![]() ln -s /etc/log/file logfile - Creates a shortcut to file.mv oldfile1 newfile2 - Renames “oldfile1” to “newfile2”.Dir2 will be created if it does not exist. cp -r olddir1 newdir2 - Recursively copies directory “olddir1” to “newdir2”.cp oldfile1 newfile2 - Copies contents of oldfile1 to newfile2.rm -rf NewFolder – Force deletes a directory named “NewFolder” recursively.rm -r NewFolder - Deletes directory named “NewFolder” recursively. ![]() rm -f NewFile - Forcibly deletes file named “NewFile”.rm NewFile - Deletes file named “NewFile”.mkdir NewFolder - Creates new directory named “NewFolder”.pwd - Displays the current working directory.cd - Goes to the home directory ($HOME variable).usermod NewUser Modifies “NewUser” user’s information.userdel NewUser - Deletes user named “NewUser”.adduser NewUser - Adds user named “NewUser”.groupadd "testgroup" – Creates a group named “testgroup”.last – Lists information about last logins to the system including time, username, ip address and session length.Id - Details about the user (uid, gid, and group).Feel free to add your most commonly used commands in the comments below and share the list.Ĭloud Servers Intel Xeon Gold 6254 3.1 GHz CPU, SLA 99,9%, 100 Mbps channel from 4 EUR/month Try Users This list is not complete but it contains most commonly used commands. Sometimes you can forget terminal commands in Linux and saving them on your computer or a peace of paper as a cheat sheet is a good practice.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |