Before we look at some common commands, I just want to note a few keyboard commands that are very helpful:
Up Arrow
: Will show your last commandDown Arrow
: Will show your next commandTab
: Will auto-complete your commandCtrl + L
: Will clear the screenCtrl + C
: Will cancel a commandCtrl + R
: Will search for a commandCtrl + D
: Will exit the terminal
On Linux and Mac, the man
command is used to show the manual of any command that you can run in the terminal. So if you wanted to know more about the ls
command, you could run:
man ls
Unfortunately, if you are on Windows and using Git Bash, the man
command is not included, however, you can just type the command that you want to know more about and then --help
and you will get similar info:
ls --help
You should be able to use the arrow keys or page up and down. When you are ready to exit, just press q
.
The whoami
command will show you the current user that you are logged in as.
whoami
Another really simple one is the date
command, which, surprise, will show you the current date and time.
date
Commands to navigate your file system are very important. You will be using them all the time. You won't remember every single command that you use, but these are the ones that you should remember.
Command | Description |
---|---|
pwd | Lists the path to the working directory |
ls | List directory contents |
ls -a | List contents including hidden files (Files that begin with a dot) |
ls -l | List contents with more info including permissions (long listing) |
ls -r | List contents reverse order |
cd | Change directory to home |
cd [dirname] | Change directory to specific directory |
cd ~ | Change to home directory |
cd .. | Change to parent directory |
cd - | Change to previous directory (which could be different than the parent of course) |
find [dirtosearch] -name [filename] | Find location of a program |
Of course, you can group flags together. For example, if I want to see more info and view hidden files, I could do ls -l -a
and even shorten it to ls -la
.
If you want to open a file or a folder in the GUI from your terminal, the command is different depending on the OS.
Mac - open [dirname]
Windows - start [dirname]
Linux - xdg-open [dirname]
You can open folders, files and even URLs
open https://traversymedia.com
Command | Description |
---|---|
mkdir [dirname] | Make directory |
touch [filename] | Create file |
rm [filename] | Remove file |
rm -i [filename] | Remove directory, but ask before |
rm -r [dirname] | Remove directory |
rm -rf [dirname] | Remove directory with contents |
rm ./* | Remove everything in the current folder |
cp [filename] [dirname] | Copy file |
mv [filename] [dirname] | Move file |
mv [dirname] [dirname] | Move directory |
mv [filename] [filename] | Rename file or folder |
mv [filename] [filename] -v | Rename Verbose - print source/destination directory |
We can also do multiple commands at once with the &&
operator:
cd test2 && mkdir test3
This symbol tells the system to output results into whatever you specify next. The target is usually a filename. You can use this symbol by itself to create a new file:
> [filename]
When you are done, hit ctrl+D
The cat command is a very common command and allows you to create single or multiple files, view content of a file, concatenate files and redirect output in terminal or files.
The most common thing I use it for is to display the contents of a file:
cat [filename]
You can also view the contents of multiple files:
cat [filename] [filename]
You can also create a file using the cat
command:
cat > [filename]
This will open up a new file and you can start typing. When you are done, you can press Ctrl + D
to save and exit.
You can also append to a file:
cat >> [filename]
This will open up the file and you can start typing. When you are done, you can press Ctrl + D
to save and exit.
You can use it to show line numbers:
cat -n [filename]
There are other uses as well, but as you can see, the cat
command is very powerful.
The less
command is used to view the contents of a file. It is similar to the cat
command, but it allows you to scroll up and down.
less [filename]
To exit the less
command, just press q
.
The echo
command is used to display messages, or to create and write to files. It is similar to the cat
command, but it is used to display a single line of text.
echo "Hello World"
You can also use it to create a file:
echo "Hello World" > [filename]
You can also append to a file:
echo "Hello World" >> [filename]
The nano
command is a text editor that is installed by default on most Linux distributions, MacOS and you can even use it with Git Bash on Windows. It is very similar to the vim
editor, but it is much easier to use.
You can open an existing file to edit or create a new file and open it with:
nano [filename]
When you're ready to exit, just hit Ctrl + X
and then Y
to save and N
to not save.
The head
command is used to output the first part of files. By default, it outputs the first 10 lines of each file. You can also specify the number of lines to output.
head [filename]
You can also specify the number of lines to output:
head -n 5 [filename]
The tail
command is used to output the last part of files. By default, it outputs the last 10 lines of each file. You can also specify the number of lines to output.
tail [filename]
You can also specify the number of lines to output:
tail -n 5 [filename]
The grep
command is used to search for a text pattern in a file. It is very powerful and can be used to search for a string or regular expression in a file or set of files.
grep [searchterm] [filename]
You can also search for a string in multiple files:
grep [searchterm] [filename] [filename]
There are a lot more things that you can do with the grep
command, but it's a but more advanced.
The find
command is extremely powerful and is used to find the location of files and directories based on conditions that you specify.
To start off by creating something to work with. Let's create 100 files in the current directory. This is one of those things that I talked about earlier where you can do certain things much faster than you could in the GUI. We already know that the touch
command will create a file. It can also be used to create multiple files.
touch file-{001..100}.txt
Now we have 100 .txt files in the current directory. Something that would have taken a lot longer to do in the GUI.
Let's do something very simple and find a specific file. The format looks like this:
find [dirname] -name [filename]
Let's find the file called file-001.txt
:
find . -name "file-001.txt"
This will look in the current directory, which is represented with a dot.
We can look in other directories as well. Let's create a file in our home folder called test.txt
touch ~/test.txt
To find that file:
find ~/ -name "test.txt"
We can look for files that match a certain pattern as well. Let's find all files that start with file-
:
find . -name "file-*"
We can search for files that are empty:
find . -empty
Let's append some text to the file file-002.txt
. We could use the cat
command, like I showed you earlier, but we can also use the echo
command:
echo "Hello World" >> file-002.txt
Now if we find the empty files again, we will see that file-002.txt
is no longer empty:
find . -empty
We can remove all of the files that we created with this command:
find . -name "file-*" -delete
rm -f file-* # This will also work
There is so much more that you can do with the find
command, but it goes beyond the scope of this tutorial.
Piping is very powerful. It is a way of redirecting standard output to another destination, such as another file. Let's actually use the find command to find a list of files and then pipe them to a new file.
First, we'll create 10 files:
touch file-{001..010}.txt
Now, let's pipe the result from our find into a new file named output.txt
find . -name "file-0*" > output.txt
You can see the results now in the new file:
cat output.txt
A symlink is a special type of file that points to another file. It is a shortcut to the original file. It is useful when you want to access a file in a different location without having to copy it.
We can use the ln
command to create a symlink:
ln -s [filename] [symlinkname]
You can remove a symlink with the rm
command:
rm [symlinkname]
If you're on Windows and you are not using something like Git Bash, you can use the mklink
command:
mklink [symlinkname] [filename]
tar
is a program for concatenating multiple files into one big file called a tarball and reversing this process by extracting the files from the tarball.
Command | Description |
---|---|
tar czvf [dirname].tar.gz [dirname] | Create tarball |
tar tzvf [dirname] | See what is in the tarball |
tar xzvf [dirname].tar.gz | Extract tarball |
- -c : Creates Archive
- -x : Extract the archive
- -f : creates archive with given filename
- -t : displays or lists files in archived file
- -u : archives and adds to an existing archive file
- -v : Displays Verbose Information
- -A : Concatenates the archive files
- -z : zip, tells tar command that creates tar file using gzip
- -j : filter archive tar file using tbzip
- -W : Verify a archive file
- -r : update or add file or directory in already existed .tar file
Used to display the history of commands that you have run.
history
You can also use the !
to run a command from the history.
!100
This will run the command that is in the 100th position in the history.
Thank you so much Brad ;)