LinuxCommand
Learning the
shell
Writing
shell scripts
Script
library
SuperMan
pages
Who, What,
Where, Why
|
Looking Around
Now that you know how to move from working
directory to working directory, we're going to take
a tour of your Linux system and along the way,
learn some things about what makes it tick. But
before we begin, I have to teach you some tools
that will come in handy during our adventure. These
are:
- ls (list files and
directories)
- less (view text
files)
- file (classify a
file's contents)
The ls command is used to
list the contents of a directory. It is probably
the most commonly used Linux command. It can be
used in a number of different ways. Here are some
examples:
Examples of the ls command
|
Command |
Result |
| ls |
List the files in the working
directory
|
| ls /bin |
List the files in the /bin directory (or
any other directory you care to specify)
|
| ls -l |
List the files in the working directory in
long format
|
| ls -l /etc /bin |
List the files in the /bin directory and
the /etc directory in long format
|
| ls -la .. |
List all files (even ones with names
beginning with a period character, which are
normally hidden) in the parent of the working
directory in long format
|
These examples also point out an important
concept about commands. Most commands operate like
this:
command -options arguments
where command is the name of the command,
-options is one or more adjustments to the
command's behavior, and arguments is one or
more "things" upon which the command operates.
In the case of ls, we see
that ls is the name of the
command, and that it can have one or more options,
such as, -a and -l, and it can operate on one or
more files or directories.
A Closer Look At Long Format
If you use the "-l" option with ls, you will get a file listing that
contains a wealth of information about the files
being listed. Here's an example:
-rw------- 1 bshotts bshotts 576 Apr 17 1998 weather.txt
drwxr-xr-x 6 bshotts bshotts 1024 Oct 9 1999 web_page
-rw-rw-r-- 1 bshotts bshotts 276480 Feb 11 20:41 web_site_scripts.tar
-rw------- 1 bshotts bshotts 5743 Dec 16 1998 xmas_file.txt
---------- ------- ------- -------- ------------ -------------
| | | | | |
| | | | | File Name
| | | | |
| | | | +--- Modification Time
| | | |
| | | +------------- Size (in bytes)
| | |
| | +----------------------- Group
| |
| +-------------------------------- Owner
|
+---------------------------------------------- File Permissions
- File Name
- The name of the file or directory
- Modification Time
- The last time the file was modified. If the
last modification occurred more than six months
in the past, the date and year are displayed.
Otherwise the time of day is shown.
- Size
- The size of the file in bytes
- Group
- The name of the group that has file
permissions in addition to the file's owner.
- Owner
- The name of the user who owns the file
- File Permissions
- A representation of the file's access
permissions. The first character is the type of
file. A "-" indicates a regular (ordinary) file.
A "d" indicates a directory. The second set of
three characters represent the read, write, and
execution rights of the file's owner. The next
three represent the rights of the file's group,
and the final three represent the rights granted
to everybody else.
less is a program that
lets you view text files. This is very handy since
many of the files used to control and configure
Linux are human readable (as opposed to the legacy
operating systems).
|
|
The less program is
invoked by simply typing:
less text_file
And it will display the file.
Controlling less
Once started, less will
display the text file one page at a time. You may
use the Page Up and Page Down keys to move through
the text file. To exit less,
type "q". Here are some commands that less will accept:
Keyboard commands for the less program
| Command |
Action |
|
Page Up or b
|
Scroll back one page
|
|
Page Down or space
|
Scroll forward one page
|
|
G
|
Go to the end of the text file
|
|
1G
|
Go to the beginning of the text file
|
|
/characters
|
Search forward in the text file for an
occurence of the specified
characters
|
|
n
|
Repeat the previous search
|
|
q
|
Quit
|
|
|
As you wander around your Linux system, it is
helpful to determine what a file contains before
you try to view it. This is where the file command comes in. file will examine a file and tell you
what kind of file it is.
To use the file program,
just type:
file name_of_file
The file program can
recognize most types of files, such as:
Various kinds of files
| File Type |
Description |
Viewable as
text? |
|
ASCII text
|
The name says it all
|
yes
|
|
Bourne-Again shell script text
|
A bash script
|
yes
|
|
ELF 32-bit LSB core file
|
A core dump file (a program will create
this when it crashes)
|
no
|
|
ELF 32-bit LSB executable
|
An executable binary program
|
no
|
|
ELF 32-bit LSB shared object
|
A shared library
|
no
|
|
GNU tar archive
|
A tape archive file. A common way of
storing groups of files.
|
no, use tar tvf to
view listing.
|
|
gzip compressed data
|
An archive compressed with gzip
|
no
|
|
HTML document text
|
A web page
|
yes
|
|
JPEG image data
|
A compressed JPEG image
|
no
|
|
PostScript document text
|
A PostScript file
|
yes
|
|
RPM
|
A Red Hat Package Manager archive
|
no, use rpm -q to
examine contents.
|
|
Zip archive data
|
An archive compressed with zip
|
no
|
While it may seem that most files cannot be
viewed as text, you will be surprised how many can.
This is especially true of the important
configuration files. You will also notice during
our adventure that many features of the operating
system are controlled by shell scripts. In Linux,
there are no secrets!
|