Difference between revisions of "Unix cheatsheet"
From CoolWiki
Jump to navigationJump to searchm |
m |
||
Line 6: | Line 6: | ||
* Getting a directory listing | * Getting a directory listing | ||
ls | ls | ||
+ | |||
+ | * Getting a directory listing where the computer will add "/" to directories (folders) and "*" to executable programs, and leave plain text files unadorned: | ||
+ | ls -F | ||
* Getting a directory listing of just one kind of file extension | * Getting a directory listing of just one kind of file extension |
Revision as of 17:49, 7 July 2008
Here is a quick list of common unix commands. These will work from a terminal window on Linux or Mac, or from a terminal window once you have cygwin installed on Windows. (see Windows hints, tips, and tricks.)
- Changing directories (folders)
cd /path/to/directory
- Getting a directory listing
ls
- Getting a directory listing where the computer will add "/" to directories (folders) and "*" to executable programs, and leave plain text files unadorned:
ls -F
- Getting a directory listing of just one kind of file extension
ls *txt
- Getting a directory listing in a plain text file
ls *fits > listoffiles.txt
- Examining the contents of a file (works best on text files, but will also attempt it without complaint on binary files -- be careful!) ... To scroll down and see more of the file, hit the space bar; to quit out, hit "q".
more listoffiles.txt
- Unzipping the files from Leopard -- the "\" is important!!
unzip \*.zip
- Unzipping files with a *gz extension
gunzip *.gz
- Uncompressing a tar file -- tar = Tape ARchive
tar -xf foo.tar
- Uncompressing a compressed tar file (may not work on older systems) -- e.g., doing the previous two steps in just one step.
tar -xzf foo.tar.gz