0% found this document useful (0 votes)
147 views

Linux Commands Overview With Examples

This document provides an overview of Linux commands, listing 136 common commands along with brief 1-3 sentence descriptions. It explains that the page will introduce the most frequently used Linux commands and provides examples of each. It notes that the full description of each command can be found in its manual page using the "man" command.

Uploaded by

ravi
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
147 views

Linux Commands Overview With Examples

This document provides an overview of Linux commands, listing 136 common commands along with brief 1-3 sentence descriptions. It explains that the page will introduce the most frequently used Linux commands and provides examples of each. It notes that the full description of each command can be found in its manual page using the "man" command.

Uploaded by

ravi
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 28

A – Z Linux Commands – Overview with Examples

tecmint.com/linux-commands-cheat-sheet

On this page
1. adduser/addgroup
2. agetty
3. alias
4. anacron
5. apropos
6. apt
7. apt-get
8. aptitude
9. arch
10. arp
11. at
12. atq
13. atrm
14. awk
15. batch
16. basename
17. bc
18. bg
19. bzip
20. cal
21. cat
22. chgrp
23. chmod
24. chown
25. cksum

1/28
26. clear
27. cmp
28. comm
29. cp
30. date
31. dd
32. df
33. diff
34. dir
35. dmidecode
36. du
37. echo
38. eject
39. env
40. exit
41. expr
42. factor
43. find
44. free
45. grep
46. groups
47. gzip
48. gunzip
49. head
50. history
51. hostname
52. hostnamectl
53. hwclock
54. hwinfo
55. id
56. ifconfig
57. ionice
58. iostat
59. ip
60. iptables
61. iw
62. iwlist
63. kill
64. killall
65. kmod
66. last
67. ln
68. locate
69. login

2/28
70. ls
71. lshw
72. lscpu
73. lsof
74. lsusb
75. man
76. mdsum
77. mkdir
78. more
79. mv
80. nano
81. nc/netcat
82. netstat
83. nice
84. nmap
85. nproc
86. openssl
87. passwd
88. pidof
89. ping
90. ps
91. pstree
92. pwd
93. rdiff-backup
94. reboot
95. rename
96. rm
97. rmdir
98. scp
99. shutdown
100. sleep
101. sort
102. split
103. ssh
104. stat
105. su
106. sudo
107. sum
108. tac
109. tail
110. talk
111. tar
112. tee
113. time

3/28
114. top
115. touch
116. tr
117. uname
118. uniq
119. uptime
120. users
121. vim/vi
122. w
123. wall
124. watch
125. wc
126. wget
127. whatis
128. which
129. who
130. whereis
131. xargs
132. yes
133. youtube-dl
134. zcmp/zdiff
135. zip
136. zz

There are a countless number of commands in Linux. We are bound to use a number of
them on a daily routine or numerous times to perform common tasks than others. It is
important to note that certain commands are “distro-based” – they can only be found in
specific distros. While others are generic Unix/Linux commands that you’ll find in all if
not most mainstream distros.

In this article, we will introduce you a list of most frequently used Linux commands with
their examples for easy learning. You can find the actual description of each Linux
command in their manual page which you can access like this:

$ man command-name

adduser/addgroup Command
The adduser and addgroup commands are used to add a user and group to the system
respectively according to the default configuration specified in /etc/adduser.conf file.

$ sudo adduser tecmint

For more adduser and addgroup commands: 15 Practical Examples on adduser


Command in Linux

4/28
agetty Command
agetty is a program which manages physical or virtual terminals and is invoked by init.
Once it detects a connection, it opens a tty port, asks for a user’s login name and calls up
the /bin/login command. Agetty is a substitute of Linux getty:

$ agetty -L 9600 ttyS1 vt100

alias Command
alias is a useful shell built-in command for creating aliases (shortcut) to a Linux
command on a system. It is helpful for creating new/custom commands from existing
Shell/Linux commands (including options):

$ alias home='cd /home/tecmint/public_html'

The above command will create an alias called home for /home/tecmint/public_html
directory, so whenever you type home in the terminal prompt, it will put you in the
/home/tecmint/public_html directory.

anacron Command
anacron is a Linux facility used to run commands periodically with a frequency defined in
days, weeks and months.

Unlike its sister cron; it assumes that a system will not run continuously, therefore if a
scheduled job is due when the system is off, it’s run once the machine is powered on.

For more information about anacron and cron read: Cron Vs Anacron: How to Schedule
Jobs Using Anacron on Linux

apropos Command
apropos command is used to search and display a short man page description of a
command/program as follows.

$ apropos adduser

apt Command
apt tool is a relatively new higher-level package manager for Debian/Ubuntu systems:

$ sudo apt update

For more apt usage read: 15 Useful Examples on APT Command

apt-get Command
apt-get is a powerful and free front-end package manager for Debian/Ubuntu systems. It
5/28
is used to install new software packages, remove available software packages, upgrade
existing software packages as well as upgrade entire operating system.

$ sudo apt-get update

For more apt-get usage, read: 25 Useful Commands of APT-GET for Package
Management

aptitude Command
aptitude is a powerful text-based interface to the Debian GNU/Linux package
management system. Like apt-get and apt; it can be used to install, remove or upgrade
software packages on a system.

$ sudo aptitude update

For more usage on aptitude, read: Learn Debian Package Management with Aptitude
Command

arch Command
arch is a simple command for displaying machine architecture or hardware name
(similar to uname -m):

$ arch

arp Command
ARP (Address Resolution Protocol) is a protocol that maps IP network addresses of a
network neighbor with the hardware (MAC) addresses in an IPv4 network.

You can use it as below to find all alive hosts on a network:

$ sudo arp-scan --interface=enp2s0 --localnet

at Command
at command is used to schedule tasks to run in a future time. It’s an alternative to cron
and anacron, however, it runs a task once at a given future time without editing any
config files:

For example, to shutdown the system at 23:55 today, run:

$ sudo echo "shutdown -h now" | at -m 23:55

atq Command
atq command is used to view jobs in at command queue:

6/28
$ atq

atrm Command
atrm command is used to remove/deletes jobs (identified by their job number) from at
command queue:

$ atrm 2

For more usage about at command, read: How to Use ‘at’ Command to Schedule a Task
in Linux

awk Command
Awk is a powerful programming language created for text processing and generally used
as a data extraction and reporting tool.

$ awk '//{print}'/etc/hosts

For more Awk concepts (basic and advance) with simple and easy-to-understand, we’ve
created a book that contains 13 chapters with a total of 41 pages, which covers all Awk
basic and advance usage with practical examples: Awk Getting Started Guide for
Beginners

batch Command
batch is also used to schedule tasks to run a future time, similar to the at command.

basename Command
basename command helps to print the name of a file stripping of directories in the
absolute path:

$ basename bin/findhosts.sh

bc Command
bc is a simple yet powerful and arbitrary precision CLI calculator language which can be
used like this:

$ echo 20.05 + 15.00 | bc

bg Command
bg is a command used to send a process to the background.

$ tar -czf home.tar.gz .


$ bg
$ jobs

7/28
To learn more about bg command, read: Start Linux Command in Background and
Detach Process in Terminal

bzip2 Command
bzip2 command is used to compress or decompress file(s).

$ bzip2 -z filename #Compress


$ bzip2 -d filename.bz2 #Decompress

To learn more examples on bzip2, read: How to Compress and Decompress a .bz2 File in
Linux

cal Command
The cal command print a calendar on the standard output.

$ cal

cat Command
cat command is used to view contents of a file or concatenate files, or data provided on
standard input, and display it on the standard output.

$ cat file.txt

To learn more about cat command, read: 13 Useful Cat Command Examples on Linux

chgrp Command
chgrp command is used to change the group ownership of a file. Provide the new group
name as its first argument and the name of file as the second argument like this:

$ chgrp tecmint users.txt

chmod Command
chmod command is used to change/update file access permissions like this.

$ chmod +x sysinfo.sh

chown Command
chown command changes/updates the user and group ownership of a file/directory like
this.

$ chmod -R www-data:www-data /var/www/html

8/28
To learn more about chgrp, chmod and chwon commands, read: Managing Users &
Groups, File Permissions & Attributes in Linux

cksum Command
cksum command is used to display the CRC checksum and byte count of an input file.

$ cksum README.txt

clear Command
clear command lets you clear the terminal screen, simply type.

$ clear

cmp Command
cmp performs a byte-by-byte comparison of two files like this.

$ cmp file1 file2

comm Command
comm command is used to compare two sorted files line-by-line as shown below.

$ comm file1 file2

cp Command
cp command is used for copying files and directories from one location to another.

$ cp /home/tecmint/file1 /home/tecmint/Personal/

For more information on how to copy files in Linux, read:

1. How to Copy a File to Multiple Directories in Linux


2. Advanced Copy Command – Shows Progress Bar While Copying Large Files/Folders
in Linux
3. Progress – A Tiny Tool to Monitor Progress for (cp, mv, dd, tar, etc.) Commands in
Linux

date Command
date command displays/sets the system date and time like this.

$ date
$ date --set="8 JUN 2017 13:00:00"

To learn more about how to set date in Linux, read: How to Set System Date in Linux

9/28
dd Command
dd command is used for copying files, converting and formatting according to flags
provided on the command line. It can strip headers, extracting parts of binary files and
so on.

The example below shows creating a boot-able USB device:

$ dd if=/home/tecmint/kali-linux-1.0.4-i386.iso of=/dev/sdc1 bs=512M; sync

df Command
df command is used to show file system disk space usage as follows.

$ df -h

For more usage on df command, read: 12 Useful ‘df’ Command Examples to Check Disk
Space

diff Command
diff command is used to compare two files line by line. It can also be used to find the
difference between two directories in Linux like this:

$ diff file1 file2

Some useful diff tools for Linux: 8 Best File Comparison and Difference (Diff) Tools for
Linux

dir Command
dir command works like Linux ls command, it lists the contents of a directory.

$ dir

dmidecode Command
dmidecode command is a tool for retrieving hardware information of any Linux system.
It dumps a computer’s DMI (a.k.a SMBIOS) table contents in a human-readable format
for easy retrieval.

To view your system hardware info, you can type:

$ sudo dmidecode --type system

Some useful tools to find out Linux system hardware info: 10 Useful Commands to Get
Linux Hardware Information

du Command
10/28
du command is used to show disk space usage of files present in a directory as well as its
sub-directories as follows.

$ du /home/aaronkilik

echo Command
echo command prints a text of line provided to it.

$ echo “This is TecMint - Linux How Tos”

eject Command
eject command is used to eject removable media such as DVD/CD ROM or floppy disk
from the system.

$ eject /dev/cdrom
$ eject /mnt/cdrom/
$ eject /dev/sda

env Command
env command lists all the current environment variables and used to set them as well.

$ env

Learn more on How to Set and Unset Environment Variables in Linux

exit Command
exit command is used to exit a shell like so.

$ exit

expr Command
expr command is used to calculate an expression as shown below.

$ expr 20 + 30

factor Command
factor command is used to show the prime factors of a number.

$ factor 10

find Command

11/28
find command lets you search for files in a directory as well as its sub-directories. It
searches for files by attributes such as permissions, users, groups, file type, date, size
and other possible criteria.

$ find /home/tecmint/ -name tecmint.txt

Learn more on how to find files in Linux:

1. How to Use ‘find’ Command to Search for Multiple Filenames (Extensions)


2. How to Find Number of Files in a Directory and Subdirectories
3. How to Find Today’s Modified Files in Linux
4. How to Find and Sort Files Based on Modified Date and Time
5. How to Find Top Directories and Files (Disk Space) in Linux

free Command
free command shows the system memory usage (free, used, swapped, cached, etc.) in
the system including swap space. Use the -h option to display output in human friendly
format.

$ free -h

Learn more on how to find memory usage in Linux.

1. Find Top Running Processes by Highest Memory and CPU Usage in Linux
2. Smem – Reports Memory Consumption Per-Process and Per-User Basis in Linux
3. How to Clear RAM Memory Cache, Buffer and Swap Space on Linux

grep Command
grep command searches for a specified pattern in a file (or files) and displays in output
lines containing that pattern as follows.

$ grep ‘tecmint’ domain-list.txt

Learn more about grep command usage in Linux.

1. What’s Difference Between Grep, Egrep and Fgrep in Linux?


2. 12 Basic Linux ‘Grep’ Command Examples in Linux
3. 11 Advanced Linux ‘Grep’ Commands in Linux

groups Command
groups command displays all the names of groups a user is a part of like this.

$ groups
$ groups tecmint

12/28
gzip Command
Gzip helps to compress a file, replaces it with one having a .gz extension as shown
below:

$ gzip passwds.txt
$ cat file1 file2 | gzip > foo.gz

gunzip Command
gunzip expands or restores files compressed with gzip command like this.

$ gunzip foo.gz

head command is used to show first lines (10 lines by default) of the specified file or
stdin to the screen:

# ps -eo pid,ppid,cmd,%mem,%cpu --sort=-%mem | head

history Command
history command is used to show previously used commands or to get info about
command executed by a user.

$ history

Learn more about Linux history command.

1. The Power of Linux “History Command” in Bash Shell


2. Set Date and Time for Each Command You Execute in Bash History
3. How to Use ‘Yum History’ to Find Out Installed/Removed Packages Info

hostname Command
hostname command is used to print or set system hostname in Linux.

$ hostname
$ hostname NEW_HOSTNAME

hostnamectl Command
hostnamectl command controls the system hostname under systemd. It is used to print
or modify the system hostname and any related settings:

$ hostnamectl
$ sudo hostnamectl set-hostname NEW_HOSTNAME

hwclock

13/28
hwclock is a tool for managing the system hardware clock; read or set the hardware
clock (RTC).

$ sudo hwclock
$ sudo hwclock --set --date 8/06/2017

hwinfo Command
hwinfo is used to probe for the hardware present in a Linux system like this.

$ hwinfo

Learn more about how to get Linux hardware info.

1. I-Nex – An Advanced Tool to Collect System/Hardware Information in Linux


2. 9 Useful Tools to Get System Information in Linux

id Command
id command shows user and group information for the current user or specified
username as shown below.

$ id tecmint

ifconfig Command
ifconfig command is used to configure a Linux systems network interfaces. It is used to
configure, view and control network interfaces.

$ ifconfig
$ sudo ifconfig eth0 up
$ sudo ifconfig eth0 down
$ sudo ifconfig eth0 172.16.25.125

ionice Command
ionice command is used to set or view process I/O scheduling class and priority of the
specified process.

If invoked without any options, it will query the current I/O scheduling class and priority
for that process:

$ ionice -c 3 rm /var/logs/syslog

To understand how it works, read this article: How to Delete HUGE (100-200GB) Files in
Linux

iostat Command
iostat is used to show CPU and input/output statistics for devices and partitions. It
14/28
produces useful reports for updating system configurations to help balance the
input/output load between physical disks.

$ iostat

ip Command
ip command is used to display or manage routing, devices, policy routing and tunnels. It
also works as a replacement for well known ifconfig command.

This command will assign an IP address to a specific interface (eth1 in this case).

$ sudo ip addr add 192.168.56.10 dev eth1

iptables Command
iptables is a terminal based firewall for managing incoming and outgoing traffic via a set
of configurable table rules.

The command below is used to check existing rules on a system (using it may require
root privileges).

$ sudo iptables -L -n -v

Learn more about iptables firewall in Linux.

1. How to Start/Stop and Enable/Disable FirewallD and Iptables in Linux


2. Basic Guide on IPTables (Linux Firewall) Tips / Commands
3. Nishita Agarwal Shares Her Interview Experience on Linux ‘iptables’ Firewall

iw Command
iw command is used to manage wireless devices and their configuration.

$ iw list

iwlist Command
iwlist command displays detailed wireless information from a wireless interface. The
command below enables you to get detailed information about the wlp1s0 interface.

$ iwlist wlp1s0 scanning

kill Command
kill command is used to kill a process using its PID by sending a signal to it (default signal
for kill is TERM).

15/28
$ kill -p 2300
$ kill -SIGTERM -p 2300

killall Command
killall command is used to kill a process by its name.

$ killall firefox

Learn more about kill and killall command in Linux.

1. How to Find and Kill Running Processes in Linux


2. A Guide to Kill, Pkill and Killall Commands to Terminate a Process
3. How to Kill Processes/Unresponsive Applications Using ‘xkill’ Command

kmod Command
kmod command is used to manage Linux kernel modules. To list all currently loaded
modules, type.

$ kmod list

last Command
last command display a listing of last logged in users.

$ last

ln Command
ln command is used to create a soft link between files using the -s flag like this.

$ ln -s /usr/bin/lscpu cpuinfo

locate Command
locate command is used to find a file by name. The locate utility works better and faster
than it’s find counterpart.

The command below will search for a file by its exact name (not *name*):

$ locate -b '\domain-list.txt'

login Command
login command is used to create a new session with the system. You’ll be asked to
provide a username and a password to login as below.

$ sudo login

16/28
ls Command
ls command is used to list contents of a directory. It works more or less like dir
command.

The -l option enables long listing format like this.

$ ls -l file1

To know more about ls command, read our guides.

1. 15 Basic ‘ls’ Command Examples in Linux


2. 7 Quirky ‘ls’ Command Tricks Every Linux User Should Know
3. How to Sort Output of ‘ls’ Command By Last Modified Date and Time
4. 15 Interview Questions on Linux “ls” Command – Part 1
5. 10 Useful ‘ls’ Command Interview Questions – Part 2

lshw Command
lshw command is a minimal tool to get detailed information on the hardware
configuration of the machine, invoke it with superuser privileges to get a comprehensive
information.

$ sudo lshw

lscpu Command
lscpu command displays system’s CPU architecture information (such as number of
CPUs, threads, cores, sockets, and more).

$ lscpu

lsof Command
lsof command displays information related to files opened by processes. Files can be of
any type, including regular files, directories, block special files, character special files,
executing text reference, libraries, and stream/network files.

To view files opened by a specific user’s processes, type the command below.

$ lsof -u tecmint

lsusb Command
lsusb command shows information about USB buses in the system and the devices
connected to them like this.

$ lsusb

17/28
man Command
man command is used to view the on-line reference manual pages for
commands/programs like so.

$ man du
$ man df

md5sum Command
md5sum command is used to compute and print the MD5 message digest of a file . If run
without arguments, debsums checks every file on your system against the stock md5sum
files:

$ sudo debsums

mkdir Command
mkdir command is used to create single or more directories, if they do not already exist
(this can be overridden with the -p option).

$ mkdir tecmint-files
OR
$ mkdir -p tecmint-files

more Command
more command enables you to view through relatively lengthy text files one screenful at
a time.

$ more file.txt

Check difference between more and less command and Learn Why ‘less’ is Faster Than
‘more’ Command

mv Command
mv command is used to rename files or directories. It also moves a file or directory to
another location in the directory structure.

$ mv test.sh sysinfo.sh

nano Command
nano is a popular small, free and friendly text editor for Linux; a clone of Pico, the
default editor included in the non-free Pine package.

To open a file using nano, type:

18/28
$ nano file.txt

nc/netcat Command
nc (or netcat) is used for performing any operation relating to TCP, UDP, or UNIX-
domain sockets. It can handle both IPv4 and IPv6 for opening TCP connections, sending
UDP packets, listening on arbitrary TCP and UDP ports, performing port scanning.

The command below will help us see if the port 22 is open on the host 192.168.56.5.

$ nc -zv 192.168.1.5 22

Learn more examples and usage on nc command.

1. How to Check Remote Ports are Reachable Using ‘nc’ Command


2. How to Transfer Files Between Computers Using ‘nc’ Command

netstat Command
netstat command displays useful information concerning the Linux networking
subsystem (network connections, routing tables, interface statistics, masquerade
connections, and multicast memberships).

This command will display all open ports on the local system:

$ netstat -a | more

nice Command
nice command is used to show or change the nice value of a running program. It runs
specified command with an adjusted niceness. When run without any command
specified, it prints the current niceness.

The following command starts the process “tar command” setting the “nice” value to 12.

$ nice -12 tar -czf backup.tar.bz2 /home/*

nmap Command
nmap is a popular and powerful open source tool for network scanning and security
auditing. It was intended to quickly scan large networks, but it also works fine against
single hosts.

The command below will probe open ports on all live hosts on the specified network.

$ nmap -sV 192.168.56.0/24

nproc Command
19/28
nproc command shows the number of processing units present to the current process.
It’s output may be less than the number of online processors on a system.

$ nproc

openssl Command
The openssl is a command line tool for using the different cryptography operations of
OpenSSL’s crypto library from the shell. The command below will create an archive of all
files in the current directory and encrypt the contents of the archive file:

$ tar -czf - * | openssl enc -e -aes256 -out backup.tar.gz

passwd Command
passwd command is used to create/update passwords for user accounts, it can also
change the account or associated password validity period. Note that normal system
users may only change the password of their own account, while root may modify the
password for any account.

$ passwd tecmint

pidof Command
pidof displays the process ID of a running program/command.

$ pidof init
$ pidof cinnamon

ping Command
ping command is used to determine connectivity between hosts on a network (or the
Internet):

ps Command
ps shows useful information about active processes running on a system. The example
below shows the top running processes by highest memory and CPU usage.

# ps -eo pid,ppid,cmd,%mem,%cpu --sort=-%mem | head

pstree Command
pstree displays running processes as a tree which is rooted at either PID or init if PID is
omitted.

$ pstree

20/28
pwd Command
pwd command displays the name of current/working directory as below.

$ pwd

rdiff-backup Command
rdiff-backup is a powerful local/remote incremental backup script written in Python. It
works on any POSIX operating system such as Linux, Mac OS X.

Note that for remote backups, you must install the same version of rdiff-backup on both
the local and remote machines. Below is an example of a local backup command:

$ sudo rdiff-backup /etc /media/tecmint/Backup/server_etc.backup

reboot Command
reboot command may be used to halt, power-off or reboot a system as follows.

$ reboot

rename Command
rename command is used to rename many files at once. If you’ve a collection of files with
“.html” extension and you want to rename all of them with “.php” extension, you can
type the command below.

$ rename 's/\.html$/\.php/' *.html

rm command
rm command is used to remove files or directories as shown below.

$ rm file1
$ rm -rf my-files

rmdir Command
rmdir command helps to delete/remove empty directories as follows.

$ rmdir /backup/all

scp Command
scp command enables you to securely copy files between hosts on a network, for
example.

$ scp ~/names.txt [email protected]:/root/names.txt

21/28
shutdown Command
shutdown command schedules a time for the system to be powered down. It may be
used to halt, power-off or reboot the machine like this.

$ shutdown --poweroff

Learn how to show a Custom Message to Users Before Linux Server Shutdown.

sleep Command
sleep command is used to delay or pause (specifically execution of a command) for a
specified amount of time.

$ check.sh; sleep 5; sudo apt update

sort Command
sort command is used to sort lines of text in the specified file(s) or from stdin as shown
below

$ cat words.txt

Learn more examples of sort command in Linux.

1. 7 Interesting Linux ‘sort’ Command Examples


2. How to Sort Output of ‘ls’ Command By Last Modified Date and Time
3. How to Find and Sort Files Based on Modification Date and Time

split Command
split as the name suggests, is used to split a large file into small parts.

$ tar -cvjf backup.tar.bz2 /home/tecmint/Documents/*

ssh Command
ssh (SSH client) is an application for remotely accessing and running commands on a
remote machine. It is designed to offer a secure encrypted communications between two
untrusted hosts over an insecure network such as the Internet.

$ ssh [email protected]

Learn more about ssh command and how to use it on Linux.

1. 5 Best Practices to Secure and Protect SSH Server


2. Configure “No Password SSH Keys Authentication” with PuTTY on Linux
3. SSH Passwordless Login Using SSH Keygen in 5 Easy Steps
4. Restrict SSH User Access to Certain Directory Using Chrooted Jail
22/28
stat Command
stat is used to show a file or file system status like this ( -f is used to specify a
filesystem).

$ stat file1

su Command
su command is used to switch to another user ID or become root during a login session.
Note that when su is invoked without a username, it defaults to becoming root.

$ su
$ su tecmint

sudo Command
sudo command allows a permitted system user to run a command as root or another
user, as defined by the security policy such as sudoers.

In this case, the real (not effective) user ID of the user running sudo is used to determine
the user name with which to query the security policy.

$ sudo apt update


$ sudo useradd tecmint
$ sudo passwd tecmint

Learn more about sudo command and how to use it on Linux.

1. 10 Useful Sudoers Configurations for Setting ‘sudo’ in Linux


2. How to Run ‘sudo’ Command Without Entering a Password in Linux
3. How to Keep ‘sudo’ Password Timeout Session Longer in Linux

sum Command
sum command is used to show the checksum and block counts for each each specified
file on the command line.

$ sum output file.txt

tac Command
tac command concatenates and displays files in reverse. It simply prints each file to
standard output, showing last line first.

$tac file.txt

tail Command

23/28
tail command is used to display the last lines (10 lines by default) of each file to standard
output.

If there more than one file, precede each with a header giving the file name. Use it as
follow (specify more lines to display using -n option).

$ tail long-file
OR
$ tail -n 15 long-file

talk Command
talk command is used to talk to another system/network user. To talk to a user on the
same machine, use their login name, however, to talk to a user on another machine use
‘user@host’.

$ talk person [ttyname]


OR
$ talk‘user@host’ [ttyname]

tar Command
tar command is a most powerful utility for archiving files in Linux.

$ tar -czf home.tar.gz .

Learn more about tar command and its usage on Linux.

tee Command
tee command is used to read from standard input and prints to standard output and
files as shown below.

$ echo "Testing how tee command works" | tee file1

time Command
time command runs programs and summarizes system resource usage.

$ time wc /etc/hosts

top Command
top program displays all processes on a Linux system in regards to memory and CPU
usage and provides a dynamic real-time view of a running system.

$ top

touch Command
24/28
touch command changes file timestamps, it can also be used to create a file as follows.

$ touch file.txt

tr Command
tr command is a useful utility used to translate (change) or delete characters from stdin,
and write the result to stdout or send to a file as follows.

$ cat domain-list.txt | tr [:lower:] [:upper:]

uname Command
uname command displays system information such as operating system, network node
hostname kernel name, version and release etc.

Use the -a option to show all the system information:

$ uname

uniq Command
uniq command displays or omits repeated lines from input (or standard input). To
indicate the number of occurrences of a line, use the -c option.

$ cat domain-list.txt

uptime Command
uptime command shows how long the system has been running, number of logged on
users and the system load averages as follows.

$ uptime

users Command
users command shows the user names of users currently logged in to the current host
like this.

$ users

vim/vi Command
vim (Vi Improved) popular text editor on Unix-like operating systems. It can be used to
edit all kinds of plain text and program files.

$ vim file

Learn how to use vi/vim editor in Linux along with some tips and tricks.

25/28
w Command
w command displays system uptime, load averages and information about the users
currently on the machine, and what they are doing (their processes) like this.

$w

wall Command
wall command is used to send/display a message to all users on the system as follows.

$ wall “This is TecMint – Linux How Tos”

watch Command
watch command runs a program repeatedly while displaying its output on fullscreen. It
can also be used to watch changes to a file/directory. The example below shows how to
watch the contents of a directory change.

$ watch -d ls -l

wc Command
wc command is used to display newline, word, and byte counts for each file specified,
and a total for many files.

$ wc filename

wget Command
wget command is a simple utility used to download files from the Web in a non-
interactive (can work in the background) way.

$ wget -c http://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/wget/wget-1.5.3.tar.gz

whatis Command
whatis command searches and shows a short or one-line manual page descriptions of
the provided command name(s) as follows.

$ whatis wget

which Command
which command displays the absolute path (pathnames) of the files (or possibly links)
which would be executed in the current environment.

$ which who

26/28
who Command
who command shows information about users who are currently logged in like this.

$ who

whereis Command
whereis command helps us locate the binary, source and manual files for commands.

$ whereis cat

xargs Command
xargs command is a useful utility for reading items from the standard input, delimited
by blanks (protected with double or single quotes or a backslash) or newlines, and
executes the entered command.

The example below show xargs being used to copy a file to multiple directories in Linux.

$ echo /home/aaronkilik/test/ /home/aaronkilik/tmp | xargs -n 1 cp -v /home/aaronkilik/bin/sys_info.sh

yes Command
yes command is used to display a string repeatedly until when terminated or killed
using [ Ctrl + C ] as follows.

$ yes "This is TecMint - Linux HowTos"

youtube-dl Command
youtube-dl is a lightweight command-line program to download videos and also extract
MP3 tracks from YouTube.com and a few more sites.

The command below will list available formats for the video in the provided link.

$ youtube-dl --list-formats https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iR

zcmp/zdiff Command
zcmp and zdiff minimal utilities used to compare compressed files as shown in the
examples below.

$ zcmp domain-list.txt.zip basic_passwords.txt.zip


$ zdiff domain-list.txt.zip basic_passwords.txt.zip

zip Command
zip is a simple and easy-to-use utility used to package and compress (archive) files.

27/28
$ tar cf - . | zip | dd of=/dev/nrst0 obs=16k
$ zip inarchive.zip foo.c bar.c --out outarchive.zip
$ tar cf - .| zip backup -

zz Command
zz command is an alias of the fasd commandline tool that offers quick access to files
and directories in Linux. It is used to quickly and interactively cd into a previously
accessed directory by selecting the directory number from the first field as follows.

$ zz

That’s it for now! As we mentioned before, there are a countless number of commands
in Linux. The list is possibly longer than we can offer. Use the feedback form below to
share any useful and frequently used commands missing in this list.

28/28

You might also like