UNIX/Linux Tutorial
Other useful UNIX commands
quota
All
students are allocated a certain amount of disk space on the file
system for their personal files, usually about 100Mb. If you go over
your quota, you are given 7 days to remove excess files.
To
check your current quota and how much of it you have used, type
%
quota -v
df
The
df
command reports on the space left on the file system. For example, to
find out how much space is left on the fileserver, type
%
df .
du
The
du
command outputs the number of kilobyes used by each subdirectory.
Useful if you have gone over quota and you want to find out which
directory has the most files. In your home-directory, type
%
du -s *
The
-s flag will display only a summary (total size) and the *
means all files and directories.
gzip
This
reduces the size of a file, thus freeing valuable disk space. For
example, type
%
ls -l science.txt
and
note the size of the file using ls
-l
. Then to compress science.txt, type
%
gzip science.txt
This
will compress the file and place it in a file called science.txt.gz
To
see the change in size, type ls
-l
again.
To
expand the file, use the gunzip
command.
%
gunzip science.txt.gz
zcat
zcat
will read gzipped files without needing to uncompress them first.
%
zcat science.txt.gz
If
the text scrolls too fast for you, pipe the output though less
.
%
zcat science.txt.gz | less
file
file
classifies the named files according to the type of data they
contain, for example ascii (text), pictures, compressed data, etc..
To report on all files in your home directory, type
%
file *
diff
This
command compares the contents of two files and displays the
differences. Suppose you have a file called file1 and you edit
some part of it and save it as file2. To see the differences
type
%
diff file1 file2
Lines
beginning with a < denotes file1, while lines beginning
with a > denotes file2.
find
This
searches through the directories for files and directories with a
given name, date, size, or any other attribute you care to specify.
It is a simple command but with many options - you can read the
manual by typing man find.
To
search for all fies with the extention .txt, starting at the
current directory (.) and working through all sub-directories, then
printing the name of the file to the screen, type
%
find . -name "*.txt" -print
To
find files over 1Mb in size, and display the result as a long
listing, type
%
find . -size +1M -ls
history
The
C shell keeps an ordered list of all the commands that you have
entered. Each command is given a number according to the order it was
entered.
%
history (show command history list)
If
you are using the C shell, you can use the exclamation character (!)
to recall commands easily.
%
!! (recall last command)
%
!-3 (recall third most recent command)
%
!5 (recall 5th command in list)
%
!grep (recall last command starting with grep)
You
can increase the size of the history buffer by typing
%
set history=100
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