Linux How-TOs โ“ | A must know list of commands in Linux shells

sarthak - Aug 24 - - Dev Community

Hello Everyone ๐Ÿ‘‹.

Here's a list of useful tools and commands that are required often for using Linux as a daily driver or even only for development.

This article will cover commands from bash, zsh, and fish since they are mostly compatible.

Topics covered in this article

Concepts: Environment variables, Aliasing, Path
Built in commands: set(fish), cd, pwd, ls, mkdir, touch, cat, echo, rm, cp, mv, grep, wget, tar
Installable commands: nano, mousepad

Basics

Before starting with commands here are some core concepts you should be aware of:

  • ~ in a path represents the home directory (eg: /home/username/ )
  • / represents the root directory
  • Values starting with a $ denote an environment variable. For example, $HOME returns the path to your home directory. If the environment variable is not found an empty string is returned.
sarthak@sarthak ~> echo $HOME
/home/sarthak
sarthak@sarthak ~> echo $THIS_ENV_DONT_EXIST

sarthak@sarthak ~>  
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  • There might be some differences between syntax patterns in different shells, in that case, alternatives will be used.

These are basic commands you should know to use the terminal efficiently.

Environment Variables

Environment variables are used to store values for a process into the system, there are several Environment variables like PATH, PWD, USER etc set up by the processes on the system. Here are some operations you can perform on them.

# reading a env variable
echo $HOME # prefixing the name with $
ENV_NAME="VALUE" # setting value for a session
# Example
sarthak@sarthak:~$ VAR2="sarthak in bash" # using bash
sarthak@sarthak:~$ echo $VAR1 $VAR2
sarthak in bash
sarthak@sarthak ~> set VAR1 "sarthak in fish" # using fish
sarthak@sarthak ~> echo $VAR1
sarthak in fish
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Creating aliases

You can create aliases for long commands using alias command. These are useful when you need to repeat same task multiple times.

alias [ALIAS] [COMMAND]
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Example

grep example


The PATH variable

The path variable stores directory addresses where executable files are stored. These are stored in a single string seperated by a colons. You can access the path using the PATH variable in the shell.
Adding a path temporarily
To add a path temporarily you can use the export command in the active shell

export PATH=$PATH:/path/to/directory # for bash and zsh
fish_add_path /path/to/directory # for fish
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This will add the PATH to the path variable for current shell session.
Adding a path permanently
You need to edit your RC file which should be named after your shell ( .bashrc, .zshrc) to execute the commands from above. For fish shell you need to add the set command in ~/.config/fish/config.fish


Navigation

  • cd: The cd command is used to move from one directory to another. The syntax for the command is
cd [DIRECTORY] # where directory is the path of the directory to navigate to 
cd .. # to navigate to the parent directory of your current
# you can also navigate to other dir in the parent dir
cd ../other_directory_in_parent_directory 
cd ~ # for the home directory
cd / # for the root directory

# exclusive to fish, you can type in the directory path directly
directory/
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  • pwd: Print Working Directory prints the path to the current working directory.
# example
sarthak@sarthak ~/p/codeforces (main)> pwd
/home/sarthak/projects/codeforces
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  • ls: This is used to list the contents of a directory. Command syntax:
ls [DIR_NAME=pwd] # current directory is listed by default
ls -R # shows files and folders inside the dir recusively
# you don't want to use the -R tag most of the times.
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Working with directories and files

  • mkdir: The mkdir command is used to make directories in the current working directory. Command syntax:
mkdir [DIRECTORY_NAME] # creates a directory with the name provided
# if the directory is a subdirectory and the parent dir does not exist
mkdir -p [DIRECTORY_PATH] 
# example
mkdir hello/world # will error since dir hello does not exist
mkdir -p hello/world # will create hello dir with world dir inside it
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  • touch: This command is actually meant to modify edit and create time of files, but can also be used to create them. Command syntax:
touch hello.txt # creates a new file called hello.txt
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  • cat: This command is used to concatinate the contents of file(s) and display them. Command Syntax:
cat [FILE(s)]
# example
cat file1.txt file2.txt
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  • echo: The echo command is mainly used to display text in the stdout but can also be used to write in a file. Command syntax:
echo "text to display in shell"
echo "text to display in file" > filename
# Example
sarthak@sarthak ~> echo "import hello" > main.py
sarthak@sarthak ~> cat main.py
import hello
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  • rm: The rm command is used to remove files or dirs specified in the argument. Some useful flags for this command are:
    • r: recursively remove items from the directory
    • f: ignore files that do not exist without any prompts

Command Syntax:

rm <flags> [TARGET] 
# Example
rm hello.txt # will remove the hello.txt file 
rm -rf src/ 
# will remove all the files and dirs inside the src dir and delete it
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  • cp: This command is used to create a copy of a file. Command syntax:
cp [SOURCE_FILE] [TARGET_FILE] # target file created if doesn't exist
# Example
sarthak@sarthak ~> cat hello.py
import hello
sarthak@sarthak ~> cp hello.py test.py
sarthak@sarthak ~> cat test.py
import hello
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  • mv: The move command is used to move the file from one location to another. It can also be used to rename the file.
mv [FILE] [TARGET] # target can be a directory or a file name
# Example
sarthak@sarthak ~> mkdir test_dir
# moving to a new directory
sarthak@sarthak ~> mv hello.py test_dir/
sarthak@sarthak ~> cat test_dir/hello.py
import hello
# renaming the file
sarthak@sarthak ~> mv test_dir/hello.py test_dir/renamed_file.py
sarthak@sarthak ~> cat test_dir/renamed_file.py
import hello
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  • grep: The grep command is used to find for text in a file. Command syntax
grep <tags> [STR_TO_SEARCH_FOR] [FILENAME]
# Example
sarthak@sarthak ~ [1]> grep "py" space/src/lib.rs
use pyo3::prelude::*;
#[pyfunction]
#[pymodule(name="space")]
    m.add_function(wrap_pyfunction!(test_function, m)?)?;
# For better output use the --color and -n tags
# it will highlight the output and add line numbers to the matches
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grep example

  • wget: This utility is used to download files to the local system. Command Syntax:
wget <-c> [URL] # the c tag is used to establish a continous download
# Example
sarthak@sarthak ~> wget -c https://bootstrap.pypa.io/get-pip.py
--2024-08-24 08:01:29--  https://bootstrap.pypa.io/get-pip.py
Resolving bootstrap.pypa.io (bootstrap.pypa.io)... 151.101.156.175, 2a04:4e42:25::175
Connecting to bootstrap.pypa.io (bootstrap.pypa.io)|151.101.156.175|:443... connected.
HTTP request sent, awaiting response... 200 OK
Length: 2266755 (2.2M) [text/x-python]
Saving to: โ€˜get-pip.pyโ€™

get-pip.py                    100%[=================================================>]   2.16M  10.3MB/s    in 0.2s

2024-08-24 08:01:30 (10.3 MB/s) - โ€˜get-pip.pyโ€™ saved [2266755/2266755]
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Text Editing

Text editing tools like nano and vim come pre installed on most linux distributions. You can use nano for basic text editing inside the terminal.
Usage: nano [FILENAME]
Alternatively you can use mousepad for GUI based editing.
Usage: mousepad [FILENAME]

nano usage


Working with Archives

The tar command is used to work with tar.gz format which is mostly used in linux OS(s).
Usage: tar [options] [archive-file]
You can use this command to unarchive files.

tar -cvzf [archive].tar.gz [FOLDER NAME]
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These are the commands I use for development using Ubuntu(WSL) and Arch(Bare Metal) as a daily driver. Fell free to comment for improvements and other relevant useful information that can be added ๐Ÿ˜„.

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