Unix Command Summary
Unix Command Summary
See the Unix tutorial for a leisurely, self-paced introduction on how to use the commands listed
below. For more documentation on a command, consult a good book, or use the man pages. For
example, for more information on grep, use the command man grep.
Contents
cat --- for creating and displaying short files
chmod --- change permissions
cd --- change directory
cp --- for copying files
date --- display date
echo --- echo argument
ftp --- connect to a remote machine to download or upload files
grep --- search file
head --- display first part of file
ls --- see what files you have
lpr --- standard print command (see also print )
more --- use to read files
mkdir --- create directory
mv --- for moving and renaming files
ncftp --- especially good for downloading files via anonymous ftp.
print --- custom print command (see also lpr )
pwd --- find out what directory you are in
rm --- remove a file
rmdir --- remove directory
rsh --- remote shell
setenv --- set an environment variable
sort --- sort file
tail --- display last part of file
tar --- create an archive, add or extract files
telnet --- log in to another machine
wc --- count characters, words, lines
cat
This is one of the most flexible Unix commands. We can use to create, view and concatenate
files. For our first example we create a three-item English-Spanish dictionary in a file called
"dict."
% cat >dict
red rojo
green verde
blue azul
<control-D>
%
<control-D> stands for "hold the control key down, then tap 'd'". The symbol > tells the computer
that what is typed is to be put into the file dict. To view a file we use cat in a different way:
% cat dict
red rojo
green verde
blue azul
%
If we wish to add text to an existing file we do this:
% cat >>dict
white blanco
black negro
<control-D>
%
Now suppose that we have another file tmp that looks like this:
% cat tmp
cat gato
dog perro
%
Then we can join dict and tmp like this:
% cat dict tmp >dict2
We could check the number of lines in the new file like this:
% wc -l dict2
8
The command wc counts things --- the number of characters, words, and line in a file.
chmod
This command is used to change the permissions of a file or directory. For example to make a
file essay.001 readable by everyone, we do this:
% chmod +x mycommand
Now we can run mycommand as a command.
To check the permissions of a file, use ls -l . For more information on chmod, use man chmod.
cd
Use cd to change directory. Use pwd to see what directory you are in.
% cd english
% pwd
% /u/ma/jeremy/english
% ls
novel poems
% cd novel
% pwd
% /u/ma/jeremy/english/novel
% ls
ch1 ch2 ch3 journal scrapbook
% cd ..
% pwd
% /u/ma/jeremy/english
% cd poems
% cd
% /u/ma/jeremy
Jeremy began in his home directory, then went to his english subdirectory. He listed this
directory using ls , found that it contained two entries, both of which happen to be diretories. He
cd'd to the diretory novel, and found that he had gotten only as far as chapter 3 in his writing.
Then he used cd .. to jump back one level. If had wanted to jump back one level, then go to
poems he could have said cd ../poems. Finally he used cd with no argument to jump back to his
home directory.
cp
This copies the file jabber in the directory poems to the current directory. The symbol "." stands
for the current directory. The symbol "~" stands for the home directory.
date
Use this command to check the date and time.
% date
Fri Jan 6 08:52:42 MST 1995
echo
The echo command echoes its arguments. Here are some examples:
% echo this
this
% echo $EDITOR
/usr/local/bin/emacs
% echo $PRINTER
b129lab1
Things like PRINTER are so-called environment variables. This one stores the name of the default
printer --- the one that print jobs will go to unless you take some action to change things. The
dollar sign before an environment variable is needed to get the value in the variable. Try the
following to verify this:
% echo PRINTER
PRINTER
ftp
Use ftp to connect to a remote machine, then upload or download files. See also: ncftp
Example 1: We'll connect to the machine fubar.net, then change director to mystuff, then
download the file homework11:
% ftp solitude
Connected to fubar.net.
220 fubar.net FTP server (Version wu-2.4(11) Mon Apr 18 17:26:33 MDT
1994) ready.
Name (solitude:carlson): jeremy
331 Password required for jeremy.
Password:
230 User jeremy logged in.
ftp> cd mystuff
250 CWD command successful.
ftp> get homework11
ftp> quit
Example 2: We'll connect to the machine fubar.net, then change director to mystuff, then
upload the file collected-letters:
% ftp solitude
Connected to fubar.net.
220 fubar.net FTP server (Version wu-2.4(11) Mon Apr 18 17:26:33 MDT
1994) ready.
Name (solitude:carlson): jeremy
331 Password required for jeremy.
Password:
230 User jeremy logged in.
ftp> cd mystuff
250 CWD command successful.
ftp> put collected-letters
ftp> quit
The ftp program sends files in ascii (text) format unless you specify binary mode:
ftp> binary
ftp> put foo
ftp> ascii
ftp> get bar
The file foo was transferred in binary mode, the file bar was transferred in ascii mode.
grep
Use this command to search for information in a file or files. For example, suppose that we have
a file dict whose contents are
red rojo
green verde
blue azul
white blanco
black negro
Then we can look up items in our file like this;
% grep red dict
red rojo
% grep blanco dict
white blanco
% grep brown dict
%
Notice that no output was returned by grep brown. This is because "brown" is not in our
dictionary file.
Grep can also be combined with other commands. For example, if one had a file of phone
numbers named "ph", one entry per line, then the following command would give an alphabetical
list of all persons whose name contains the string "Fred".
% man grep
head
% head essay.001
displays the first 10 lines of the file essay.001 To see a specific number of lines, do this:
% head -n 20 essay.001
This displays the first 20 lines of the file.
ls
Use ls to see what files you have. Your files are kept in something called a directory.
% ls
foo letter2
foobar letter3
letter1 maple-assignment1
%
Note that you have six files. There are some useful variants of the ls command:
% ls l*
letter1 letter2 letter3
%
Note what happened: all the files whose name begins with "l" are listed. The asterisk (*) is the "
wildcard" character. It matches any string.
lpr
This is the standard Unix command for printing a file. It stands for the ancient "line printer." See
% man lpr
for information on how it works. See print for information on our local intelligent print
command.
mkdir
There shouldn't be any files there yet, since you just made it. To create files, see cat or emacs.
more
More is a command used to read text files. For example, we could do this:
% more poems
The effect of this to let you read the file "poems ". It probably will not fit in one screen, so you
need to know how to "turn pages". Here are the basic commands:
mv
% mv foo foobar
Use ncftp for anonymous ftp --- that means you don't have to have a password.
% ncftp ftp.fubar.net
Connected to ftp.fubar.net
> get jokes.txt
In each case print does the right thing, regardless of whether the file is a text file (like foo ), a
postcript file (like notes.ps, or a dvi file (like manuscript.dvi. In these examples the file is
printed on the default printer. To see what this is, do
% print
and read the message displayed. To print on a specific printer, do this:
% print foo jwb321
% print notes.ps jwb321
% print manuscript.dvi jwb321
To change the default printer, do this:
% setenv PRINTER jwb321
pwd
Use this command to find out what directory you are working in.
% pwd
/u/ma/jeremy
% cd homework
% pwd
/u/ma/jeremy/homework
% ls
assign-1 assign-2 assign-3
% cd
% pwd
/u/ma/jeremy
%
Jeremy began by working in his "home" directory. Then he cd 'd into his homework
subdirectory. Cd means " change directory". He used pwd to check to make sure he was in the
right place, then used ls to see if all his homework files were there. (They were). Then he cd'd
back to his home directory.
rm
The first command removed a single file. The second command was intended to remove all files
beginning with the string "letter." However, our user (Jeremy?) decided not to remove letter3.
rmdir
Use this command to remove a directory. For example, to remove a directory called "essays", do
this:
% rmdir essays
A directory must be empty before it can be removed. To empty a directory, use rm.
rsh
Use this command if you want to work on a computer different from the one you are currently
working on. One reason to do this is that the remote machine might be faster. For example, the
command
% rsh solitude
connects you to the machine solitude. This is one of our public workstations and is fairly fast.
setenv
% echo $PRINTER
labprinter
% setenv PRINTER myprinter
% echo $PRINTER
myprinter
sort
Use this commmand to sort a file. For example, suppose we have a file dict with contents
red rojo
green verde
blue azul
white blanco
black negro
Then we can do this:
% sort dict
black negro
blue azul
green verde
red rojo
white blanco
Here the output of sort went to the screen. To store the output in file we do this:
% sort dict >dict.sorted
You can check the contents of the file dict.sorted using cat , more , or emacs .
tail
% tail essay.001
displays the last 10 lines of the file essay.001 To see a specific number of lines, do this:
% tail -n 20 essay.001
This displays the last 20 lines of the file.
tar
Use create compressed archives of directories and files, and also to extract directories and files
from an archive. Example:
Use this command to log in to another machine from the machine you are currently working on.
For example, to log in to the machine "solitude", do this:
% telnet solitude
wc
Use this command to count the number of characters, words, and lines in a file. Suppose, for
example, that we have a file dict with contents
red rojo
green verde
blue azul
white blanco
black negro
Then we can do this
% wc dict
5 10 56 tmp
% wc -l dict
5 tmp
% wc -w dict
10 tmp
% wc -c dict
56 tmp
People who use Windows without DOS, or a Macintosh, or PPP without a terminal, or an ISP's menu
without the Unix prompt are at a disadvantage. Something is happening, and they don't know what it is.
I like to know what's really going on, so I've been learning some Unix.
The Net is a Unix place. I'm no wizard, but I'm comfortable with basic commands and
occasionally type "rm" at my DOS prompt instead of "del". This is my Unix cheat sheet, so I can
remember. Uppercase and lowercase matter. These commands (mostly) work with my C-shell
account on RAIN. Your account might be different, especially if your prompt ends with a "$"
(Korn shell) rather than a "%", so be cautious. When I need help, I reach for the books UNIX in
a Nutshell (O'Reilly) and Unix Unbound by Harley Hahn (Osborne/McGraw Hill, 1994).
This page won't look right without table support. Most of this is available in a text version.
List a directory
It's ok to combine attributes, eg ls
ls {path} -laF gets a long listing of all files with
types.
Change to directory
cd {dirname} There must be a space between.
Remove a directory
rmdir {dirname} Only works if {dirname} is empty.
mv {oldname} {newname}
Delete a file
? and * wildcards work like DOS
rm {filespec} should. "?" is any character; "*" is any
string of characters.
find {filespec} > {filename} Redirect find list to file. Can be big!
Make an Alias
Put the command in 'single quotes'.
alias {name} '{command}'
More useful in your .cshrc file.
{command} < {file} Get input from a file, eg sort < file.txt
execute permission =1
write permission =2
read permission =4
Add the number value of the permissions you want to grant each group to make a three digit
number, one digit each for the owner, the group, and the world. Here are some useful
combinations. Try to figure them out!
chmod 700 {filespec} You can read, write, and execute; the
world can't. Good for scripts.
Applications I use
finger {userid} Find out what someone's up to.
gopher Gopher.
pine Email.
telnet {host} Start Telnet session to another host.
tin Usenet.
System info
date Show date and time.
- file
d directory, * executable
^ symbolic links (?) file size (bytes) file name / directory
^ ^ ^ ^ ^
drwxr-xr-x 11 mkummel 2560 Mar 7 23:25 public_html/
-rw-r--r-- 1 mkummel 10297 Mar 8 23:42 index.html
^
^^^ user permission (rwx) date and time last modified
^^^ group permission (rwx)
^^^ world permission (rwx)
Aliases are more useful if they're permanent so you don't have to think about them. You can do
this by adding the alias to your .cshrc file so they're automatically loaded when you start. Type
pico .cshrc and look for the alias section and add what you want. It will be effective when you
start. Just remember that if you make an alias with the name of a Unix command, that command
will become unavailable.
alias h history
alias m more
alias q quota -v
alias bye exit
alias ls ls -F
alias dir ls
alias cdup cd ..
alias motd more /etc/motd
Unix can't rename a bunch of files at once the way DOS can. This is a problem if you develop
Web pages on a DOS machine and then upload them to your Unix Server. You might have a
bunch of .htm files that you want to rename as .html files, but Unix makes you do it one by one.
This is actually not a defect. (It's a feature!) Unix is just being more consistent than DOS. So
make a script!
Make a text file (eg with pico) with the following lines. The first line is special. It tells Unix
what program or shell should execute the script. Other # lines are comments.
#! /bin/csh
# htm2html converts *.htm files to *.html
foreach f ( *.htm )
set base=`basename $f .htm`
mv $f $base.html
end
Save this in your home directory as htm2html (or whatever). Then make it user-executable by typing
chmod 700 htm2html. After this a * will appear by the file name when you ls -F, to show that it's
executable. Change to a directory with .htm files and type ~/htm2html, and it will do its stuff.
Think about scripts whenever you find yourself doing the same tedious thing over and over.
Some of these dotfiles are crucial. They initialize your shell and the programs you use, like
autoexec.bat in DOS and .ini files in Windows. rc means "run commands". These are all text
files that can be edited, but change them at your peril. Make backups first!
change directory cd cd