Common Unix/Linux Commands used via Telnet for pc's & stb's

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    • Official Post

    This was written for a tm9100 but is relevant for all linux stb,s & pc's.
    Thanks to sonoftechno for the info.



    There are a few different ways to start a Telnet session, here are two of the more common ones.
    Click START > RUN and type Telnet ip.address.of.TM9100 - A command window will appear, enter username root and current password (remember could be blank on some tm9100 images)
    Download Puttytel.exe ( Bottom of page)
    1. start putty
    2. input the ip of the box
    3. login: root and current password (remember could be blank on some tm9100 images)



    Basic Navigation


    cd
    When typed by itself, cd (”change directory”), will take you back to your $HOME directory
    cd /path/to/directory
    To change to a specific directory, type cd followed by the path to the directory. If it is a subdirectory of the current directory, you can just type the directory name.
    cd ..
    Typing cd .. moves you up one directory from your current location.
    pwd
    To see which directory you are in, type pwd (”print (display) working directory”).
    exit
    Just as it sounds, use exit to log out. Alternatively, you can type logout.
    Creating and Deleting Directories


    mkdir directoryname
    To create a new directory, type mkdir (”make directory”) and specify the new directory’s name.
    rmdir directoryname
    To delete an empty directory, type rmdir (”remove directory”) and the directory’s name.


    Listing Files


    ls
    To display a list of files and subdirectories in your current directory, type ls (”list”)
    ls -a
    To see a more complete list which includes hidden files or files that begin with a “.” (dot), type ls -a.
    ls -la
    To list all files and directories in long format which will provide details about each file and directory, type ls -la.
    ls -lS
    To list all directories and files, sorted by size, in long format, type ls -lS.
    ls -lta
    To list all files and directories in long format by time modified, type ls -lta.


    Copying Files


    cp oldfilename newfilename
    Will copy the contents of one file to another file, resulting in two copies of the same file on your account.
    cp directory/* destinationdirectory
    Will copy the contents of one directory to another directory. Make sure you have created the destination directory before trying to copy files to it - see mkdir above. Results in two copies of the files on your account; one copy in the existing directory and another in the destination directory.


    Searching FIles and Directories


    find -name ‘n*’
    The find command can be used to locate files or a group of files. It can also be used to display directories. The example given will find all file and directory names within the current directory and subdirectories of it that begin with the letter n. (You can also explore using the locate command - type info locate and/or man locate for usage information.)
    grep -inw text filename
    Can be used to locate text in a specific file or directory of files (use * in place of filename to search all of the files in the current directory). The -i argument indicates the search is to disregard cASe, the -n instructs to show the corresponding line number, and -w tells it to match only based on the whole word. (This doesn’t even begin to touch on the power of grep and its many uses. In addition to its searching capability, the grep command can be used in combination with other commands to act as a filter. It also allows the use of “wildcards”. Two other variations of grep are also available, egrep and fgrep. To begin your quest for more information, type man grep and/or info grep.)


    Displaying / Comparing File Content


    wc filename
    Counts and displays the number of lines, number of words, and number of characters of the given file.
    cat filename
    Displays the entire contents of a file.
    nl filename
    Shows the content of the file, including line numbers (nl=number lines).
    more filename
    Displays the contents of a file one screen at a time. Press the SPACEBAR to display the next screen of text.
    cmp filename1 filename2
    Compares the contents of the two named files and reports the first different character found and the line number.
    diff filename1 filename2
    Compares the contents of the two named files and reports all of the differences found. (Can also be used for comparing the contents of two directories.)
    Moving, Renaming, and Deleting Files


    mv oldfilename newfilename
    Can be used to rename a file (mv fileA fileB), move a file (mv fileA /dirA/), or both (mv fileA /dirB/fileB).
    rm -i filename
    Removes (deletes) the specified file. (The -i is not necessary, but is recommended as it will prompt you to confirm the action first. When prompted, type y to confirm or type n if you changed your mind.)


    Changing Permissions


    chmod permissions filename
    Changes the permissions on a filename or directory as specified. For example, chmod 755 startup.sh.


    Archives and Compression


    tar -cfv filename.tar directoryname
    To archive a directory and all of its contents including subdirectories, navigate to where the directory is located and type the above command, replacing filename.tar with the name you wish to give the archive file and directoryname with the name of the directory you wish to archive. Alternatively, you can archive a select group of individual files (or directories) by specifying each file name in place of directoryname separated by spaces, like tar -cvf filename.tar fileA fileB fileC. Note: When creating a tar file (aka “tarball”) be sure to specify the name you wish to give the tar file! (TAR indicates Tape ARchive, as it was originally a tape archiving program. The -c means “create”, v means “verbose” (which basically says tell me what you’re doing), and the f indicates that a filename will follow (filename.tar)).
    tar -tvf filename.tar
    Typing this command will result in a list of the contents of the tar file. This is generally a good thing to do before unpacking the tar file to be sure there are no matching filenames which will result in files being unintentionally overwritten.
    tar -xvf filename.tar
    You can see the similarities to the command used to tar the file. This time, though, you use -x to “extract” instead of the -c used to create. You can also extract only certain select files (or directories) by specifying the individual names, separated by spaces, after the tar filename, such as tar -xvf filename.tar fileA fileC
    gzip filename.tar
    This utility, gzip (gnu zip), is used for compression. Normally, when you wish to compress a set of files, you willtar them first then compress them using this command. In doing so, the filename will automatically change from filename.tar to filename.tar.gz (appending .gz to the file extension).
    gunzip filename.tar.gz
    This command (g”unzip”) is used to uncompress a .tar.gz file, which will also result in the filename being changed back to filename.tar. Once it has been uncompressed, you can then untar it using the tar command above. (Alternatively, you can use gzip -d (for “decompress”) in place of gunzip.)
    tar -czvf filename.tgz directoryname
    This command, which uses a z switch (”zip”), allows you to take a bit of a shortcut instead of using the tar and gzip commands separately. The example will result in a compressed archive named filename.tgz.
    tar -xzvf filename.tgz
    This command is used to uncompress and extract the files from a .tgz archive.

    • Official Post

    Linux Commands – Top 20 Most Used


    Files and Directories Management


    ls – Lists files and directories content, I usually use “ls -la” to have a long listing with all the details and hidden files
    cd – move from the current directory to a different folder
    pwd – lists your current location
    mv – this command can either change the name of a file, or move it to a different location.
    locate – find any file on the Linux server, to get an updated index of files (if for example you just installed a whole bunch of RPM’s) run the command updatedb
    ln – create a shortcut to a file or folder
    tar – create or extract files out of a storage file. with the correct arguments it will also compress the files


    Editing and Viewing


    tail – lists the last 10 lines of a file, but you tell tell it to show any number of last lines
    vi – the best command line editing software :) a little hard to learn how to work this one at first, buts its worth the effort
    cat – list the content of the file. better know how long is the file you are running this command on, or you will get a very long scrolling of lines that will fill up your screen


    Network


    nslookup – very important networking tool – this will show you where a DNS name is pointing – to which IP or to another DNS
    wget – get a file from the web from the command line – if you need to download some RPM directly to the command line without a browser, this is the command you need
    ping – I think its one of the most used commands, you can check the time it takes you to get via the network to a remote server, whether that server is available, how many packets are getting to the server, etc


    General


    history – lists the last used commands on your Linux server
    make – when compiling a software from source, this command will create the binaries
    id – who am I right now? besides the philosophical angle, this command will show you as which user you will be running commands, I use this to check what is my status, and then sudo to the user I need
    sudo – execute a command as another user – although usually use it to change to root
    ps – list the running processes on the server, it give more info like the process id, the parent process id, running time and much more
    man – displays a manual page, whenever you are not sure about a specific command or config file, you should run “man command” to get info about it. to search the man database use “whatis command” to find which man file has the info you need
    df – report file system disk space usage, use “df -h” to get a human formatted listing

  • master G

    Added the Label Article

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