUPPOSEDLY returns *ALL* attributes, but actually *MANY* missing
getfattr -m - file # This MIGHT return more attributes
getfattr -n system.ntfs_attrib file # View ntfs-3g special attributes
getfattr -d -e hex file # View attribute values in HEX
grep / zgrep
grep -Rsl PATTERN [FILE] # Recursive, no error output, only list filename
grep BASIC-REG-EXP-PATTERN [FILE] # Use classic regexp (like "dma\|DMA")
egrep EXT-REG-EXP-PATTERN [FILE] # Same as grep -E. Use extended regexp (like "dma|DMA")
fgrep FIXED-STRINGS-REG-EXP [FILE] # Same as grep -F. Pattern is a list of strings to match.
grep -n PATTERN [FILE] # Print matched line numbers.
grep -- "-s" [FILE] # Search for text "-s"
grep -e "-s" [FILE] # Search for text "-s" - alternative solution
grep -R -include=*.in PATTERN * # Search recursively through folders, limiting to files matching pattern "*.in"
grep -R PATTERN *.in # Idem, but matching pattern "*.in" also applies to folders.
grep -o PATTERN [FILE] # (--only-matching) Print only the matched (non-empty) parts of a matching line.
zgrep works like grep, but also accepts compressed (.gz) files.
zgrep PATTERN *.txt *.txt.gz # Search in .txt file (compressed or not)
gzip / gunzip / zcat
gzip -c FILE # Compress FILE to stdout
gunzip -c FILE # Uncompress FiLe to stdout
zcat FILE # Equivalent to gunzip -c FILE
ls
Listing directory content:
ls --full-time # To list files full date & time
ls -d directory-name # List directory entries, not content
# eg. ls -d /etc/rc*
ls -lS | head # List biggest files first - print only first 10 entries
ls -lt | head -n 20 # List most recent files first, print only 20 first entries
lsattr
lsattr list file attributes on a Linux second extended file system.
sudo lsattr
---------------- ./memtest86+.elf ---------------- ./System.map-3.13.0-39-generic ---------------- ./vmlinuz-3.13.0-39-generic ---------------- ./initrd.img-3.13.0-39-generic ----------I----- ./grub ---------------- ./abi-3.13.0-39-generic ---------------- ./memtest86+_multiboot.bin ---------------- ./memtest86+.bin ---------------- ./config-3.13.0-39-generic ---------------- ./lost+found
ntfsundelete
ntfsundelete recover a delete file from an NTFS volume. Does not scan the disk.
par2
par2 is a very useful program for creating and using PAR2 files to detect damage in data files and repair them if necessary.
From the manpage, using an example 800MB test.mpg:
par2 create test.mpg # Will create *.par2 files, for a total of roughly 40MB (5% redundancy)
par2 verify test.mpg.par2 # to verify integrity
par2 repair test.mpg.par2 # to repair
*.par2 files stores error correction informations, in a number of recovery blocks. Repair is possible as long as there are enough recovery blocks available (on Usenet era, it was useful to have *.par2 files of increasing size such that to allow users to minimize bandwidth usage).
par2 is particularly useful to protect MP3 files on USB sticks (that have frequent FS failure over time):
par2 create check.par2 *.mp3 # Generate recovery blocks (5% redundancy)
par2 verify check.par2 # Verify
par2 repair check.par2 # Repair
To increase redundancy:
par2 create -r10 check.par2 *.mp3 # Generate recovery blocks (10% redundancy)
Note: to simulate file corruption, we can use:
# Simulate 25kB corruption, from 10k-th byte.
dd if=/dev/zero of=output.mp3 bs=1024 count=25 seek=10 conv=notrunc
progress
progress [7] watches progress of other utilities like cp, mv, dd, tar.
# display estimated I/O throughput and estimated remaining time for on going coreutils commands
progress -w
# Start an heavy command and monitor it with -m and $!
tar czf images.tar.gz linuxmint-18-cinnamon-64bit.iso CentOS-7.0-1406-x86_64-DVD.iso CubLinux-1.0RC-amd64.iso | progress -m $!
pv
pv monitors the progress of data through a pipe. It can also be used to copy files or entire volume very rapidly.
For instance:
pv </dev/sda >/dev/sdb
Also over the network using nc
:
# On Host A (receiver):
nc -l 2222 > /dev/sda
# On Host B (sender):
pv </dev/sda | nc hosta 2222 # 111MB avg throughput on direct link (cross-cable), SSD hard disks
rdfind
rdfind finds duplicate files, very rapidly.
rdfind /foo/dir /bar/dir # Find duplicates in give dir and tell what could be gained
rdfind -makehardlinks true /foo/dir /bar/dir # Remove dups by creating hardlinks
rg
rg or ripgrep is an extremelly fast alternative to grep (in fact even faster than ag the silver-searcher).
See ripgrep on GitHub for ripgrep.deb package.
rsync
Perfect copy over network (see this page for details)
#If needed, pre-activate sudo on remote system. Flag -t required to solve 'sudo: no tty present and no askpass program specified'
#
# Also, this requires the following line in /etc/sudoers:
#
# Defaults !tty_tickets
#
stty -echo; ssh -t user@server sudo -v; stty echo
sudo rsync -aHAXS --delete --rsync-path "sudo rsync" --numeric-ids -h -v --exclude='lost+found' user@server:/remote/path /local/path
More basic use of rsync:
sudo rsync -aP src1 dst2 # Copy with progress
scalpel
scalpel recover files using a header / footer database (see [8]).
Install scalpel, then edit /etc/scalpel/scalpel.conf to select which file types to recover (based on header/footer).
sudo apt-get install scalpel
sudo vi /etc/scalpel/scalpel.conf
Here we enable jpg and mp3 (see [9] for more):
# GIF and JPG files (very common)
# gif y 5000000 \x47\x49\x46\x38\x37\x61 \x00\x3b
# gif y 5000000 \x47\x49\x46\x38\x39\x61 \x00\x00\x3b
jpg y 200000000 \xff\xd8\xff\xe0\x00\x10 \xff\xd9
jpg y 200000000 \xff\xd8\xff\xe1 \xff\xd9
# MP3
mp3 y 8000000 \xFF\xFB??\x44\x00\x00
mp3 y 8000000 \x57\x41\x56\45 \x00\x00\xFF\
mp3 y 8000000 \xFF\xFB\xD0\ \xD1\x35\x51\xCC\
mp3 y 8000000 \x49\x44\x33\
mp3 y 8000000 \x4C\x41\x4D\x45\
Start scalpel:
sudo scalpel /dev/sda1 -o output_dir # output_dir must *not* be on disk being scanned
tar
tar archives and restores timestamps. When run as root, tar will also restore ownership and permissions.
tar -cvzf archive.tgz somedir/ # Archive & GZIP compress the directory somedir/ (recursively)
tar -cvjf archive.tar.bz2 somedir/ # ... Use BZIP2 insteadl
tar -cvzf archive.tgz --exclude=notme somedir/ # ... exclude any file matching name
tar -cvzf archive.tgz --exclude=somedir/not/me somedir/ # ... exclude file at specific location
tar -xvzf archive.tgz # Extract archive (will create somedir/)
tar -xvzf archive.tgz -C targetdir # ... to specified directory
tar -tvzf archive.tgz # List the content (equiv. of tar --list -vzf ...)
tar cf - --sort=name --owner=root:0 --group=root:0 \
--mtime='UTC 2019-01-01' . | gzip -n > invariant.tgz # Create a stable archive w/o timestamps, etc
# https://stackoverflow.com/questions/32997526/how-to-create-a-tar-file-that-omits-timestamps-for-its-contents
- Troubleshootigng
- On windows, getting errors like
tar: ....myfile.txt: file changed as we read it
.
- No fix. We silent the error with the following script:
nice_tar()
{
# Bloody tar returns a warning about modified dir on windows. Must silent the warning.
tar "$@"
RC=$?
[ $RC -eq 0 -o $RC -eq 1 ] && return 0 || return $RC
}
testdisk / photorec
testdisk scans and repairs disk partitions. photorec recovers lost files from harddisk, digital camera and cdrom (including audio and photo files).
photorec /log /d output_dir /dev/sda1
ug
ug or ugrep is an extremelly fast alternative to grep (in fact even faster than ag the silver-searcher, and comparable speed with ripgrep, but with some more powerful search capabilities).
See ugrep on GitHub (also nice instructions for setup on Vim).
Miscellaneous
- badblocks
- An utility to detect bad sectors on USB flash drive or so.
- dosfslabel
- Change FAT16/FAT32 disk label
sudo dosfslabel /dev/sdc1 UBUNTULIVE
- mbr
- Install MS-like Master Boot Record (see [10])
sudo apt-get install mbr
install-mbr -i n -p D -t 0 /dev/sda # Fix MBR on /dev/sda
# -i interrupt n = none (do not display a MBR prompt)
# -p partition D = boot the partition with the bootable flag set
# -t timeout 0 = do not wait to boot
dd if=/dev/sda of=opensource.mbr bs=512 count=1
install-mbr -i n -p D -t 0 opensource.mbr # Create a file opensource.mbr containing the generated MBR
- mkfs
- Format disk utility
sudo mkfs.vfat -F 32 -c /dev/sdc1
- ms-sys
- Install MS-compatible Master Boot Record (similar to FIXMBR on WinXP rescue console, see [11])
# Get ms-sys from http://ms-sys.sourceforge.net/#Download
sudo apt-get install gettext
make
sudo make install
sudo ms-sys -m /dev/sdb
- relocntfs
- relocntfs (see [12]) is more or less the equivalent of the FIXBOOT command in the Windows Recovery Console. It is among other available on the Trinity Rescue Kit. For instance, to fix the boot record of a windows partition at /dev/sda2 issue the commands:
relocntfs /dev/sda2
relocntfs -w /dev/sda2 # To actually write the new boot record
- stat
- display file or file system status (like file access time, creation time, modification time...)
- tree
- List the contents of directories in a tree-like format.
Network
autossh
See Autossh.
dhclient
dhclient -r eth1 # Release DHCP lease on eth1
dhclient eth1 # Obtain fresh ip on eth1
dig
dig stands for domain information groper. It replaces the deprecated nslookup. It comes with package dnsutils:
sudo apt-get install dnsutils
To get ip address of a given host:
dig +short google.com | head -n 1 # In case host has multiple address
See also getent hosts
or hostname
.
To do a reverse DNS lookup:
- Use option
-x
of dig command:
dig +short -x 82.78.227.176
# 176.176-191.227.78.82.in-addr.arpa.
# ivorde.ro.
- Or query record
PTR
inin-addr.arpa
domain:
dig +short ptr 176.227.78.82.in-addr.arpa.
# 176.176-191.227.78.82.in-addr.arpa.
# ivorde.ro.
getent
Use getent hosts
to get ip address of a given host:
getent hosts google.be
getent hosts google.be | awk '{ print $1; exit }' # To get first ip address only
Note getent
may succeed where dig
fails (for instance host in /etc/hosts file or hosts with .local suffix).
host
Use host to do a reverse DNS lookup, i.e. get hostname from a given IP address:
host 123.45.67.89
host can also do a regular DNS lookup and fetch alias names:
host -t a www.facebook.com # www.facebook.com is an alias for star.c10r.facebook.com. # star.c10r.facebook.com has address 173.252.100.27
hostname
Use hostname -I
to get local host ip address:
hostname -I
hostname -I | awk '{ print $1 }' # In case host has multiple interfaces / ip addresses
ifconfig
See Linux networking.
ip
See Linux networking.
iwconfig
See Wifi.
mail — send and receive mail.
# Using local SMTP
echo my message body here | /usr/bin/mail -s"My subject here" my_email@myserver.org
# Using ISP SMTP - no auth
echo "my message body here" | mail -S 'smtp=smtp.myisp.org:25' -S 'from=first.last@myisp.org' -s 'My subject here' my_email@myserver.org
multitee
multitee sends multiple inputs to multiple outputs.
Check this page.
Original is here, or can also be found here on Debian.
Here a patch to build it on Cygwin. The patch ports calls to BSD signal.h API (struct sigvec, sigvec(), sigmask(), sigblock()...) to the POSIX API (struct sigaction, sigaction(), sigprocmask(), sigfillset()...):
$ patch -Np1 <../multitee-3.0-cygwin.patch
$ make
$ cp multitee.1 /usr/local/man/man1
$ cp multitee.exe /usr/local/bin
Example of use:
$ multitee 0-1,4,5 4> foo 5> bar # same as tee foo bar with better blocking behavior
$ multitee 0:1 3:1 4:1,2 6:7 # various merge and copy
$ tcpclient server smtp multitee 0:7 6:1e0 # e0 tell multitee to quit as soon connection close
$ multitee 0:3 3:1 # same as 'socat - FD:3'
netcat or nc
TCP-IP swiss army knife (equivalent of the telnet program. Check wikipedia:netcat. Also known as command nc).
See also Using Netcat (Linux Tips).
- Using as telnet-like
nc www.immie.org 22 # Connect to SSH port
nc www.immie.org ssh # idem, using port name
nc -v www.immie.org ssh # idem, verbose
Use nc also to test whether some ports are open, a bit like nmap
. For instance:
nc -vz www.immie.org 25 # See if SMTP port is open
# www.immie.org [91.134.134.85] 25 (smtp) open
nc -vz www.immie.org 80 # idem, with http port
- Using TCP in multi-connect
- Netcat will quit as soon as the first connection terminates. Use option
-k
to keep the connection alive:
# On DESTINATION host
nc -l -k 6666 # Keep connection alive
# On SOURCE host
echo foo | nc griffin 6666
echo bar | nc griffin 6666
- Using UDP in multi-connect
- Note that When nc is listening to a UDP socket, it 'locks on' to the source port and source IP of the first packet it receives. [13]. So one must give the source port (with option
-p
) on the SOURCE host as well, or second and next transmissions will be ignored.
# On DESTINATION host
nc -l -u 6666
# On SOURCE host
echo foo | nc -u -w 1 -p 6665 griffin 6666 # Enforce source port 6665. Option -w 1 to timeout after 1 sec
echo bar | nc -u -w 1 -p 6665 griffin 6666
netstat
See Linux networking.
nmap
nmap is the network exploration tool and security / port scanner.
nmap localhost # Scan and print all open ports on 'localhost'
nmap -sP hostname # Simply test whether 'hostname' is accessible
nmap -sP 192.168.1.0/24 # Scan all local network with mask 192.168.1.0/24 (sudo: show mac address)
- Detect host availability
One can use nmap in a bash script to test whether a given host is accessible, but it turns out that ping is faster:
# Using nmap
nmap -sP $1 2>/dev/null | grep -q "1 host up" # Too slow, does not always detect hosts
# ... or ping (faster)
if [ "$HOST_MACH" = "cygwin" ]; then
ping $1 1 1 2>/dev/null | grep -q "1 packets received"
else
ping -c 1 $1 2>/dev/null | grep -q "1 received"
fi
- Detect all Raspberry pi on the network
sudo nmap -sP 192.168.1.0/24 | awk '/^Nmap/{ip=$NF}/B8:27:EB/{print ip}'
sudo nmap -sP 192.168.1.0/24 | grep -B2 Raspberry
- Various scan
sudo nmap -A -T4 myserver.org # Quick port scan on myserver.org
sudo nmap -A -T4 -p22 myserver.org # Get SSH banner from server
nmcli
See Linux networking.
nm-tool
nm-tool is an utility to report NetworkManager state and devices.
nm-tool # Print IP addresses, DNS servers, etc.
/etc/init.d/nscd
This is not really a command, but the init service Name Service Cache Daemon.
sudo /etc/init.d/nscd restart # To restart daemon and flush DNS cache
nslookup
nslookup is a program to query the DNS database. It is available on Linux and Windows, but on Linux is is deprecated by dig.
nslookup 8.8.8.8 # Reverse DNS lookup
rpcinfo
rpcinfo reports RPC information
rpcinfo -p # Probe the portmapper on host, and print a list of all registered RPC programs
socat
Command-line utility that establishes two bidirectional byte streams and transfers data between them ([14]). socat is the more powerful version of netcat. Check the homepage. And also this page on Yobi for examples on how to use socat to bypass a proxy.
# All these commands listen on localhost:53805, and forward to server:53806
socat TCP4-LISTEN:53805 TCP:server:53806 # Listen, and close as soon socket closes
socat TCP4-LISTEN:53805,reuseaddr,fork TCP:server:53806 # Idem, but fork so that listener continues after socket closes
socat -v ... # Send txfed data to stderr, with some formatting (text format)
socat -x ... # ... idem in hex format (can be combined with -v)
socat -ly # Writes messages to syslog instead of stderr; severity as defined with option -d
socat can easily tunnel connections:
socat -ly 'TCP4-LISTEN:143,reuseaddr,fork' PROXY:ton.imap.server:143|TCP:134.27.168.36:8080
socat can also be used as SSH ProxyCommand
:
ProxyCommand socat -ly - 'PROXY:%h:%p|TCP:proxy.server:8080'
# Using socat v2.0.0 beta
ProxyCommand socat -ly - 'PROXY:%h:%p,proxyauth=user:pass|SSL,verify=0|PROXY:my.server:443,proxyauth=user:pass|TCP:big.brother.proxy:8080'
socat can be easily used as a replacement of telnet:
socat tcp:<host>:<port> - # <port> can be a port number or service name (telnet,imap...)
To establish UDP transfer, use:
socat UDP-RECV:[port] STDOUT # On destination host
socat STDIN UDP-DATAGRAM:[host]:[port] # On source host
QUESTION TO MR DOEGOX: - WHY -s in SED? - Where does it get info on % for socat? $ socat echo - $ socat echo STDIO $ socat echo STDOUT%STDIN $ socat echo STDIO%STDIO $ socat echo -%- $ socat echo FD:1%FD:0 $ socat echo 1%0 /usr/local/bin/socat TCP:127.0.0.1:1234 -%EXEC:"awk 'BEGIN{print \"BANNER\";fflush()}/BANNER/{next}//{print;fflush()}'" Testing socat: - /usr/local/bin/socat - TCP-LISTEN:1234 - /usr/local/bin/socat TCP:127.0.0.1:1234 EXEC:"/bin/sed -s 's/foo/bar/g'"%EXEC:"/bin/sed -u 's/toto/tata/g'" First open a port for listening and connect it to STDIO In another shell, connect and do the black magic... reference: - http://eros.ph0k.eu/~nizox/twin/V2/modules/socat-1.6.0.0/EXAMPLES - http://www.rschulz.eu/2008/09/ssh-proxycommand-without-netcat.html $ exec 3<>/dev/tcp/zeus.yobi.be/22;(cat <&3 & );cat >&3 SSH-2.0-OpenSSH_5.1p1 Debian-3 - http://thesmithfam.org/blog/2006/05/23/bash-socket-programming-with-devtcp-2/ - http://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=146464 - http://www.mtu.net/~engstrom/ssh-proxy.php ATTEMPT 3: Window 1: socat -v -%'EXEC:/home/beq06659/.ssh/mys2.sh' TCP-LISTEN:1234 Window 2: /usr/local/bin/socat -ly -v -%"EXEC:sed -unf /home/beq06659/.ssh/sedy" "PROXY:ftp.noekeon.org:22|TCP:localhost:1234" File mys2.sh: #! /bin/bash echo -e "HTTP/1.1 200 Connection established\r\n\r\n" cat File sedy: 1 s/^/SSH-2.0-OpenSSH_5.1\n/p; /SSH-2.0-OpenSSH_5.1/d; /SSH-2.0-OpenSSH_5.1/! p LESSONS LEARNED: - READ THE CHANGES DOC, especially for BETA SW - SOCKET = bidir --> a filter = 4 descriptors - PIPE = unidir --> a filter = 2 descriptor (stdin/stdout)
ss
See Linux networking.
wavemon
wavemon is a top-like monitoring tool for wifi connection.
To install:
sudo apt install wavemon
To use:
wavemon
wget
wget URL
wget URL --content-dispostion # If download gets wrong name, use this option first
wget URL -O filename # ... otherwise use this to rename download to 'filename'
whois
Find CIDR for www.facebook.com [15]:
host -t a www.facebook.com
# www.facebook.com has address 69.171.228.40
whois 69.171.228.40 | grep CIDR
# CIDR: 69.171.224.0/19
Internet
httrack
httrack is a offline browser; it copies websites to a local directory.
# Example: checking out progit boot
# -d stay on same principal domain
# -w mirror web sites
# -O /var/www path for mirror/logfiles+cache
# -I0 don't make an index
# -%v display on screen filesnames downloaded
# -P 127.0.0.1:8118 Proxy settings
# '+progit.org/figures/*' +filter
# '-progit.org/book/*/*' -filter
httrack http://progit.org/book/ -d -w -O /var/www -I0 -%v '+progit.org/figures/*' '-progit.org/book/*/*' [-P 127.0.0.1:8118]
sed -ri \"s_'http://progit.org/book'_'index.html'_\" /var/www/progit.org/book/*.html
# Example 2
# -W mirror web sites, semi-automatic (ask question)
httrack http://www.cplusplus.com/ -W -O /var/www -%v '-www.cplusplus.com/forum/*' '-www.cplusplus.com/src/*' '-www.cplusplus.com/member/*' [-P 127.0.0.1:8118]
# Example 3 - Use different path for cache/log files
# -O /var/www,/tmp/httrack path for mirror,path cache and logfiles
httrack http://www.argospress.com/Resources/systems-engineering/index.html -d -O /var/www,/tmp/httrack -I0 -%v [-P 127.0.0.1:8118]
sed -ri '/wms.assoc-amazon.com/{N; d}' /var/www/www.argospress.com/Resources/systems-engineering/*.htm
# Example 4 - Limit depth
# -r2 set mirror depth to 2 (i.e. given address + 1st links)
httrack http://powerman.name/doc/asciidoc -r2 -w -I0 [-P 127.0.0.1:8118]
Serial
stty
stty changes and prints terminal line settings. It usually comes pre-installed.
stty -F /dev/ttyUSB0 -a # Print all settings in human-readable form
stty -F /dev/ttyUSB0 --save # Print all settings in stty-readable form
setserial
setserial get/set Linux serial port information.
See for instance [16] for usage.
Package Management
dpkg
Package manager for Debian / Ubuntu. See Package Management#Ubuntu / Debian
rpm
System
dmidecode
dmidecode is a tool to decode DMI (SMBIOS) tables:
sudo dmidecode
...
Handle 0x0000, DMI type 0, 24 bytes
BIOS Information
Vendor: Dell Inc.
Version: A19
Release Date: 12/21/2009
Address: 0xF0000
Runtime Size: 64 kB
ROM Size: 1728 kB
Characteristics:
ISA is supported
PCI is supported
PC Card (PCMCIA) is supported
PNP is supported
BIOS is upgradeable
BIOS shadowing is allowed
...
inxi
inxi is yet another way to get information on hardware:
inxi -Gx # as current desktop user, don't use sudo!
# Graphics: Card: Intel 3rd Gen Core processor Graphics Controller bus-ID: 00:02.0
# X.Org: 1.15.1 driver: intel Resolution: 1600x900@60.0hz
# GLX Renderer: Mesa DRI Intel Ivybridge Mobile GLX Version: 3.0 Mesa 10.1.0 Direct Rendering: Yes
loadkeys
loadkeys loads keyboard translation tables.
Use loadkeys to change the keyboard layout in console mode (i.e. Ctrl-Alt-F1 console).
sudo loadkeys be # Load Belgian layout
lscpu
lscpu # Display information about the cpu architecture
lsmem
lsmem # List all ranges of available memory
lsmod / modinfo / modprobe
lsmod # Show the status of modules in the Linux Kernel
modinfo iwlagn # Show information about a Linux Kernel module
modprobe -r iwlagn # Remove module from the Linux Kernel
modprobe iwlagn 11n_disable=1 # Add module to the Linux Kernel, with specific parameters
lspci
lspci # List all PCI devices
lspci -v # List all PCI devices (verbose)
newgrp
newgrp log in to a new group
newgrp - <group> # Start a new session with <group> as primary group. - means to reinitialize environment.
umask 002 # Make sure all files / directories we create have group access
To run newgrp in a script, use the following construction [17]:
newgrp groupb << END
touch "myscript_output.txt"
END
Or better yet use the sg command instead.
pidinfo
Find the process ID of a running program
pidof apache2 # Find all pid of apache2
pgrep
Prints PID of the process matching given pattern. Never match pgrep itself!
ps -fp $(pgrep autossh) # Much better that "ps -aef | grep autossh", which match grep process itself
pkill
Send a signal (default TERM) to process matching given pattern. Never match pkill itself!
pkill -0 autossh # Test if process "autossh" is running
ps
ps -ef # All processes - full format
ps afl # Proc w ttys, all users - long + forest
ps flx # Proc w/o ttys - long + forest
ps aflx # All processes, all users - long + forest
ps au # Proc w ttys, all users - user output
ps ux # Proc w/o ttys - user output
ps aux # All processes, all users - user output
ps axs # All process, with signals
pv
pipe viewer — terminal-based tool for monitoring the progress of data through a pipeline
pv -cN source < linux-2.2.20.tar.bz2 | bzcat | pv -CN bzcat | gzip -9 | pv -cN gzip > linux-2.2.20.tar.gz
source: 4.48MB 0:02:01 [9.84kB/s] [========> ] 29% ETA 0:04:44
bzcat: 26MB 0:02:01 [ 192kB/s] [ <=> ]
gzip: 5.58MB 0:02:01 [ 64kB/s] [ <=> ]
savelog
savelog saves, rotates and compresses log files. This is similar to logrotate cron job.
savelog -n ~/log/git-fetch.log
sg
sg executes command as different group ID.
umask 002 # Ensure that all files written will be group accessible
sg - <group> -c "mkdir foo" # Run commands as group <group>
The following construction restart the current script under a different group (from [18]):
if ! [ "${SBREADY:=false}" = true -o $(id -ng) = ${NEEDGRP:=wheel} ] ; then
export SBREADY=true
exec sg $NEEDGRP "$0" "$@"
fi
sudo / gksudo
See also Ubuntu's page at [linux reference script security sudo ubuntu].
ls | sudo tee /root/somefile # Instead of redirection sudo ls > /root/somefile
ls | sudo tee -a /root/somefile # ... same but append instead
sudo sh -c "ls > /root/somefile" # Yet another way to do redirection with sudo
sudo !! # Repeat last command with root privilege
sudo -i # Get a root *login* shell
sudo su - # ... another solution
sudo -s # Root shell but keeping current environment
sudo su # ... another solution
sudo -k # Reset sudo password timeout
gksudo is the graphical equivalent of sudo:
gksudo gedit /etc/fstab
showkey
showkey examine the codes sent by the keyboard (linux kernel only - for X keyboard events, see xev!).
showkey -k # Dump key codes (default)
showkey -s # Dump scan codes
timeout / timelimit
timeout / timelimit are small binary to run a command with a given time limit. More exactly they send a given signal to the child process after some specified time. See also Perl - kill on ALARM signal).
timeout -15 30 mplayer dvd:// # Show 30s of DVD movie, then kill mplayer with a TERM signal
- free
- Display the amount of free and used memory (free -m to get info in MB)
free
free -m # Show in megabyte
- /proc/meminfo
- All memory usage information
cat /proc/meminfo
- vmstat
- Summary of memory usage
vmstat
Miscellaneous
- htop
- an improved top command
- lsb_release
- lsb_release -a prints version information for the Linux release you're running.
- Another option (also working on Debian), is to use
cat /etc/*-release
. - mkfifo
- make FIFOs (named pipes)
- pv, pipeview, pipebench
- monitor the progress of data through a pipe
- strace
- trace system calls and signals
- tee
- read from standard input and write to standard output and files
- uname
- uname -a prints all system information, include machine name, kernel name & version.
- watch
- Execute a program periodically, showing output full screen
watch -n 0.5 myprog arg1 arg2 # Wait 0.5s between run
watch -cn 0.5 myprog arg1 arg2 # ... same with color
watch -cn 0.5 myprog \"arg w/ space\" # BEWARE! arg must be "double" quoted
watch -cn 0.5 myprog ${*@Q} # Quoted args, in case args are user defined in a script
User / Group Administration
groupadd / addgroup
Use groupadd, addgroup to create a new group. groupadd is the low-level utility. addgroup is the Debian more friendly version.
sudo groupadd groupname # Create a new group groupname
sudo groupadd -g 123 groupname # ... and specify gid of the new group
sudo addgroup groupname
sudo addgroup --gid 123 groupname
useradd / adduser
Use useradd to create new user. useradd is the low-level utility. adduser is the Debian more friendly version.
sudo useradd username # Create a new user username
sudo useradd -s /bin/bash username # ... specify the deafult shell in use for the user
sudo useradd -s /bin/bash -m username # ... and create user home directory (from /etc/skel)
sudo useradd -u 1234 username # Create a new user username with uid 1234
sudo useradd -g GRP1 -G GRP2,GRP3 username # Specify primary and supplementary groups
sudo adduser username # Create a new user username
sudo adduser --system username # Create a new system user (in the system uid range)
sudo adduser --shell /bin/bash username # Use /bin/bash as default login shell
userdel / groupdel / deluser
Use userdel, groupdel, deluser to remove an existing user /group. deluser is the Debian more friendly version
sudo userdel username # Remove existing user username
sudo groupdel groupname # Remove existing group groupname
sudo deluser username # Remove existing user username
sudo deluser --group groupname # Remove existing group groupname
usermod
Use usermod to modify an existing user
sudo usermod -g GRP1 username # Modify the primary group of user username
sudo usermod -g GRP1 -G GRP2,GRP3 username # ... and also the supplementary groups
gpasswd
Use gpasswd to administer /etc/group and /etc/gshadow
sudo gpasswd -a $USER fuse # Add self to group 'fuse'
To make the new group effective:
loginctl terminate-user $USERNAME # This will FORCE LOGOUT !!!
su - $USERNAME # New shell with new groups
X
disper
TO install:
sudo add-apt-repository ppa:wvengen/ppa
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install
Some examples of use:
disper -s # Only enable primary screen (laptop screen)
disper -S # Only enable secondary screen (external monitor)
disper -d auto -e # Auto-detect + enable extended mode
disper -d auto -c # clone mode
xbindkeys / xbindkeys-config
- xbindkeys is a program that allows you to launch shell commands with your keyboard or your mouse under the X Window System. It links commands to keys or mouse buttons, using a configuration file. It's independent of the window manager and can capture all keyboard keys (ex: Power, Wake...).
- xbindkeys-config is an easy to use gtk program for configuring Xbindkeys (see [19].
xclip
- xclip is a command line interface to the X11 clipboard. It can also be used for copying files, as an alternative to sftp/scp, thus avoiding password prompts when X11 forwarding has already been setup. Check this guide.
xdpyinfo
Display information utility for X, like the dimension of the display (pixels vs millimeters) and the resolution (DPI):
xdpyinfo | grep dimensions # Return dimension of the desktop (size in pixels and millimeters)
xdpyinfo | grep resolution # Return current screen resolution in DPI (dots per inch)
XSel / XSelection
XSel is a command-line program for getting and setting the contents of the X selection and context-menu clipboard. Normally the former is only accessible by manually highlighting information and pasting it with the middle mouse button, and the latter is only accessible by using context-menu cut/copy/paste command.
xselection is an equivalent package on OpenSUSE.
On Cygwin, one has to use getclip, putclip or device /dev/clipboard.
xsel -p # To get content of PRIMARY buffer (X selection)
xselection PRIMARY # (equivalent command for xselection)
xsel -b # To get content of CLIPBOARD (context-menu clipboard)
xselection CLIPBOARD # (equivalent command for xselection)
echo sometext | xsel -p # To set PRIMARY buffer
echo sometext | xselection PRIMARY - # (equivalent command for xselection)
xselection PRIMARY sometext # (equivalent command for xselection)
echo sometext | xsel -b # To set CLIPBOARD buffer
echo sometext | xselection CLIPBOARD - # (equivalent command for xselection)
xselection CLIPBOARD sometext # (equivalent command for xselection)
xvkbd
xvkbd is a virtual (graphical) keyboard program for X Window System which provides facility to enter characters onto other clients (softwares) by clicking on a keyboard displayed on the screen. It can also be used to send keyboard events through command-line:
xvkbd -xsendevent -text text-string
xwininfo
xwininfo is the window information utility for X. Could be used to find the geometry of a window. See here
xwininfo # Return information on the clicked windows
xwininfo -root # ... or on the root window
xwininfo -root |awk '/Width/{print $2} # Get Width of the current desktop
Text Manipulation
column
Format input into multiple columns
cat | column -l
123 456
98765 98765
^D
# 123 456
# 98765 98765
csvquote
csvquote is a nice wrapper tool to pre-/post-process CSV files to ease processing by tools like AWK (to handle comma within quotes)
csvquote foobar.csv | cut -d ',' -f 5 | sort | uniq -c | csvquote -u
cat foobar.csv | csvquote | cut -d ',' -f 7,4,2 | csvquote -u
csvquote -t foobar.tsv | wc -l
csvquote -q "'" foobar.csv | sort -t, -k3 | csvquote -u
csvquote foobar.csv | awk -F, '{sum+=$3} END {print sum}'
cut
TBC
paste
TBC
fold
fold -w 40 FILE # Wrap FILE to 40-char width
expand
expand -t 4 FILE # Convert tabs to spaces (4)
expand -t 4,10 FILE # Set explicit tab positions
fmt
TBC
less
command | less -S # To wrap (aka fold) long-lines (or use '-','S' within less)
nl
nl numbers lines of files
nl -ba FILE # Number *all* lines of FILE
rl, shuf
rl is a command-line tool that reads lines from an input file or stdin, randomizes the lines and outputs a specified number of lines (requires package randomize-lines).
shuf generates random permutations.
They are alternative to sort -R
(note that the latter does not work with duplicate lines).
sed
Moved to page dedicated to Sed.
sort
sort is the well-know text sort utility.
sort -R shuffle.txt # shuffle the lines (use random hash) - fail with duplicate lines
nl -ba file | sort -R | sed 's/^.*[0-9]\t//' # ... idem, but workaround for dup lines
sort
by default takes into account the current locale. To get the traditional sort order that uses native byte values:
LC_ALL=C sort myfile.txt # traditional sort, indep of current locale
Use -o file
to sort in-place, or use the sponge
utility:
sort file -o file # sort in-place
sort file | sponge file # soak sorted file and write it back
Use LC_ALL=C
for huge speed improvement. Also increasing the internal buffer helps:
LC_ALL=C sort -S 2G file
tr
tr translates or deletes characters.
Some basic uses:
echo lowercase | tr a-z A-Z # turns lowercase into uppercase
echo lowercase | tr [:lower:] [:upper:] # idem
echo encrypt me please | tr a-z n-za-m # a very simple rot13 implementation
A powerful rot-n implementation [20]:
dual=abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyzabcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz
phrase='hello there'
n=13
newphrase=$(echo $phrase | tr ${dual:0:26} ${dual:$n:26})
echo ${newphrase}
tr can also be used to split words into newlines:
tr ' ' '\n' file
figlet, toilet... (fun)
Some funny banner-like tool:
Image manipulation
netpbm
Netpbm is a package of graphics programs and programming libraries. There are over 220 separate programs in the package, most of which have pbm, pgm, ppm, or pnm in their names. For example, pnmscale
and giftopnm
.
For example, you might use pnmscale
to shrink an image by 10%. Or use pnmcomp
to overlay one image on top of another. Or use pbmtext
to create an image of text. Or reduce the number of colors in an image with pnmquant
.
anytopnm myfile.gif | pnmtopng > myfile.png # Convert a GIF file to PNG
anytopnm oll28.gif | pnmflip -r90 | ppmtogif > oll28-90.gif # Rotate and output GIF
JPEG file manipulation can be done with djpeg
and cjpeg
from package libjpeg-turbo-progs:
djpeg foo.jpg | pnmflip -r90 | cjpeg) # Lossy rotate of jpeg
Development
addr2line
addr2Line converts addresses into file names and line numbers.
ar
ar creates, modifies, and extracts from archives. It can be used to generate static libraries (.a files) for use with gcc.
diff
Use diff to compare 2 files/directories together and/or to generate patch files. Use colordiff (package colordiff) to have colored output.!
diff old new # View difference (default ed script format)
diff -u old new >new.patch # Generate a patch file (universal format)
diff -y old new # View difference side-by-side (as with sdiff)
#Color with DIFF:
colordiff -u old new # colordiff can also colorize a diff output package colordiff
diff old new | colordiff # ... idem
#Color with WDIFF:
wdiff -n old new | colordiff # But need option '-n'
#Piping to LESS with COLORS
diff -u old new | colordiff | less -R # To keep color with pager
#DIFF / WDIFF combo
diff --strip-trailing-cr -bu old new | wdiff -d | colordiff | less -R # Handy when wdiff miss some options...
Patch can be applied with the command patch (see below). Be careful regarding file names / directory structures when generating patch files! Sometimes you'll need to edit the generated patch files to fix the directory structure.
ldd
ldd print shared object dependencies.
See also readelf
and lddtree
(package pax-utils).
ldd /bin/ls
# linux-vdso.so.1 (0x00007ffcc3563000)
# libselinux.so.1 => /lib64/libselinux.so.1 (0x00007f87e5459000)
# libcap.so.2 => /lib64/libcap.so.2 (0x00007f87e5254000)
# libc.so.6 => /lib64/libc.so.6 (0x00007f87e4e92000)
# libpcre.so.1 => /lib64/libpcre.so.1 (0x00007f87e4c22000)
# libdl.so.2 => /lib64/libdl.so.2 (0x00007f87e4a1e000)
# /lib64/ld-linux-x86-64.so.2 (0x00005574bf12e000)
# libattr.so.1 => /lib64/libattr.so.1 (0x00007f87e4817000)
# libpthread.so.0 => /lib64/libpthread.so.0 (0x00007f87e45fa000)
lddtree
lddtree
readelf
readelf displays information on ELF files.
# View libraries linked in .elf (but only directly linked, these may yet load other libs)
readelf -d obs-ios-camera-source.so | grep NEEDED
# 0x0000000000000001 (NEEDED) Shared library: [libobs.so.0]
# 0x0000000000000001 (NEEDED) Shared library: [libavcodec.so.58]
# ...
patch
Use patch to apply a patch previously generated with the command diff. patch use is pretty much straightforward, one mainly has to pay attention to directory structure / blanks.
Complete example using diff:
$ cp project project-patched
$ cd project-patched
$ vi somefile # We start modifying the copy
$ cd ..
$ diff -u project project-patched >project.patch # We generate the patch file (universal format)
$ cd project # We cd into project directory to patch
$ patch -lNp1<../project.patch # We apply the patch in place
- -l — ignore white spaces (very handy when copying patch from internet page for instance).
- -N — ignore patch that seems reversed or already applied (same as --forward).
- -p1 — tells patch to ignore the first (i.e. one level of) directory in the file name given in the patch header.
The value to use for option p depends actually on the patch header:
- First example - same root directory for both to and from file
- second example - different root directory between to and from file
--- outguess-0.2/jpg.c 2001-02-13 01:29:07.000000000 +0100
+++ outguess-0.2/jpg.c 2009-08-25 16:06:05.242378300 +0200
$ patch -lNp0 <project.patch # First example
--- outguess-0.2/jpg.c 2001-02-13 01:29:07.000000000 +0100
+++ outguess-0.2-patched/jpg.c 2009-08-25 16:06:05.242378300 +0200
$ cd project_dir; patch -lNp1 <../project.patch # Second example
vbindiff
vbindiff — hexadecimal file display and comparison
vbindiff file1.bin file2.bin # Compare and view 2 binary files
Scripting
Some commands very useful when writing scripts
command
From the manpage, command
execute a simple command...
GDB=$(command -v gdb) # Get path to gdb
command -v
behaves much like which
, except that on Bash:
command
is a shell built-in.- it treats aliases differently.
Miscellaneous
base64
base64 from coreutils
echo QWxhZGRpbjpvcGVuIHNlc2FtZQ== | base64 --decode
echo `echo QWxhZGRpbjpvcGVuIHNlc2FtZQ== | base64 --decode`
cksum / jacksum / md5sum / sha1sum / sum
cksum file # Generate a CRC similar to CRC32, but in decimal, and with length appended.
cksum -o3 file # Generate a CRC32 checksum (BSD only)
sum file # Generate a checksum
md5sum file # Hash file using MD5
sha1sum file # Hash file using SHA1
jacksum -a crc32 file # Hash using CRC32 (dec)
jacksum -a crc32 -E hexup file # Hash using CRC32 (hex)
date
date +'%F %T' # YYYY-mm-dd HH:MM:SS
date +'%Y%m%d%H%M%S" # YYYmmddHHMMSS
date +'%s' # Get current epoch time (seconds since 1970-01-01 00:00:00 UTC)
date --date='@1498485311' # Convert epoch to human readable time
direnv
direnv is an extension for your shell. It augments existing shells with a new feature that can load and unload environment variables depending on the current directory.
- Alternatives: https://github.com/gyf304/dotenv
# Create a new folder for demo purposes.
$ mkdir ~/my-project
$ cd ~/my-project
# Show that the FOO environment variable is not loaded.
$ echo ${FOO-nope}
nope
# Create a new .envrc. This file is bash code that is going to be loaded by
# direnv.
$ echo export FOO=foo > .envrc
.envrc is not allowed
# The security mechanism didn't allow to load the .envrc. Since we trust it,
# let's allow its execution.
$ direnv allow .
direnv: reloading
direnv: loading .envrc
direnv export: +FOO
# Show that the FOO environment variable is loaded.
$ echo ${FOO-nope}
foo
# Exit the project
$ cd ..
direnv: unloading
# And now FOO is unset again
$ echo ${FOO-nope}
nope
dog
dog is better than cat. It writes the contents of each give file, URL, or the standard input to standard output.
dtach
dtach simple program that emulates the detach feature of screen. A session in dtach is a single instance in which a program is running under the control of dtach. The program is disassociated from the original terminal, and is thus protected from your original terminal being disconnected for some reason.
echo
echo -e "Some text\n...on 2 lines..." # Enable interpretation of backslash escapes (must be quoted!)
expect
Expect is a tool for automating interactive applications such as telnet, ftp, passwd, fsck, rlogin, tip, etc.
hyperfine
hyperfine is a command-line benchmarking tool (benchmark tool).
hyperfine --warmup 3 'fd -HI "[0-9]\.jpg"' 'find -name "*[0-9].jpg"'
Hyperfine may produce results in CSV, JSON, Markdown.
iconv
locale encoding conversions
konwert
fancy encoding conversions
mc (Midnight Commander)
mc or Midnight Commander is a powerful file manager working in a shell terminal.
See dedicated page on this wiki.
mimencode
binary file conversion for the mail.
munpack
Use munpack to extract MIME attachment from email [23]:
cat Message
# ...
#
# --PGP_Universal_31BF743E_DCBDB54C_D4397473_15481C77
# Content-Type: application/octet-stream;
# name="tuleap_ex.txt.gpg"
# Content-Transfer-Encoding: BASE64
# Content-Disposition: attachment;
# filename="tuleap_ex.txt.gpg"
#
# hQIOA1uCgmTNqsbUEAgAqbp/CXJfNQmZu8RHtZaP6Fm5gi+sjyothO19faktgOFrVTsame5ZW8yi
# ...
# ...
# NnRRvRI+TcohkYsisQy4oiUA
# --PGP_Universal_31BF743E_DCBDB54C_D4397473_15481C77--
#
sudo apt install mpack
munpack -f Message
mrxvt
A multi-tab version of rxvt (terminal-emulator).
parallel
parallel runs many job in parallel.
parallel -i chronic sh -c "date; echo {}"
Note that this is parallel
from moreutils. There is also a separate package parallel with different options.
recode
recode /cl../cr <dos.txt >mac.txt
recode /cr.. <mac.txt >unix.txt
recode ../cl <unix.txt >dos.txt
recode charset1/surface1..charset2/surface2 <input.txt >output.txt
recode /QP.. <qp.txt >normal.txt # To convert quoted-printable text
charset | surface | ||
---|---|---|---|
us | ASCII (7 bits) | /cr | Carriage return as end of line (Mac text) |
l1 | ISO Latin-1 (ISO-8859-1, Western Europe, 8 bits) | /cl | Carriage return line feed as end of line (DOS text) |
EUCJP | EUC-JP for Japanese (Unix) | / | Line feed as end of line (Unix text) |
SJIS | Shift-JIS for Japanese (Microsoft) | /d1 | Human readable bytewise decimal dump |
ISO2022JP | Mail encoding for Japanese (7 bits) | /x1 | Human readable bytewise hexidecimal dump |
u2 | UCS-2 (Universal Character Set, 2 bytes) | /64 | Base64 encoded text (see also base64) from coreutils. |
u8 | UTF-8 (Universal Transformation Format, 8 bits) | /QP | Quoted-Printable encoded text |
reformime
MIME E-mail reformatting tool
screen
Screen is a full-screen window manager that multiplexes a physical terminal between several processes, typically interactive shells.
See also tmux for a better alternatives that supports splitting in panes, mousewheel support...
Launch with
screen # Start a new screen session
screen -r # Resumes a detacked screen session
screen -d -r # Reattach a session and if necessary detach it first
screen -d -R # Reattach a session and if necessary detach or even create it first
screen -D -r # Reattach a session. If necessary detach and logout remotely first
screen -D -R # Attach here and now, ie:
# - If no session is running, create it
# - Otherwise reattach the session. If necessary detach/logout remotely first
For convenience one may add the following alias to .bashrc:
alias screen=screen -D -R
Useful shortcuts:
key | description |
---|---|
C-a c | Open a new instance |
C-a Space | Switch to next instance |
C-a d | Detach from screen. Reattach later with screen -r
|
C-a D D | Power detach, i.e. detach and logout |
byobu is a wrapper around screen, which makes it prettier and more powerful (see this also).
Use reptyr to capture an already running process and attach it to a new terminal. Very handy if you start a process, and you regret not having started screen first...
sponge
sponge (package moreutils) soaks up standard input and write to a file. It can be used to easily edit file in-place:
sed -r '...' FILE | grep ... | sponge FILE # Pipeline from and to same file!
tabs
Set tabulation size of the terminal.
tabs 4 # Set default tab size to 4
tabs 8 # Set default tab size to 8 (the default)
Note that some applications are not impacted by this setting or have alternate solution:
less -x1,5 # LESS - sets tabs
git config --global core.pager 'less -x1,5' # GIT
diff -t --tabsize=4 # DIFF - alternate solution
tesseract
A tool to perform OCR.
Example of script AskUbuntu:
#!/bin/bash
SCR_IMG=".screentemp.png"
TEMP_TXT=".screentext.txt"
gnome-screenshot -a --file=$SCR_IMG
tesseract $SCR_IMG $TEMP_TXT -l eng
cat $TEMP_TXT* | xsel -b
rm $SCR_IMG $TEMP_TXT*
timeout
timeout
runs a command with a time limit.
On MinGW, timeout is not available. Instead there is a bash-script equivalent.
tmux
See page Tmux.
uuencode, uudecode
Binary file conversion for Unix.
wc
Counts lines, words and character in a file
xargs
For more examples, see combinations with the command find
#By default, xargs cuts at WHITE SPACE and NEWLINE. Use -d '\n' to only cut at NEWLINES
for i in $(locate .pdf); do basename $i; done # WRONG
locate .pdf | xargs -rd '\n' -n 1 basemane # Correct
Hex Tools
hd / hexdump
ASCII, decimal, hexadecimal, octal dump.
hexdump -e '"%2x"' <myfile> # Convert myfile into a long hexadecimal string - ! See DOUBLE-QUOTED parameter
hexdump -C <myfile> # Canonical hex + ascii display (16 bytes)
hd <myfile> # (idem)
See also od and xxd. There are also hex editors, like hexer and hexedit (adapts to width of the terminal!).
od
od - dump files in octal and other formats
od -xc file # Output file in ascii and hex output (2-byte, ! little-endian)
od -t x1 -a --width=32 testvar.sh # Output 32-byte at once
See also hd / hexdump and xxd.
xxd
Make a hexdump or do the reverse. This tool is delivered along with vim. Probably the BEST out there
xxd -g8 -c32 <file> # Output 32 bytes, grouped in 8-byte columns
xxd -p -c64 <file> # Output 64 bytes per line, plain (postscript) mode
echo 202122 | xxd -r -p # Convert hexdump to a binary string
echo -n ' !"' | xxd -p # Convert binary string to hexdump - DON'T FORGET -n
echo -n ' !"' | xxd -u -p # Convert binary string to hexdump - DON'T FORGET -n (uppercase)
See also hd / hexdump and od.
xxd can be easily used in Vim to hexedit a file:
" To convert current buffer to hex
:%xxd
" To convert current buffer from hex
:%xxd -r
Security
openssl rand
openssl rand generates random strings:
openssl rand -hex 16 # Generate a 16-byte random string in hexadecimal
openssl rand -base64 16 # Generate a 16-byte random string in base64
Desktop
notify-send
notify-send is a program to send desktop notifications.
notify-send "summary" "body message"
If messages are not visible, use either -t 0
to remove time limit, or critical
urgency [24]:
notify-send -u critical "Urgent" "This is urgent!"
notify-send -t 0 "Nag" "This is a nag screen."
notify-send
uses icons from /usr/share/icons/gnome/32x32 and /usr/share/notify-osd/icons/.... Any file in any sub-folder can be used directly, or a specific image file can be given [25]:
notify-send -i face-laugh "I am happy"
notify-send -i task-due "Time to work dude!"
notify-send -i ~/myicon.png "This is my icon"
Multimedia
paplay
paplay
is the best alternative on "modern" linux
paplay /usr/share/games/xboard/sounds/woodthunk.wav
play
Play sound with ALSA. But often get under-run warnings (see Linux audio). Better use paplay
.
play /usr/share/games/xboard/sounds/woodthunk.wav
play --single-threaded /usr/share/games/xboard/sounds/woodthunk.wav # Does not help
Python modules
Reference: https://til.simonwillison.net/python/stdlib-cli-tools
HTTP server
python -m http.server
Base64
python3.11 -m base64 -h
JSON
echo '{"foo": "bar", "baz": [1, 2, 3]}' | python -m json.tool
Calendar
python -m calendar