The document provides summaries of common Linux commands organized into categories including file permissions, networking, compression/archives, package installation, searching, login, file transfer, disk usage, directory traversal, system information, hardware information, users, file commands, and process related commands. It describes the use of commands like chmod, chown, ip, tar, gzip, rpm, grep, ssh, scp, df, du, mount, uname, lshw, useradd, ls, mkdir, kill and more.
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
100%(1)100% found this document useful (1 vote)
1K views1 page
Linux Cheat Sheet
The document provides summaries of common Linux commands organized into categories including file permissions, networking, compression/archives, package installation, searching, login, file transfer, disk usage, directory traversal, system information, hardware information, users, file commands, and process related commands. It describes the use of commands like chmod, chown, ip, tar, gzip, rpm, grep, ssh, scp, df, du, mount, uname, lshw, useradd, ls, mkdir, kill and more.
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 1
FILE PERMISSION RELATED
chmod octal file-name =>Change the permissions of file to octal
Example chmod 777 /data/test.c =>Set rwx permission for owner,group,world chmod 755 /data/test.c =>Set rwx permission for owner,rx for group and world chown owner-user file =>Change owner of the file chown owner-user:owner-group file-name =>Change owner and group owner of the file chown owner-user:owner-group directory =>Change owner and group owner of the directory NETWORK ip addr show =>Display all network interfaces and ip address (a iproute2 command,powerful than ifconfig) ip address add 192.168.0.1 dev eth0 =>Set ip address ethtool eth0 =>Linux tool to show ethernet status mii-tool eth0 =>Linux tool to show ethernet status ping host =>Send echo request to test connection whois domain =>Get who is information for domain dig domain =>Get DNS information for domain dig -x host =>Reverse lookup host host google.com =>Lookup DNS ip address for the name hostname i =>Lookup local ip address wget file =>Download file netstat -tupl =>Listing all active listening ports COMPRESSION / ARCHIVES tar cf home.tar home =>Create tar named home.tar containing home/ tar xf file.tar =>Extract the files from file.tar tar czf file.tar.gz files =>Create a tar with gzip compression gzip file =>Compress file and renames it to file.gz INSTALL PACKAGE rpm -i pkgname.rpm =>Install rpm based package rpm -e pkgname =>Remove package INSTALL FROM SOURCE
./configure make make install SEARCH grep pattern files =>Search for pattern in files grep -r pattern dir =>Search recursively for pattern in dir locate file =>Find all instances of file find /home/tom -name 'index*' =>Find files names that start with "index" find /home -size +10000k =>Find files larger than 10000k in /home
LOGIN (SSH AND TELNET) ssh user@host =>Connect to host as user ssh -p port user@host =>Connect to host using specific port telnet host =>Connect to the system using telnet port FILE TRANSFER scp scp file.txt server2:/tmp =>Secure copy file.txt to remote host /tmp folder rsync rsync -a /home/apps /backup/ =>Synchronize source to destination DISK USAGE df h =>Show free space on mounted filesystems df -i =>Show free inodes on mounted filesystems fdisk -l =>Show disks partitions sizes and types du -ah =>Display disk usage in human readable form du -sh =>Display total disk usage on the current directory findmnt =>Displays target mount point for all filesystem mount device-path mount-point =>Mount a device DIRECTORY TRAVERSE cd .. =>To go up one level of the directory tree cd =>Go to $HOME directory cd /test =>Change to /test directory SYSTEM uname -a =>Displaylinux system information uname -r =>Display kernel release information uptime =>Show how long the system has been running + load hostname =>Show system host name hostname -i =>Display the IP address of the host last reboot =>Show system reboot history date =>Show the current date and time cal =>Show this month calendar w =>Display who is online whoami =>Who you are logged in as finger user =>Display information about user HARDWARE dmesg =>Detected hardware and boot messages cat /proc/cpuinfo =>CPU model cat /proc/meminfo =>Hardware memory cat /proc/interrupts =>Lists the number of interrupts per CPU per I/O device lshw =>Displays information on hardware configuration of the system lsblk =>Displays block device related information in Linux free -m =>Used and free memory (-m for MB) lspci -tv =>Show PCI devices lsusb -tv =>Show USB devices dmidecode =>Show hardware info from the BIOS hdparm -i /dev/sda =>Show info about disk sda hdparm -tT /dev/sda =>Do a read speed test on disk sda badblocks -s /dev/sda =>Test for unreadable blocks on disk sda USERS id =>Show the active user id with login and group last =>Show last logins on the system who =>Show who is logged on the system groupadd admin =>Add group "admin" useradd -c "Sam Tomshi" =>g admin -m sam #Create user "sam" userdel sam =>Delete user sam adduser sam =>Add user "sam" usermod =>Modify user information FILE COMMANDS ls al =>Display all information about files/ directories pwd =>Show the path of current directory mkdir directory-name =>Create a directory rm file-name =>Delete file rm -r directory-nam =>Delete directory recursively rm -f file-name =>Forcefully remove file rm -rf directory-name =>Forcefully remove directory recursively cp file1 file2 =>Copy file1 to file2 cp -r dir1 dir2 =>Copy dir1 to dir2, create dir2 if it doesnt exist mv file1 file2 =>Rename source to dest / move source to directory ln s /path/to/file-name link-name #Create symbolic link to file-name touch file =>Create or update file cat > file =>Place standard input into file more file =>Output contents of file head file =>Output first 10 lines of file tail file =>Output last 10 lines of file tail -f file =>Output contents of file as it grows starting with the last 10 lines gpg -c file =>Encrypt file gpg file.gpg =>Decrypt file wc =>print the number of bytes, words, and lines in files xargs =>Execute command lines from standard input PROCESS RELATED ps =>Display your currently active processes ps aux | grep 'telnet' =>Find all process id related to telnet process pmap =>Memory map of process top =>Display all running processes kill pid =>Kill process with mentioned pid id killall proc =>Kill all processes named proc pkill process-name =>Send signal to a process with its name bg =>Resumes suspended jobs without bringing them to foreground fg =>Brings the most recent job to foreground fg n =>Brings job n to the foreground MORE DETAILED : HTTP://LINOXIDE.COM/GUIDE/LINUX-COMMAND-SHELF.HTML