Christopher Negus

Linux Bible


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      The bash shell is worth knowing not only because it is the default in most installations, but because it is the one you will use with most Linux certification exams.

      The simplest way to run a command is just to type the name of the command from a shell. From your desktop, open a Terminal window. Then enter the following command:

       $ date Thu Jun 29 08:14:53 EDT 2019

      Entering the date command, with no options or arguments, causes the current day, month, date, time, time zone, and year to be displayed as just shown.

      Here are a few other commands you can try:

       $ pwd /home/chris $ hostname mydesktop $ ls Desktop Downloads Pictures Templates Documents Music Public Videos

      The pwd command shows your current working directory. Entering hostname shows your computer's hostname. The ls command lists the files and directories in your current directory. Although many commands can be run by just entering command names, it's more common to type other characters after the command to modify its behavior. The characters and words that you can type after a command are called options and arguments.

      Understanding command syntax

      Most commands have one or more options that you can add to change the command's behavior. Options typically consist of a single letter preceded by a hyphen. However, you can group single-letter options together or precede each with a hyphen to use more than one option at a time. For example, the following two uses of options for the ls command are the same:

       $ ls -l -a -t $ ls -lat

      In both cases, the ls command is run with the -l (long listing), -a (show hidden dot files), and -t options (list by time).

      Some commands include options that are represented by a whole word. To tell a command to use a whole word as an option, you typically precede it with a double hyphen (--). For example, to use the help option on many commands, you enter --help on the command line. Without the double hyphen, the letters h, e, l, and p would be interpreted as separate options. There are some commands that don't follow the double hyphen convention, using a single hyphen before a word, but most commands use double hyphens for word options.

      NOTE

      You can use the --help option with most commands to see the options and arguments that they support. For example, try typing hostname --help.

       $ ls --hide=Desktop Documents Music Public Videos Downloads Pictures Templates

      In the previous example, the --hide option tells the ls command not to display the file or directory named Desktop when listing the contents of the directory. Notice that the equal sign immediately follows the option (no space) and then the argument (again, no space).

      Here's an example of a single-letter option that is followed by an argument:

       $ tar -cvf backup.tar /home/chris

      In the tar example just shown, the options say to create (c) a file (f) named backup.tar that includes all of the contents of the /home/chris directory and its subdirectories and show verbose (v) messages as the backup is created. Because backup.tar is an argument to the f option, backup.tar must immediately follow the option.

      Here are a few commands that you can try out. See how they behave differently with different options:

       $ ls Desktop Documents Downloads Music Pictures Public Templates Videos $ ls -a . Desktop .gnome2_private .lesshst Public .. Documents .gnote .local Templates .bash_history Downloads .gnupg .mozilla Videos .bash_logout .emacs .gstreamer-0.10 Music .xsession-errors .bash_profile .esd_auth .gtk-bookmarks Pictures .zshrc .bashrc .fsync.log .gvfs Pictures $ uname Linux $ uname -a Linux mydesktop 5.3.7-301.fc31.x86_64 #1 SMP Mon Oct 21 19:18:58 UTC 2019 x86_64 x86_64 x86_64 GNU/Linux $ date Wed 04 Mar 2020 09:06:25 PM EST $ date +'%d/%m/%y' 04/03/20 $ date +'%A, %B %d, %Y' Wednesday, March 04, 2020

      The ls command, by itself, shows all regular files and directories in the current directory. By adding the -a, you can also see the hidden files in the directory (those beginning with a dot). The uname command shows the type of system you are running (Linux). When you add -a, you also can see the hostname, kernel release, and kernel version.

      Try the id and who commands to get a feel for your current Linux environment, as described in the following paragraphs.

      When you log in to a Linux system, Linux views you as having a particular identity, which includes your username, group name, user ID, and group ID. Linux also keeps track of your login session: It knows when you logged in, how long you have been idle, and where you logged in from.

      To find out information about your identity, use the id command as follows:

       $ id uid=1000(chris) gid=1000(chris) groups=1005(sales), 7(lp)

      In this example, the username is chris, which is represented by the numeric user ID (uid) 1000. The primary group for chris also is called chris, which has a group ID (gid) of 1000. It is normal for Fedora and Red Hat Enterprise Linux users to have the same primary group name as their username. The user chris also belongs to other groups called sales (gid 1005) and lp (gid 7). These names and numbers represent the permissions that chris has to access computer resources.

      NOTE

      Linux distributions that have Security Enhanced Linux (SELinux) enabled, such as Fedora and RHEL, show additional information at the end of the id output. That output might look something like the following:

        context=unconfined_u:unconfined_r:unconfined_t:s0-s0:c0.c1023

      SELinux provides a means of tightly locking down the security of a Linux system. See Chapter 24, “Enhancing Linux Security with SELinux,” if you want to learn about SELinux.

      You can see information about your current login session by using