Unix Basic Commands: Topics 1.key Points in Unix 2.architecture of Unix Os 3.responsiblities&advantages 5.VI Editor
Unix Basic Commands: Topics 1.key Points in Unix 2.architecture of Unix Os 3.responsiblities&advantages 5.VI Editor
TOPICS
1.Key points in Unix
2.Architecture of Unix os
3.Responsiblities&advantages
4.Commonly used commands
5.VI Editor
Presented by N.NAVEEN
1
Key Points in UNIX
2
Architecture of Unix Os
1.Application Program
2. Services provided by OS (shell)
3.Kernel
4.Hardware
3
• Unix is also case-sensitive. This means that cat and
Cat are different commands.
4
Responsibilities & Advantages
1.Process Scheduling 1.Open Source
2.Memory Management 2.Multitasking
3 Providing Security 3.Realiblity
4 File Management 4.Network Friendly
5 Controlling i/p & o/p
6 Process Management
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• Shell Commands of UNIX
• Unix Commands
•When you first log into a unix system, you are presented
with something that looks like the following:
/home/pi#
•That “something” is called a prompt. As its name would
suggest, it is prompting you to enter a command.
•Every unix command is a sequence of letters, numbers
and characters. But there are no spaces.
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• Unix Commands
• obtaining help
• # -Super User
• $ -Normal User
• The man command displays reference pages for
the command you specify.
• The UNIX man pages (man is short for manual )
cover every command available.
• To search for a man page, enter man followed by
the name of the command to find .
• For example:
pi@raspberrypi:-$ man ls
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To exit
Press “q”
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• Storing information
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• cat
• cat command is used to concatenate or displays the contents
of a file.
• To use it, type cat, and then press enter key:
/home/pi# cat
• This produces the correct result and runs the cat program.
1. Creating New File: cat >file
2. Displaying the content: cat file
3. Appending the Data: cat >>file
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• A path could refer to either a directory or a filename, so joe
could be either.
• All the items before the short name must be directories.
Root Directory
Sub-Directory larry
Directory
structure File File joe
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• pwd
• pwd (present working directory) tells you your
current directory.
– Most commands act, by default, on the current directory.
For instance, ls without any parameters displays the
contents of the current directory.
• cd
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• Moving Information
• The primary commands for manipulating files under unix are
cp, mv, and rm. They stand for copy, move, and remove,
respectively.
• cp
• cp is used to copy contents of file1 to file2
Syntax: cp source file destinationfile
cp file1 file2 (contents of file1 is copied to file2 in the same directory)
cp folder1/file1 folder2 (contents of file1 is copied to file1 in the
inside of folder2 directory)
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• cut
– It is used to cut the some data in the given file
– Syntax: cut options filename
– cut -c --->cut the characters
– cut -f --->cut the fields
paste
• mv
• mv is used to move a file.
– mv file1 file2 ---> moves a file1 named file2
• looks like cp, except that it deletes the original file after
copying it.
• mv will rename a file if the second parameter is a file. If the
second parameter is a directory, mv will move the file to the
new directory, keeping it’s shortname the same.
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• Some Other UNIX Commands
• The Power of Unix
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• Operating on Files
• In addition to the commands like cd, mv, and rm, you learned
in shell section, there are other commands that just operate on
files, but not the data in them.
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Some of the things these commands manipulate:
• The time stamp: Each file has three dates associated with it.
These are creation time, last modification time and last access
time.
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drwxr-xr-x 2 dag users 6 Dec 6 2000 netscape
file name
group
owner
• touch
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• chmod
• du
du (disk usage) will count the amount of disk space for a given
directory, and all its subdirectories take up on the disk.
• df
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• more
• more is much more useful, and is the command that you’ll
want to use when browsing ASCII text files
more [-l] [+linenumber}] [file1 file2 ... fileN]
• The only interesting option is l, which will tell more that you
aren't interested in treating the character Ctrl-L} as a ``new
page'' character. more will start on a specified linenumber.
• head
head will display the first ten lines in the listed files.
head [- lines}] [l file1 file2 ... fileN]
• Any numeric option will be taken as the number of lines to
print, so head -15 frog will print the first fifteen lines of the
file frog
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• tail
• Like head, tail display only a fraction of the file.
• tail also accepts an option specifying the number of lines.
tail [-lines] [l file1 file2 ... fileN]
• file
• file command attempts to identify what format a particular
file is written in.
file [file1 file2 ... fileN]
• Since not all files have extentions or other easy to identify
marks, the file command performs some rudimentary
checks to try and figure out exactly what it contains.
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• Information Commands
• The commands that will alter a file, perform a certain
operation on the file, or display statistics on the file.
• grep
• grep is the generalized regular expression parser.
• This is a fancy name for a utility which can only search a text
file.
grep { expression} [file1 file2 ... fileN]
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• wc
• wc (word count) simply counts the number of words, lines,
and characters in the file(s).
wc [-clw] [file1 file2 ... fileN]
• The three parameters, clw, stand for character, line, and
word respectively, and tell wc which of the three to count.
• spell
• spell is very simple unix spelling program, usually for
American English. spell is a filter, like most of the other
programs we’ve talked about.
spell [file1 file2 ... fileN]
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• cmp
• cmp compares two files.
• cmp is very simple, and merely tells you where the two
files first differ.
Syntax : cmp file1 [ file2]
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• Editors
• There are a lot of available editors under linux operating
system.
• Amongst these vi is the most common one. One can
claim that every unix system has vi.
• Modes of VI editor
1. Insert mode :typing the new text to a file.
2. Edit mode :modifying the text to a existing file.
3. Command mode :interacting with OS and actions like
read and write files
commands: press i --->goto insert mode
:w -->write file
:wq ---> save and quite the file
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:!q ---->quite the file without saving.