3.1 Alphabetical Summary of Commands
GNU autoconf tool. Place m4 macro definitions needed by autoconf into a single file. The aclocal command first scans for macro
definitions in m4 files in its
default directory (/usr/share/aclocal on some
systems) and in the file acinclude.m4. It next
scans for macros used in the configure.in file.
It generates an aclocal.m4 file that contains
definitions of all m4 macros
required by autoconf.
Options
- --acdir=dir
-
Look for macro files in directory dir instead of
the default directory.
- --help
-
Print help message, then exit.
- --output=file
-
Save output to file instead of
aclocal.m4.
- --print-ac-dir
-
Print the name of the directory to be searched for m4 files, then exit.
- --verbose
-
Print names of files being processed.
- --version
-
Print version number, then exit.
- -I dir
-
Additionally, search directory dir for m4 macro definitions.
addr2line [options] [addresses]
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Translate
hexadecimal program addresses into filenames and line numbers for the
executable given with the -e option,
or a.out if -e
is not specified. If addresses are given on the
command line, display the filename and line number for each address.
Otherwise, read the addresses from standard input and display the
results on standard output (useful for use in a pipe). addr2line prints two question marks
(??) if it cannot determine a filename,
and 0 if it cannot determine the line number. addr2line is used for debugging.
Options
- -b bfdname, --target=bfdname
-
Set the binary file format using its binary file descriptor name,
bfdname. Use the -h option for a list of supported formats for
your system.
- -C, --demangle[=style]
-
Decode (demangle) low-level symbol names into user names. See the
-h help output for a list of styles
supported by your compiler.
- -e file, --exe=file
-
Specify the filename of the executable to use. The default is
a.out.
- -f, --functions
-
Display function names in addition to filenames and line numbers.
- -h, --help
-
Display help information and exit.
- -s, --basenames
-
Strip directories off filenames and show only the basenames.
agetty [options] port baudrate [term]
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System administration command. The Linux
version of getty. Set terminal type, modes, speed, and line
discipline. agetty is invoked by
init. It is the second process in the
series init-getty-login-shell, which
ultimately connects a user with the Linux system. agetty reads the user's login
name and invokes the login command
with the user's name as an argument. While reading
the name, agetty attempts to adapt
the system to the speed and type of device being used.
You must specify a port, which agetty will search for in the
/dev directory. You may use -, in which case agetty reads from standard input. You must
also specify baudrate, which may be a
comma-separated list of rates through which agetty will step. Optionally, you may specify
the term, which is used to override the TERM
environment variable.
Options
- -f file
-
Specify the use of file instead of
/etc/issue upon connection to terminal. It is
overridden by -i.
- -h
-
Specify hardware, not software, flow control.
- -H hostname
-
Write login hostname into the
utmp file. By default, no login host is
specified.
- -I string
-
Specify string to be sent to tty or modem.
- -i
-
Suppress printing of /etc/issue before printing
the login prompt.
- -l program
-
Specify the use of program instead of
/bin/login.
- -m
-
Attempt to guess the appropriate baud rate.
- -n
-
Don't prompt for a login name.
- -t timeout
-
Specify that agetty should exit if
the open on the line succeeds and
there is no response to the login prompt in
timeout seconds.
- -L
-
Do not require carrier detect; operate locally only. Use this when
connecting terminals.
- -w
-
Wait for carriage return or linefeed before sending login prompt. Use
when sending an initialization string.
System administration command. Normally started in a system startup
file. Execute commands periodically. By default, the anacron command reads a list of jobs from a
configuration file, /etc/anacrontab. The file
consists of shell variables to use when running commands, followed by
a list of tasks to run. Each task specifies how often in days it
should be run, a delay in minutes to wait before running the task, a
unique job identifier used to store a timestamp, and the shell
command to execute. Timestamps for the last run of each task are
stored in the /var/spool/anacron file. For each
task, anacron compares the stored
timestamp against the current time. If the command has not been
executed within the specified frequency, the command is run. Upon
completion anacron records the new
date in the timestamp file. Limit anacron to a specified task by giving its
unique job identifier on the command line.
The anacron command is often used to
support the cron daemon on systems
that are not run continuously.
Options
- -d
-
Run in foreground rather than as a background process. Send messages
to standard error.
- -f
-
Run tasks ignoring timestamps.
- -h
-
Print help message, then exit.
- -n
-
Run tasks now, ignoring delay specifications.
- -q
-
Suppress messages to standard error when using the -d option.
- -s
-
Execute tasks serially. Do not start new task until previous task is
completed.
- -t file
-
Read tasks from file instead of from
/etc/anacrontab.
- -u
-
Update timestamps for tasks, but don't run them.
- -V
-
Print version number, then exit.
System administration command. apmd handles events reported by the
Advanced Power Management BIOS driver.
The driver reports on battery level and requests to enter sleep or
suspend mode. apmd will log any
reports it gets via syslogd and take
steps to make sure that basic sleep and suspend requests are handled
gracefully. You can fine-tune the behavior of apmd by specifying an apmd_proxy command to run when it receives an
event.
Options
- -c n, --check n
-
Set the number of seconds to wait for an event before rechecking the
power level. Default is to wait indefinitely. Setting this causes the
battery levels to be checked more frequently.
- -P command, --apmd_proxy command
-
Specify the apmd_proxy command to
run when APM driver events are reported. This is generally a shell
script. The command will be invoked with
parameters indicating what kind of event was received. The parameters
are listed in the next section.
- -p n, --percentage n
-
Log information whenever the power changes by n
percent. The default is 5. Values greater than 100 will disable
logging of power changes.
- -V, --version
-
Print version and exit.
- -v, --verbose
-
Verbose mode; all events are logged.
- -W, --wall
-
Use wall to alert all users of a low
battery status.
- -w n, --warn n
-
Log a warning at ALERT level when the battery charge drops below
n percent. The default is 10. Negative values
disable low battery level warnings.
- -q, --quiet
-
Disable low battery level warnings.
- -?, --help
-
Print help summary and exit.
Parameters
The apmd proxy script will be
invoked with the following parameters:
- start
-
Invoked when the daemon starts.
- stop
-
Invoked when the daemon stops.
- suspend [ system | user ]
-
Invoked when a suspend request has been made. The second parameter
indicates whether the request was made by the system or by the user.
- standby [ system | user ]
-
Invoked when a standby request has been made. The second parameter
indicates whether the request was made by the system or by the user.
- resume [ suspend | standby | critical ]
-
Invoked when the system resumes normal operation. The second
parameter indicates the mode the system was in before resuming.
critical suspends indicate an
emergency shutdown. After a critical
suspend the system may be unstable, and you can use the resume command to help you recover from the
suspension.
- change power
-
Invoked when system power is changed from AC to battery or from
battery to AC.
- change battery
-
Invoked when the APM BIOS driver reports that the battery is low.
- change capability
-
Invoked when the APM BIOS driver reports that some hardware that
affects its capability has been added or removed.
Search the short manual page descriptions in the whatis database for occurrences of each
string and display the result on the standard
output. Like whatis, except that it
searches for strings instead of words. Equivalent to man -k.
The Advanced Package Tool, the Debian
package management system. A freely available packaging system for
software distribution and installation. For detailed information on
apt and its commands, see Chapter 5.
ar key [args] [posname] [count] archive [files]
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Maintain a group of
files that are combined into a file
archive. Used most commonly to create and update
static library files as used by the link editor (ld). Compiler frontends often call ar automatically. Only one key letter may be
used, but each can be combined with additional
args (with no separations between).
posname is the name of a file in
archive. When moving or replacing
files, you can specify that they be placed
before or after posname.
Keys
- d
-
Delete files from archive.
- m
-
Move files to end of
archive.
- p
-
Print files in archive.
- q
-
Append files to archive.
- r
-
Replace files in archive.
- t
-
List the contents of archive or list the named
files.
- x
-
Extract contents from archive or only the named
files.
Arguments
- a
-
Use with r or m key to place files in
the archive after posname.
- b
-
Same as a, but before
posname.
- c
-
Create archive silently.
- f
-
Truncate long filenames.
- i
-
Same as b.
- l
-
For backward compatibility; meaningless in Linux.
- N
-
Use count parameter. Where multiple entries with
the same name are found, use the count instance.
- o
-
Preserve original timestamps.
- P
-
Use full pathname. Useful for non-POSIX-compliant archives.
- s
-
Force regeneration of archive symbol table
(useful after running strip).
- S
-
Do not regenerate symbol table.
- u
-
Use with r to replace only
files that have changed since being put in
archive.
- v
-
Verbose; print a description of actions taken.
- V
-
Print version number.
Example
Replace mylib.a with object files
from the current directory:
ar r mylib.a `ls *.o`
Print machine architecture type to standard output. Equivalent to
uname -m.
TCP/IP
command. Clear, add to, or dump the kernel's
Address Resolution Protocol (ARP)
cache (/proc/net/arp). ARP is used to translate
protocol addresses to hardware interface addresses. Modifying your
ARP cache can change which interfaces handle specific requests. ARP
cache entries may be marked with the following flags: C (complete), M
(permanent), and P (publish). In kernels before 2.2, a published
entry was used for creating an ARP proxy, a technique by which one
system can act as a gateway to another system on the same subnet.
While arp can create a proxy for a
single system, subnet proxies are now handled by the arp kernel module. See the Linux 2.4 Advanced
Routing HOWTO for details. We have retained the subnet proxy
information here for older kernels.
Options
host option arguments may be given as either a
hostname or an IP address. When using the -D option, they may also be given as a
hardware interface address (e.g., eth0, eth1).
- -a [hosts], --display [hosts]
-
Display entries for hosts or, if none are
specified, all entries.
- -d host, --delete host
-
Remove the specified host's
entry.
- -D, --use-device
-
Use the hardware address associated with the specified interface.
This may be used with -s when
creating a proxy entry.
- -d host [pub], --delete host [pub]
-
Remove host's entry. To delete
a proxy entry, use the pub argument
and specify the interface associated with the proxy using -i.
- -f file, --file file
-
Read entries from file and add them.
- -H type, --hw-type type, -t type
-
Search for type entries when examining the ARP
cache. type is usually ether (Ethernet), which is the default, but
may be ax25 (AX.25 packet radio),
arcnet (ARCnet), pronet (PROnet), or netrom (NET/ROM).
- -i interface, --device interface
-
Select an interface. If you are dumping the ARP cache, this option
will cause the command to display only the entries using that
interface. When setting entries, this will cause the interface to be
associated with that entry. If you do not use this option when
setting an entry, the kernel will guess.
- -n, --numeric
-
Display host IP addresses instead of their domain names.
- -s host hardware-address [netmask mask] [pub], --set host hardware-address [netmask mask] [pub]
-
Add a permanent entry for host at
hardware-address. A hardware-address
for type ether hardware
is 6 hexadecimal bytes, colon-separated. The pub argument can be used to set the publish
flag, creating a proxy entry. On kernels before 2.2x, you can specify
a netmask on behalf of which the current system should handle
requests.
- -v, --verbose
-
Verbose mode.
Examples
Display entry for host eris:
arp -a eris
Set a permanent cache entry for host illuminati, whose hardware address you know:
arp -s illuminati 00:05:23:73:e6:cf
Set an ARP proxy for host fnord
using the eth0
interface's hardware address:
arp -Ds fnord eth0 pub
Remove the fnord ARP proxy:
arp -i eth0 -d fnord pub
Generate an object file from each specified assembly language source
file. Object files have the same root name as
source files but replace the .s suffix with
.o. There may be some additional system-specific
options.
Options
- -- [ | files]
-
Read input files from standard input, or from
files if the pipe is used.
- -a[cdhlmns][=file]
-
With only the -a option, list source
code, assembler listing, and symbol table. The other options specify
additional things to list or omit:
- -ac
-
Omit false conditionals.
- -ad
-
Omit debugging directives.
- -ah
-
Include the high-level source code, if available.
- -al
-
Include an assembly listing.
- -am
-
Include macro expansions.
- -an
-
Suppress forms processing.
- -as
-
Include a symbol listing.
- =file
-
Set the listing filename to file.
- --defsym symbol=value
-
Define the symbol to have the value
value, which must be an integer.
- -f
-
Skip whitespace and comment preprocessing.
- --fatal-warnings
-
Treat warnings as errors.
- --gstabs
-
Generate stabs debugging information.
- --gdwarf2
-
Generate DWARF2 debugging information.
- -o objfile
-
Place output in object file objfile (default is
file.o).
- --statistics
-
Print information time and space assembler uses.
- -v
-
Display the version number of the assembler.
- -I path
-
Include path when searching for .include directives.
- -J
-
Don't warn about signed overflow.
- -R
-
Combine both data and text in text section.
- -W
-
Don't show warnings.
- -Z
-
Generate object file even if there are errors.
Execute commands at a specified time and
optional date. The commands are read from
standard input or from a file. (See also batch.) End input with EOF.
time can be formed either as a numeric hour
(with optional minutes and modifiers) or as a keyword. It can contain
an optional date, formed as a month and date, a
day of the week, or a special keyword (today or tomorrow). An increment can also be specified.
The at command can always be issued
by a privileged user. Other users must be listed in the file
/etc/at.allow if it exists;
otherwise, they must not be listed in
/etc/at.deny. If neither file exists,
only a privileged user can issue the command.
Options
- -c job [job...]
-
Display the specified jobs on the standard output. This option does
not take a time specification.
- -d job [job...]
-
Delete the specified jobs. Same as atrm.
- -f file
-
Read job from file, not from standard input.
- -l
-
Report all jobs that are scheduled for the invoking user. Same as
atq.
- -m
-
Mail user when job has completed, regardless of whether output was
created.
- -q letter
-
Place job in queue denoted by letter, where
letter is any single letter from a-z or A-Z.
Default queue is a. (The batch queue
defaults to b.) Higher-lettered
queues run at a lower priority.
- -V
-
Display the version number.
Time
- hh:mm [modifiers]
-
Hours can have one digit or two (a 24-hour clock is assumed by
default); optional minutes can be given as one or two digits; the
colon can be omitted if the format is h,
hh, or hhmm (e.g., valid
times are 5, 5:30, 0530, 19:45). If modifier am or pm is
added, time is based on a 12-hour clock. If the
keyword zulu is added, times
correspond to Greenwich Mean Time.
- midnight | noon | teatime | now
-
Use any one of these keywords in place of a numeric time. teatime translates to 4:00 p.m.; now must be followed by an
increment (described in a moment).
Date
- month num[, year]
-
month is one of the 12 months, spelled out or
abbreviated to its first three letters; num is
the calendar date of the month; year is the
four-digit year. If the given month occurs
before the current month, at
schedules that month next year.
- day
-
One of the seven days of the week, spelled out or abbreviated to its
first three letters.
- today | tomorrow
-
Indicate the current day or the next day. If
date is omitted, at schedules today when the specified
time occurs later than the current time;
otherwise, at schedules tomorrow.
Increment
Supply a numeric increment if you want to specify an execution time
or day relative to the current time. The number
should precede any of the keywords minute, hour,
day, week, month,
or year (or their plural forms). The
keyword next can be used as a
synonym of + 1.
Examples
In typical usage, you run at and
input commands that you want executed at a particular time, followed
by EOF.
$ at 1:00 am tomorrow
at> ./total_up > output
at> mail joe < output
at> <EOT> Entered by pressing Ctrl-D
job 1 at 2003-03-19 01:00
The two commands could also be placed in a file and submitted as
follows:
$ at 1:00 am tomorrow < scriptfile
More examples of syntax follow. Note that the first two commands are
equivalent.
$ at 1945 December 9
$ at 7:45pm Dec 9
$ at 3 am Saturday
$ at now + 5 hours
$ at noon next day
System administration command. Normally started in a system startup
file. Execute jobs queued by the at
command.
Options
- -b n
-
Wait at least n seconds after beginning one job
before beginning the next job. Default is 60.
- -d
-
Print error messages to standard error instead of using syslog.
- -l average
-
When system load average is higher than average,
wait to begin a new job. Default is 0.8.
- -s
-
Process queue once, then exit.
List the user's pending jobs, unless the user is a
privileged user; in that case, list everybody's
jobs. Same as at -l, and related to
batch and atrm.
Options
- -q queue
-
Query only the specified queue and ignore all other queues.
- -v
-
Show jobs that have completed but have not yet been deleted.
- -V
-
Print the version number.
atrm [options] job [job...]
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|
Delete jobs that have been queued for future execution. Same as
at -d.
Options
- -q queue
-
Remove job from the specified queue.
- -V
-
Print the version number and then exit.
audiosend [email@address]
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Send an audio recording as an email from a properly equipped
workstation (Sun and Sony, with microphones). After prompting for
address, subject, and Cc: fields, the program asks the user to record
a message, then allows him to re-record, send, or cancel.
autoconf [options] [template_file]
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|
Generate a configuration script from m4 macros defined in
template_file, if given, or in a
configue.ac or configure.in
file in the current working directory. The generated script is almost
invariably called
configure.
Options
- -d, --debug
-
Don't remove temporary files.
- -f, --force
-
Replace files generated previously by autoconf.
- -h, --help
-
Print help message, then exit.
- -i, --initialization
-
When tracing calls with the -t
option, report calls made during initialization.
- -o file, --output=file
-
Save output to file.
- -t macro, --trace=macro
-
Report the list of calls to macro.
- -v, --verbose
-
Verbosely print information about the progress of autoconf.
- -I dir, --include=dir
-
Search in directory dir for input files.
- -V, --version
-
Print version number, then exit.
- -W category, --warnings=category
-
Print any warnings related to category. Accepted
categories are:
- cross
-
Cross compilation.
- obsolete
-
Obsolete constructs.
- syntax
-
Questionable syntax.
- all
-
All warnings.
- no-category
-
Turn off warnings for category.
- none
-
Turn off all warnings.
- error
-
Treat warnings as errors.
autoheader [options] [template_file]
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GNU autoconf tool. Generate a template file of C
#define statements from m4 macros defined in
template_file, if given, or in a
configue.ac or configure.in
file in the current working directory. The generated template file is
almost invariably called config.h.in.
Options
- -d, --debug
-
Don't remove temporary files.
- -f, --force
-
Replace files generated previously by autoheader.
- -h, --help
-
Print help message, then exit.
- -o file, --output=file
-
Save output to file.
- -v, --verbose
-
Verbosely print information about the progress of autoheader.
- -I dir, --include=dir
-
Search in directory dir for input files.
- -V, --version
-
Print version number, then exit.
- -W category, --warnings=category
-
Print any warnings related to category. Accepted
categories are:
- obsolete
-
Obsolete constructs.
- all
-
All warnings.
- no-category
-
Turn off warnings for category.
- none
-
Turn off all warnings.
- error
-
Treat warnings as errors.
automake [options] [template_file]
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GNU automake tool. Creates GNU
standards-compliant Makefile.in files from
Makefile.am template files and can be used to
ensure that projects contain all files and install options required
to be standards-compliant. Note that Versions 1.4 and 1.6 differ
enough that many distributions include an
automake14 package for backward compatibility.
Options
- -a, --add-missing
-
Add any missing files automake
requires to the directory by creating symbolic links to automake's default versions.
- -c, --copy
-
Used with the -a option. Copy
missing files instead of creating symbolic links.
- --cygnus
-
Specifies project has a Cygnus-style source tree.
- -f, --force-missing
-
Used with the -a option. Replace
required files even if a local copy already exists.
- --foreign
-
Treat project as a non-GNU project. Check only for elements required
for proper operation.
- --gnu
-
Treat project as a GNU project with the GNU project structure.
- --gnits
-
A stricter version of --gnu,
performing more checks to comply with GNU project structure rules.
- --help
-
Print help message, then exit.
- -i, --ignore-deps
-
Disable automatic dependency tracking.
- --libdir=dir
-
Used with the -a option. Search in
directory dir for default files.
- --no-force
-
Update only Makefile.in files that have updated
dependents.
- -v, --verbose
-
List files being read or created by automake.
- --version
-
Print version number, then exit.
- -Werror
-
Treat warnings as errors.
GNU autoconf tool. Update configure
scripts by running autoconf,
autoheader, aclocal, automake, and libtoolize in specified directories and
subdirectories. This command is seldom invoked manually. It is
usually called automatically from other autoconf tools.
Options
- -d, --debug
-
Don't remove temporary files.
- -f, --force
-
Remake all configure scripts, even when newer than their template
files.
- -h, --help
-
Print help message, then exit.
- -i, --install
-
Add any default files missing from package by copying versions
included with autoconf and automake.
- -s, --symlink
-
Used with the -i option. Create
symbolic links to default files instead of copying them.
- -v, --verbose
-
Verbosely print information about the progress of autoreconf.
- -I dir, --include=dir
-
Search in directory dir for input files.
- -V, --version
-
Print version number, then exit.
- -W category, --warnings=category
-
Print any warnings related to category. Accepted
categories are:
- cross
-
Cross compilation.
- obsolete
-
Obsolete constructs.
- syntax
-
Questionable syntax.
- all
-
All warnings.
- no-category
-
Turn off warnings for category.
- none
-
Turn off all warnings.
- error
-
Treat warnings as errors.
autoscan [options] [directory]
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|
GNU autoconf tool. Create or
maintain a preliminary configure.ac file named
configure.scan based on source files in
specified directory, or current directory if
none given. If a configure.ac file already
exists, autoconf will check it for
completeness and print suggestions for correcting any problems it
finds.
Options
- -d, --debug
-
Don't remove temporary files.
- -h, --help
-
Print help message, then exit.
- -v, --verbose
-
Verbosely print information about the progress of autoscan.
- -I dir, --include=dir
-
Search in directory dir for input files. Use
multiple times to add multiple directories.
- -B dir, --prepend-include=dir
-
Search dir for input files before searching in
other directories. Use multiple times to add multiple directories.
- -V, --version
-
Print version number, then exit.
autoupdate [options] [file]
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GNU autoconf tool. Update the
configure template file file, or
configure.ac if no file is specified. This
command is seldom invoked manually. It is usually called
automatically from other autoconf
tools.
Options
- -d, --debug
-
Don't remove temporary files.
- -f, --force
-
Remake all configure scripts, even when newer than their template
files.
- -h, --help
-
Print help message, then exit.
- -v, --verbose
-
Verbosely print information about the progress of autoupdate.
- -I dir, --include=dir
-
Search in directory dir for input files.
- -V, --version
-
Print version number, then exit.
badblocks [options] device block-count
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System administration command. Search device for
bad blocks. You must specify the number of blocks on the device
(block-count).
Options
- -b blocksize
-
Expect blocksize-byte blocks.
- -c blocksize
-
Test blocksize-byte blocks at a time. Default is
16.
- -f
-
Force a read/write or nondestructive write test on a mounted device.
Use only when /etc/mtab incorrectly reports a
device as mounted.
- -i file
-
Skip test of known bad blocks listed in file.
- -n
-
Perform a nondestructive test by writing to each block and then
reading back from it while preserving data.
- -o file
-
Direct output to file.
- -p number
-
Repeat search of device until no new bad blocks have been found in
number passes. Default is 0.
- -v
-
Verbose mode.
- -w
-
Test by writing to each block and then reading back from it.
banner [option] [characters]
|
|
Print characters as a poster. If no
characters are supplied, banner prompts for them and reads an input
line from standard input. By default, the results go to standard
output, but they are intended to be sent to a printer.
Option
- -w width
-
Set width to width characters. Note that if your
banner is in all lowercase, it will be narrower than
width characters. If -w is not specified, the default width is 132.
If -w is specified but
width is not provided, the default is 80.
Example
/usr/games/banner -w50 Happy Birthday! |lpr
basename name [suffix]
basename option
|
|
Remove leading directory components from a path. If
suffix is given, remove that also. The result is
printed to standard output.
Options
- --help
-
Print help message and then exit.
- --version
-
Print the version number and then exit.
Examples
basename /usr/lib/libm.a
libm.a
% basename /usr/lib/libm.a .a
libm
bash [options] [file [arguments]]
sh [options] [file [arguments]]
|
|
Standard Linux shell, a command interpreter into which all other
commands are entered. For more information, see Chapter 7.
Execute commands entered on standard input. If
time is omitted, execute commands when the
system load permits (when the load average falls below 0.8). Very
similar to at, but does not insist
that the execution time be entered on the command line. See at for details.
Options
- -f file
-
Read job from file, not standard input.
- -m
-
Mail user when job has completed, regardless of whether output was
created.
- -q letter
-
Place job in queue denoted by letter, where
letter is one letter from a-z or A-Z. The
default queue is b. (The at queue defaults to a.) Higher-lettered queues run at a lower
priority.
- -V
-
Print the version number and then exit.
- -v
-
Display the time a job will be executed.
bc is a language (and compiler)
whose syntax resembles that of C, but with unlimited-precision
arithmetic. bc consists of
identifiers, keywords, and symbols, which are briefly described in
the following entries. Examples are given at the end.
Interactively perform arbitrary-precision arithmetic or convert
numbers from one base to another. Input can be taken from
files or read from the standard input. To exit,
type quit or EOF.
Options
- -h, --help
-
Print help message and exit.
- -i, --interactive
-
Interactive mode.
- -l, --mathlib
-
Make functions from the math library available.
- -s, --standard
-
Ignore all extensions, and process exactly as in POSIX.
- -w, --warn
-
When extensions to POSIX bc are
used, print a warning.
- -q, --quiet
-
Do not display welcome message.
- -v, --version
-
Print version number.
Identifiers
An
identifier is a series of one or more characters. It must begin with
a lowercase letter but may also contain digits and underscores. No
uppercase letters are allowed. Identifiers are used as names for
variables, arrays, and functions. Variables normally store
arbitrary-precision numbers. Within the same program you may name a
variable, an array, and a function using the same letter. The
following identifiers would not conflict:
- x
-
Variable x.
- x[i]
-
Element i of array x.
i can range from 0 to 2047 and can also be an
expression.
- x(y,z)
-
Call function x with parameters
y and z.
Input-output keywords
ibase, obase, scale,
and last store a value. Typing them
on a line by themselves displays their current value. You can also
change their values through assignment. The letters A-F are treated
as digits whose values are 10-15.
- ibase = n
-
Numbers that are input (e.g., typed) are read as base
n (default is 10).
- obase = n
-
Numbers that are displayed are in base n
(default is 10). Note: once ibase
has been changed from 10, use A to restore ibase or obase to decimal.
- scale = n
-
Display computations using n decimal places
(default is 0, meaning that results are truncated to integers).
scale is normally used only for
base-10 computations.
- last
-
Value of last printed number.
Statement keywords
A semicolon or a newline separates one statement from another. Curly
braces are needed when grouping multiple statements.
- if (rel-expr) {statements} [else {statements}]
-
Do one or more statements if relational
expression rel-expr is true. Otherwise, do
nothing, or if else (an extension)
is specified, do alternative statements. For
example:
if (x= =y) {i = i + 1} else {i = i - 1}
- while (rel-expr) {statements}
-
Repeat one or more statements while
rel-expr is true; for example:
while (i>0) {p = p*n; q = a/b; i = i-1}
- for (expr1; rel-expr; expr2) {statements}
-
Similar to while; for example, to
print the first 10 multiples of 5, you could type:
for (i=1; i<=10; i++) i*5
GNU bc does not require three
arguments to for. A missing argument
1 or 3 means that those expressions will never be evaluated. A
missing argument 2 evaluates to the value 1.
- break
-
Terminate a while or for statement.
- print list
-
GNU extension. It provides an alternate means of output.
list consists of a series of comma-separated
strings and expressions; print
displays these entities in the order of the list. It does not print a
newline when it terminates. Expressions are evaluated, printed, and
assigned to the special variable last. Strings (which may contain special
characters, i.e., characters beginning with \)
are simply printed. Special characters can be:
- a
-
Alert or bell
- b
-
Backspace
- f
-
Form feed
- n
-
Newline
- r
-
Carriage return
- q
-
Double quote
- t
-
Tab
- \
-
Backslash
- continue
-
GNU extension. When within a for
statement, jump to the next iteration.
- halt
-
GNU extension. Cause the bc
processor to quit when executed.
- quit
-
GNU extension. Cause the bc
processor to quit whether line is executed or not.
- limits
-
GNU extension. Print the limits enforced by the local version of
bc.
Function keywords
- define f(args) {
-
Begin the definition of function f having the
arguments args. The arguments are separated by
commas. Statements follow on successive lines. End with }.
- auto x, y
-
Set up x and y as variables
local to a function definition, initialized to 0 and meaningless
outside the function. Must appear first.
- return(expr)
-
Pass the value of expression expr back to the
program. Return 0 if (expr) is left off. Used in function definitions.
- sqrt(expr)
-
Compute the square root of expression expr.
- length(expr)
-
Compute how many significant digits are in expr.
- scale(expr)
-
Same as length, but count only
digits to the right of the decimal point.
- read( )
-
GNU extension. Read a number from standard input. Return value is the
number read, converted via the value of ibase.
Math library functions
These are available when bc is invoked with -l. Library functions set scale to 20.
- s(angle)
-
Compute the sine of angle, a constant or
expression in radians.
- c(angle)
-
Compute the cosine of angle, a constant or
expression in radians.
- a(n)
-
Compute the arctangent of n, returning an angle
in radians.
- e(expr)
-
Compute e to the power of
expr.
- l(expr)
-
Compute the natural log of expr.
- j(n, x)
-
Compute the Bessel function of integer order n.
Operators
These consist of operators and other
symbols. Operators can be arithmetic, unary, assignment, or
relational:
- arithmetic
-
+ -
* / % ^
- unary
-
- ++ --
- assignment
-
=+ =-
=* =/ =%
=^ =
- relational
-
< <=
> >= = =
!=
Other symbols
- /* */
-
Enclose comments.
- ( )
-
Control the evaluation of expressions (change precedence). Can also
be used around assignment statements to force the result to print.
- { }
-
Use to group statements.
- [ ]
-
Indicate array index.
- "text"
-
Use as a statement to print text.
Examples
Note in these examples that when you type some quantity (a number or
expression), it is evaluated and printed, but assignment statements
produce no display.
ibase = 8 Octal input
20 Evaluate this octal number
16 Terminal displays decimal value
obase = 2 Display output in base 2 instead of base 10
20 Octal input
10000 Terminal now displays binary value
ibase = A Restore base-10 input
scale = 3 Truncate results to 3 decimal places
8/7 Evaluate a division
1.001001000 Oops! Forgot to reset output base to 10
obase=10 Input is decimal now, so A isn't needed
8/7
1.142 Terminal displays result (truncated)
The following lines show the use of functions:
define p(r,n){ Function p uses two arguments
auto v v is a local variable
v = r^n r raised to the n power
return(v)} Value returned
scale=5
x=p(2.5,2) x = 2.5 ^ 2
x Print value of x
6.25
length(x) Number of digits
3
scale(x) Number of places right of decimal point
2
Notify user of mail arrival and sender's name.
biff operates asynchronously. Mail
notification works only if your system is running the comsat(8) server. The command biff y enables notification, and the command
biff n disables notification. With
no arguments, biff reports biff's current status.
Given a file containing context-free grammar,
convert into tables for subsequent parsing while sending output to
file.c. This utility is to a large extent
compatible with yacc, and in fact is
named for it. All input files should use the suffix
.y; output files will use the original prefix.
All long options (those preceded by --) may instead be preceded by +.
Options
- -b prefix, --file-prefix=prefix
-
Use prefix for all output files.
- -d, --defines
-
Generate file.h, producing #define statements that relate bison's token codes to the
token names declared by the user.
- -r, --raw
-
Use bison token numbers, not
yacc-compatible translations, in
file.h.
- -k, --token-table
-
Include token names and values of YYNTOKENS, YYNNTS, YYNRULES, and
YYNSTATES in file.c.
- -l, --no-lines
-
Exclude #line constructs from code
produced in file.c. (Use after debugging is
complete.)
- -n, --no-parser
-
Suppress parser code in output, allowing only declarations. Assemble
all translations into a switch statement body and print it to
file.act.
- -o file, --output-file=file
-
Output to file.
- -p prefix, --name-prefix=prefix
-
Substitute prefix for yy in all external symbols.
- -t, --debug
-
Compile runtime debugging code.
- -v, --verbose
-
Verbose mode. Print diagnostics and notes about parsing tables to
file.output.
- -V, --version
-
Display version number.
- -y, --yacc, --fixed-output-files
-
Duplicate yacc's
conventions for naming output files.
bootpd [options] [configfile [dumpfile]]
|
|
TCP/IP command. Internet Boot Protocol server. bootpd normally is run by
/etc/inetd by including the following line in
the file /etc/inetd.conf:
bootps dgram udp wait root /etc/bootpd bootpd This causes bootpd to be started
only when a boot request arrives. It may also be started in
standalone mode, from the command line. Upon startup, bootpd first reads its configuration file,
/etc/bootptab (or the
configfile listed on the command line), then
begins listening for BOOTREQUEST packets.
bootpd looks in
/etc/services to find the port numbers it should
use. Two entries are extracted: bootps
(the bootp server
listening port) and bootpc (the
destination port used to reply to clients).
If bootpd is compiled with the
-DDEBUG option, receipt of a SIGUSR1
signal causes it to dump its memory-resident database to the file
/etc/bootpd.dump or the
dumpfile specified on the command line.
Options
- -c directory
-
Force bootpd to work in
directory.
- -d level
-
Specify the debugging level. Omitting level will
increment the level by 1.
- -t timeout
-
Specify a timeout value in minutes. A timeout value of 0 means wait
forever.
Configuration file
The bootpd configuration file has a format in
which two-character, case-sensitive tag symbols are used to represent
host parameters. These parameter declarations are separated by
colons. The general format is:
hostname:tg=value:tg=value:tg=value
where hostname is the name of a bootp client and tg is a
tag symbol. The currently recognized tags are listed in the following
section.
Tags
bf
|
Bootfile
|
bs
|
Bootfile size in 512-octet blocks
|
cs
|
Cookie server address list
|
ds
|
Domain name server address list
|
gw
|
Gateway address list
|
ha
|
Host hardware address
|
hd
|
Bootfile home directory
|
hn
|
Send hostname
|
ht
|
Host hardware type (see Assigned Numbers RFC)
|
im
|
Impress server address list
|
ip
|
Host IP address
|
lg
|
Log server address list
|
lp
|
lpr server address list
|
ns
|
IEN-116 name server address list
|
rl
|
Resource location protocol server address list
|
sm
|
Host subnet mask
|
tc
|
Table continuation
|
to
|
Time offset in seconds from UTC
|
ts
|
Time server address list
|
vm
|
Vendor magic cookie selector
|
There is also a generic tag, Tn, where
n is an RFC 1048 vendor field tag number.
Generic data may be represented as either a stream of hexadecimal
numbers or as a quoted string of ASCII characters.
TCP/IP command. Internet Boot Protocol Gateway. Maintain a gateway
that forwards bootpd requests to
server. In addition to dealing with BOOTREPLY
packets, also deal with BOOTREQUEST packets. bootpgw is normally run by
/etc/inetd by including the following line in
the file /etc/inetd.conf:
bootps dgram udp wait root /etc/bootpgw bootpgw This causes bootpgw to be started
only when a boot request arrives. bootpgw takes all the same options as
bootpd, except -c.
bootptest [options] server [template]
|
|
TCP/IP command. Test server's
bootpd daemon by sending requests
every second for 10 seconds or until the server responds. Read
options from the template file, if provided.
Options
- -f file
-
Read the boot filename from file.
- -h
-
Identify client by hardware address, not IP address.
- -m magic-number
-
Provide magic-number as the first word of the
vendor options field.
bzcmp [options] file1 file2
|
|
Apply cmp to the data from files in
the bzip2 format without requiring
on-disk decompression. See bzip2 and
cmp for usage.
bzdiff [options] file1 file2
|
|
Apply diff to data from files in the
bzip2 format without requiring
on-disk decompression. See bzip2 and
cmp for usage.
bzgrep [options] pattern [file...]
|
|
Apply grep to data from files in the
bzip2 format without requiring
on-disk decompression. See bzip2 and
grep for usage.
bzip2 [options] filenames
bunzip2 [options] filenames
bzcat [option] filenames
bzip2recover filenames
|
|
File compression and decompression utility similar to gzip, but uses a different algorithm and
encoding method to get better compression. bzip2 replaces each file in
filenames with a compressed version of the file
and with a .bz2 extension appended. bunzip2 decompresses each file compressed by
bzip2 (ignoring other files, except
to print a warning). bzcat
decompresses all specified files to standard output, and bzip2recover is used to try to recover data
from damaged files.
Additional related commands include bzcmp, which compares the contents of bzipped
files; bzdiff, which creates diff
(difference) files from a pair of bzip files; bzgrep, to search them; and the bzless and bzmore commands, which apply the more and less
commands to bzip output as bzcat does with the cat command. See cat, cmp,
diff, and grep for information on how to use those
commands.
Options
- --
-
End of options; treat all subsequent arguments as filenames.
- -dig
-
Set block size to dig x 100KB when
compressing, where dig is a single digit from 1
to 9.
- -c, --stdout
-
Compress or decompress to standard output.
- -d, --decompress
-
Force decompression.
- -f, --force
-
Force overwrite of output files. Default is not to overwrite. Also
forces breaking of hard links to files.
- -k, --keep
-
Keep input files; don't delete them.
- -L, --license, -V, --version
-
Print license and version information and exit.
- -q, --quiet
-
Print only critical messages.
- -s, --small
-
Use less memory, at the expense of speed.
- -t, --test
-
Check the integrity of the files, but don't actually
compress them.
- -v, --verbose
-
Verbose mode. Show the compression ratio for each file processed. Add
more -v's to
increase the verbosity.
- -z, --compress
-
Force compression, even if invoked as bunzip2 or bzcat.
- --repetitive-fast, --repetitive-best
-
Sometimes useful in versions earlier than 0.9.5 (which has an
improved sorting algorithm) for providing some control over the
algorithm.
Applies less to data files in the
bzip2 format without requiring
on-disk decompression. See bzip2 and
less for usage.
Applies more to data files in the
bzip2 format without requiring
on-disk decompression. See bzip2 and
more for usage.
See g++.
c++filt [options] [symbol]
|
|
Decode the specified C++ or Java
function name symbol, or read and decode symbols
from standard input if no symbol is given. This command reverses the
name mangling used by C++ and Java compilers to support function
overloading, multiple functions that share the same name.
Options
- -_, --strip-underscores
-
Remove initial underscores from symbol names.
- --help
-
Print usage information, then exit.
- -j, --java
-
Print names using Java syntax.
- -n, --no-strip-underscores
-
Preserve initial underscores on symbol names.
- -s format, --format=format
-
Expect symbols to have been coded in the specified format. Format may
be one of the following:
- arm
-
C++ Annotated Reference Manual.
- edg
-
EDG (Intel) compiler.
- gnu
-
Gnu compiler (the default).
- gnu-new-abi
-
Gnu compiler with the new application binary interface (for gcc 3.x.)
- hp
-
HP compiler.
- lucid
-
Lucid compiler.
- --version
-
Print version number, then exit.
cal [options] [[month] year]
|
|
Print a 12-month calendar (beginning with January) for the given
year, or a one-month calendar of the given
month and year.
month ranges from 1 to 12.
year ranges from 1 to 9999. With no arguments,
print a calendar for the current month.
Options
- -j
-
Display Julian dates (days numbered 1 to 365, starting from January
1).
- -m
-
Display Monday as the first day of the week.
- -y
-
Display entire year.
Examples
cal 12 1995
cal 1994 > year_file
cardctl [options] command
|
|
System administration command. Control PCMCIA sockets or select the
current scheme. The current scheme is sent along with the address of
any inserted cards to configuration scripts (by default located in
/etc/pcmcia). The scheme command displays or changes the scheme.
The other commands operate on a named card socket number, or all
sockets if no number is given.
Commands
- config [socket]
-
Display current socket configuration.
- eject [socket]
-
Prepare the system for the card(s) to be ejected.
- ident [socket]
-
Display card identification information.
- insert [socket]
-
Notify system that a card has been inserted.
- reset [socket]
-
Send reset signal to card.
- resume [socket]
-
Restore power to socket and reconfigure for use.
- scheme [name]
-
Display current scheme or change to specified scheme
name.
- status [socket]
-
Display current socket status.
- suspend [socket]
-
Shut down device and cut power to socket.
Options
- -c directory
-
Look for card configuration information in
directory instead of
/etc/pcmcia.
- -f file
-
Use file to keep track of the current scheme
instead of /var/run/pcmcia-scheme.
- -s file
-
Look for current socket information in file
instead of /var/run/stab.
System administration command. The PCMCIA card daemon. cardmgr monitors PCMCIA sockets for devices
that have been added or removed. When a card is detected, it attempts
to get the card's ID and configure it according to
the card configuration database (usually stored in
/etc/pcmcia/config). By default, cardmgr does two things when it detects a
card: it creates a system log entry and it beeps. Two high beeps mean
it successfully identified and configured a device. One high beep
followed by one low beep means it identified the device, but was
unable to configure it successfully. One low beep means it could not
identify the inserted card. Information on the currently configured
cards can be found in /var/run/stab.
Options
- -c directory
-
Look for the card configuration database in
directory instead of
/etc/pcmcia.
- -d
-
Use modprobe instead of insmod to load the PCMCIA device driver.
- -f
-
Run in the foreground to process the current cards, then run as a
daemon.
- -m directory
-
Look in directory for card device modules.
Default is /lib/modules/RELEASE, where
RELEASE is the current kernel release.
- -o
-
Configure the cards present in one pass, then exit.
- -pfile
-
Write cardmgr's
process ID to file instead of
/var/run/cardmgr.pid.
- -q
-
Run in quiet mode. No beeps.
- -s file
-
Write current socket information to file instead
of /var/run/stab.
- -v
-
Verbose mode.
- -V
-
Print version number and exit.
Read (concatenate) one or more
files and print them on standard output. Read
standard input if no files are specified or if
- is specified as one of the files;
input ends with EOF. You can use the > operator to combine several files into a
new file or >> to append files
to an existing file.
Options
- -A, --show-all
-
Same as -vET.
- -b, --number-nonblank
-
Number all nonblank output lines, starting with 1.
- -e
-
Same as -vE.
- -E, --show-ends
-
Print $ at the end of each line.
- -n, --number
-
Number all output lines, starting with 1.
- -s, --squeeze-blank
-
Squeeze down multiple blank lines to one blank line.
- -t
-
Same as -vT.
- -T, --show-tabs
-
Print TAB characters as ^I.
- -u
-
Ignored; retained for Unix compatibility.
- -v, --show-nonprinting
-
Display control and nonprinting characters, with the exception of
LINEFEED and TAB.
Examples
cat ch1 Display a file
cat ch1 ch2 ch3 > all Combine files
cat note5 >> notes Append to a file
cat > temp1 Create file at terminal; end with EOF
cat > temp2 << STOP Create file at terminal; end with STOP
See gcc.
cdda2wav [options] [output.wav]
|
|
Convert Compact Disc Digital Audio (CDDA) to the WAV format. This
process is often called "ripping" a
CD-ROM, and is generally performed before using an encoder to convert
the file to a compressed music format such as OGG or MP3. By default,
cdda2wav reads data from the
/dev/cdrom device and outputs one WAV file per
track.
Options
Some of the following options use sectors as a unit of measurement.
Each sector of data on a CD represents approximately 1/75 second of
play time.
- -D, --device devicename
-
Specify the device. The device must work with the -i (--interface) settings.
- -A , --auxdevice drivename
-
Specify a different drive for ioctl purposes.
- -I, --interface ifname
-
Specify the type of interface. For Linux systems, the most
appropriate value is usually cooked_ioctl.
- -s, --stereo
-
Record in stereo. Use -m (--mono) to record in mono.
- -x, --max
-
Set recording quality (and amount of hard disk usage) to maximum.
- -b, --bits-per-sample n
-
Set the quality of samples to n bits per sample
per channel. Possible values are 8, 12, and 16.
- -r, --rate n
-
Set the sample rate in samples per second. To get a list of possible
values, use the -R option.
- -R, --dump-rates
-
Output a list of possible sample rates and dividers. This option is
typically used alone.
- -P, --set-overlap n
-
Use n sectors of overlap for jitter correction.
- -n, --sectors-per-request n
-
Read n sectors in each request.
- -t, --track tracknumber
-
Set start track and, optionally, end track. Separate the tracks with
the + character.
- -i, --index n
-
Set the start index to n when recording.
- -o, --offset n
-
Start recording n sectors before the beginning
of the first track.
- -O, --output-format
-
Choose the output file format. Normal file options are
wav, aiff,
aifc, au, and
sun. You can also use cdr
and raw for headerless files dumped into
recording devices.
- -d, --duration
-
Set to a number followed by f for
frames (sectors) or s for seconds.
Set time to zero to record an entire track. For example, to copy two
minutes, enter 120s.
- -B, --bulk
-
Copy each track into its own file.
- -w, --wait
-
Wait for a signal before recording anything.
- -e, --echo
-
Copy audio data to a sound device rather than to a file.
- -p, --set-pitch n
-
Adjust the pitch by n percent when copying data
to an audio device.
- -S, --speed-select n
-
Specify the speed at which your system will read the CD-ROM. Set the
value to the multiple of normal playback speed given as your CD-ROM
drive speed (4, 16, 32, and so forth). Setting the speed lower than
the maximum can prevent errors in some cases.
- -q, --quiet
-
Quiet mode; the program will not send any data to the screen.
- -J, --version
-
Display version and quit.
Examples
For most systems, you should be able to copy a complete CD to a
single WAV file with the following command:
cdda2wav
To copy a complete CD to a set of WAV files, one per track:
cdda2wav -B
cdparanoia [options] span [outfile]
|
|
Like cdda2wav, cdparanoia records Compact Disc audio files as
WAV, AIFF, AIFF-C, or raw format files. It uses additional
data-verification and sound-improvement algorithms to make the
process more reliable, and is used by a number of graphical recording
programs as a backend.
Options
- -v, --verbose
-
Verbose mode.
- -q, --quiet
-
Quiet mode.
- -e, --stderr-progress
-
Send all progress messages to stderr instead of stdout; used by
wrapper scripts.
- -V, --version
-
Print version information and quit.
- -Q, --query
-
Display CD-ROM table of contents and quit.
- -s, --search-for-drive
-
Search for a drive, even if /dev/cdrom exists.
- -h, --help
-
Display options and syntax.
- -p, --output-raw
-
Output headerless raw data.
- -r, --output-raw-little-endian
-
Output raw data in little-endian byte order.
- -R, --output-raw-big-endian
-
Output raw data in big-endian byte order.
- -w, --output-wav
-
Output in WAV format. This is the default.
- -f, --output-aiff
-
Output in AIFF format.
- -a, --output-aifc
-
Output in AIFF-C format.
- -c, --force-cdrom-little-endian
-
Force cdparanoia to treat the drive
as a little-endian device.
- -C, --force-cdrom-big-endian
-
Force cdparanoia to treat the drive
as a big-endian device.
- -d, --force-cdrom-device devicename
-
Specify a device name to use instead of the first readable CD-ROM
available.
- -S, --force-read-speed n
-
Set the read speed to n on drives that support
it. This is useful if you have a slow drive or are low on memory.
- -Z, --disable-paranoia
-
Disable data verification and correction. Causes cdparanoia to behave exactly as cdda2wav would.
- -z, --never-skip[=retries]
-
If a read fails (for example, due to a scratch in the disc), try
again and again. If you specify a number, cdparanoia will try that number of times. If
you do not, cdparanoia will retry
until it succeeds.
- -Y, --disable-extra-paranoia
-
Use data verification and correction only at read boundaries. Not
recommended.
- -X, --abort-on-skip
-
If a read fails and must be skipped, skip the entire track and delete
any partially completed output file.
Progress symbols
The output during operation cdparanoia includes both smiley faces and more
standard progress symbols. They are:
- :-)
-
Operation proceeding normally.
- :-|
-
Operation proceeding normally, but with jitter during reads.
- :-/
-
Read drift.
- 8-|
-
Repeated read problems in the same place.
- :-O
-
SCSI/ATAPI transport error (hardware problem not related to the disc
itself).
- :-(
-
Scratch detected.
- ;-(
-
Unable to correct problem.
- 8-X
-
Unknown and uncorrectable error.
- :^D
-
Finished.
-
-
Blank space in the progress indicator means that no corrections were
necessary.
- -
-
Jitter correction was required.
- +
-
Read errors.
- !
-
Errors even after correction; repeated read errors.
- e
-
Corrected transport errors.
- V
-
An uncorrected error or a skipped read.
The span argument
The cdparanoia command takes exactly
one argument, which describes how much of the CD to record. It uses
numbers followed by bracketed times to designate track numbers and
time within them. For example, the string 1[2:23]-2[5] indicates a recording from the
two-minute and twenty-three-second mark of the first track up to the
fifth second of the second track. The time format is demarcated by
colons,
hours:minutes:seconds:.sectors,
with the last item, sectors, preceded by a
decimal point (a sector is 1/75 of a second). It's
best to put this argument within quotes.
If you use the -B option, the span
argument is not required.
cdrdao command [options] toc-file
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|
Write all content specified in description file
toc-file to a CD-R disk drive in one step. This
is called disk-at-once (DAO) mode, as opposed to the
more commonly used track-at-once (TAO) mode. DAO mode allows you to
change the length of gaps between tracks and define data to be
written in these gaps (like hidden bonus tracks or track intros). The
toc file can be created by hand or generated from an existing CD
using cdrdao's
read-toc command. A cue file, as
generated by other audio programs, can be used instead of a toc file.
The file format for toc files is discussed at length in the cdrdao manpage.
Commands
The first argument must be a command. Note that not all options are
available for all commands.
- show-toc
-
Print a summary of the CD to be created.
- read-toc
-
Read from a CD and create a disk image and toc file that will allow
creation of duplicates.
- read-cddb
-
Check a CDDB server for data about the CD represented by a given toc
file, then write that data to the toc file as CD-TEXT data.
- show-data
-
Print out the data that will be written to the CD-R. Useful for
checking byte order.
- read-test
-
Check the validity of the audio files described in the toc file.
- disk-info
-
Display information about the CD-R currently in the drive.
- msinfo
-
Display multisession information. Useful mostly for wrapper scripts.
- scanbus
-
Scan the system bus for devices.
- simulate
-
A dry run: do everything except write the CD.
- unlock
-
Unlock the recorder after a failure. Run this command if you cannot
eject the CD after using cdrdao.
- write
-
Write the CD.
- copy
-
Copy the CD. If you use a single drive, you will be prompted to
insert the CD-R after reading. An image file will be created unless
you use the --on-the-fly flag
and two CD drives.
Options
- --device bus,id,logicalunit
-
Set the SCSI address of the CD-R using the bus number, ID number, and
logical unit number.
- --source-device bus,id,logicalunit
-
Used only with the copy command. Set
the SCSI address of the source device.
- --driver driver-id:option-flags
-
Force cdrdao to use the driver you
choose with the driver options named, instead of the driver it
autodetects.
- --source-driver driver-id:option-flags
-
Used only with the copy command. Set the source device driver and
flags.
- speed value
-
Set the write speed to value. The default is the
highest available; use a lower value if higher values give poor
results.
- --datafile filename
-
When used with the read-toc command,
specifies the data file placed in the toc file. When used with
read-cd and copy, specifies the name of the image file
created.
- read-raw
-
Used only with the read-cd command.
Write raw data to the image file.
- --buffers n
-
Set the number of seconds of data to be buffered. Default is 32; set
to a higher number if your read source is unreliable or is slower
than the CD-R.
- --multi
-
Record as a multisession disc.
- --overburn
-
If you are using a disc with more storage space than cdrdao detects, use this option to keep
writing even when cdrdao thinks
you're out of space.
- --eject
-
Eject the disc when done.
- --swap
-
Swap byte order for all samples.
- --session n
-
Used only with the read-toc and
read-cd commands when working with
multisession CDs. Specifies the number of the session to be
processed.
- --reload
-
Allow the drive to be opened before writing without interrupting the
process. Used with simulation runs.
- --force
-
Override warnings and perform the action anyway.
- --paranoia-mode n
-
Specifies n, from 0 to 3, for the amount of
error correction in the CD read. 0 is none, 3 is full (see cdparanoia for information about error
correction). Set error correction to a lower number to increase read
speed. The default is 3.
- --keepimage
-
Used only with the copy command.
Keeps the image file created during the copy process.
- --on-the-fly
-
Do not create an image file: pipe data directly from source to CD-R.
- --with-cddb
-
Use CDDB to fetch information about the disc and save it as CD-TEXT
data. Used with the copy, read-toc, and read-cd commands.
- cddb-servers server,server
-
Enter hosts for servers. Servers may include ports, paths, and
proxies; you can list multiple servers separated by spaces or commas.
- --cddb-timeout s
-
Set the timeout for CDDB server connections to s
seconds.
- --cddb-directory localpath
-
CDDB data that is fetched will be saved in the directory
localpath.
- --save
-
Save current options to the settings file
$HOME/.cdrdao.
- -n
-
Do not wait 10 seconds before writing the disc.
- -v verbose-level
-
Set the amount of information printed to the screen. 0, 1, and 2 are
fine for most users; greater numbers are useful for
debugging.
cdrecord [general-options] dev=device [track-options]
track1,track2...
|
|
Record data or audio compact discs. This program normally requires
root access, and has a large number of options and settings. A number
of useful examples can be found in the manpage, which is quite
extensive.
General options
General option flags go directly after the cdrecord command. Options affecting the track
arguments are placed after the device argument and before the track
arguments themselves. The general options are:
- --version
-
Print version information and exit.
- -v
-
Verbose mode. Use one v for each
level of verbosity: -vv would be
very verbose, and -vvv would be even
more so.
- -V
-
As with the -v, a verbose mode
counter. However, this applies only to SCSI transport messages. This
will slow down the application.
- --debug=n, -d
-
Set the debug level to an integer (greater numbers are more verbose),
or use multiple -d flags as with the
-v and -V flags.
- --kdebug=n, --kd=n
-
Set the kernel's debug notification value to
n during SCSI command execution. Works through
the scg-driver.
- -s, --silent
-
Silent mode. Do not print any SCSI error commands.
- --force
-
Override errors if possible. May allow you to blank an otherwise
broken CD-RW.
- --dummy
-
Perform a dry run, doing all the steps of recording with the laser
turned off. This will let you know whether the process is going to
work.
- --dao
-
Disk-at-once mode. Works only with MMC drives that support non-raw
session-at-once modes.
- --multi
-
Set to record in multisession mode. Must be present on all sessions
but the last one for a multisession disc.
- --msinfo
-
Get multisession information from the CD. Used only with multisession
discs onto which you can still record more sessions.
- --toc
-
Display the table of contents for the CD currently in the drive.
Works for CD-ROM as well as CD-R and CD-RW drives.
- --atip
-
Display the ATIP (Absolute Time In Pregroove) information for a disc.
Only some drives allow you to read this information.
- --fix
-
Close ("fixate") the session,
preventing future multisession recordings and allowing the disc to be
played in standard audio CD players (some can also play a disc that
has not been closed).
- --nofix
-
Do not close the disc after writing.
- --load
-
Load media and exit. Works with tray-loading mechanisms only.
- --eject
-
Eject disc after recording. Some hardware may need to eject a disc
after a dummy recording and before the actual recording.
- --speed=n
-
Set the speed to n, a multiple of the audio
speed. Normally, cdrecord will get
this from the CDR_SPEED environment variable. If your drive has
trouble with higher numbers, try 0 as a value.
- blank=type
-
Erase data from a CD-RW in one of the following ways:
- help
-
Display a possible list of blanking methods.
- all
-
Erase all information on the disc. May take a long time.
- fast
-
Perform a quick erase of the disc, erasing only the PMA, TOC, and
pregap.
- track
-
Blank a track.
- unreserve
-
Unreserve a track previously marked as reserved.
- trtail
-
Blank the tail of a track only.
- unclose
-
Unclose the last session.
- session
-
Blank the last session.
- fs=n
-
Set the fifo buffer size to n, in bytes. You may
use k, m, s, or
f to specify kilobytes, megabytes,
or units of 2048 and 2352 bytes, respectively. The default is 4MB.
- timeout=n
-
Set the timeout to n seconds. Defaults to 40.
- driver=name
-
Lets you specify a driver for your system. Suggested for experts
only. The special drivers cdr_simul and dvd_simul are used for
simulation and profiling tests.
- driveropts=optlist
-
Specify a comma-separated list of driver options. To get a list of
valid options, use driveropts=help
and --checkdrive.
- --checkdrive
-
Check to see if there are valid drivers for the current drive.
Returns 0 if the drive is valid.
- --scanbus
-
Scan SCSI devices.
- --reset
-
Attempt to reset the SCSI bus. Does not work on all systems.
- --useinfo
-
Use .inf files to override audio options set
elsewhere.
- mcn=n
-
Set the Media Catalog Number to n.
The device argument
The device argument should be specified not as a file but as three
integers representing the bus, target, and logical unit, as in the
cdrdao command. To check the
available options, use the --scanbus option.
Track options and arguments
Track options may be mixed with track arguments, and normally apply
to the track immediately after them or to all tracks after them. The
track arguments themselves should be the files that you will be
writing to the CD. Options are:
- isrc=n
-
Set the International Standard Recording Number for the track
following this argument.
- index=a,b,c
-
Set the index list for the next track. The values should be
increasing comma-separated integers, starting with index 1 and
counting in sectors (75ths of a second). For example, you could set
three indices in a track with index=0,750,7500 and they would occur at the
beginning of the track, after 10 seconds, and after 100 seconds.
- --audio
-
Write all tracks after this track in digital audio format (playable
by standard CD players). If you do not use this flag or the --data flag, cdrecord will assume that
.au and .wav files are to
be recorded as raw audio and that all other files are data.
- --swab
-
Declare that your data is in byte-swapped (little-endian) byte order.
This is not normally necessary.
- --data
-
Record subsequent tracks as CD-ROM data. If you do not use this flag
or the --audio flag, all files
except for those ending in .wav or
.au are assumed to be data.
- --mode2
-
Write all subsequent tracks in CD-ROM mode 2 format.
- --xa1, --xa2
-
Write subsequent tracks in CD-ROM XA mode 1 or CD-ROM XA mode 2
format.
- --cdi
-
Write subsequent tracks in CDI format.
- --isosize
-
The size of the next track should match the size of the ISO-9660
filesystem. This is used when duplicating CDs or copying from
raw-data filesystems.
- --pad
-
Insert 15 sectors of blank data padding between data tracks. Applies
to all subsequent tracks or until you use the --nopad argument, and is overridden by
the padsize=n
argument.
- padsize=n
-
Insert n sectors of blank data padding after the
next track. Applies only to the track immediately after it.
- --nopad
-
Do not insert blank data between data tracks following this flag.
This is the default behavior.
- tsize=n
-
Set the size of the next track. Useful only if you are recording from
a raw disk for which cdrecord cannot
determine the file size. If you are recording from an ISO 9660
filesystem, use the --isosize
flag instead.
cfdisk [options] [device]
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|
System administration command. Partition a hard disk. Normally,
device will be /dev/hda,
/dev/hdb, /dev/sda,
/dev/sdb, /dev/hdc,
/dev/hdd, and so on. See also fdisk.
Options
- -a
-
Highlight the current partition with a cursor, not reverse video.
- -c cylinders
-
Specify the number of cylinders.
- -g
-
Ignore driver-provided geometry; guess one instead.
- -h heads
-
Specify the number of heads.
- -s sectors
-
Specify the number of sectors per track.
- -v
-
Print version number and exit.
- -z
-
Do not read the partition table; partition from scratch.
- -P format
-
Display the partition table in format, which
must be r (raw data), s (sector order), or t (raw format).
Commands
- up arrow, down arrow
-
Move among partitions.
- b
-
Toggle partition's bootable flag.
- d
-
Delete partition (allow other partitions to use its space).
- g
-
Alter the disk's geometry. Prompt for what to
change: cylinders, heads, or sectors (c, h, or
s, respectively).
- h
-
Help.
- m
-
Attempt to ensure maximum usage of disk space in the partition.
- n
-
Create a new partition. Prompt for more information.
- p
-
Display the partition table.
- q
-
Quit without saving information.
- t
-
Prompt for a new filesystem type, and change to that type.
- u
-
Change the partition size units, rotating from megabytes to sectors
to cylinders and back.
- W
-
Save information.
Change information about user password expirations. If run without
any option flags, chage will prompt
for values to be entered; you may also use option flags to change or
view information.
Options
- -l
-
This flag is used without any others, and causes chage to display the current password
expiration attributes for the user.
- -m mindays
-
Minimum number of days between password changes. Default is zero,
meaning that the user may change the password at any time.
- -M maxdays
-
Maximum number of days between password changes.
- -d lastday
-
Date of last password change. This may be expressed as a date in
YYYY-MM-DD format, or as the number of days between January 1, 1970
and the last password change.
- -I inactive-days
-
If a password expires and the user does not log in for this number of
days, the account will be locked, and the user must contact a system
administrator before logging in. Set to 0 to disable the feature.
- -E expiredate
-
Set the date when the account will be locked. This is not a date for
password expiration, but for account expiration. It may be expressed
as a YYYY-MM-DD date or as a number of days since January 1, 1970.
- -W warning
-
The number of days before password expiration that a user will be
warned to change passwords.
System administration command. Set up or initiate dial-up Internet
connections; often used in conjunction with pppd, the PPP daemon. On some systems,
chat takes the place of the
dip program. A chat
script is composed of a simple but expressive
syntax of paired expect and send strings and sometimes substrings. A
script string may contain either text expected from the modem or text
to be sent, a chat directive, a substitution character, or a mixture
of all three. When reading from a file, lines beginning with # are
treated as comments.
Options
- -e
-
Start script with the ECHO directive
turned on.
- -E
-
Allow script to read environment variables by using shell $VARIABLE syntax.
- -f file
-
Read chat script from file instead of standard
input.
- -r file
-
Send the output of the REPORT
directive to file. By default, they are sent to
standard error.
- -s
-
Send all error and log information to standard error, even when using
the -v option.
- -S
-
Silent mode; send neither error nor log messages to syslogd.
- -t n
-
Set the default timeout value to n seconds. When
not specified, the default timeout value is 45 seconds.
- -T string
-
Set the string to be used instead of the \T substitution character. This is usually a
phone number.
- -U string
-
Set the string to be used instead of the \U substitution character. This is usually a
second phone number.
- -v
-
Verbose mode; log the chat script state and text sent to and received
from the modem to syslogd.
- -V
-
Standard error verbose mode; identical to -v, but send information to standard error
instead of syslogd.
Chat directives
Scripts are built from paired strings, an expect string and a send
string. A null string formed with two single quotes, '', tells
chat to expect nothing and just send
the send string. A hyphen, -, may be used in an expect string to
specify an alternate expect and send in the event the first expect
fails. chat will wait, expecting the
first part of the string, and if it fails to receive it, it will
perform the second part of the string, often a directive. For
example:
ogin:-BREAK-ogin:
is interpreted by chat to mean
expect the string "ogin:"; if it is
not received before the timeout period, send a break signal to the
modem, then expect "ogin:" again.
BREAK is an example of a chat
directive, which is a special keyword that directs chat to take some action. Most directives are
meant for use as expect strings. Some are meant to be special reply
strings. BREAK can be used as a
reply, or, as the above example shows, can be inserted into an expect
substring. The following chat directives are recognized by chat:
- ABORT string
-
If the modem returns the specified string, abort
the script. This is often used to capture a modem status sent as a
string, such as BUSY or NO CARRIER.
- BREAK string
-
Reply string. Send a break signal to the modem. If the modem returns
the specified string, abort the script. This is
often used to capture a modem status sent as a string, such as
BUSY or NO
CARRIER.
- CLR_ABORT string
-
Clear an ABORT string from memory.
- CLR_ABORT string
-
Clear a REPORT string from memory.
- ECHO status
-
Set ECHO to
status ON or
OFF. When on, chat will echo output from the modem to
standard error.
- EOT
-
Reply string. EOT is used as a send
string. It instructs chat to send an
end-of-file character. This can also be embedded in a string using
the character sequence ^D.
- REPORT string
-
When the script receives string, write it and
any characters following it to standard error.
- HANGUP status
-
Set HANGUP to status ON or OFF.
When on, chat will treat a modem
hanging up as an error. When off, it will continue to process the
script. You usually want to set this to on after the modem has
connected.
- SAY string
-
Print the string to the standard error. This can be used to
communicate with the script's user.
- TIMEOUT n
-
Set the timeout value for subsequent expect strings to
n seconds.
Substitution characters
- ''
-
The null string. When used in place of a send string, chat sends a return character. When used in an
expect string, chat expects nothing
and just sends the send string.
- \b
-
Backspace character.
- \c
-
Used at the end of a string. Suppresses the newline character
automatically added to send strings. Not valid in expect strings.
- \d
-
Pause one second. Not valid in expect strings.
- \n
-
The newline character.
- \N, \0
-
The null character.
- \p
-
Pause one tenth of a second. Not valid in expect strings.
- \xd5
-
Mask this string. Write the string ?????? instead when writing to the system log.
Not valid in expect strings.
- \r
-
The carriage return character.
- \t
-
The tab character.
- \T
-
The string specified with the -T
option, usually a phone number. Not valid in expect strings.
- \U
-
The string specified with the -U
option, usually a second phone number. Not valid in expect strings.
- \\
-
The backslash character.
- \ddd
-
An ASCII character expressed in octal. Not valid in expect strings.
- ^char
-
Substitute a control character for char.
- @file
-
Substitute the contents of file. Not valid in
expect strings.
- $NAME
-
When using the -E option, substitute
the value of the specified environment variable
NAME, or substitute nothing if the variable is
not set.
Exit codes
- 0
-
Script terminated normally.
- 1
-
Invalid parameter or expect string. Script failed.
- 2
-
Error during execution. Script failed.
- 3
-
Expect string timeout with no further instructions. Script halted.
- 4 and up
-
Script exited on an ABORT condition.
The exit code indicates the abort string--4 is the first, 5 the
second, and so on.
chattr [options] mode files
|
|
Modify file attributes. Specific to Linux Second and Third Extended
Filesystem (ext2 and ext3). Behaves similarly to symbolic chmod, using +, -, and
=. mode is in
the form opcode attribute. See also lsattr.
Options
- -R
-
Modify directories and their contents recursively.
- -V
-
Print modes of attributes after changing them.
- -v version
-
Set the file's version.
Opcodes
- +
-
Add attribute.
- -
-
Remove attribute.
- =
-
Assign attributes (removing unspecified attributes).
Attributes
- A
-
Don't update access time on modify.
- a
-
Append only for writing. Can be set or cleared only by a privileged
user.
- c
-
Compressed.
- d
-
No dump.
- i
-
Immutable. Can be set or cleared only by a privileged user.
- j
-
Journalled file. This is useful only in cases where you are using an
ext3 filesystem mounted with the data="ordered"
or data="writeback"
attributes. The data="journalled"
option for the filesystem causes this operation to be performed for
all files in the system and makes this option irrelevant.
- S
-
Synchronous updates.
- s
-
Secure deletion. The contents are zeroed on deletion, and the file
cannot be undeleted or recovered in any way.
- u
-
Undeletable. This causes a file to be saved even after it has been
deleted, so that a user can undelete it later.
Example
chattr +a myfile As superuser
System administration command. Examine and optionally repair the
LPRng printer capability
database and related files. Entries in this database control the
printing and spooling of print jobs. The checkpc command reports incorrect entries in
/etc/printcap and ensures that files and
directories used by LPRng exist and have the correct permissions.
Options
- -a
-
Don't create missing accounting files specified in
:af entries.
- -c
-
Print verbose configuration details.
- -D
-
Run with debugging flags on.
- -f
-
Fix database by creating missing files and changing incorrect file
permissions.
- -h
-
Print help message and exit.
- -l
-
Don't create missing logging files specified in
:lf entries.
- -p
-
Print information about printcap database.
- -r
-
Remove old job files. Use -A to set
the maximum age for job files.
- -s
-
Don't create missing filter status files specified
in :ps entries.
- -t size[unit]
-
Truncate log files to specified size. You may
specify the unit of that size in k
or M for kilobytes or megabytes. The
default is megabytes.
- -A age[unit]
-
Report junk or job files older than age. A unit
of D, H, M, or
S may be used to specify that
age represents days, hours, minutes, or seconds.
The default is days.
- -P printer
-
Check or fix entries only for the specified
printer.
- -V
-
Verbose mode. Report on progress of checkpc including all entries checked and
repairs made.
chfn [options] [username]
|
|
Change the information that is stored
in /etc/passwd and displayed to the finger query. Without
options, chfn
enters interactive mode and prompts for changes. To make a field
blank, enter the keyword none. Only
a privileged user can change information for another user. For
regular users, chfn prompts for the
user's password before making the change.
Options
- -f, --full-name
-
Specify new full name.
- -h, --home-phone
-
Specify new home phone number.
- -o, --office
-
Specify new office number.
- -p, --office-phone
-
Specify new office phone number.
- -u, --usage, --help
-
Print help message and then exit.
- -v, --version
-
Print version information and then exit.
Example
chfn -f "Ellen Siever" ellen
chgrp [options] newgroup files
chgrp [options]
|
|
Change the group of one or more files to
newgroup. newgroup is
either a group ID number or a group name located in
/etc/group. Only the owner of a file or a
privileged user may change the group.
Options
- -c, --changes
-
Print information about files that are changed.
- -f, --silent, --quiet
-
Do not print error messages about files that cannot be changed.
- --help
-
Print help message and then exit.
- -R, --recursive
-
Traverse subdirectories recursively, applying changes.
- --reference=filename
-
Change the group to that associated with
filename. In this case,
newgroup is not specified.
- -v, --verbose
-
Verbosely describe ownership changes.
- --version
-
Print version information and then exit.
chmod [options] mode files
chmod [options] --reference=filename files
|
|
Change the access mode (permissions) of one or
more files. Only the owner of a file or a
privileged user may change the mode. mode can be
numeric or an expression in the form of who
opcode permission.
who is optional (if omitted, default is
a); choose only one
opcode. Multiple modes are separated by commas.
Options
- -c, --changes
-
Print information about files that are changed.
- -f, --silent, --quiet
-
Do not notify user of files that chmod cannot change.
- --help
-
Print help message and then exit.
- -R, --recursive
-
Traverse subdirectories recursively, applying changes.
- --reference=filename
-
Change permissions to match those associated with
filename.
- -v, --verbose
-
Print information about each file, whether changed or not.
- --version
-
Print version information and then exit.
Who
- u
-
User.
- g
-
Group.
- o
-
Other.
- a
-
All (default).
Opcode
- +
-
Add permission.
- -
-
Remove permission.
- =
-
Assign permission (and remove permission of the unspecified fields).
Permissions
- r
-
Read.
- w
-
Write.
- x
-
Execute.
- s
-
Set user (or group) ID.
- t
-
Sticky bit; used on directories to prevent removal of files by
non-owners.
- u
-
User's present permission.
- g
-
Group's present permission.
- o
-
Other's present permission.
Alternatively, specify permissions by a three-digit octal number. The
first digit designates owner permission; the second, group
permission; and the third, other's permission.
Permissions are calculated by adding the following octal values:
- 4
-
Read.
- 2
-
Write.
- 1
-
Execute.
Note that a fourth digit may precede this sequence. This digit
assigns the following modes:
- 4
-
Set user ID on execution to grant permissions to process based on the
file's owner, not on permissions of the user who
created the process.
- 2
-
Set group ID on execution to grant permissions to process based on
the file's group, not on permissions of the user who
created the process.
- 1
-
Set sticky bit.
Examples
Add execute-by-user permission to file:
chmod u+x file
Either of the following will assign read/write/execute permission by
owner (7), read/execute permission by group (5), and execute-only
permission by others (1) to file:
chmod 751 file
chmod u=rwx,g=rx,o=x file
Any one of the following will assign read-only permission to
file for everyone:
chmod =r file
chmod 444 file
chmod a-wx,a+r file
The following makes the executable setuid, assigns read/write/execute
permission by owner, and assigns read/execute permission by group and
others:
chmod 4755 file
chown [options] newowner files
chown [options] --reference=filename files
|
|
Change the ownership of one or more files to
newowner. newowner is
either a user ID number or a login name located in
/etc/passwd. chown also accepts users in the form
newowner:newgroup or
newowner.newgroup. The last two forms change the
group ownership as well. If no owner is specified, the owner is
unchanged. With a period or colon but no group, the group is changed
to that of the new owner. Only the current owner of a file or a
privileged user may change the owner.
Options
- -c, --changes
-
Print information about files that are changed.
- --dereference
-
Follow symbolic links.
- -f, --silent, --quiet
-
Do not print error messages about files that cannot be changed.
- -h, --no-dereference
-
Change the ownership of each symbolic link (on systems that allow it)
rather than the referenced file.
- -v, --verbose
-
Print information about all files that chown attempts to change, whether or not they
are actually changed.
- -R, --recursive
-
Traverse subdirectories recursively, applying changes.
- --reference=filename
-
Change owner to the owner of filename instead of
specifying a new owner explicitly.
- --help
-
Print help message and then exit.
- --version
-
Print version information and then exit.
System administration command. Change user passwords in a batch.
chpasswd accepts input in the form
of one username:password
pair per line. If the -e option is
not specified, password is encrypted before
being stored.
Option
- -e
-
Passwords given are already encrypted.
System administration command. Change root directory for
command or, if none is specified, for a new copy
of the user's shell. This command or shell is
executed relative to the new root. The meaning of any initial / in
pathnames is changed to newroot for a command
and any of its children. In addition, the initial working directory
is newroot. This command is restricted to
privileged users.
chsh [options] [username]
|
|
Change your login shell, either interactively or on the command line.
Warn if shell does not exist in
/etc/shells. Specify the full path to the shell.
chsh prompts for your password. Only
a privileged user can change another user's shell.
Options
- -l, --list-shells
-
Print valid shells, as listed in /etc/shells,
and then exit.
- -s shell, --shell shell
-
Specify new login shell.
- -u, --help
-
Print help message and then exit.
- -v, --version
-
Print version information and then exit.
Example
chsh -s /bin/tcsh
Switch to virtual terminal N (that is, switch to
/dev/ttyN). If you have not created
/dev/ttyN, it will be created when you use this
command. There are keyboard shortcuts for this functionality as well.
From a graphical desktop, you can press Ctrl-Alt-F1 through F12 to
switch to different virtual terminals. In text mode, you can skip the
Ctrl key and just use Alt-F1 through F12. To switch back to graphical
mode, use Alt-F7.
Compute a cyclic redundancy check (CRC) checksum for all
files; this is used to ensure that a file was
not corrupted during transfer. Read from standard input if the
character - or no files are given.
Display the resulting checksum, the number of bytes in the file, and
(unless reading from standard input) the filename.
Clear the terminal display.
cmp [options] file1 file2 [skip1 [skip2]]
|
|
Compare file1 with file2.
Use standard input if file1 is - or missing. This command is normally used
for comparing binary files, although files can be of any type. (See
also comm and diff.) skip1 and
skip2 are optional offsets in the files at which
the comparison is to start.
Options
- -c, --print-chars
-
Print differing bytes as characters.
- -i num, --ignore-initial=num
-
Ignore the first num bytes of input.
- -l, --verbose
-
Print offsets and codes of all differing bytes.
- -s, --quiet, --silent
-
Work silently; print nothing, but return exit codes:
- 0
-
Files are identical.
- 1
-
Files are different.
- 2
-
Files are inaccessible.
Example
Print a message if two files are the same (exit code is 0):
cmp -s old new && echo 'no changes'
A postprocessing filter that handles reverse linefeeds and escape
characters, allowing output from tbl
or nroff to appear in reasonable
form on a terminal.
Options
- -b
-
Ignore backspace characters; helpful when printing manpages.
- -f
-
Process half-line vertical motions, but not reverse line motion.
(Normally, half-line input motion is displayed on the next full
line.)
- -l n
-
Buffer at least n lines in memory. The default
buffer size is 128 lines.
- -x
-
Normally, col saves printing time by
converting sequences of spaces to tabs. Use -x to suppress this conversion.
Examples
Run myfile through tbl and nroff, then capture output on screen by
filtering through col and more:
tbl myfile | nroff | col | more
Save manpage output for the ls
command in out.print, stripping out backspaces
(which would otherwise appear as ^H):
man ls | col -b > out.print
A postprocessing filter that handles reverse linefeeds and escape
characters, allowing output from tbl
or nroff to appear in reasonable
form on a terminal. Put half-line characters (e.g., subscripts or
superscripts) and underlining (changed to dashes) on a new line
between output lines.
Options
- -
-
Do not underline.
- -2
-
Double space by printing all half-lines.
Remove specified columns from a file, where a column is a single
character in a line. Read from standard input and write to standard
output. Columns are numbered starting with 1; begin deleting columns
at (including) the start column, and stop at
(including) the stop column. Entering a tab
increments the column count to the next multiple of either the
start or stop column;
entering a backspace decrements it by 1.
Example
colrm 3 5 < test1 > test2
Format input from one or more files into
columns, filling rows first. Read from standard input if no files are
specified.
Options
- -c num
-
Format output into num columns.
- -s char
-
Delimit table columns with char. Meaningful only
with -t.
- -t
-
Format input into a table. Delimit with whitespace, unless an
alternate delimiter has been provided with -s.
- -x
-
Fill columns before filling rows.
comm [options] file1 file2
|
|
Compare lines common to the sorted files file1
and file2. Three-column output is produced:
lines unique to file1, lines unique to
file2, and lines common to both files. comm is similar to diff in that both commands compare two files.
But comm can also be used like
uniq; comm selects duplicate or unique lines between
two sorted files, whereas uniq selects duplicate or unique lines within
the same sorted file.
Options
- -
-
Read the standard input.
- -num
-
Suppress printing of column num. Multiple
columns may be specified and should not be space-separated.
- --help
-
Print help message and exit.
- --version
-
Print version information and exit.
Example
Compare two lists of top-10 movies, and display items that appear in
both lists:
comm -12 siskel_top10 ebert_top10
Compress one or more files, replacing each with
the compressed file of the same name with .Z
appended. If no file is specified, compress standard input. Each file
specified is compressed separately. compress ignores files that are symbolic
links. See also gzip and bzip2, which are more commonly used now.
Options
- -b maxbits
-
Limit the maximum number of bits.
- -c
-
Write output to standard output, not to a .Z
file.
- -d
-
Decompress instead of compressing. Same as uncompress.
- -f
-
Force generation of an output file even if one already exists.
- -r
-
If any of the specified files is a directory, compress recursively.
- -v
-
Print compression statistics.
- -V
-
Print version and compilation information and then exit.
cp [options] file1 file2
cp [options] files directory
|
|
Copy file1 to file2, or
copy one or more files to the same names under
directory. If the destination is an existing
file, the file is overwritten; if the destination is an existing
directory, the file is copied into the directory (the directory is
not overwritten).
Options
- -a, --archive
-
Preserve attributes of original files where possible. The same as
-dpR.
- -b, --backup
-
Back up files that would otherwise be overwritten.
- -d, --no-dereference
-
Do not dereference symbolic links; preserve hard link relationships
between source and copy.
- -f, --force
-
Remove existing files in the destination.
- -i, --interactive
-
Prompt before overwriting destination files.
- -l, --link
-
Make hard links, not copies, of nondirectories.
- -p, --preserve
-
Preserve all information, including owner, group, permissions, and
timestamps.
- -P, --parents
-
Preserve intermediate directories in source. The last argument must
be the name of an existing directory. For example, the command:
cp --parents jphekman/book/ch1 newdir
copies the file jphekman/book/ch1 to the file
newdir/jphekman/book/ch1, creating intermediate
directories as necessary.
- -r, -R, --recursive
-
Copy directories recursively.
- -S backup-suffix, --suffix=backup-suffix
-
Set suffix to be appended to backup files. This may also be set with
the SIMPLE_BACKUP_SUFFIX environment
variable. The default is ~. You need to explicitly include a period
if you want one before the suffix (for example, specify
.bak, not bak).
- -s, --symbolic-link
-
Make symbolic links instead of copying. Source filenames must be
absolute.
- -u, --update
-
Do not copy a file to an existing destination with the same or newer
modification time.
- -v, --verbose
-
Before copying, print the name of each file.
- -V type, --version-control=type
-
Set the type of backups made. You may also use the VERSION_CONTROL environment variable. The
default is existing. Valid arguments
are:
- t, numbered
-
Always make numbered backups.
- nil, existing
-
Make numbered backups of files that already have them; otherwise,
make simple backups.
- never, simple
-
Always make simple backups.
- -x, --one-file-system
-
Ignore subdirectories on other filesystems.
Example
Copy the contents of the guest directory
recursively into the archives/guest/ directory,
and display a message for each file copied:
cd /archives && cp -av /home/guest guest
Copy file archives from or to tape or disk, or to another location on
the local machine. Each of the three flags -i, -o, or
-p accepts different options.
Flags
- -i, --extract [options] [patterns]
-
Copy in (extract) from an archive files whose names match selected
patterns. Each pattern can include Bourne shell
filename metacharacters. (Patterns should be quoted or escaped so
that they are interpreted by cpio,
not by the shell.) If pattern is omitted, all
files are copied in. Existing files are not overwritten by older
versions from the archive unless -u
is specified.
- -o, --create [options]
-
Copy out to an archive a list of files whose names are given on the
standard input.
- -p, --pass-through [options] directory
-
Copy (pass) files to another directory on the same system.
Destination pathnames are interpreted relative to the named
directory.
Comparison of valid options
Options available to the -i,
-o, and -p flags are shown here (the - is omitted for clarity):
i: bcdf mnrtsuv B SVCEHMR IF
o: 0a c vABL VC HM O F
p: 0a d lm uv L V R
Options
- -0, --null
-
Expect list of filenames to be terminated with null, not newline.
This allows files with a newline in their names to be included.
- -a, --reset-access-time
-
Reset access times of input files after reading them.
- -A, --append
-
Append files to an existing archive, which must be a disk file.
Specify this archive with -O or
-F.
- -b, --swap
-
Swap bytes and half-words to convert between big-endian and
little-endian 32-bit integers.
- -B
-
Block input or output using 5120 bytes per record (default is 512
bytes per record).
- --blocksize=size
-
Set input or output blocksize to size
x 512 bytes.
- -c
-
Read or write header information as ASCII characters; useful when
source and destination machines are different types.
- -C n, --io-size=n
-
Like -B, but blocksize can be any
positive integer n.
- -d, --make-directories
-
Create directories as needed.
- -E file, --pattern-file=file
-
Extract from the archives filenames that match patterns in
file.
- -f, --nonmatching
-
Reverse the sense of copying; copy all files
except those that match
patterns.
- -F file, --file=file
-
Use file as the archive, not stdin or stdout.
file can reside on another machine, if given in
the form user@hostname:file (where
user@ is optional).
- --force-local
-
Assume that file (provided by -F, -I, or
-O) is a local file, even if it
contains a colon (:) indicating a remote file.
- -H type, --format=type
-
Use type format. Default for copy-out is
bin; default for copy-in is
autodetection of the format. Valid formats (all caps also accepted)
are:
- bin
-
Binary.
- odc
-
Old (POSIX.1) portable format.
- newc
-
New (SVR4) portable format.
- crc
-
New (SVR4) portable format with checksum added.
- tar
-
Tar.
- ustar
-
POSIX.1 tar (also recognizes GNU tar archives).
- hpbin
-
HP-UX's binary (obsolete).
- hpodc
-
HP-UX's portable format.
- -I file
-
Read file as an input archive. May be on a
remote machine (see -F).
- -k
-
Ignored. For backward compatibility.
- -l, --link
-
Link files instead of copying.
- -L, --dereference
-
Follow symbolic links.
- -m, --preserve-modification-time
-
Retain previous file modification time.
- -M msg, --message=msg
-
Print msg when switching media, as a prompt
before switching to new media. Use variable %d in the message as a numeric ID for the next
medium. -M is valid only with
-I or -O.
- -n, --numeric-uid-gid
-
When verbosely listing contents, show user ID and group ID
numerically.
- --no-absolute-filenames
-
Create all copied-in files relative to the current directory.
- --no-preserve-owner
-
Make all copied files owned by yourself, instead of the owner of the
original. Can be used only if you are a privileged user.
- -O file
-
Archive the output to file, which may be a file
on another machine (see -F).
- --only-verify-crc
-
For a CRC-format archive, verify the CRC of each file;
don't actually copy the files in.
- --quiet
-
Don't print the number of blocks copied.
- -r
-
Rename files interactively.
- -R [user][:group], --owner [user][:group]
-
Reassign file ownership and group information to the
user's login ID (privileged users only).
- -s, --swap-bytes
-
Swap bytes of each two-byte half-word.
- -S, --swap-half-words
-
Swap half-words of each four-byte word.
- --sparse
-
For copy-out and copy-pass, write files that have large blocks of
zeros as sparse files.
- -t, --list
-
Print a table of contents of the input (create no files). When used
with the -v option, resembles output
of ls -l.
- -u, --unconditional
-
Unconditional copy; old files can overwrite new ones.
- -v, --verbose
-
Print a list of filenames processed.
- -V, --dot
-
Print a dot for each file read or written (this shows cpio at work without cluttering the screen).
- --version
-
Print version number and then exit.
Examples
Generate a list of files whose names end in .old
using find; use the list as input to
cpio:
find . -name "*.old" -print | cpio -ocBv > /dev/rst8
Restore from a tape drive all files whose names contain save (subdirectories are created if needed):
cpio -icdv "*save*" < /dev/rst8
Move a directory tree:
find . -depth -print | cpio -padm /mydir
cpp [options] [ ifile [ ofile ] ]
|
|
GNU C language preprocessor. cpp is
normally invoked as the first pass of any C compilation by the
gcc command. The output of cpp is a form acceptable as input to the next
pass of the C compiler. The ifile and
ofile options are, respectively, the input and
output for the preprocessor; they default to standard input and
standard output.
Options
- -$
-
Do not allow $ in identifiers.
- -ansi
-
Use 1990 ISO C standard. This is equivalent to -std=c89.
- -dD
-
Similar to -dM, but exclude
predefined macros and include results of preprocessing.
- -dM
-
Suppress normal output. Print series of #defines that create the macros used in the
source file.
- -dN
-
Similar to -dD, but
don't print macro expansions.
- -dI
-
Print #include directives in
addition to other output.
- -fpreprocessed
-
Treat file as already preprocessed. Skip most processing directives,
remove all comments, and tokenize file.
- -ftabstop=width
-
Set distance between tabstops so columns will be reported correctly
in warnings and errors. Default is 8.
- -fno-show-column
-
Omit column numbers in warnings and errors.
- -gcc
-
Define _ _GNUC_ _, _ _GNUC_MINOR_ _, and _
_GNUC_PATCHLEVEL_ _ macros.
- --help
-
Print usage message and exit.
- -idirafter dir
-
Search dir for header files when a header file
is not found in any of the included directories.
- -imacros file
-
Process macros in file before processing main
files.
- -include file
-
Process file before main file.
- -iprefix prefix
-
When adding directories with -iwithprefix, prepend
prefix to the directory's name.
- -isystem dir
-
Search dir for header files after searching
directories specified with -I but
before searching standard system directories.
- -iwithprefix dir
-
Append dir to the list of directories to be
searched when a header file cannot be found in the main include path.
If -iprefix has been set, prepend
that prefix to the directory's name.
- -iwithprefixbefore dir
-
Insert dir at the beginning of the list of
directories to be searched when a header file cannot be found in the
main include path. If -iprefix has
been set, prepend that prefix to the directory's
name.
- -lang-c, -lang-c++, -lang-objc, -lang-objc++
-
Expect the source to be in C, C++, Objective C, or Objective C++,
respectively.
- -lint
-
Display all lint commands in comments as #pragma lint command.
- -nostdinc
-
Search only specified, not standard, directories for header files.
- -nostdinc++
-
Suppress searching of directories believed to contain C++-specific
header files.
- -o file
-
Write output to file. (Same as specifying a
second filename in the command line.)
- -pedantic
-
Warn verbosely.
- -pedantic-errors
-
Produce a fatal error in every case in which -pedantic would have produced a warning.
- -std=standard
-
Specify C standard of input file. Accepted
values are:
- iso9899:1990, c89
-
1990 ISO C standard.
- iso9899:199409
-
1994 amendment to the 1990 ISO C standard.
- iso9899:1999, c99, iso9899:199x, c9x
-
1999 revised ISO C standard.
- gnu89
-
1990 C Standard with gnu extensions. The default value.
- gnu99, gnu9x
-
1999 revised ISO C standard with gnu extensions.
- -traditional
-
Behave like traditional C, not ANSI.
- -trigraphs
-
Convert special three-letter sequences, meant to represent missing
characters on some terminals, into the single character they
represent.
- -undef
-
Suppress definition of all nonstandard macros.
- -v
-
Verbose mode.
- -version
-
Print version number, then process file.
- --version
-
Print version number then exit.
- -w
-
Don't print warnings.
- -x language
-
Specify the language of the input file. language
may be c, c++, objective-c, or assembler-with-cpp. By default, language is
deduced from the filename extension. If the extension is
unrecognized, the default is c.
- -A name[=def]
-
Assert name with value def
as if defined by #assert. To turn
off standard assertions, use -A-.
- -A -name[=def]
-
Cancel assertion name with value
def.
- -C
-
Retain all comments except those found on cpp directive lines. By default, cpp strips C-style comments.
- -Dname[=def]
-
Define name with value def
as if by a #define. If no
=def is given, name is
defined with value 1. -D has lower
precedence than -U.
- -E
-
Preprocess the source files, but do not compile. Print result to
standard output. This option is usually passed from gcc.
- -H
-
Print pathnames of included files, one per line, on standard error.
- -Idir
-
Search in directory dir for #include files whose names do not begin with /
before looking in directories on standard list. #include files whose names are enclosed in
double quotes and do not begin with / will be searched for first in
the current directory, then in directories named on -I options, and last in directories on the
standard list.
- -I-
-
Split includes. Search directories specified by -I options preceding this one for header files
included with quotes (#include
"file.h") but not for header files included with angle
brackets (#include <file.h>).
Search directories specified by -I
options following this one for all header files.
- -M [-MG]
-
Suppress normal output. Print a rule for make that describes the main source
file's dependencies. If -MG is specified, assume that missing header
files are actually generated files, and look for them in the source
file's directory.
- -MF file
-
Print rules generated by -M or
-MM to file.
- -MD file
-
Similar to -M, but output to
file; also compile the source.
- -MM
-
Similar to -M, but describe only
those files included as a result of #include "file".
- -MMD file
-
Similar to -MD, but describe only
the user's header files.
- -MQ target
-
Similar to -MT, but quote any
characters that are special to make.
- -MT target
-
Specify the target to use when generating a rule
for make. By default the target is
based on the name of the main input file.
- -P
-
Preprocess input without producing line-control information used by
next pass of the C compiler.
- -Uname
-
Remove any initial definition of name, where
name is a reserved symbol predefined by the
preprocessor or a name defined on a -D option. Names predefined by cpp are unix
and i386 (for Intel systems).
- -Wall
-
Warn both on nested comments and trigraphs.
- -Wcomment, -Wcomments
-
Warn when encountering the beginning of a nested comment.
- -Wtraditional
-
Warn when encountering constructs that are interpreted differently in
ANSI than in traditional C.
- -Wtrigraph, -Wcomments
-
Warn when encountering trigraphs, three-letter sequences meant to
represent missing characters on some terminals.
Special names
cpp understands various special
names, some of which are:
- _ _DATE_ _
-
Current date (e.g., Jan 10 2003).
- _ _FILE_ _
-
Current filename (as a C string).
- _ _LINE_ _
-
Current source line number (as a decimal integer).
- _ _TIME_ _
-
Current time (e.g., 12:00:00).
These special names can be used anywhere, including in macros, just
like any other defined names. cpp's understanding of the
line number and filename may be changed using a #line directive.
Directives
All cpp directive lines start with
# in column 1. Any number of blanks
and tabs is allowed between the #
and the directive. The directives are:
- #assert name (string)
-
Define a question called name, with an answer of
string. Assertions can be tested with #if directives. The predefined assertions for
#system, #cpu, and #machine can be used for
architecture-dependent changes.
- #unassert name
-
Remove assertion for question name.
- #define name token-string
-
Define a macro called name, with a value of
token-string. Subsequent instances of
name are replaced with
token-string.
- #define name( arg, ... , arg ) token-string
-
This allows substitution of a macro with arguments.
token-string will be substituted for
name in the input file. Each call to
name in the source file includes arguments that
are plugged into the corresponding args in
token-string.
- #undef name
-
Remove definition of the macro name. No
additional tokens are permitted on the directive line after
name.
- #ident string
-
Put string into the comment section of an object
file.
- #include "filename", #include<filename>
-
Include contents of filename at this point in
the program. No additional tokens are permitted on the directive line
after the final " or >.
- #line integer-constant "filename"
-
Cause cpp to generate line-control
information for the next pass of the C compiler. The compiler behaves
as if integer-constant is the line number of the
next line of source code and filename (if
present) is the name of the input file. No additional tokens are
permitted on the directive line after the optional
filename.
- #endif
-
End a section of lines begun by a test directive (#if, #ifdef,
or #ifndef). No additional tokens
are permitted on the directive line.
- #ifdef name
-
Lines following this directive and up to matching #endif or next #else or #elif will appear in the output if
name is currently defined. No additional tokens
are permitted on the directive line after name.
- #ifndef name
-
Lines following this directive and up to matching #endif or next #else or #elif will appear in the output if
name is not currently defined. No additional
tokens are permitted on the directive line after
name.
- #if constant-expression
-
Lines following this directive and up to matching #endif or next #else or #elif will appear in the output if
constant-expression evaluates to nonzero.
- #elif constant-expression
-
An arbitrary number of #elif
directives are allowed between an #if, #ifdef,
or #ifndef directive and an
#else or #endif directive. The lines following the
#elif and up to the next #else, #elif,
or #endif directive will appear in
the output if the preceding test directive and all intervening
#elif directives evaluate to zero,
and the constant-expression evaluates to
nonzero. If constant-expression evaluates to
nonzero, all succeeding #elif and
#else directives will be ignored.
- #else
-
Lines following this directive and up to the matching #endif will appear in the output if the
preceding test directive evaluates to zero, and all intervening
#elif directives evaluate to zero.
No additional tokens are permitted on the directive line.
- #error
-
Report fatal errors.
- #warning
-
Report warnings, but then continue processing.
System administration command. Normally started in a system startup
file. Execute commands at scheduled times, as specified in
users' files in
/var/spool/cron. Each file shares its name with
the user who owns it. The files are controlled via the command
crontab. The cron command will also read commands from the
/etc/crontab file and from the
/etc/cron.d/ directory.
View, install, or uninstall your current
crontab file. A privileged user can run crontab for another user by supplying
-u user. A
crontab file is a list of commands, one per
line, that will execute automatically at a given time. Numbers are
supplied before each command to specify the execution time. The
numbers appear in five fields, as follows:
Minute 0-59
Hour 0-23
Day of month 1-31
Month 1-12
Jan, Feb, Mar, ...
Day of week 0-6, with 0 = Sunday
Sun, Mon, Tue, ... Use a comma between multiple values, a hyphen to indicate a range,
and an asterisk to indicate all possible values. For example,
assuming these crontab entries:
59 3 * * 5 find / -print | backup_program
0 0 1,15 * * echo "Timesheets due" | mail user the first command backs up the system files every Friday at 3:59
a.m., and the second command mails a reminder on the 1st and 15th of
each month.
The superuser can always issue the crontab command. Other users must be listed in
the file /etc/cron.allow if it exists;
otherwise, they must not be listed in
/etc/cron.deny. If neither file exists, only the
superuser can issue the command.
Options
The -e, -l, and -r
options are not valid if any files are
specified.
- -e
-
Edit the user's current crontab
file (or create one).
- -l
-
Display the user's crontab file
on standard output.
- -r
-
Delete the user's crontab file.
- -u user
-
Indicate which user's
crontab file will be acted upon.
csh [options] [file [arguments]]
|
|
C shell, a command interpreter into which all other commands are
entered. On Linux, csh has been
replaced with an enhanced version of the shell called tcsh. For more information, see Chapter 8.
csplit [options] file arguments
|
|
Separate file into context-based sections and
place sections in files named xx00 through xxn
(n < 100), breaking file
at each pattern specified in arguments. See also
split.
Options
- -
-
Read from standard input.
- -b suffix, --suffix-format=suffix
-
Append suffix to output filename. This option
causes -n to be ignored.
suffix must specify how to convert the binary
integer to readable form by including one of the following: %d, %i,
%u, %o, %x, or
%X. The value of
suffix determines the format for numbers as
follows:
- %d
-
Signed decimal.
- %i
-
Same as %d.
- %u
-
Unsigned decimal.
- %o
-
Octal.
- %x
-
Hexadecimal.
- %X
-
Same as %x.
- -f prefix, --prefix=prefix
-
Name new files prefix00 through
prefixn (default is xx00 through
xxn).
- -k, --keep-files
-
Keep newly created files even when an error occurs (which would
normally remove these files). This is useful when you need to specify
an arbitrarily large repeat argument, {n}, and you don't want an
out-of-range error to cause removal of the new files.
- -n num, --digits=num
-
Use output filenames with numbers num digits
long. The default is 2.
- -s, -q, --silent, --quiet
-
Suppress all character counts.
- -z, --elide-empty-files
-
Do not create empty output files. However, number as if those files
had been created.
Arguments
Any one or a combination of the following expressions may be
specified as arguments. Arguments containing blanks or other special
characters should be surrounded by single quotes.
- /expr/[offset]
-
Create file from the current line up to the line containing the
regular expression expr.
offset should be of the form +n or -n, where
n is the number of lines below or above
expr.
- %expr%[offset]
-
Same as /expr/, except no file is created for lines
previous to line containing expr.
- num
-
Create file from current line up to (but not including) line number
num. When followed by a repeat count (number
inside { }), put the next
num lines of input into another output file.
- {n}
-
Repeat argument n times. May follow any of the
preceding arguments. Files will split at instances of
expr or in blocks of num
lines. If * is given instead of
n, repeat argument until input is exhausted.
Examples
Create up to 20 chapter files from the file novel:
csplit -k -f chap. novel '/CHAPTER/' '{20}'
Create up to 100 address files (xx00 through xx99), each four lines
long, from a database named address_list:
csplit -k address_list 4 {99}
Create a list of function and macro names defined in a programming
source file. More than one file may be
specified. ctags understands many
programming languages, including C, C++, FORTRAN, Java, Perl, Python,
flex, yacc, and bison. The output list (named
tags by default) contains lines of the form:
name file context where name is the function or macro name,
file is the source file in which
name is defined, and
context is a search pattern that shows the line
of code containing name. After the list of tags
is created, you can invoke vi on any
file and type:
:set tags= tagsfile
:tag name This switches the vi editor to the
source file associated with the name listed in
tagsfile (which you specify with -t).
etags produces an equivalent file
for tags to be used with Emacs.
Options
- -a
-
Append tag output to existing list of tags.
- -e
-
Create tag files for use with emacs.
- -h extensionlist
-
Interpret files with filename extensions specified in
extensionlist as header files. The default list
is ".h.H.hh.hpp.hxx.h++.inc.def".
To indicate that files without extensions should be treated as header
files, insert an additional period in the list before another period
or at the end of the list, or use just a period by itself. To use
this option multiple times and have the specified lists ANDed
together, use a plus sign as the first character in the list. To
restore the default, use the word
"default".
- -n
-
Use numeric ex commands to locate
tags. Same as --excmd= number.
- -o file, -f file, --output=file
-
Write to file.
- --packages-only
-
Include tag entries for members of structure-like constructs.
- -R
-
Recursively read files in subdirectories of the directory given on
the command line.
- -u
-
Don't sort tag entries.
- -x
-
Produce a tabular listing of each function, and its line number,
source file, and context.
- -B
-
Search for tags backward through files.
- -I tokenlist
-
Specify a list of tokens to be specially handled. If given as a file,
use ex pattern commands to locate
tags. Same as --excmd= pattern.
- -N
-
Use ex pattern commands to locate
tags. Same as --excmd= pattern.
- -S, --ignore-indentation
-
Normally ctags uses indentation to
parse the tag file; this option tells ctags to rely on indentation less.
- -T, --typedefs-and-c++
-
Include tag entries for typedefs, structs, enums, unions, and C++
member functions.
- -V, --version
-
Print the version number and exit.
Cut out selected columns or fields from one or more
files. In the following options,
list is a sequence of integers. Use a comma
between separate values, and a hyphen to specify a range (e.g.,
1-10,15,20 or
50-). See also paste and join.
Options
- -b list, --bytes list
-
Specify list of positions; only bytes in these
positions will be printed.
- -c list, --characters list
-
Cut the column positions identified in list.
- -d c, --delimiter c
-
Use with -f to specify field
delimiter as character c (default is tab);
special characters (e.g., a space) must be quoted.
- -f list, --fields list
-
Cut the fields identified in list.
- -n
-
Don't split multibyte characters.
- -s, --only-delimited
-
Use with -f to suppress lines
without delimiters.
- --output-delimiter=string
-
Use string as the output delimiter. By default,
the output delimiter is the same as the input delimiter.
- --help
-
Print help message and exit.
- --version
-
Print version information and exit.
Examples
Extract usernames and real names from
/etc/passwd:
cut -d: -f1,5 /etc/passwd
Find out who is logged on, but list only login names:
who | cut -d" " -f1
Cut characters in the fourth column of file, and
paste them back as the first column in the same file:
cut -c4 file | paste - file
cvs [options] cvs-command [command-options] [command-args]
|
|
CVS (Concurrent Versions System) is a version control system. Like
earlier version control systems such as RCS, CVS tracks versions,
permits the storage and retrieval of earlier versions, and allows
tracking of the history of a file or an entire project. In addition,
it permits multiple users on different systems across a network to
work in a file simultaneously and merge their changes. All CVS
commands start with cvs, followed by
any global options, the command to execute, and any command options
or arguments. For more information on CVS and its commands, see Chapter 15.
date [options] [+format] [date]
|
|
Print the current date and time. You may specify a display
format. format can consist
of literal text strings (blanks must be quoted) as well as field
descriptors, whose values will appear as described in the following
entries (the listing shows some logical groupings). A privileged user
can change the system's date and time.
Options
- +format
-
Display current date in a nonstandard format. For example:
$ date +"%A %j %n%k %p"
Tuesday 248
15 PM
The default is %a %b %e %T %Z %Y
(e.g., Tue Sep 5 14:59:37 EDT 2000).
- -d date, --date date
-
Display date, which should be in quotes and may
be in the format d days or m months d days to print a date in the future. Specify
ago to print a date in the past. You
may include formatting (see the following section).
- -f datefile, --file=datefile
-
Like -d, but printed once for each
line of datefile.
- -I [timespec], --iso-8601[=timespec]
-
Display in ISO-8601 format. If specified,
timespec can have one of the values date (for date only), hours, minutes, or seconds to get the indicated precision.
- -r file, --reference=file
-
Display the time file was last modified.
- -R, --rfc-822
-
Display the date in RFC 822 format.
- --help
-
Print help message and exit.
- --version
-
Print version information and exit.
- -s date, --set date
-
Set the date.
- -u, --universal
-
Set the date to Greenwich Mean Time, not local time.
Format
The exact result of many of these codes is locale-specific and depend
upon your language setting, particularly the LANG environment variable. See locale.
- %
-
Literal %.
- - (hyphen)
-
Do not pad fields (default: pad fields with zeros).
- _ (underscore)
-
Pad fields with space (default: zeros).
- %a
-
Abbreviated weekday.
- %b
-
Abbreviated month name.
- %c
-
Country-specific date and time format.
- %d
-
Day of month (01-31).
- %h
-
Same as %b.
- %j
-
Julian day of year (001-366).
- %k
-
Hour in 24-hour format, without leading zeros (0-23).
- %l
-
Hour in 12-hour format, without leading zeros (1-12).
- %m
-
Month of year (01-12).
- %n
-
Insert a new line.
- %p
-
String to indicate AM or PM.
- %r
-
Time in %I:%M:%S %p (12-hour) format.
- %s
-
Seconds since "the epoch," which is
1970-01-01 00:00:00 UTC (a nonstandard extension).
- %t
-
Insert a tab.
- %w
-
Day of week (Sunday = 0).
- %x
-
Country-specific date format based on locale.
- %y
-
Last two digits of year (00-99).
- %z
-
RFC 822-style numeric time zone.
- %A
-
Full weekday.
- %B
-
Full month name.
- %D
-
Date in %m/%d/%y format.
- %H
-
Hour in 24-hour format (00-23).
- %I
-
Hour in 12-hour format (01-12).
- %M
-
Minutes (00-59).
- %S
-
Seconds (00-59).
- %T
-
Time in %H:%M:%S format.
- %U
-
Week number in year (00-53); start week on Sunday.
- %V
-
Week number in year (01-52); start week on Monday.
- %W
-
Week number in year (00-53); start week on Monday.
- %X
-
Country-specific time format based on locale.
- %Y
-
Four-digit year (e.g., 1996).
- %Z
-
Time zone name.
Strings for setting date
Strings for setting the date may be numeric or nonnumeric. Numeric
strings consist of time, day, and year in the format
MMDDhhmm[[CC]YY][.ss]. Nonnumeric strings may
include month strings, time zones, a.m., and p.m.
- time
-
A two-digit hour and two-digit minute (hhmm);
hh uses 24-hour format.
- day
-
A two-digit month and two-digit day of month
(MMDD); default is current day and month.
- year
-
The year specified as either the full four-digit century and year or
just the two-digit year; the default is the current year.
Examples
Set the date to July 1 (0701), 4
a.m. (0400), 1995 (95):
date 0701040095
The command:
date +"Hello%t Date is %D %n%t Time is %T"
produces a formatted date as follows:
Hello Date is 05/09/93
Time is 17:53:39
Make a copy of an input file (if)
using the specified conditions, and send the results to the output
file (or standard output if of is
not specified). Any number of options can be supplied, although
if and of are the most common and are usually
specified first. Because dd can
handle arbitrary blocksizes, it is useful when converting between raw
physical devices.
Options
- bs=n
-
Set input and output blocksize to n bytes; this
option overrides ibs and obs.
- cbs=n
-
Set the size of the conversion buffer (logical record length) to
n bytes. Use only if the conversion
flag is ascii,
ebcdic, ibm, block,
or unblock.
- conv=flags
-
Convert the input according to one or more (comma-separated)
flags listed next. The first five
flags are mutually exclusive.
- ascii
-
EBCDIC to ASCII.
- ebcdic
-
ASCII to EBCDIC.
- ibm
-
ASCII to EBCDIC with IBM conventions.
- block
-
Variable-length records (i.e., those terminated by a newline) to
fixed-length records.
- unblock
-
Fixed-length records to variable-length records.
- lcase
-
Uppercase to lowercase.
- ucase
-
Lowercase to uppercase.
- noerror
-
Continue processing after read errors.
- notrunc
-
Don't truncate output file.
- swab
-
Swap each pair of input bytes.
- sync
-
Pad input blocks to ibs with
trailing zeros.
- count=n
-
Copy only n input blocks.
- ibs=n
-
Set input blocksize to n bytes (default is 512).
- if=file
-
Read input from file (default is standard input).
- obs=n
-
Set output blocksize to n bytes (default is 512).
- of=file
-
Write output to file (default is standard
output).
- seek=n
-
Skip n output-sized blocks from start of output
file.
- skip=n
-
Skip n input-sized blocks from start of input
file.
- --help
-
Print help message and then exit.
- --version
-
Print the version number and then exit.
You can multiply size values (n) by a factor of
1024, 512, or 2 by appending the letter k, b, or
w, respectively. You can use the
letter x as a multiplication
operator between two numbers.
Examples
Convert an input file to all lowercase:
dd if=caps_file of=small_file conv=lcase
Retrieve variable-length data and write it as fixed-length to
out:
data_retrieval_cmd | dd of=out conv=sync,block
Deallocate and destroy the unused virtual console
/dev/ttyN. Multiple consoles may be named with
additional spaces and integers: deallocvt 1
4 will deallocate the /dev/tty1 and
/dev/tty4. Consoles are considered unused if
they are not in the foreground, have no open processes, and have no
selected text. The command will not destroy consoles that are still
active.
debugfs [[option] device]
|
|
System administration command. Provide direct access to data
structure of an ext2 filesystem in order to debug problems with the
device. device is
the special file corresponding to the device containing the ext2
filesystem (e.g., /dev/hda3). debugfs may be used on a mounted filesystem
device.
Option
- -b blocksize
-
Use the specified blocksize for the filesystem.
- -c
-
Catastrophic mode. Open the filesystem in read-only mode, do not read
the inode and group bitmaps initially.
- -f file
-
Read commands from file. Exit when done
executing commands.
- -i
-
Specify file system device is an ext2 image file
created by e2image.
- -s block
-
Read the superblock from the specified block.
- -w
-
Open the filesystem in read-write mode.
- -R command
-
Execute the given command (see list below) then
exit.
- -V
-
Print version number, then exit.
Commands
- cat file
-
Dump the contents of an inode to standard output.
- cd directory
-
Change the current working directory to
directory.
- chroot directory
-
Change the root directory to be the specified inode.
- close
-
Close the currently open filesystem.
- clri file
-
Clear the contents of the inode corresponding to
file.
- dump file out_file
-
Dump the contents of an inode to out_file.
- expand_dir directory
-
Expand directory.
- feature [[-]feature]
-
Set filesystem feature listed on the command
line, then print current feature settings. Use - to clear a feature.
- find_free_block [goal]
-
Find first free block starting from goal (if
specified) and allocate it.
- find_free_inode [dir [mode]]
-
Find a free inode and allocate it.
- freeb block
-
Mark block as not allocated.
- freei file
-
Free the inode corresponding to file.
- help
-
Print a list of commands understood by debugfs.
- icheck block
-
Do block-to-inode translation.
- initialize device blocksize
-
Create an ext2 filesystem on device.
- kill_file file
-
Remove file and deallocate its blocks.
- lcd directory
-
Change current working directory on native
filesystem.
- ln source_file dest_file
-
Create a link.
- logdump [-ac] [-bblock] [-iinode] [-fjournal_file] [out_file]
-
Print the ext3 journal for the filesytem. Use options to specify the
location of the journal by block, inode, or filename, or to specify a
file to which the journal should be printed.
- ls [-l] [-d] [pathname]
-
Emulate the ls command. Use
-l for verbose format and -d to list deleted entries.
- modify_inode file
-
Modify the contents of the inode corresponding to
file.
- mkdir directory
-
Make directory.
- mknod file [p|[[c|b] major minor]]
-
Create a special device file.
- ncheck inode
-
Do inode-to-name translation.
- open [-b blocksize] [-c] [-f] [-i] [-w] [-s block] device
-
Open a filesystem.
- pwd
-
Print the current working directory.
- quit
-
Quit debugfs.
- rdump directory dest_directory
-
Recursively dump directory and its contents to
dest_directory on the native filesystem.
- rm file
-
Remove file.
- rmdir directory
-
Remove directory.
- setb block
-
Mark block as allocated.
- seti file
-
Mark in use the inode corresponding to file.
- set_super_value [-l] field value
-
Set superblock field to
value. Use -l
to print a list of valid fields.
- show_super_stats [-h]
-
List the contents of the superblock and block group descriptors. Use
-h to list only the superblock
contents.
- stat file
-
Dump the contents of the inode corresponding to
file.
- testb block
-
Test whether block is marked as allocated.
- testi file
-
Test whether the inode corresponding to file is
marked as allocated.
- unlink file
-
Remove a link.
- write source_file file
-
Create a file in the filesystem named file, and
copy the contents of source_file into the
destination file.
System administration command. Create a dependency file for the
modules given on the command line. This dependency file can be used
by modprobe to automatically load
the relevant modules. The normal use of
depmod is to include the line
/sbin/depmod -a in one of the files
in /etc/rc.d so that the correct module
dependencies will be available after booting the system.
Options
- -a, --all
-
Create dependencies for all modules listed in
/etc/modules.conf.
- -b dir, --basedir dir
-
Specify a base directory to use instead of
/lib/modules.
- -e, --errsyms
-
Print a list of all unresolved symbols.
- -d
-
Debug mode. Show all commands being issued.
- -h, --help
-
Print help message, then exit.
- -n, --show
-
Write dependency file to standard output.
- -q, --quiet
-
Don't display error messages about missing symbols.
- -r, --root
-
Allow root to load modules not owned by root.
- -s, --syslog
-
Write error messages to the syslog daemon instead of to standard
error.
- -v
-
Print a list of all processed modules.
- -A, --quick
-
Check timestamps and update the dependency file if anything has
changed.
- -C file, --config file
-
Use the specified configuration file instead of
/etc/modules.conf. May also be set using the
MODULECONF environment variable.
- -F file, --kernelsyms file
-
Use the specified kernel symbol file to build dependencies. Usually
this is either a copy of a system's
System.map file or the output of
/proc/ksyms.
- -V, --version
-
Print version number.
Files
- /etc/modules.conf
-
Information about modules: which ones depend on others, and which
directories correspond to particular types of modules.
- /sbin/insmod, /sbin/rmmod
-
Programs that depmod relies on.
Interactively display the contents of the device or filesystem image
isoimage. devdump displays the first 256 bytes of the
first 2048-byte sector and waits for commands. The prompt shows the
extent number (zone) and offset within the extent, and the contents
display at the top of the screen.
Commands
- +
-
Search forward for the next instance of the search string.
- a
-
Search backward within the image.
- b
-
Search forward within the image.
- f
-
Prompt for a new search string.
- g
-
Prompt for a new starting block and go there.
- q
-
Exit.
Report the amount of free disk space available on all mounted
filesystems or on the given name. (df cannot report on unmounted filesystems.)
Disk space is shown in 1KB blocks (default) or 512-byte blocks (if
the environment variable POSIXLY_CORRECT is set).
name can be a device name (e.g.,
/dev/hd*), the directory name of a mounting
point (e.g., /usr), or a directory name (in
which case df reports on the entire
filesystem in which that directory is mounted).
Options
- -a, --all
-
Include empty filesystems (those with 0 blocks).
- --block-size=n
-
Show space as n-byte blocks.
- -h, --human-readable
-
Print sizes in a format friendly to human readers (e.g., 1.9G instead
of 1967156).
- -H, --si
-
Like -h, but show as power of 1000
rather than 1024.
- -i, --inodes
-
Report free, used, and percent-used inodes.
- -k, --kilobytes
-
Print sizes in kilobytes.
- -l, --local
-
Show local filesystems only.
- -m, --megabytes
-
Print sizes in megabytes.
- --no-sync
-
Show results without invoking sync
first (i.e., without flushing the buffers). This is the default.
- -P, --portability
-
Use POSIX output format (i.e., print information about each
filesystem on exactly one line).
- --sync
-
Invoke sync (flush buffers) before
getting and showing sizes.
- -t type, --type=type
-
Show only type filesystems.
- -T, --print-type
-
Print the type of each filesystem in addition to the sizes.
- -x type, --exclude-type=type
-
Show only filesystems that are not of type type.
- --help
-
Print help message and then exit.
- --version
-
Print the version and then exit.
diff [options] [diroptions] file1 file2
|
|
Compare two text files. diff reports
lines that differ between file1 and
file2. Output consists of lines of context from
each file, with file1 text flagged by a
< symbol and
file2 text by a > symbol. Context lines are preceded by the
ed command (a, c, or
d) that would be used to convert
file1 to file2. If one of
the files is -, standard input is
read. If one of the files is a directory, diff locates the filename in that directory
corresponding to the other argument (e.g., diff
my_dir junk is the same as diff
my_dir/junk junk). If both arguments are directories,
diff reports lines that differ
between all pairs of files having equivalent names (e.g.,
olddir/program and
newdir/program); in addition, diff lists filenames unique to one directory,
as well as subdirectories common to both. See also cmp.
Options
- -a, --text
-
Treat all files as text files. Useful for checking to see if binary
files are identical.
- -b, --ignore-space-change
-
Ignore repeating blanks and end-of-line blanks; treat successive
blanks as one.
- -B, --ignore-blank-lines
-
Ignore blank lines in files.
- -c
-
Context diff: print 3 lines
surrounding each changed line.
- -C n, --context[=n]
-
Context diff: print
n lines surrounding each changed line. The
default context is 3 lines.
- -d, --minimal
-
To speed up comparison, ignore segments of numerous changes and
output a smaller set of changes.
- -D symbol, --ifdef=symbol
-
When handling C files, create an output file that contains all the
contents of both input files, including #ifdef and #ifndef directives that reflect the directives
in both files.
- -e, --ed
-
Produce a script of commands (a,
c, d) to re-create file2
from file1 using the ed editor.
- -F regexp, --show-function-line[=regexp]
-
For context and unified diff, show
the most recent line containing regexp before
each block of changed lines.
- -H
-
Speed output of large files by scanning for scattered small changes;
long stretches with many changes may not show up.
- --help
-
Print brief usage message.
- --horizon-lines=n
-
In an attempt to find a more compact listing, keep
n lines on both sides of the changed lines when
performing the comparison.
- -i, --ignore-case
-
Ignore case in text comparison. Uppercase and lowercase are
considered the same.
- -I regexp, --ignore-matching-lines=regexp
-
Ignore lines in files that match the regular expression
regexp.
- -l, --paginate
-
Paginate output by passing it to pr.
- -L label, --label label, --label=label
-
For context and unified diff, print
label in place of the filename being compared.
The first such option applies to the first filename and the second
option to the second filename.
- --left-column
-
For two-column output (-y), show
only left column of common lines.
- -n, --rcs
-
Produce output in RCS diff format.
- -N, --new-file
-
Treat nonexistent files as empty.
- -p, --show-c-function
-
When handling files in C or C-like languages such as Java, show the
function containing each block of changed lines. Assumes -c, but can also be used with a unified
diff.
- -P, --unidirectional-new-file
-
If two directories are being compared and the first lacks a file that
is in the second, pretend that an empty file of that name exists in
the first directory.
- -q, --brief
-
Output only whether files differ.
- -r, --recursive
-
Compare subdirectories recursively.
- -s, --report-identical-files
-
Indicate when files do not differ.
- -S filename, --starting-file=filename
-
For directory comparisons, begin with the file
filename, skipping files that come earlier in
the standard list order.
- --suppress-common-lines
-
For two-column output (-y), do not
show common lines.
- -t, --expand-tabs
-
Produce output with tabs expanded to spaces.
- -T, --initial-tab
-
Insert initial tabs into output to line up tabs properly.
- -u
-
Unified diff: print old and new
versions of lines in a single block, with 3 lines surrounding each
block of changed lines.
- -U n, --unified[=n]
-
Unified diff: print old and new
versions of lines in a single block, with n
lines surrounding each block of changed lines. The default context is
3 lines.
- -v, --version
-
Print version number of this version of diff.
- -w, --ignore-all-space
-
Ignore all whitespace in files for comparisons.
- -W n, --width=n
-
For two-column output (-y), produce
columns with a maximum width of n characters.
Default is 130.
- -x regexp, --exclude=regexp
-
Do not compare files in a directory whose names match
regexp.
- -X filename, --exclude-from=filename
-
Do not compare files in a directory whose names match patterns
described in the file filename.
- -y, --side-by-side
-
Produce two-column output.
- -n
-
For context and unified diff, print
n lines of context. Same as specifying a number
with -C or -U.
diff3 [options] file1 file2 file3
|
|
Compare three files and report the differences. No more than one of
the files may be given as -
(indicating that it is to be read from standard input). The output is
displayed with the following codes:
- = = = =
-
All three files differ.
- = = = =1
-
file1 is different.
- = = = =2
-
file2 is different.
- = = = =3
-
file3 is different.
diff3 is also designed to merge
changes in two differing files based on a common ancestor file (i.e.,
when two people have made their own set of changes to the same file).
diff3 can find changes between the
ancestor and one of the newer files and generate output that adds
those differences to the other new file. Unmerged changes occur where
both of the newer files differ from each other and at least one of
them differs from the ancestor. Changes from the ancestor that are
the same in both of the newer files are called merged
changes. If all three files differ in the same place, it
is called an overlapping change.
This scheme is used on the command line with the ancestor being
file2, the second filename. Comparison is made
between file2 and file3,
with those differences then applied to file1.
Options
- -3, --easy-only
-
Create an ed script to incorporate
into file1 unmerged, nonoverlapping differences
between file1 and file3.
- -a, --text
-
Treat files as text.
- -A, --show-all
-
Create an ed script to incorporate
all changes, showing conflicts in bracketed format.
- -e, --ed
-
Create an ed script to incorporate
into file1 all unmerged differences between
file2 and file3.
- -E, --show-overlap
-
Create an ed script to incorporate
unmerged changes, showing conflicts in bracketed format.
- -x, --overlap-only
-
Create an ed script to incorporate
into file1 all differences where all three files
differ (overlapping changes).
- -X
-
Same as -x, but show only
overlapping changes, in bracketed format.
- -m, --merge
-
Create file with changes merged (not an ed script).
- -L label, --label=label
-
Use label to replace filename in output.
- -i
-
Append the w (save) and q (quit) commands to ed script output.
- -T, --initial-tab
-
To line tabs up properly in output, begin lines with a tab instead of
two spaces.
- -v, --version
-
Print version information and then exit.
dig [@server] [options] [name] [type] [class] [query-options]
dig @server name type
dig -h
|
|
The dig command is used to query
DNS servers; it is more flexible than
the deprecated nslookup command. If you use it without any
options or arguments, it will search for the root server. The
standard arguments are:
- server
-
The server to query. If no server is supplied, dig will check the name servers listed in
/etc/resolv.conf. The address may be an IPv4
dotted address or an IPv6 colon-delimited address. It may also be a
hostname, which dig will resolve
(through the name servers in /etc/resolv.conf).
- name
-
The domain name to look up.
- type
-
The type of query to perform, such as A, ANY,
MX, SIG, and so forth. The default is A, but you may use any valid BIND9 query type.
Options
You may use the following option flags with dig:
- -b address
-
Set the source IP address for the query.
- -c class
-
Set the class of query. The default value is IN (internet), but you can choose HS for Hesiod or CH for CHAOSNET.
- -f filename
-
Operate in batch mode, performing the queries in the file you specify.
- -p portnumber
-
Choose the port number for the query. The default value is the
standard DNS port, 53.
- -t type
-
Set the type of query, as with the query argument. The default value
is A, but you may use any valid
BIND9 query.
- -x addr
-
Use the -x flag for reverse lookups,
specifying an IPv4 or IPv6 address. You do not need the name, class,
or type arguments if you use the -x
flag.
- -k filename
-
Specify a TSIG key file; used for signed transactions. You can also
use the -y key, although this is
less secure.
- -y keyname:keyvalue
-
Enter the actual key name and value when conducting a signed
transaction. Because the key and value can be seen in the output of
ps, this is not recommended for use
on multiuser systems; use -k
instead.
Query options
There are a large number of query options for dig. Each query option is preceded by
+, and many have an opposite version
beginning with no. For example, the
tcp flag is passed as +tcp, and negated with +notcp. Because there are so many options,
only a few are discussed here. For greater detail, see the dig manpage.
- +tcp, +notcp
-
Use (or do not use) the TCP protocol instead of the default UDP.
- +domain=searchdomain
-
Perform a search in the domain specified; this is equivalent to using
the +search option and having
"searchdomain" as the sole entry in
the search list or domain directive of
/etc/resolv.conf.
- +search, +nosearch
-
Use (or do not use) the search list provided in
/etc/resolv.conf. The default is not to use the
search list.
- +time=T
-
Timeout for queries, in seconds. The default is 5, and the minimum is
1.
- +tries=N
-
The number of times to retry UDP queries. The default is 3, and the
minimum is 1.
dip [options] [chat scriptfile]
|
|
System
administration command. Set up or initiate dial-up Internet
connections. dip can be used to
establish connections for users dialing out or dialing in. Commands
can be used in interactive mode or placed in a script file for use in
dial-out connections. To establish dial-in connections, dip is often used as a shell, and may be
executed using the commands diplogin
or diplogini.
Options
- -a
-
In dial-in mode, prompt for username and password. Same as the
diplogini command.
- -i
-
Initiate a login shell for a dial-in connection. Same as the
diplogin command.
- -k
-
Kill the most recent dip process or
the process running on the device specified by the -l option.
- -l device
-
Used with the -k option. Specifies a
tty device.
- -m mtu
-
Maximum Transfer Unit. The default is 296.
- -p protocol
-
The protocol to use: SLIP, CSLIP, PPP, or TERM.
- -t
-
Command mode. This is usually done for testing.
- -v
-
Verbose mode.
Commands
Most of these commands can be used either in interactive mode or in a
script file.
- beep times
-
Beep the terminal the specified number of times.
- bootp
-
Retrieve local and remote IP addresses using the BOOTP protocol.
- break
-
Send a BREAK.
- chatkey keyword code
-
Map a modem response keyword to a numeric code.
- config [interface|routing] [pre|up|down|post] arguments
-
Modify interface characteristics or
the routing table before the link
comes up, when it is up, when it goes down, or after it is down. The
syntax for arguments is the same as for
arguments for the ifconfig or
route commands.
- databits 7|8
-
Set the number of data bits.
- dec $variable [value]
-
Decrement $variable by
value. The default is 1.
- default
-
Set default route to the IP address of the host connected to.
- dial phonenumber [timeout]
-
Dial phonenumber. Abort if remote modem
doesn't answer within timeout
seconds. Set $errlvl according to
the modem response.
- echo on|off
-
Enable or disable the display of modem commands.
- exit [n]
-
Exit the script. Optionally return the number n
as the exit status.
- flush
-
Clear the input buffer.
- get $variable [ask|remote [timeout]] value
-
Set $variable to value. If
ask is specified, prompt the user
for a value. If remote is specified,
retrieve the value from the remote system. Abort after
timeout seconds.
- goto label
-
Jump to the section identified by label.
- help
-
List available commands.
- if expr goto label
-
Jump to the section identified by label if the
expression evaluates to true. An expression compares a variable to a
constant using one of these operators: =, !=, <, >, <=, or
>=.
- inc $variable [value]
-
Increment $variable by
value. The default is 1.
- init string
-
Set the string used to initialize the modem. The
default is ATE0 Q0 V1 X1.
- mode protocol
-
Set the connection protocol. Valid values are
SLIP, CSLIP, PPP,
and TERM. The default is SLIP.
- netmask mask
-
Set the subnet mask.
- parity E|O|N
-
Set the line parity to even, odd, or none.
- password
-
Prompt user for password.
- proxyarp
-
Install a proxy ARP entry in the local ARP table.
- print $variable
-
Display the content of $variable.
- psend command
-
Execute command in a shell, and send output to
the serial device. Commands are executed using the
user's real UID.
- port device
-
Specify the serial device the modem is attached to.
- quit
-
Exit with a nonzero exit status. Abort the connection.
- reset
-
Reset the modem.
- securid
-
Prompt user for the variable part of an ACE System SecureID password,
and send it together with the stored prefix to the remote system.
- securidf prefix
-
Store the fixed part of an ACE System SecureID password.
- send string
-
Send string to the serial device.
- shell command
-
Execute command in a shell using the user's real UID.
- skey [timeout]
-
Wait for an S/Key challenge, then prompt user for the secret key.
Generate and send the response. Abort if challenge is not received
within timeout seconds. S/Key support must be
compiled into dip.
- sleep time
-
Wait time seconds.
- speed bits-per-second
-
Set the port speed. Default is 38400.
- stopbits 1|2
-
Set the number of stop bits.
- term
-
Enable terminal mode. Pass keyboard input directly to the serial
device.
- timeout time
-
Set the number of seconds the line can be inactive before the link is
closed.
- wait text [timeout]
-
Wait timeout seconds for
text to arrive from the remote system. If
timeout is not specified, wait
forever.
List directory contents. dir is equivalent to the command ls -C -b (list files in columns, sorted
vertically, special characters escaped) and it takes the same
arguments as ls. This is an
alternate invocation of the ls
command and is provided for the convenience of those converting from
Microsoft Windows and the DOS shell.
dircolors [options] [file]
|
|
Set the color options for ls by changing the
LS_COLORS environment variable. If you
specify a file, dircolors will read
it to determine which colors to use. Otherwise, it will use a default
set of colors.
Options
The program takes three options in addition to the standard --help and --version flags:
- -p, --print-database
-
Display the default colors. You can copy this information into a file
and change it to suit your preferences, and then run the program with
the file as its argument to set the colors to your new values.
- -c, --csh, --c-shell
-
Use csh (C shell) syntax when setting the LS_COLORS variable.
- -b, --sh, --bourne-shell
-
Use the Bourne shell syntax when setting the LS_COLORS variable.
Print pathname,
excluding the last level. Useful for stripping the actual filename
from a pathname. If there are no slashes (no directory levels) in
pathname, dirname prints . to indicate the current
directory. See also basename.
System administration command. Display the system control messages
from the kernel ring buffer. This buffer stores all messages since
the last system boot, or the most recent ones if the buffer has been
filled.
Options
- -c
-
Clear buffer after printing messages.
- -nlevel
-
Set the level of system message that will display on console.
- -sbuffersize
-
Specify buffersize of kernel ring buffer. This
is useful if you have changed the kernel default.
TCP/IP command. Print the system's DNS domain name.
See also hostname.
dnssec-keygen [options] domain-name
|
|
System administration command. Generate encrypted Secure DNS (DNSSEC)
or Transaction Signatures (TSIG) keys for
domain-name. When the key is completed,
dnssec-keygen prints the key
identifier to standard output and creates public and private key
files whose names are based on the key identifier and the filename
extensions .key and
.private. It creates both files even when using
an asymmetric algorithm like HMAC-MD5. For more information on Secure
DNS, see DNS and BIND
(O'Reilly), or read RFC 2535.
Options
- -a algorithm
-
Specify the cryptographic algorithm to use.
Accepted values are RSAMD5,
RSA, DSA, DH, or
HMAC-MD5.
- -b bitsize
-
Specify the key bitsize. Accepted values depend
on the encryption algorithm used.
- -c class
-
The domain record for which the key is being generated should contain
class. When this option is not given, a
class of IN is
assumed.
- -e
-
Use a large exponent when generating an RSA key.
- -g generator
-
Specified the number to use as a generator when creating a DH (Diffie
Hellman) key. Accepted values are 2
and 5.
- -h
-
Print a help message, then exit.
- -n type
-
The owner of the key must be of the specified
type. Accepted values are ZONE, HOST,
ENTITY, or USER.
- -p protocol
-
Specify the protocol value for the generated key. Accepted values are
given in RFC 2535 and other DNS Security RFCs. By default the value
is either 2 (email) or 3 (DNSSEC).
- -r device
-
Specify the device to use as a source of
randomness when creating keys. This can be a device file, a file
containing random data, or the string keyboard to specify keyboard input. By
default, /dev/random will be used when
available, and keyboard input will be used when it is not.
- -s type
-
Specify whether the key can be used for authentication, confirmation,
both, or neither. Accepted values for type are
AUTHCONF, NOAUTHCONF, NOAUTH, or NOCONF.
dnssec-makekeyset [options] key-identifiers
|
|
System administration command. Generate a domain keyset from one or
more DNS Security keys generated by dnssec-keygen. Keysets can be sent to parent
zone administrators to be signed with the zone key. The keyset is
written to a file with the name
keyset-domainname. For more information on
Secure DNS, see DNS and BIND
(O'Reilly), or read RFC 2535.
Options
- -a
-
Verify all generated signatures.
- -e end-time
-
Specify the date and time the records will expire. The
end-time may be specified in
yyyymmddhhmmss notation, or as +N seconds from the
start-time. The default is 30 days from
start-time.
- -h
-
Print help message, then exit.
- -p
-
Use pseudo-random data to sign the zone key.
- -r device
-
Specify the device to use as a source of
randomness when creating keys. This can be a device file, a file
containing random data, or the string keyboard to specify keyboard input. By
default, /dev/random will be used when
available, and keyboard input will be used when it is not.
- -s start-time
-
Specify the date and time the records become valid. The
end-time may be specified in
yyyymmddhhmmss notation, or as +N seconds from the
current time. The default is the current time.
- -t ttl
-
Specify the TTL (time to live) in seconds for the KEY and SIG
records. Default is 3600 seconds.
dnssec-signkey [options] keyset key-identifiers
|
|
System administration command. Sign a secure DNS
keyset with the key signatures specified in the
list of key-identifiers. A zone administrator
would use this command to sign a child zone's keyset
with the parent zone's keys. For more information on
Secure DNS, see DNS and BIND
(O'Reilly), or read RFC 2535.
Options
- -a
-
Verify generated signatures.
- -c class
-
Specify the DNS class of the keyset.
- -e end-time
-
Specify the date and time the records will expire. The
end-time may be specified in
yyyymmddhhmmss notation, or as +N seconds from the
start-time. The default is 30 days from
start-time.
- -h
-
Print help message, then exit.
- -p
-
Use pseudo-random data to sign the zone key.
- -r device
-
Specify the device to use as a source of
randomness when creating keys. This can be a device file, a file
containing random data, or the string keyboard to specify keyboard input. By
default, /dev/random will be used when
available, and keyboard input will be used when it is not.
- -s start-time
-
Specify the date and time the records become valid. The
end-time may be specified in
yyyymmddhhmmss notation, or given as +N seconds from the
current time. The default is the current time.
dnssec-signzone [options] zonefile [key-identifiers]
|
|
System administration command. Sign a secure DNS
zonefile with the signatures in the specified
list of key-identifiers. If signed keysets
associated with the zone are found in the current directory, include
their signatures in the signed zone file. The dnssec-signzone command writes the signed zone
information to a file named db-domainname.signed. This file should be referenced in a
zone statement in a named.conf file. For more
information on Secure DNS, see DNS and BIND
(O'Reilly), or read RFC 2535.
Options
- -a
-
Verify generated signatures.
- -c class
-
Specify the DNS class of the keyset.
- -d directory
-
Search directory for signed key files.
- -e end-time
-
Specify the date and time the records will expire. The
end-time may be specified in
yyyymmddhhmmss notation, or given as +N seconds from the
start-time. The default is 30 days from
start-time.
- -h
-
Print help message, then exit.
- -i days
-
When signing a previously signed zone, replace any records due to
expire within the specified number of days. The
default is one quarter of the number of days between the
signature's start-time and
end-time.
- -n threads
-
Specify the number of threads to use when
signing the zone file. The default is one for each detected CPU.
- -o origin
-
Specify the zone origin. The name of the zone
file is the default origin.
- -p
-
Use pseudo-random data to sign the zone key.
- -r device
-
Specify the device to use as a source of
randomness when creating keys. This can be a device file, a file
containing random data, or the string keyboard to specify keyboard input. By
default, /dev/random will be used when
available, and keyboard input will be used when it is not.
- -s start-time
-
Specify the date and time the records become valid. The
end-time may be specified in
yyyymmddhhmmss notation, or given as +N seconds from the
current time. The default is the current time.
- -t
-
Print statistics when complete.
NFS/NIS command. Set or display name of current NIS domain. With no
argument, domainname displays the
name of the current NIS domain. Only a privileged user can set the
domain name by giving an argument; this is usually done in a startup
script.
dosfsck [options] device
fsck.msdos [options] device
|
|
System administration command. Similar to fsck, but specifically intended for MS-DOS
filesystems. When checking an MS-DOS filesystem, fsck calls this command. Normally dosfsck stores all changes in memory, then
writes them when checks are complete.
Options
- -a
-
Automatically repair the system; do not prompt the user.
- -d file
-
Drop the named file from the file allocation table. Force checking,
even if kernel has already marked the filesystem as valid. dosfsck will normally exit without checking if
the system appears to be clean.
- -f
-
Save unused cluster chains to files.
- -l
-
List pathnames of files being processed.
- -r
-
Repair the system, prompting user for advice.
- -t
-
Mark unreadable clusters as bad.
- -u file
-
Attempt to undelete the named file.
- -v
-
Verbose mode.
- -w
-
Write changes to disk immediately.
- -y
-
When queried, answer "yes."
- -A
-
Filesystem is an Atari version of MS-DOS.
- -F
-
Flush buffer caches before checking.
- -V
-
Repeat test to verify all errors have been corrected.
du [options] [directories]
|
|
Print disk usage (as the number of 1KB blocks used by each named
directory and its subdirectories; default is the current directory).
Options
- -a, --all
-
Print disk usage for all files, not just subdirectories.
- -b, --bytes
-
Print sizes in bytes.
- -c, --total
-
In addition to normal output, print grand total of all arguments.
- -D, --dereference-args
-
Follow symbolic links, but only if they are command-line arguments.
- -h, --human-readable
-
Print sizes in human-readable format.
- -H, --si
-
Like -h, but show as power of 1000
rather than 1024.
- -k, --kilobytes
-
Print sizes in kilobytes (this is the default).
- -l, --count-links
-
Count the size of all files, whether or not they have already
appeared (i.e., via a hard link).
- -L, --dereference
-
Follow symbolic links.
- --exclude=pattern
-
Exclude files that match pattern.
- --max-depth=num
-
Report sizes for directories only down to num
levels below the starting point (which is level 0).
- -m, --megabytes
-
Print sizes in megabytes.
- -s, --summarize
-
Print only the grand total for each named directory.
- -S, --separate-dirs
-
Do not include the sizes of subdirectories when totaling the size of
parent directories.
- -x, --one-file-system
-
Display usage of files in current filesystem only.
- -X, --exclude-from=file
-
Exclude files that match any pattern in file.
- --help
-
Print help message and then exit.
- --version
-
Print the version and then exit.
System administration command. Print information about
device's superblock and blocks
group.
Options
- -b
-
List blocks marked as bad.
- -f
-
Force display of filesystems with unknown feature flags.
- -h
-
Display superblock information only.
- -i
-
Specify device is an image file created by e2image.
- -ob superblock
-
Specify location of the superblock.
- -oB blocksize
-
Specify blocksize to use when examining
filesystem.
- -x
-
Print block numbers in hexadecimal.
- -V
-
Print version number and exit.
Print information about the keyboard driver's
translation tables to standard output. Further information is
available in the manual pages under keytables.
Options
- -1, --separate-lines
-
Print one line for each modifier/keycode pair and prefix plain to each unmodified keycode.
- -ccharset, --charset=charset
-
Specify character set with which to interpret character code values.
The default character set is iso-8859-1. The full list of valid character
sets is available with the --help option.
- --compose-only
-
Print compose key combinations only. Requires compose key support in
the kernel.
- -f, --full-table
-
Output in canonical, not short, form: for each key, print a row with
modifier combinations divided into columns.
- --funcs-only
-
Print function key string definitions only; do not print key bindings
or string definitions.
- -h, --help
-
Print help message and the version.
- -i, --short-info
-
Print in short-info format, including information about acceptable
keycode keywords in the keytable files; the number of actions that
can be bound to a key; a list of the ranges of action codes (the
values to the right of a key definition); and the number of function
keys that the kernel supports.
- --keys-only
-
Print key bindings only; do not print string definitions.
- -l, --long-info
-
Print the same information as in --short-info, plus a list of the
supported action symbols and their numeric values.
- -n, --numeric
-
Print action code values in hexadecimal notation; do not attempt to
convert them to symbolic notation.
- -S num, --shape=num
-
Print using num to determine table shape. Values
of num are:
- 0
-
Default.
- 1
-
Same as --full-table.
- 2
-
Same as --separate-lines.
- 3
-
One line for each keycode up to the first hole, then one line per
modifier/keycode pair.
e2fsck [options] device
fsck.ext2 [options] device
|
|
System administration command. Similar to fsck, but specifically intended for Linux
Second Extended Filesystems. When checking a second extended
filesystem, fsck calls this command.
This command is also used for the third extended filesystem (ext3),
which is a journaling version of the second extended filesystem.
Options
- -b superblock
-
Use superblock instead of the default superblock.
- -d
-
Debugging mode.
- -f
-
Force checking, even if kernel has already marked the filesystem as
valid. e2fsck will normally exit
without checking if the system appears to be clean.
- -l file
-
Consult file for a list of bad blocks, in
addition to checking for others.
- -n
-
Ensure that no changes are made to the filesystem. When queried,
answer "no."
- -p
-
"Preen." Repair all bad blocks
noninteractively.
- -t
-
Display timing statistics.
- -v
-
Verbose.
- -y
-
When queried, answer "yes."
- -B size
-
Expect to find the superblock at size; if
it's not there, exit.
- -F
-
Flush buffer caches before checking.
- -L file
-
Consult file for list of bad blocks instead of
checking filesystem for them.
e2image [option] device file
|
|
System administration command. Store disaster recovery data for ext2
filesystem on device to image file
file. Weekly filesystem images can be an
important part of a disaster recovery plan.
Option
- -r
-
Create a raw image file that can be checked and debugged using
filesystem utilities such as e2fsck
or debugfs. Raw images are created
as sparse files. Either compress the image file before moving it, or
use the -sparse=always option when
copying it with cp.
System administration command. Display the filesystem label on an
ext2 filesystem device. Change filesystem label
to label if specified.
Send (echo) the input string to standard output.
This is the /bin/echo command.
echo also exists as a command built
into the C shell and bash. The
following character sequences have special meanings:
- \a
-
Alert (bell).
- \b
-
Backspace.
- \c
-
Suppress trailing newline.
- \f
-
Form feed.
- \n
-
Newline.
- \r
-
Carriage return.
- \t
-
Horizontal tab.
- \v
-
Vertical tab.
- \\
-
Literal backslash.
- \nnn
-
The octal character whose ASCII code is nnn.
Options
- -e
-
Enable character sequences with special meaning. (In some versions,
this option is not required in order to make the sequences work.)
- -E
-
Disable character sequences with special meaning.
- -n
-
Suppress printing of newline after text.
- --help
-
Print help message and then exit.
- --version
-
Print version information and then exit.
Examples
/bin/echo "testing printer" | lp
/bin/echo "TITLE\nTITLE" > file ; cat doc1 doc2 >> file
/bin/echo "Warning: ringing bell \a"
egrep [options] [regexp] [files]
|
|
Search one or more files for lines that match an
extended regular expression regexp. egrep doesn't support the
regular expressions \(, \), \n, \<, \>,
\{, or \}, but does support the other expressions, as well as the
extended set +, ?, |, and
( ). Remember to enclose these
characters in quotes. Regular expressions are described in Chapter 9. Exit status is 0 if any lines match, 1 if
none match, and 2 for errors.
See grep for the list of available
options. Also see fgrep.
Examples
Search for occurrences of Victor or
Victoria in
file:
egrep 'Victor(ia)*' file
egrep '(Victor|Victoria)' file
Find and print strings such as old.doc1 or new.doc2 in files, and
include their line numbers:
egrep -n '(old|new)\.doc?' files
Eject removable media such as a CD-ROM, floppy, tape, or JAZ or ZIP
disk. You may name the device by /dev or
/mnt filename. The /dev and
/mnt prefixes are optional for any items in the
/dev and /mnt directories.
If no device is named, it is assumed that
"cdrom" should be ejected.
Options
The eject command takes the following option flags:
- -h
-
Display help information.
- -v, --verbose
-
Verbose mode: display additional information about actions.
- -d, --default
-
List the default device name rather than doing anything.
- -a, --auto on|1|off|0
-
Set the auto-eject mode to on or off (equivalent to 1 or 0). If
auto-eject mode is on, the device is ejected when closed or
unmounted.
- -c, --changerslot slotnumber
-
If using a CD-ROM changer, select a CD from one of the slots. Slots
are enumerated starting with 0, and the CD-ROM drive must not be
playing music or mounted to read data.
- -t, --trayclose
-
Close the CD-ROM drive. Not all drives will respond to this command.
- -x, --cdspeed speed
-
Set the speed multiplier for the CD-ROM to an integer, usually a
power of 2. Not all devices support this command. Setting the speed
to 0 indicates that the drive should operate at its maximum speed.
- -n, --noop
-
Do not perform any actions; merely display the actions that would be
performed.
- -r, --cdrom
-
Use CD-ROM commands to eject the drive. Normally, the system will try
all methods (CD-ROM, SCSI, floppy, tape) to eject.
- -s, --scsi
-
Use SCSI commands to eject the drive. Normally, the system will try
all methods (CD-ROM, SCSI, floppy, tape) to eject.
- -f, --floppy
-
Use floppy commands to eject the drive. Normally, the system will try
all methods (CD-ROM, SCSI, floppy, tape) to eject.
- -q, --tape
-
Use tape commands to eject the drive. Normally, the system will try
all methods (CD-ROM, SCSI, floppy, tape) to eject.
- -p, --proc
-
Use the mounted files listed in /proc/mounts
rather than in /etc/mtab.
- -V, --version
-
Display version information, then quit.
elvtune [options] devices
|
|
System administration command. Set the latency in the elevator
algorithm used to schedule I/O activities for the specified block
devices. If no options are given, print the
current settings for devices.
Options
- -b N
-
Set the maximum coalescing factor allowed on writes when reads are
pending to N.
- -h
-
Print help message, then exit.
- -r N
-
Set the maximum read latency (basically, the number of sectors to
read before writes are allowed) to N. The
default is 8192.
- -v
-
Print version number, then exit.
- -w N
-
Set the maximum write latency (sectors to write before allowing a
read) to N. The default is 16384.
A text editor and all-purpose work environment. For more information,
see Chapter 10.
env [option] [variable=value ... ] [command]
|
|
Display the current environment or, if an environment
variable is specified, set it to a new
value and display the modified environment. If
command is specified, execute it under the
modified environment.
Options
- -, -i, --ignore-environment
-
Ignore current environment entirely.
- -u name, --unset name
-
Unset the specified variable.
- --help
-
Print help message and then exit.
- --version
-
Print version information and then exit.
Create a list of function and macro names defined in a programming
source file. etags generates tags for use by emacs. (ctags
produces an equivalent tags file for use with vi.) More than one file
may be specified. etags understands
many programming languages, including C, C++, FORTRAN, Java, Perl,
Python, flex, yacc, and bison. The output list (named
TAGS by default) contains lines of the form:
name file context where name is the function or macro name,
file is the source file in which
name is defined, and
context is a search pattern that shows the line
of code containing name. After the list of tags
is created, you can invoke Emacs on any file and type:
M-x visit-tags-table You will be prompted for the name of the tag table; the default is
TAGS. To switch to the source file associated
with the name listed in
tagsfile, type:
M-x find-tag You will be prompted for the tag you would like Emacs to search for.
Options
- -a, --append
-
Append tag output to existing list of tags.
- -d, --defines
-
Include tag entries for C preprocessor definitions.
- -i file, --include=file
-
Add a note to the tags file that file should be
consulted in addition to the normal input file.
- -l language, --language=language
-
Consider the files that follow this option to be written in
language. Use the -h option for a list of languages and their
default filename extensions.
- -o file, --output=file
-
Write to file.
- -r regexp, --regex=regexp
-
Include a tag for each line that matches regexp
in the files following this option.
- -C, --c++
-
Expect .c and .h files to
contain C++, not C, code.
- -D, --no-defines
-
Do not include tag entries for C preprocessor definitions.
- -H, -h, --help
-
Print usage information.
- -R, --noregex
-
Don't include tags based on regular-expression
matching for the files that follow this option.
- -S, --ignore-indentation
-
Normally etags uses indentation to
parse the tag file; this option tells it to rely on it less.
- -V, --version
-
Print the version number.
An interactive command-based editor. For more information, see Chapter 11.
Convert tabs in given files (or standard input, if the file is named
-) to appropriate number of spaces; write results to standard output.
Options
- -tabs, -t tabs, --tabs tabs
-
tabs is a comma-separated list of integers that
specify the placement of tab stops. If exactly one integer is
provided, the tab stops are set to every integer
spaces. By default, tab stops are 8 spaces apart. With -t and --tabs, the list may be separated by
whitespace instead of commas.
- -i, --initial
-
Convert tabs only at the beginning of lines.
- --help
-
Print help message and then exit.
- --version
-
Print version information and then exit.
expr arg1 operator arg2 [ operator arg3 ... ]
|
|
Evaluate arguments as expressions and print the results. Arguments
and operators must be separated by spaces. In most cases, an argument
is an integer, typed literally or represented by a shell variable.
There are three types of operators: arithmetic, relational, and
logical, as well as keyword expressions. Exit status for expr is 0 (expression is nonzero and nonnull),
1 (expression is 0 or null), or 2 (expression is invalid).
Arithmetic operators
Use these to produce mathematical
expressions whose results are printed:
- +
-
Add arg2 to arg1.
- -
-
Subtract arg2 from arg1.
- *
-
Multiply the arguments.
- /
-
Divide arg1 by arg2.
- %
-
Take the remainder when arg1 is divided by
arg2.
Addition and subtraction are evaluated last, unless they are grouped
inside parentheses. The symbols *, (, and ) have
meaning to the shell, so they must be escaped (preceded by a
backslash or enclosed in single quotes).
Relational operators
Use these to compare two arguments.
Arguments can also be words, in which case comparisons are defined by
the locale. If the comparison statement is true, the result is 1; if
false, the result is 0. Symbols >
and < must be escaped.
- =, = =
-
Are the arguments equal?
- !=
-
Are the arguments different?
- >
-
Is arg1 greater than arg2?
- >=
-
Is arg1 greater than or equal to
arg2?
- <
-
Is arg1 less than arg2?
- <=
-
Is arg1 less than or equal to
arg2?
Logical operators
Use
these to compare two arguments. Depending on the values, the result
can be arg1 (or some portion of it),
arg2, or 0. Symbols | and & must be escaped.
- |
-
Logical OR; if arg1 has a nonzero (and nonnull)
value, the result is arg1; otherwise, the result
is arg2.
- &
-
Logical AND; if both arg1 and
arg2 have a nonzero (and nonnull) value, the
result is arg1; otherwise, the result is 0.
- :
-
Like grep; arg2
is a pattern to search for in arg1.
arg2 must be a regular expression. If part of
the arg2 pattern is enclosed in \( \) (escaped parentheses), the result is the
portion of arg1 that matches; otherwise, the
result is simply the number of characters that match. By default, a
pattern match always applies to the beginning of the first argument
(the search string implicitly begins with a ^). Start the search string with .* to match other parts of the string.
Keywords
- index string character-list
-
Return the first position in string that matches
the first possible character in character-list.
Continue through character-list until a match is
found, or return 0.
- length string
-
Return the length of string.
- match string regex
-
Same as string : regex.
- quote token
-
Treat token as a string, even if it would
normally be a keyword or an operator.
- substr string start length
-
Return a section of string, beginning with
start, with a maximum length of
length characters. Return null when given a
negative or nonnumeric start or
length.
Examples
Division happens first; result is 10:
expr 5 + 10 / 2
Addition happens first; result is 7 (truncated from 7.5):
expr \( 5 + 10 \) / 2
Add 1 to variable i. This is how variables are
incremented in shell scripts:
i=`expr $i + 1`
Print 1 (true) if variable a is the
string "hello":
expr $a = hello
Print 1 (true) if b plus 5 equals 10
or more:
expr $b + 5 \>= 10
Find the 5th, 6th, and 7th letters of the word
character:
expr substr character 5 3
In the examples that follow, variable p is the string
"version.100". This command prints
the number of characters in p:
expr $p : '.*' Result is 11
Match all characters and print them:
expr $p : '\(.*\)' Result is "version.100"
Print the number of lowercase letters at the beginning of p:
expr $p : '[a-z]*' Result is 7
Match the lowercase letters at the beginning of p:
expr $p : '\([a-z]*\)' Result is "version"
Truncate $x if it contains five or
more characters; if not, just print $x. (Logical OR uses the second argument when
the first one is 0 or null, i.e., when the match fails.)
expr $x : '\(.....\)' \| $x
In a shell script, rename files to their first five letters:
mv $x `expr $x : '\(.....\)' \| $x`
(To avoid overwriting files with similar names, use mv -i.)
A null command that returns an unsuccessful (nonzero) exit status.
Normally used in bash scripts. See
also true.
Low-level format of a floppy disk. The device for a standard format
is usually /dev/fd0 or
/dev/fd1.
Option
- -n
-
Do not verify format after completion.
System administration command. Maintain disk partitions via a menu.
fdisk displays information about
disk partitions, creates and deletes disk partitions, and changes the
active partition. It is possible to assign a different operating
system to each of the four possible primary partitions, though only
one partition is active at any given time. You can also divide a
physical partition into several logical partitions. The minimum
recommended size for a Linux system partition is 40MB. Normally,
device will be /dev/hda,
/dev/hdb, /dev/sda,
/dev/sdb, /dev/hdc,
/dev/hdd, and so on. See also cfdisk.
Options
- -b sectorsize
-
Set the size of individual disk sectors. May be 512, 1024, or 2048.
Most systems now recognize sector sizes, so this is not necessary.
- -l
-
List partition tables and exit.
- -u
-
Report partition sizes in sectors instead of cylinders.
- -s partition
-
Display the size of partition, unless it is a
DOS partition.
- -v
-
Print version number, then exit.
Commands
- a
-
Toggle a bootable flag on current partition.
- b
-
Edit disklabel of a BSD partition.
- c
-
Toggle DOS compatibility flag.
- d
-
Delete current partition.
- l
-
List all partition types.
- m
-
Main menu.
- n
-
Create a new partition; prompt for more information.
- o
-
Create an empty DOS partition table.
- p
-
Print a list of all partitions and information about each.
- q
-
Quit; do not save.
- t
-
Replace the type of the current partition.
- u
-
Modify the display/entry units, which must be cylinders or sectors.
- v
-
Verify: check for errors, and display a summary of the number of
unallocated sectors.
- w
-
Save changes and exit.
- x
-
Switch to expert commands.
fetchmail [options] [servers...]
|
|
System administration command. Retrieve mail from mail servers and
forward it to the local mail delivery system. fetchmail retrieves mail from servers that
support the common mail protocols POP2, POP3, IMAP2bis, and IMAP4.
Messages are delivered via SMTP through port 25 on the local host and
through your system's mail delivery agent (such as
sendmail), where they can be read through the
user's mail client. fetchmail settings are stored in the
~/.fetchmailrc file. Parameters and servers can
also be set on the command line, which will override settings in the
.fetchmailrc file. fetchmail is compatible with the popclient program, and users can use both
without having to adjust file settings.
Options
- -a, --all
-
Retrieve all messages from server, even ones that have already been
seen but are left on the server. The default is to retrieve only new
messages.
- -auth type
-
Specify an authentication type. type can be:
password, kerberos_v5, kerberos, gssapi, cram-md5, otp, ntlm,
ssh, or any. When using the default value, any, fetchmail will use the highest authentication
available. In decreasing order of security: gssapi, kerberos, cram, x-otp,
ntlm, then login. Using ssh suppresses authentication. Use ssh when using an end-to-end secure
connection.
- -B n, --fetchlimit n
-
Set the maximum number of messages (n) accepted
from a server per query.
- -b n, --batchlimit n
-
Set the maximum number of messages sent to an SMTP listener per
connection. When this limit is reached, the connection will be broken
and reestablished. The default of 0 means no limit.
- -bsmtp file
-
Append fetched mail to the specified batched sendmail (BSMTP)
file. If file is -, send to standard output.
- -c, --check
-
Check for mail on a single server without retrieving or deleting
messages. Works with IMAP, but not well (if at all) with other
protocols.
- -D [domain], --smtpaddress [domain]
-
Specify the domain name placed in RCPT TO lines
sent to SMTP. The default is the local host.
- -d n, --daemon n
-
Detach from current process and run as a daemon, fetching mail every
n seconds. A user may run only one fetchmail daemon process. See option --quit.
- -E header, --envelope header
-
Change the header assumed to contain the mail's
envelope address (usually
"X-Envelope-to:") to
header.
- -e n, --expunge n
-
Tell an IMAP server to EXPUNGE (i.e., purge messages marked for
deletion) after n deletes. A setting of 0
indicates expunging only at the end of the session. Normally, an
expunge occurs after each delete.
- -F, --flush
-
For POP3 and IMAP servers, remove previously retrieved messages from
the server before retrieving new ones.
- -f file, --fetchmailrc file
-
Specify a nondefault name for the fetchmail configuration file.
- --fetchdomains hosts
-
Specify the domains to which mail should be sent when operating in
ETRN or ODMR mode.
- -I specification, --interface specification
-
Require that the mail server machine is up and running at a specified
IP address (or range) before polling. The
specification is given as
interface/ipaddress/mask. The first part
indicates the type of TCP connection expected
(sl0, ppp0, etc.), the
second is the IP address, and the third is the bit mask for the IP,
assumed to be 255.255.255.255.
- -i file, --idfile file
-
Store POP3 UIDs in file instead of the default
.fetchids file.
- --invisible
-
Supress Received header and and spoof the MTA so it looks like mail
comes directly from the mailserver host.
- -K, --nokeep
-
Delete all retrieved messages from the mail server.
- -k, --keep
-
Keep copies of all retrieved messages on the mail server.
- -L file, --logfile file
-
Redirect status messages to the specified file.
This option is primarily for use in debugging. See the --syslog option.
- -l size, --limit size
-
Set the maximum message size that will be retrieved from a server.
Messages larger than this size will be left on the server and marked
unread.
- -lmtp
-
Deliver fetched mail via LMTP instead of SMTP. The server, specified
with the -S option, must explicitly
include the port to be used.
- -M interface, --monitor interface
-
In daemon mode, monitor the specified TCP/IP
interface for any activity besides itself, and
skip the poll if there is no other activity. Useful for PPP
connections that automatically time out with no activity.
- -m command, --mda command
-
Pass mail directly to mail delivery agent instead of sending to port
25. The command is the path and options for the
mailer, such as /usr/lib/sendmail
-oem. A %T in the command
will be replaced with the local delivery address, and an %F will be replaced with the
message's From
address.
- -N, --nodetach
-
Run command in the foreground. Useful for debugging a configuration
file that normally would run fetchmail as a daemon. Also causes fetchmail to ignore -L or --syslog options.
- -n, --norewrite
-
Do not expand local mail IDs to full addresses. This option will
disable expected addressing and should be used only to find problems.
- --nobounce
-
Do not bounce error messages back to the sender; send them to the
postmaster instead.
- --nosyslog
-
Turn off logging to syslogd. This
option overrides resource file settings and the -L option.
- -P n, --port n
-
Specify a port to connect to on the mail server. The default port
numbers for supported protocols are usually sufficient.
- -p proto, --protocol proto
-
Specify the protocol to use when polling a mail server.
proto can be:
- AUTO
-
Attempt IMAP, POP3, then POP2.
- POP2
-
Post Office Protocol 2.
- POP3
-
Post Office Protocol 3.
- APOP
-
POP3 with MD5 authentication.
- KPOP
-
POP3 with Kerberos v4 authentication on port 1109.
- RPOP
-
POP3 with RPOP authentication.
- SDPS
-
Demon Internet's Standard Dial-up POP3 Service.
- IMAP
-
IMAP2bis, IMAP4, or IMAP4rev1. fetchmail autodetects their capabilities.
- ETRN
-
Extended SMTP with Extended TURN command.
- ODMR
-
On Demand Mail Relaying.
- --plugin command
-
Use external program to establish the TCP connection. The
command is the path and options for the external
program. Use escape codes %h and
%p in command
to pass the hostname and port as arguments to the external program.
When using this command, fetchmail
will write to the program's standard input and read
from its standard output.
- --plugout command
-
Same as the --plugin option,
but used to establish SMTP connections.
- --plugout principal
-
Authenticate using the specified service
principal. Used with POP3 or IMAP with Kerberos
authentication.
- --postmaster name
-
If unable to deliver mail, deliver it to name.
Set name to ""
to have undeliverable mail discarded.
- -Q string, --qvirtual string
-
Remove the prefix string, which is the local
user's hostid, from the address in the envelope
header (such as "Delivered-To:").
- -q, --quit
-
Kill a running daemon process before performing any other commands.
- -r folder, --folder folder
-
Retrieve the specified mail folder from the mail
server.
- -S hostlist, -smtphost hostlist
-
Attempt to forward mail to one of the SMTP hosts listed in the
comma-separated hostlist. The hosts are tried in
the order they are given. The host may be a domain name, IP address,
or the directory path to an LMTP socket. Port numbers can be appended
to domain names and IP addresses using /port notation.
- -s, --silent
-
Suppress status messages during a fetch.
- --showdots
-
Always print progress dots. By default fetchmail prints progress dots only when the
current tty is standard output.
- --smtpname user
-
Specify the user and domain name to use in RCPT TO lines sent to
SMTP. user should be in the form
user@domain. By default,
fetchmail uses the local user and
domain.
- -syslog
-
Redirect status and error messages to the syslog daemon.
- --ssl
-
Encrypt connection to mail server using Secure Socket Layer.
- --sslcert file
-
Specify the file containing the client-side
public SSL certificate.
- --sslkey file
-
Specify the file containing the client-side
private SSL key.
- --sslproto proto
-
Specify a specific SSL protocol to use. proto
may be ssl2, ssl3, or tls1.
- --sslcertck
-
Fail unless the server's certificate has been signed
by a local list of trusted certificates. proto
may be ssl2, ssl3, or tls1.
- --sslcertpath directory
-
Specify the directory containing trusted certificates to be used with
--sslcertck.
- --sslfingerprint hash
-
Fail unless the server's key fingerprint matches the
specified fingerprint hash.
hash is an MD5 hash of the
server's key given in hexadecimal notation, using
colons to separate groups of two digits. Letter hex digits must be in
uppercase.
- -t n, --timeout n
-
Set the non-response timeout to n seconds.
- --tracepolls
-
Add information about the account and server being polled to the
Received header of each message received.
- -U, --uidl
-
For POP3, track the age of kept messages via unique ID listing.
- -u name, --username name
-
Specify the user name to use when logging into
the mail server.
- -V, --version
-
Print the version information for fetchmail and display the options set for each
mail server. Perform no fetch.
- -v, --verbose
-
Display all status messages during a fetch.
- -w n, --warnings n
-
When issuing warnings about oversized messages, wait
n seconds after each warning before sending
another warning.
- -Z nnn, --antispam nnn
-
Specify the SMTP error nnn to signal a spam
block from the client. If nnn is -1, this option
is disabled. Multiple SMTP codes may be given as a comma-separated
list. By default fetchmail discards
messages with error codes 571, 550, 501, and 554.
Print the number of the current virtual console. For example, if you
are using /dev/tty1, the command would return 1.
fgrep [options] pattern [files]
|
|
Search one or more files for lines that match a
literal text string pattern. Exit status is 0 if
any lines match, 1 if not, and 2 for errors.
See grep for the list of available
options. Also see egrep.
Examples
Print lines in file that don't
contain any spaces:
fgrep -v ' ' file
Print lines in file that contain the words in
the file spell_list:
fgrep -f spell_list file
Classify the named files according to the type
of data they contain. file checks
the magic file (usually /usr/share/magic) to
identify some file types.
Options
- -b
-
Brief mode; do not prepend filenames to output lines.
- -c
-
Check the format of the magic file (files
argument is invalid with -c).
Usually used with -m.
- -f file
-
Read the names of files to be checked from file.
- -L
-
Follow symbolic links. By default, symbolic links are not followed.
- -m file
-
Search for file types in file instead of
/usr/share/magic.
- -n
-
Flush standard output after checking a file.
- -s
-
Check files that are block or character special files in addition to
checking ordinary files.
- -v
-
Print the version.
- -z
-
Attempt checking of compressed files.
Many file types are understood. Output lists each filename, followed
by a brief classification such as:
ascii text
c program text
c-shell commands
data
empty
iAPX 386 executable
directory
[nt]roff, tbl, or eqn input text
shell commands
symbolic link to ../usr/etc/arp
Example
List all files that are deemed to be troff/nroff
input:
file * | grep roff
find [pathnames] [conditions]
|
|
An extremely useful command for finding particular groups of files
(numerous examples follow this description). find descends the directory tree beginning at
each pathname and locates files that meet the
specified conditions. The default pathname is
the current directory. The most useful conditions include -print (which is the default if no other
expression is given), -name and
-type (for general use), -exec and -size (for advanced use), and -mtime and -user (for administrators).
Conditions may be grouped by enclosing them in \(
\) (escaped parentheses), negated
with ! (use \! in tcsh), given as
alternatives by separating them with -o, or repeated (adding restrictions to the
match; usually only for -name,
-type, or -perm). Note that
"modification" refers to editing of
a file's contents, whereas
"change" means a modification, or
permission or ownership changes. In other words, -ctime is more inclusive than -atime or -mtime.
Conditions and actions
- -atime +n | -n | n
-
Find files that were last accessed more than n
(+n), less than
n (-n), or exactly
n days ago. Note that find changes the access time of directories
supplied as pathnames.
- -ctime +n | -n | n
-
Find files that were changed more than n
(+n), less than
n (-n), or exactly
n days ago. A change is anything that changes
the directory entry for the file, such as a chmod.
- -depth
-
Descend the directory tree, skipping directories and working on
actual files first, and then the parent directories. Useful when
files reside in unwritable directories (e.g., when using find with cpio).
- -exec command { } \;
-
Run the Linux command, from the starting
directory on each file matched by find (provided command
executes successfully on that file, i.e., returns a 0 exit status).
When command runs, the argument { } substitutes the current file. Follow the
entire sequence with an escaped semicolon (\;). In some shells, the
braces may need to be escaped as well.
- -follow
-
Follow symbolic links and track the directories visited
(don't use with -type
l).
- -group gname
-
Find files belonging to group gname.
gname can be a group name or a group ID number.
- -inum n
-
Find files whose inode number is n.
- -links n
-
Find files having n links.
- -mount, -xdev
-
Search only for files that reside on the same filesystem as
pathname.
- -mtime +n | -n | n
-
Find files that were last modified more than n
(+n), less than
n (-n), or exactly
n days ago. A modification is a change to a
file's data.
- -name pattern
-
Find files whose names match pattern. Filename
metacharacters may be used but should be escaped or quoted.
- -newer file
-
Find files that were modified more recently than
file; similar to -mtime. Affected by -follow only if it occurs after -follow on the command line.
- -ok command { }\;
-
Same as -exec, but prompts user to
respond with y before
command is executed.
- -perm nnn
-
Find files whose permission flags (e.g., rwx) match octal number
nnn exactly (e.g., 664 matches -rw-rw-r--). Use a minus sign before
nnn to make a
"wildcard" match of any unspecified
octal digit (e.g., -perm -600
matches -rw-******, where * can be
any mode).
- -print
-
Print the matching files and directories, using their full pathnames.
Return true.
- -regex pattern
-
Like -path, but uses grep-style regular expressions instead of the
shell-like globbing used in -name
and -path.
- -size n[c]
-
Find files containing n blocks, or if c is specified, n
characters long.
- -type c
-
Find files whose type is c.
c can be b
(block special file), c (character
special file), d (directory), p
(fifo or named pipe), l (symbolic link), s
(socket), or f (plain file).
- -user user
-
Find files belonging to user (name or ID).
- -daystart
-
Calculate times from the start of the day today, not 24 hours ago.
- -maxdepth num
-
Do not descend more than num levels of
directories.
- -mindepth num
-
Begin applying tests and actions only at levels deeper than
num levels.
- -noleaf
-
Normally, find assumes that each
directory has at least two hard links that should be ignored (a hard
link for its name and one for ".";
i.e., two fewer "real" directories
than its hard link count indicates). -noleaf turns off this assumption, a useful
practice when find runs on
non-Unix-style filesystems. This forces find to examine all entries, assuming that
some might prove to be directories into which it must descend (a
time-waster on Unix).
- -amin +n | -n | n
-
Find files last accessed more than n
(+n), less than n
(-n), or
exactly n minutes ago.
- -anewer file
-
Find files that were accessed after file was
last modified. Affected by -follow
when after -follow on the command
line.
- -cmin +n | -n | n
-
Find files last changed more than n
(+n), less than n
(-n), or
exactly n minutes ago.
- -cnewer file
-
Find files that were changed after they were last modified. Affected
by -follow when after -follow on the command line.
- -empty
-
Continue if file is empty. Applies to regular files and directories.
- -false
-
Return false value for each file encountered.
- -fstype type
-
Match files only on type filesystems. Acceptable
types include minix, ext, ext2,
xia, msdos, umsdos, vfat,
proc, nfs, iso9660,
hpfs, sysv, smb,
and ncpfs.
- -gid num
-
Find files with numeric group ID of num.
- -ilname pattern
-
A case-insensitive version of -lname.
- -iname pattern
-
A case-insensitive version of -name.
- -ipath pattern
-
A case-insensitive version of -path.
- -iregex pattern
-
A case-insensitive version of -regex.
- -lname pattern
-
Search for files that are symbolic links, pointing to files named
pattern. pattern can
include shell metacharacters and does not treat / or . specially. The match is
case-insensitive.
- -mmin +n | -n | n
-
Find files last modified more than n
(+n), less than n
(-n), or
exactly n minutes ago.
- -nouser
-
The file's user ID does not correspond to any user.
- -nogroup
-
The file's group ID does not correspond to any group.
- -path pattern
-
Find files whose names match pattern. Expect
full pathnames relative to the starting pathname (i.e., do not treat
/ or . specially).
Examples
List all files (and subdirectories) in your home directory:
find $HOME -print
List all files named chapter1 in the
/work directory:
find /work -name chapter1
List all files beginning with memo owned by
ann:
find /work -name 'memo*' -user ann -print
Search the filesystem (begin at root) for manpage directories:
find / -type d -name 'man*' -print
Search the current directory, look for filenames that
don't begin with a capital letter, and send them to
the printer:
find . \! -name '[A-Z]*' -exec lpr { }\;
Find and compress files whose names don't end with
.gz:
gzip `find . \! -name '*.gz' -print`
Remove all empty files on the system (prompting first):
find / -size 0 -ok rm { } \;
Search the system for files that were modified within the last two
days (good candidates for backing up):
find / -mtime -2 -print
Recursively grep for a pattern down
a directory tree:
find /book -print | xargs grep '[Nn]utshell'
If the files kt1 and kt2
exist in the current directory, their names can be printed with the
command:
$ find . -name 'kt[0-9]'
./kt1
./kt2
Since the command prints these names with an initial ./ path, you
need to specify the ./ when using the -path option:
$ find . -path './kt[0-9]'
./kt1
./kt2
The -regex option uses a complete
pathname, like -path, but treats the
following argument as a regular expression rather than a glob pattern
(although in this case the result is the same):
$ find . -regex './kt[0-9]'
./kt1
./kt2
Display data about one or more users, including
information listed in the files .plan and
.project in each user's home
directory. You can specify each user either as a login name (exact
match) or as a first or last name (display information on all
matching names). Networked environments recognize arguments of the
form user@host and @host.
Options
- -l
-
Force long format (default): everything included by the -s option and home directory, home phone,
login shell, mail status, .plan,
.project, and .forward.
- -m
-
Suppress matching of users'
"real" names.
- -p
-
Omit .plan and .project
files from display.
- -s
-
Show short format: login name, real name, terminal name, write
status, idle time, office location, and office phone number.
TCP/IP command. Remote user information server. fingerd provides a network interface to the
finger program. It listens for TCP
connections on the finger port and,
for each connection, reads a single input line, passes the line to
finger, and copies the output of
finger to the user on the client
machine. fingerd is started by
inetd and must have an entry in
inetd's
configuration file, /etc/inetd.conf.
Options
- -f
-
Allow finger forwarding in the form
of user@host1@host2.
- -p command, -L path
-
Use alternate finger program
specified by command.
- -l
-
Log finger requests.
- -t n
-
Set timeout period to n seconds.
- -u
-
Reject requests in the form of @host.
- -w
-
Include additional information, such as uptime and the name of the
operating system.
flex (Fast Lexical Analyzer
Generator) is a faster variant of lex.
It generates a lexical analysis program (named
lex.yy.c) based on the regular expressions and C
statements contained in one or more input files.
See also bison, yacc, and the O'Reilly book
lex & yacc.
Options
- -b
-
Generate backup information to lex.backup.
- -d
-
Debug mode.
- -f
-
Use faster compilation (limited to small programs).
- -h
-
Help summary.
- -i
-
Scan case-insensitively.
- -l
-
Maximum lex compatibility.
- -o file
-
Write output to file instead of
lex.yy.c.
- -p
-
Print performance report.
- -s
-
Exit if the scanner encounters input that does not match any of its
rules.
- -t
-
Print to standard output. (By default, flex prints to lex.yy.c.)
- -v
-
Print a summary of statistics.
- -w
-
Suppress warning messages.
- -B
-
Generate batch (noninteractive) scanner.
- -F
-
Use the fast scanner table representation.
- -I
-
Generate an interactive scanner (default).
- -L
-
Suppress #line directives in
lex.yy.c.
- -P prefix
-
Change default yy prefix to
prefix for all globally visible variable and
function names.
- -V
-
Print version number.
- -7
-
Generate a 7-bit scanner.
- -8
-
Generate an 8-bit scanner (default).
- -+
-
Generate a C++ scanner class.
- -C
-
Compress scanner tables but do not use equivalence classes.
- -Ca
-
Align tables for memory access and computation. This creates larger
tables but gives faster performance.
- -Ce
-
Construct equivalence classes. This creates smaller tables and
sacrifices little performance (default).
- -Cf
-
Generate full scanner tables, not compressed.
- -CF
-
Generate faster scanner tables, like -F.
- -Cm
-
Construct metaequivalence classes (default).
- -Cr
-
Bypass use of the standard I/O library; use read( ) system calls instead.
Convert text to specified width by filling lines and removing
newlines. Concatenate files on the command line, or read text from
standard input if - (or no file) is
specified. By default, preserve blank lines, spacing, and
indentation. fmt attempts to break
lines at the end of sentences and avoid breaking lines after a
sentence's first word or before its last.
Options
- -c, --crown-margin
-
Crown margin mode. Do not change indentation of each
paragraph's first two lines. Use the second
line's indentation as the default for subsequent
lines.
- -p prefix, --prefix=prefix
-
Format only lines beginning with prefix.
- -s, --split-only
-
Suppress line-joining.
- -t, --tagged-paragraph
-
Tagged paragraph mode. Same as crown mode when the indentations of
the first and second lines differ. If the indentation is the same,
treat the first line as its own separate paragraph.
- -u, --uniform-spacing
-
Reduce spacing to a maximum of one space between words and two
between sentences.
- -w width, --width=width
-
Set output width to width. The default is 75.
- --help
-
Print help message and then exit.
- --version
-
Print version information and then exit.
Break the lines of the named files so that they
are no wider than the specified width (default is 80). fold breaks lines exactly at the specified
width, even in the middle of a word. Reads from standard input when
given - as a file.
Options
- -b, --bytes
-
Count bytes, not columns (i.e., consider tabs, backspaces, and
carriage returns to be one column).
- -s, --spaces
-
Break at spaces only, if possible.
- -w, --width width, -width
-
Set the maximum line width to width. The flags
-w 6, --width 6, and -6 will all set the maximum width to six
columns.
Filter standard input into mailbox format. Useful for splitting mail
digests or passing the contents of a mail file to another program
such as a spam filter for additional processing. If no sender is
apparent, provide the sender foo@bar. By
default, escape bogus From lines
with >.
Options
- +skip
-
Do not split first skip messages.
- -total
-
Stop after splitting total messages.
- -a headerfield
-
Append headerfield to header, unless it already
exists. If headerfield is Message-ID or Resent-Message-ID with no contents, generate a
unique message ID.
- -b
-
Do not escape bogus From lines.
- -c
-
When header fields are more than one line long, concatenate the lines.
- -d
-
Do not assume that input must be in strict mailbox format. This
option disables recognition of the Content-Length field so you can split digests
or use nonstandard mailbox formats
- -e
-
Allow messages to begin one immediately after the other; do not
require empty space between them.
- -f
-
Do not edit non-mailbox-format lines. By default,
formail prepends From to such lines.
- -i headerfield
-
Append headerfield whether or not it already
exists. Rename each existing headerfield to
Old-headerfield, unless
it is empty.
- -k
-
For use only with -r. Keep the body
as well as the fields specified by -r.
- -m minfields
-
Require at least minfields before recognizing
the beginning of a new message. Default is 2.
- -n
-
Allow simultaneous formail processes
to run.
- -p prefix
-
Escape lines with prefix instead of >.
- -q
-
Do not display write errors, duplicate messages, and mismatched
Content-Length fields. This is the
default; use -q- to turn it off.
- -r
-
Throw away all existing fields, retaining only X-Loop, and generate autoreply header instead.
You can preserve particular fields with the -i option.
- -s
-
Must be the last option; everything following it will be assumed to
be its arguments. Divide input to separate mail messages, and pipe
them to the program specified or concatenate them to standard output
(by default).
- -t
-
Assume sender's return address to be valid. (By
default, formail favors
machine-generated addresses.)
- -u headerfield
-
Delete all but the first occurrence of
headerfield.
- -x headerfield
-
Display the contents of headerfield on a single
line.
- -z
-
When necessary, add a space between field names and contents. Remove
("zap") empty fields.
- -A headerfield
-
Append headerfield whether or not it already
exists.
- -B
-
Assume that input is in BABYL rmail
format.
- -D maxlen idcache
-
Remember old message IDs (in idcache, which will
grow no larger than approximately maxlen). When
splitting, refuse to output duplicate messages. Otherwise, return
true on discovering a duplicate. With -r, look at the sender's mail
address instead of the message ID.
- -I headerfield
-
Append headerfield whether or not it already
exists. Remove existing fields.
- -R oldfield newfield
-
Change all fields named oldfield to
newfield.
- -U headerfield
-
Delete all but the last occurrence of
headerfield.
- -Y
-
Format in traditional Berkeley style (i.e., ignore Content-Length fields).
- -X headerfield
-
Display the field name and contents of
headerfield on a single line.
Display statistics about memory usage: total free, used, physical,
swap, shared, and buffers used by the kernel.
Options
- -b
-
Calculate memory in bytes.
- -k
-
Default. Calculate memory in kilobytes.
- -m
-
Calculate memory in megabytes.
- -o
-
Do not display "buffer adjusted"
line. The -o switch disables the
display "-/+ buffers" line that
shows buffer memory subtracted from the amount of memory used and
added to the amount of free memory.
- -s time
-
Check memory usage every time seconds.
- -t
-
Display all totals on one line at the bottom of output.
- -V
-
Display version information.
fsck [options] [filesystem] ...
|
|
System administration command. Call the filesystem checker for the
appropriate system type to check and repair unmounted filesystems. If
a filesystem is consistent, the number of files, number of blocks
used, and number of blocks free are reported. If a filesystem is
inconsistent, fsck prompts before
each correction is attempted. fsck's exit code can be
interpreted as the sum of all conditions that apply:
- 1
-
Errors were found and corrected.
- 2
-
Reboot suggested.
- 4
-
Errors were found but not corrected.
- 8
-
fsck encountered an operational
error.
- 16
-
fsck was called incorrectly.
- 128
-
A shared library error was detected.
Options
- --
-
Pass all subsequent options to filesystem-specific checker. All
options that fsck
doesn't recognize will also be passed.
- -s
-
Serial mode. Check one filesystem at a time.
- -t fstype
-
Specify the filesystem type. Do not check filesystems of any other
type.
- -A
-
Check all filesystems listed in /etc/fstab. The
root filesystem is checked first.
- -C
-
Display completion (progress) bar.
- -N
-
Suppress normal execution; just display what would be done.
- -P
-
Meaningful only with -A: check root
filesystem in parallel with other systems. This option is potentially
dangerous.
- -R
-
Meaningful only with -A: check all
filesystems listed in /etc/fstab except the root
filesystem.
- -T
-
Suppress printing of title.
- -V
-
Verbose mode.
fsck.minix [options] device
|
|
System administration command. Similar to fsck, but specifically intended for Linux
MINIX filesystems.
Options
- -a
-
Automatic mode; repair without prompting.
- -f
-
Force checking, even if kernel has already marked the filesystem.
fsck.minix will normally exit
without checking if the system appears to be clean.
- -l
-
List filesystems.
- -m
-
Enable MINIX-like "mode not
cleared" warnings.
- -r
-
Interactive mode; prompt before making any repairs.
- -s
-
Display information about superblocks.
- -v
-
Verbose mode.
Transfer files to and from remote network site
hostname. ftp
prompts the user for a command. The commands are listed after the
options. Some of the commands are toggles, meaning they turn on a
feature when it is off and vice versa. Note that versions may have
different options.
Options
- -d
-
Enable debugging.
- -g
-
Disable filename globbing.
- -i
-
Turn off interactive prompting.
- -n
-
No autologin upon initial connection.
- -v
-
Verbose. Show all responses from remote server.
Commands
- ![command [args]]
-
Invoke an interactive shell on the local machine. If arguments are
given, the first is taken as a command to execute directly, with the
rest of the arguments as that command's arguments.
- $macro-name [args]
-
Execute the macro macro-name that was defined
with the macdef command. Arguments
are passed to the macro unglobbed.
- account [passwd]
-
Supply a supplemental password that will be required by a remote
system for access to resources once a login has been successfully
completed. If no argument is given, the user will be prompted for an
account password in a non-echoing mode.
- append local-file [remote-file]
-
Append a local file to a file on the remote machine. If
remote-file is not given, the local filename is
used after being altered by any ntrans or nmap setting. File transfer uses the current
settings for type, format,
mode, and structure.
- ascii
-
Set the file transfer type to network ASCII (default).
- bell
-
Sound a bell after each file transfer command is completed.
- binary
-
Set file transfer type to support binary image transfer.
- bye
-
Terminate FTP session and then exit ftp.
- case
-
Toggle remote computer filename case mapping during mget. The default is off. When case is on, files on the remote machine with
all-uppercase names will be copied to the local machine with
all-lowercase names.
- cd remote-directory
-
Change working directory on remote machine to
remote-directory.
- cdup
-
Change working directory of remote machine to its parent directory.
- chmod [mode] [remote-file]
-
Change file permissions of remote-file. If
options are omitted, the command prompts for them.
- close
-
Terminate FTP session and return to command interpreter.
- cr
-
Toggle carriage return stripping during ASCII-type file retrieval.
- delete remote-file
-
Delete file remote-file on remote machine.
- debug [debug-value]
-
Toggle debugging mode. If debug-value is
specified, it is used to set the debugging level.
- dir [remote-directory] [local-file]
-
Print a listing of the contents in the directory
remote-directory and, optionally, place the
output in local-file. If no directory is
specified, the current working directory on the remote machine is
used. If no local file is specified or - is given instead of the filename, output
comes to the terminal.
- disconnect
-
Synonym for close.
- form format
-
Set the file transfer form to format. Default
format is file.
- get remote-file [local-file]
-
Retrieve the remote-file and store it on the
local machine. If the local filename is not specified, it is given
the same name it has on the remote machine, subject to alteration by
the current case, ntrans, and nmap settings. If local file is -, output
comes to the terminal.
- glob
-
Toggle filename expansion for mdelete, mget, and mput. If globbing is turned off, the filename
arguments are taken literally and not expanded.
- hash
-
Toggle hash sign (#) printing for each data block transferred.
- help [command]
-
Print help information for command. With no
argument, ftp prints a list of
commands.
- idle [seconds]
-
Get/set idle timer on remote machine. seconds
specifies the length of the idle timer; if omitted, the current idle
timer is displayed.
- image
-
Same as binary.
- lcd [directory]
-
Change working directory on local machine. If
directory is not specified, the
user's home directory is used.
- ls [remote-directory] [local-file]
-
Print listing of contents of directory on remote machine, in a format
chosen by the remote machine. If
remote-directory is not specified, current
working directory is used.
- macdef macro-name
-
Define a macro. Subsequent lines are stored as the macro
macro-name; a null line terminates macro input
mode. When $i is included in the
macro, loop through arguments, substituting the current argument for
$i on each pass. Escape $ with \.
- mdelete remote-files
-
Delete the remote-files on the remote machine.
- mdir remote-files local-file
-
Like dir, except multiple remote
files may be specified.
- mget remote-files
-
Expand the wildcard expression remote-files on
the remote machine and do a get for
each filename thus produced.
- mkdir directory-name
-
Make a directory on the remote machine.
- mls remote-files local-file
-
Like nlist, except multiple remote
files may be specified, and the local file must be specified.
- mode [mode-name]
-
Set file transfer mode to mode-name. Default
mode is stream mode.
- modtime [file-name]
-
Show last modification time of the file on the remote machine.
- mput [local-files]
-
Expand wildcards in local-files given as
arguments and do a put for each file
in the resulting list.
- newer remote-file [local-file]
-
Get file if remote file is newer than local file.
- nlist [remote-directory] [local-file]
-
Print list of files in a directory on the remote machine to
local-file (or to the screen if
local-file is not specified). If
remote-directory is unspecified, the current
working directory is used.
- nmap [inpattern outpattern]
-
Set or unset the filename mapping mechanism. The mapping follows the
pattern set by inpattern, a template for
incoming filenames, and outpattern, which
determines the resulting mapped filename. The sequences $1 through $9
are treated as variables; for example, the
inpattern $1.$2, along with the input file
readme.txt, would set $1 to readme
and $2 to txt. An outpattern of
$1.data would result in an output
file of readme.data. $0 corresponds to the complete filename.
[string1, string2] is
replaced by string1 unless that string is null,
in which case it's replaced by
string2.
- ntrans [inchars [outchars ]]
-
Set or unset the filename character translation mechanism. Characters
in a filename matching a character in inchars
are replaced with the corresponding character in
outchars. If no arguments are specified, the
filename mapping mechanism is unset. If arguments are specified:
Characters in remote filenames are translated during mput and put commands issued without a specified remote target filename.
Characters in local filenames are translated during
mget and get commands issued without a specified local
target filename.
- open host [port]
-
Establish a connection to the specified host FTP
server. An optional port number may be supplied,
in which case ftp will attempt to
contact an FTP server at that port.
- prompt
-
Toggle interactive prompting.
- proxy ftp-command
-
Execute an FTP command on a secondary control connection (i.e., send
commands to two separate remote hosts simultaneously).
- put local-file [remote-file]
-
Store a local file on the remote machine. If
remote-file is left unspecified, the local
filename is used after processing according to any ntrans or nmap settings in naming the remote file. File
transfer uses the current settings for type,
file, structure, and
transfer mode.
- pwd
-
Print name of the current working directory on the remote machine.
- quit
-
Synonym for bye.
- quote arg1 arg2...
-
Send the arguments specified, verbatim, to the remote FTP server.
- recv remote-file [local-file]
-
Synonym for get.
- reget remote-file [local-file]
-
Retrieve a file (like get), but
restart at the end of local-file. Useful for
restarting a dropped transfer.
- remotehelp [command-name]
-
Request help from the remote FTP server. If
command-name is specified, remote help for that
command is returned.
- remotestatus [filename]
-
Show status of the remote machine or, if
filename is specified, of
filename on remote machine.
- rename [from] [to]
-
Rename file from on remote machine to
to.
- reset
-
Clear reply queue.
- restart marker
-
Restart the transfer of a file from a particular byte count.
- rmdir [directory-name]
-
Delete a directory on the remote machine.
- runique
-
Toggle storing of files on the local system with unique filenames.
When this option is on, rename files as .1 or .2, and
so on, as appropriate, to preserve unique filenames, and report each
such action. Default value is off.
- send local-file [remote-file]
-
Synonym for put.
- sendport
-
Toggle the use of PORT commands.
- site [command]
-
Get/set site-specific information from/on remote machine.
- size filename
-
Return size of filename on remote machine.
- status
-
Show current status of ftp.
- struct [struct-name]
-
Set the file transfer structure to struct-name.
By default, stream structure is used.
- sunique
-
Toggle storing of files on remote machine under unique filenames.
- system
-
Show type of operating system running on remote machine.
- tenex
-
Set file transfer type to that needed to talk to TENEX machines.
- trace
-
Toggle packet tracing.
- type [type-name]
-
Set file transfer type to
type-name. If no type is specified, the current
type is printed. The default type is network ASCII.
- umask [mask]
-
Set user file-creation mode mask on the remote site. If
mask is omitted, the current value of the mask
is printed.
- user username [password] [account]
-
Identify yourself to the remote FTP server. ftp will prompt the user for the password (if
not specified and the server requires it) and the account field.
- verbose
-
Toggle verbose mode.
- ? [command]
-
Same as help.
TCP/IP command. Internet File Transfer Protocol server. The server
uses the TCP protocol and listens at the port specified in the
ftp service specification. ftpd is started by inetd and must have an entry in inetd's configuration file,
/etc/inetd.conf. There are several FTP daemons
available. On many Linux distributions the default is wu-ftpd, which we document here.
Options
- -a
-
Read access information from configuration file
/etc/ftpaccess.
- -d, -v
-
Write debugging information to syslogd.
- -i
-
Log all files received in the transfer log
/var/log/xferlog.
- -l
-
Log each FTP session in syslogd.
- -o
-
Log all files sent in the transfer log
/var/log/xferlog.
- -pport
-
Use port as the FTP control port instead of
reading the appropriate port from /etc/services.
Works only in standalone mode.
- -q
-
Use PID files to record the process IDs of running daemons. This is
the default. These files are needed to determine the current number
of users.
- -rdir
-
Change system root (chroot) to
specified directory when loaded.
- -s
-
Run ftpd standalone in the
foreground.
- -ttimeout
-
Set default timeout period to timeout seconds.
- -uumask
-
Set default umask to umask.
- -w
-
Record user logins in the wtmp file.
This is the default.
- -x
-
Used with options -i and -o. Log file transfers to syslogd as well as the tranfer log.
- -z option
-
Set Transport Security Layer (TSL) option for Secure Socket Layers.
See wu-ftpd documentation for more
details.
- -A
-
Do not read access information from configuration file
/etc/ftpaccess. This is the default.
- -I
-
Do not use ident to determine
client's remote username.
- -L
-
Log all commands sent to ftpd in
syslogd. This option is overriden by
option -a.
- -Pport
-
Use port as the FTP data port instead of reading
the appropriate port from /etc/services.
- -Q
-
Do not use PID files to record the process IDs of running daemons.
Without PID files, there is no imposed limit to the number of
concurrent users.
- -S
-
Run ftpd standalone in the
background.
- -Tmaxtimeout
-
Set maximum timeout period in seconds. Default limit is 15 minutes.
- -U
-
Record user logins in the utmp file.
By default, logins are not recorded.
- -V
-
Print version, then exit.
- -W
-
Do not record user logins in the wtmp file.
- -X
-
Used with options -i and -o. Log file transfers to syslogd instead of the tranfer log.
fuser [options] [files | filesystems]
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|
Identifies and outputs the process IDs of processes that are using
the files or local
filesystems. Each process ID is followed by a
letter code: c if process is using
file as the current directory; e if executable; f if an open file; m if a shared library; and r if the root directory. Any user with
permission to read /dev/kmem and
/dev/mem can use fuser, but only a privileged user can
terminate another user's process. fuser does not work on remote (NFS) files.
If more than one group of files is specified, the options may be
respecified for each additional group of files. A lone dash (-)
cancels the options currently in force, and the new set of options
applies to the next group of files. Like a number of other
administrator commands, fuser is
usually installed to the /sbin directory. You
may need to add that directory to your path or execute the command as
/sbin/fuser.
Options
- -
-
Return all options to defaults.
- -signal
-
Send signal instead of SIGKILL.
- -a
-
Display information on all specified files, even if they are not
being accessed by any processes.
- -i
-
Request user confirmation to kill a process. Ignored if -k is not also specified.
- -k
-
Send SIGKILL signal to each process.
- -l
-
List signal names.
- -m
-
Expect files to exist on a mounted filesystem;
include all files accessing that filesystem.
- -n space
-
Set the namespace checked for usage. Acceptable values are file for files, udp for local UPD ports, and tcp for local TCP ports.
- -s
-
Silent.
- -u
-
User login name, in parentheses, also follows process ID.
- -v
-
Verbose.
- -V
-
Display version information.
Invoke gcc with the options
necessary to make it recognize C++. g++ recognizes all the file extensions
gcc does, in addition to C++ source
files (.C, .cc, or
.cxx files) and C++ preprocessed files
(.ii files). See also gcc.
gawk [options] 'script' [var=value...] [files]
gawk [options] -f scriptfile [var=value...] [files]
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|
The GNU version of awk, a program
that does pattern matching, record processing, and other forms of
text manipulation. For more information, see Chapter 13.
GNU Compiler Collection. gcc,
formerly known as the GNU C Compiler, compiles multiple languages
(C, C++,
Objective-C, Ada, FORTRAN, and Java) to machine code. Here we
document its use to compile C, C++, or Objective-C code. gcc compiles one or more programming source
files; for example, C source files (file.c),
assembler source files (file.s), or preprocessed
C source files (file.i). If the file suffix is
not recognizable, assume that the file is an object file or library.
gcc normally invokes the C
preprocessor, compiles the process code to assemble language code,
assembles it, and then links it with the link editor. This process
can be stopped at one of these stages using the -c, -S, or
-E option. The steps may also differ
depending on the language being compiled. By default, output is
placed in a.out. In some cases, gcc generates an object file having a
.o suffix and a corresponding root name.
Preprocessor and linker options given on the gcc command line are passed on to these tools
when they are run. These options are briefly described here, but some
are more fully described under entries for cpp, as, and
ld. The options that follow are
divided into general, preprocessor, linker, and warning options.
gcc accepts many system-specific
options not covered here.
Note: gcc is the GNU form of
cc; on most Linux systems, the
command cc will invoke gcc. The command g++ will invoke gcc with the appropriate options for
interpreting C++.
General options
- -a
-
Provide profile information for basic blocks.
- -aux-info file
-
Print prototyped declarations and information on their origins to
file.
- -ansi
-
Enforce full ANSI conformance.
- -b machine
-
Compile for use on machine type.
- -c
-
Create linkable object file for each source file, but do not call
linker.
- -dumpmachine
-
Print compiler's default target machine, then exit.
- -dumpspecs
-
Print built-in specification strings, then exit.
- -dumpversion
-
Print version number, then exit.
- -foption
-
Set the specified compiler option. Many of these
control debugging, optimization of code, and special language
options. Use the --help -v
options for a full listing.
- -g
-
Include debugging information for use with gdb.
- -glevel
-
Provide level amount of debugging information.
level must be 1, 2, or 3, with 1 providing the
least amount of information. The default is 2.
- --help
-
Print most common basic options, then exit. When used with option
-v, print options for all of
gcc's subprocesses.
For options specific to a target, use --target-help.
- -moption
-
Set the specified machine specific option. Use
the --target-help option for a
full listing.
- -o file
-
Specify output file as file. Default is
a.out.
- -p
-
Provide profile information for use with prof.
- -pass-exit-codes
-
On error, return highest error code as the exit code instead of 1.
- -pedantic
-
Warn verbosely.
- -pedantic-errors
-
Generate an error in every case in which -pedantic would have produced a warning.
- -pg
-
Provide profile information for use with gprof.
- -print-file-name=file
-
Print the full path to the library specified by filename
file, then exit. This is the library gcc would use for linking.
- -print-search-dirs
-
Print installation directory and the default list of directories
gcc will search to find programs and
libraries, then exit.
- -pipe
-
Transfer information between stages of compiler by pipes instead of
temporary files.
- -save-temps
-
Save temporary files in the current directory when compiling.
- -std=standard
-
Specify C standard of input file. Accepted
values are:
- iso9899:1990, c89
-
1990 ISO C standard.
- iso9899:199409
-
1994 amendment to the 1990 ISO C standard.
- iso9899:1999, c99, iso9899:199x, c9x
-
1999 revised ISO C standard.
- gnu89
-
1990 C Standard with GNU extensions (the default value).
- gnu99, gnu9x
-
1999 revised ISO C standard with GNU extensions.
- -time
-
Print statistics on the execution of each subprocess.
- -v
-
Verbose mode. Print subprocess commands to standard error as they are
executed. Include gcc version number
and preprocessor version number. To generate the same output without
executing commands, use the option -###.
- -w
-
Suppress warnings.
- -x language
-
Expect input file to be written in language,
which may be c, objective-c, c-header, c++, ada,
f77, ratfor, assembler, java, cpp-output, c++-cpp-output, objc-cpp-output, f77-cpp-output, assembler-with-cpp, or ada. If none
is specified as language, guess the language by
filename extension.
- -Bpath
-
Specify the path directory in which the compiler
files are located.
- -E
-
Preprocess the source files, but do not compile. Print result to
standard output. This option is useful to meaningfully pass some
cpp options that would otherwise
break gcc, such as -C, -M, or
-P.
- -Idir
-
Include dir in list of directories to search for
include files. If dir is -, search those directories specified by
-I before the -I- only when #include
"file" is
specified, not #include
<file>.
- -Ldir
-
Search dir in addition to standard directories.
- -O[level]
-
Optimize. level should be 1, 2, 3, or 0 (the
default is 1). 0 turns off optimization; 3 optimizes the most.
- -S
-
Compile source files into assembler code, but do not assemble.
- -V version
-
Attempt to run gcc version
version.
- -Wa,options
-
Pass options to the assembler. Multiple options
are separated by commas.
- -Wl,options
-
Pass options to the linker. Multiple options are
separated by commas.
- -Wp,options
-
Pass options to the preprocessor. Multiple
options are separated by commas.
- -Xlinker options
-
Pass options to the linker. A linker option with
an argument requires two -Xlinkers,
the first specifying the option and the second specifying the
argument. Similar to -Wl.
Preprocessor options
gcc will pass the following options
to the preprocessor:
- -$
-
Do not allow $ in identifiers.
- -dD, -dI, -dM, -dN
-
Suppress normal output; print preprocessor instructions instead. See
cpp for details.
- -idirafter dir
-
Search dir for header files when a header file
is not found in any of the included directories.
- -imacros file
-
Process macros in file before processing main
files.
- -include file
-
Process file before main file.
- -iprefix prefix
-
When adding directories with -iwithprefix, prepend
prefix to the directory's name.
- -isystem dir
-
Search dir for header files after searching
directories specified with -I but
before searching standard system directories.
- -iwithprefix dir
-
Append dir to the list of directories to be
searched when a header file cannot be found in the main include path.
If -iprefix has been set, prepend
that prefix to the directory's name.
- -iwithprefixbefore dir
-
Insert dir at the beginning of the list of
directories to be searched when a header file cannot be found in the
main include path. If -iprefix has
been set, prepend that prefix to the directory's
name.
- -nostdinc
-
Search only specified, not standard, directories for header files.
- -nostdinc++
-
Suppress searching of directories believed to contain C++-specific
header files.
- -trigraphs
-
Convert special three-letter sequences, meant to represent missing
characters on some terminals, into the single character they
represent.
- -undef
-
Suppress definition of all nonstandard macros.
- -A name[=def]
-
Assert name with value def
as if defined by #assert. To turn
off standard assertions, use -A-.
- -A -name[=def]
-
Cancel assertion name with value
def.
- -C
-
Retain all comments except those found on cpp directive lines. By default, the
preprocessor strips C-style comments.
- -Dname[=def]
-
Define name with value def
as if by #define. If no
=def is given, name is
defined with value 1. -D has lower
precedence than -U.
- -H
-
Print pathnames of included files, one per line, on standard error.
- -M, -MG, -MF, -MD, -MMD, -MQ, -MT
-
Suppress normal output and print Makefile rules describing file
dependencies. Print a rule for make
that describes the main source file's dependencies.
If -MG is specified, assume that
missing header files are actually generated files, and look for them
in the source file's directory. Most of these
options imply -E. See cpp for further details.
- -Uname
-
Remove definition of symbol name.
Linker options
gcc will pass the following options to the
linker:
- -llib
-
Link to lib.
- -nostartfiles
-
Force linker to ignore standard system startup files.
- -nostdlib
-
Suppress linking to standard library files.
- -s
-
Remove all symbol table and relocation information from the
executable.
- -shared
-
Create a shareable object.
- -shared-libgcc
-
Link to a shared version of libgcc
if available.
- -static
-
Suppress linking to shared libraries.
- -static-libgcc
-
Link to a static version of libgcc
if available.
- -u symbol
-
Force the linker to search libraries for a definition of
symbol, and to link to the libraries found.
Warning options
- -pedantic
-
Warn verbosely.
- -pedantic-errors
-
Produce a fatal error in every case in which -pedantic would have produced a warning.
- -w
-
Don't print warnings.
- -W
-
Warn more verbosely than normal.
- -Waggregate-return
-
Warn if any functions that return structures or unions are defined or
called.
- -Wall
-
Enable -W, -Wchar-subscripts, -Wcomment, -Wformat, -Wimplicit, -Wmain, -Wmissing-braces, -Wparentheses, -Wreturn-type, -Wsequence-point, -Wswitch, -Wtemplate-debugging, -Wtrigraphs, -Wuninitialized, -Wunknown-pragmas, and -Wunused.
- -Wcast-align
-
Warn when encountering instances in which pointers are cast to types
that increase the required alignment of the target from its original
definition.
- -Wcast-qual
-
Warn when encountering instances in which pointers are cast to types
that lack the type qualifier with which the pointer was originally
defined.
- -Wchar-subscripts
-
Warn when encountering arrays with subscripts of type char.
- -Wcomment
-
Warn when encountering the beginning of a nested comment.
- -Wconversion
-
Warn in particular cases of type conversions.
- -Werror
-
Exit at the first error.
- -Wformat
-
Warn about inappropriately formatted printfs and scanfs.
- -Wimplicit
-
Warn when encountering implicit function or parameter declarations.
- -Winline
-
Warn about illegal inline functions.
- -Wmain
-
Warn about malformed main functions.
- -Wmissing-braces
-
Enable more verbose warnings about omitted braces.
- -Wmissing-declarations
-
Warn if a global function is defined without a previous declaration.
- -Wmissing-prototypes
-
Warn when encountering global function definitions without previous
prototype declarations.
- -Wnested-externs
-
Warn if an extern declaration is
encountered within a function.
- -Wno-import
-
Don't warn about use of #import.
- -Wparentheses
-
Enable more verbose warnings about omitted parentheses.
- -Wpointer-arith
-
Warn when encountering code that attempts to determine the size of a
function or void.
- -Wredundant-decls
-
Warn if anything is declared more than once in the same scope.
- -Wreturn-type
-
Warn about violations of sequence point rules defined in the C
standard.
- -Wreturn-type
-
Warn about functions defined without return types or with improper
return types.
- -Wshadow
-
Warn when a local variable shadows another local variable.
- -Wstrict-prototypes
-
Insist that argument types be specified in function declarations and
definitions.
- -Wswitch
-
Warn about switches that skip the index for one of their enumerated
types.
- -Wtraditional
-
Warn when encountering code that produces different results in ANSI C
and traditional C.
- -Wtrigraphs
-
Warn when encountering trigraphs.
- -Wuninitialized
-
Warn when encountering uninitialized automatic variables.
- -Wundef
-
Warn when encountering a non-macro identifier in an #if directive.
- -Wunknown-pragmas
-
Warn when encountering a #pragma
directive not understood by gcc.
- -Wunused
-
Warn about unused variables, functions, labels, and
paramaters.
Pragma directives
- #pragma interface [header-file]
-
Used in header files to force object files to provide definition
information via references instead of including it locally in each
file. C++-specific.
- #pragma implementation [header-file]
-
Used in main input files to force generation of full output from
header-file (or, if it is not specified, from
the header file with the same base name as the file containing the
pragma directive). This information will be globally visible.
Normally the specified header file contains a #pragma interface directive.
gdb [options] [program [core|pid]]
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|
GDB (GNU DeBugger) allows you to step through the execution of a
program in order to find the point at which it breaks. It fully
supports C and C++, and provides partial support for FORTRAN, Java,
Chill, assembly, and Modula-2. The program to be debugged is normally
specified on the command line; you can also specify a core or, if you
want to investigate a running program, a process ID.
Options
- -b bps
-
Set line speed of serial device used by GDB to
bps.
- -batch
-
Exit after executing all the commands specified in
.gdbinit and -x
files. Print no startup messages.
- -c file, -core=file
-
Consult file for information provided by a core
dump.
- -cd=directory
-
Use directory as gdb's working directory.
- -d directory, -directory=directory
-
Include directory in path that is searched for
source files.
- -e file, -exec=file
-
Use file as an executable to be read in
conjunction with source code. May be used in conjunction with
-s to read the symbol table from the
executable.
- -f, -fullname
-
Show full filename and line number for each stack frame.
- -h, -help
-
Print help message, then exit.
- -n, -nx
-
Ignore .gdbinit file.
- -q, -quiet
-
Suppress introductory and copyright messages.
- -s file, -symbols=file
-
Consult file for symbol table. With -e, also uses file as the
executable.
- -tty=device
-
Set standard in and standard out to device.
- -write
-
Allow gdb to write into executables
and core files.
- -x file, -command=file
-
Read gdb commands from
file.
Common commands
These are just some of the more common gdb commands; there are too many to list them
all.
- bt
-
Print the current location within the program and a stack trace
showing how the current location was reached. (where does the same thing.)
- break
-
Set a breakpoint in the program.
- cd
-
Change the current working directory.
- clear
-
Delete the breakpoint where you just stopped.
- commands
-
List commands to be executed when a breakpoint is hit.
- c
-
Continue execution from a breakpoint.
- delete
-
Delete a breakpoint or a watchpoint; also used in conjunction with
other commands.
- display
-
Cause variables or expressions to be displayed when program stops.
- down
-
Move down one stack frame to make another function the current one.
- frame
-
Select a frame for the next continue
command.
- info
-
Show a variety of information about the program. For instance,
info breakpoints shows all
outstanding breakpoints and watchpoints.
- jump
-
Start execution at another point in the source file.
- kill
-
Abort the process running under gdb's control.
- list
-
List the contents of the source file corresponding to the program
being executed.
- next
-
Execute the next source line, executing a function in its entirety.
- print
-
Print the value of a variable or expression.
- ptype
-
Show the contents of a datatype, such as a structure or C++ class.
- pwd
-
Show the current working directory.
- quit
-
Exit gdb.
- reverse-search
-
Search backward for a regular expression in the source file.
- run
-
Execute the program.
- search
-
Search for a regular expression in the source file.
- set variable
-
Assign a value to a variable.
- signal
-
Send a signal to the running process.
- step
-
Execute the next source line, stepping into a function if necessary.
- undisplay
-
Reverse the effect of the display
command; keep expressions from being displayed.
- until
-
Finish the current loop.
- up
-
Move up one stack frame to make another function the current one.
- watch
-
Set a watchpoint (i.e., a data breakpoint) in the program.
- whatis
-
Print the type of a variable or function.
Print the kernel's scancode-to-keycode mapping table.
System administration command. Provide a mouse server and
cut-and-paste utility for use on the Linux console. gpm acts like a daemon, responding to both
mouse events and client input. If no clients are connected to the
active console, gpm provides
cut-and-paste services.
Options
- -2
-
Force two buttons. If there is a middle button, it is treated as the
right button.
- -3
-
Force three buttons. With a three-button mouse, the left button makes
a selection, the right button extends the selection, and the middle
button pastes it. Using this option with a two-button mouse results
in being unable to paste.
- -a accel
-
Set the acceleration for a single motion longer than the delta
specified with the -d option.
- -A [limit]
-
Start up with pasting disabled for security. If specified,
limit gives the time in seconds during which a
selection can be pasted. If too much time has passed, the paste is
not allowed.
- -b baud
-
Specify the baud rate.
- -B seq
-
Set a three-digit button sequence, mapping the left, middle, and
right buttons to buttons 1, 2, and 3. The default is 123. The
sequence 321 is useful if you are left-handed, or 132 for a
two-button mouse.
- -d delta
-
Set the delta value for use with -a.
When a mouse motion event is longer than the specified delta, use
accel as a multiplier.
delta must be 2 or greater.
- -D
-
Debugging mode. When set, gpm does
not put itself into the background, and it logs messages to standard
error instead of syslog.
- -g num
-
For a glidepoint device, specify the button to be emulated by a tap.
num must be 1, 2, or 3 and refers to the button
number before any remapping is done by the -B option. Applies to mman and ps2
protocol decoding.
- -h
-
Print a help message and exit.
- -i interval
-
Specify the upper time limit, in milliseconds, between mouse clicks
for the clicks to be considered a double or triple click.
- -k
-
Kill a running gpm. For use with a
bus mouse to kill gpm before running
X. See also -R.
- -l charset
-
Specify the inword( ) lookup table,
which determines what characters can appear in a word.
charset is a list of characters. The list can
include only printable characters. Specify a range with -, and use \ to escape the following character
or to specify an octal character.
- -m filename
-
Specify the mouse file to open. The default is
/dev/mouse.
- -M
-
Enable the use of more than one mouse. Options appearing before
-M apply to the first mouse; those
appearing after it apply to the second mouse. Forces the use of
-R.
- -o extra-options
-
Specify a comma-separated list of additional mouse-specific options.
See the gpm info page for a
description of the mouse types and the possible options.
- -p
-
Keep the pointer visible while text is being selected. The default is
not to show the pointer.
- -r num
-
Specify the responsiveness. A higher number causes the cursor to move
faster.
- -R name
-
Act as a repeater and pass any mouse data received while in graphical
mode to the fifo /dev/gpmdata in the protocol
specified by name (default is msc). In addition to certain of the protocol
types available with -t, you can
specify raw to repeat the data with
no protocol translation.
- -s num
-
Specify the sample rate for the mouse device.
- -S [commands]
-
Enable special-command processing (see the next section). Custom
commands can be specified as a colon-separated
list to associate commands with the left button, middle button, and
right button. If a command is omitted, it defaults to sending a
signal to init.
- -t type
-
Specify the mouse protocol type. Use -t
help for a list of types; those marked with an asterisk
(*) can be used with -R.
- -v
-
Print version information and exit.
- -V [increment]
-
Make gpm more or less verbose by the
specified increment. The default verbosity level
is 5 and the default increment is 1. A larger value of
increment causes more messages to be logged. The
increment can be negative, but must be specified with no space (e.g.,
-V-3).
Special commands
Special commands, activated with the -S option, are associated with each mouse
button. You can also use -S to
customize the commands. To execute a special command, triple-click
the left and right buttons (hold down one of the buttons and
triple-click the other). A message appears on the console and the
speaker beeps twice. At that point, release the buttons and press the
desired button within three seconds to activate the associated
special command. The default special commands are:
- Left button
-
Reboot by signalling init.
- Middle button
-
Shut down the system with /sbin/shutdown -h
now.
- Right button
-
Reboot with /sbin/shutdown -r
now.
gprof [options] [object_file]
|
|
Display the profile data for an object file. The
file's symbol table is compared with the call graph
profile file gmon.out (previously created by
compiling with gcc -pg). Many of
gprof's options
take a symbol specification argument, or symspec, to limit the option
to specified files or functions. The symspec may be a filename, a
function, or a line number. It can also be given as
filename:function or
filename:linenumber to specify a function or
line number in a specific file. gprof expects filenames to contain a period
and functions to not contain a period.
Options
- -a, --no-static
-
Do not display statically declared functions. Since their information
might still be relevant, append it to the information about the
functions loaded immediately before.
- -b, --brief
-
Do not display information about each field in the profile.
- -c, --static-call-graph
-
Consult the object file's text area to attempt to
determine the program's static call graph. Display
static-only parents and children with call counts of 0.
- --demangle[=style], --no-demangle
-
Specify whether C++ symbols should be demangled or not. They are
demangled by default. If profiling a program built by a different
compiler, you may need to specify the mangling style.
- --function-ordering
-
Print suggested function order based on profiling data.
- --file-ordering file
-
Print suggested link line order for .o files
based on profiling data. Read function name to object file mappings
from file. This file can be created using the
nm command.
- -i, --file-info
-
Print summary information on data files, then exit.
- -k from to
-
Remove arcs between the routines from and
to.
- -m n, --min-count[=n]
-
Don't print count statistics for symbols executed
less than n times.
- -n[symspec], --time[=symspec]
-
Propogate time statistics in call graph analysis.
- -p[symspec], --flat-profile[=symspec]
-
Print profile statistics.
- -q[symspec], --graph[=symspec]
-
Print call graph analysis.
- -s, --sum
-
Summarize profile information in the file
gmon.sum.
- -v, --version
-
Print version and exit.
- -w n, --width=n
-
Print function index formatted to width n.
- -x, --all-lines
-
When printing annotated source, annotate every line in a basic block,
not just the beginning.
- -y, --separate-files
-
Print annotated-source output to separate files instead of standard
output. The annotated source for each source file is printed to
filename-ann.
- -z, --display-unused-functions
-
Include zero-usage calls.
- -A[symspec], --annotated-source[=symspec]
-
Print annotated source code.
- -C[symspec], --exec-counts[=symspec]
-
Print statistics on the number of times each function is called. When
used with option -l, count
basic-block execution.
- -F routine
-
Print only information about routine. Do not
include time spent in other routines.
- -I dirs, --directory-path=dirs
-
Set directory path to search for source files. The
dirs argument may be given as a colon-separated
list of directories.
- -J[symspec], --no-annotated-source[=symspec]
-
Don't print annotated source code.
- -L, --print-path
-
Print the path information when printing filenames.
- -N[symspec], --no-time[=symspec]
-
Don't propogate time statistics in call graph
analysis.
- -P[symspec], --no-flat-profile[=symspec]
-
Don't print profile statistics
- -Q[symspec], --no-graph[=symspec]
-
Don't print call graph analysis.
- -T, --traditional
-
Print output in BSD style.
- -Z[symspec], --no-exec-counts[=symspec]
-
Don't print statistics on the number of times each
function is called.
grep [options] pattern [files]
|
|
Search one or more files for lines that match a
regular expression pattern. Regular expressions
are described in Chapter 9. Exit status is 0 if
any lines match, 1 if none match, and 2 for errors. See also
egrep and fgrep.
Options
- -a, --text
-
Don't suppress output lines with binary data; treat
as text.
- -b, --byte-offset
-
Print the byte offset within the input file before each line of
output.
- -c, --count
-
Print only a count of matched lines. With -v or --revert-match option, count nonmatching
lines.
- -d action, --directories=action
-
Define an action for processing directories.
Possible actions are:
- read
-
Read directories like ordinary files (default).
- skip
-
Skip directories.
- recurse
-
Recursively read all files under each directory. Same as -r.
- -e pattern, --regexp=pattern
-
Search for pattern. Same as specifying a pattern
as an argument, but useful in protecting patterns beginning with -.
- -f file, --file=file
-
Take a list of patterns from file, one per line.
- -h, --no-filename
-
Print matched lines but not filenames (inverse of -l).
- -i, --ignore-case
-
Ignore uppercase and lowercase distinctions.
- -l, --files-with-matches
-
List the names of files with matches but not individual matched
lines; scanning per file stops on the first match.
- --mmap
-
Try to use memory mapping (mmap) to
read input in order to save time.
- -n, --line-number
-
Print lines and their line numbers.
- -q, --quiet, --silent
-
Suppress normal output in favor of quiet mode; scanning stops on the
first match.
- -r, --recursive
-
Recursively read all files under each directory. Same as -d recurse.
- -s, --no-messages
-
Suppress error messages about nonexistent or unreadable files.
- -v, --invert-match
-
Print all lines that don't match
pattern.
- -w, --word-regexp
-
Match on whole words only. Words are divided by characters that are
not letters, digits, or underscores.
- -x, --line-regexp
-
Print lines only if pattern matches the entire
line.
- -A num, --after-context=num
-
Print num lines of text that occur after the
matching line.
- -B num, --before-context=num
-
Print num lines of text that occur before the
matching line.
- -C[num], --context[=num], -num
-
Print num lines of leading and trailing context.
Default context is 2 lines.
- -E, -extended-regexp
-
Act like egrep, recognizing extended
regular expressions such as (UN|POS)IX to find UNIX and POSIX.
- -F, --fixed-strings
-
Act like fgrep, recognizing only
fixed strings instead of regular expressions. Useful when searching
for characters that grep normally
recognizes as metacharacters.
- -G, --basic-regexp
-
Expect the regular expressions traditionally recognized by grep (the default).
- -H, --with-filename
-
Display, before each line found, the name of the file containing the
line. This is done by default if multiple files are submitted to a
single grep command.
- -V, --version
-
Print the version number and then exit.
- -Z, --null
-
When displaying filenames, follow each with a zero byte instead of a
colon.
Examples
List the number of users who use tcsh:
grep -c /bin/tcsh /etc/passwd
List header files that have at least one #include directive:
grep -l '^#include' /usr/include/*
List files that don't contain
pattern:
grep -c pattern files | grep :0
groff [options] [files]
troff [options] [files]
|
|
Frontend to the groff
document-formatting system, which normally runs troff along with a postprocessor appropriate
for the selected output device. Options without arguments can be
grouped after a single dash (-). A filename of - denotes standard
input.
Options
- -a
-
Generate an ASCII approximation of the typeset output.
- -b
-
Print a backtrace.
- -C
-
Enable compatibility mode.
- -dcs, -dname=s
-
Define the character c or string
name to be the string s.
- -e
-
Preprocess with eqn, the equation
formatter.
- -E
-
Don't print any error messages.
- -ffam
-
Use fam as the default font family.
- -Fdir
-
Search dir for subdirectories with DESC and font
files before the default /usr/lib/groff/font.
- -h
-
Print a help message.
- -i
-
Read standard input after all files have been
processed.
- -l
-
Send the output to a print spooler (as specified by the print command
in the device description file).
- -Larg
-
Pass arg to the spooler. Each argument should be
passed with a separate -L option.
- -mname
-
Read the macro file tmac.name.
- -Mdir
-
Search directory dir for macro files before the
default directory /usr/lib/groff/tmac.
- -nnum
-
Set the first page number to num.
- -N
-
Don't allow newlines with eqn delimiters; equivalent to eqn's -N option.
- -olist
-
Output only pages specified in list, a
comma-separated list of page ranges.
- -p
-
Preprocess with pic.
- -Parg
-
Pass arg to the postprocessor. Each argument
should be passed with a separate -P
option.
- -rcn, -name=n
-
Set the number register c or
name to n.
c is a single character and
n is any troff
numeric expression.
- -R
-
Preprocess with refer.
- -s
-
Preprocess with soelim.
- -S
-
Use safer mode (i.e., pass the -S
option to pic and use the -msafer macros with troff).
- -t
-
Preprocess with tbl.
- -Tdev
-
Prepare output for device dev; the default is
ps.
- -v
-
Make programs run by groff print out
their version number.
- -V
-
Print the pipeline on stdout instead of executing it.
- -wname
-
Enable warning name. You can specify multiple
-w options. See the troff manpage for a list of warnings.
- -Wname
-
Disable warning name. You can specify multiple
-W options. See the troff manpage for a list of warnings.
- -z
-
Suppress troff output (except error
messages).
- -Z
-
Do not postprocess troff output.
Normally groff automatically runs
the appropriate postprocessor.
Devices
- ascii
-
Typewriter-like device.
- dvi
-
TEX dvi format.
- latin1
-
Typewriter-like devices using the ISO Latin-1 character set.
- ps
-
PostScript.
- X75
-
75-dpi X11 previewer.
- X100
-
100-dpi X11 previewer.
- lj4
-
HP LaserJet4-compatible (or other PCL5-compatible) printer.
Environment variables
- GROFF_COMMAND_PREFIX
-
If set to be X, groff will run
Xtroff instead of troff.
- GROFF_FONT_PATH
-
Colon-separated list of directories in which to search for the
devname directory.
- GROFF_TMAC_PATH
-
Colon-separated list of directories in which to search for the macro
files.
- GROFF_TMPDIR
-
If set, temporary files will be created in this directory; otherwise,
they will be created in TMPDIR (if set) or /tmp
(if TMPDIR is not set).
- GROFF_TYPESETTER
-
Default device.
- PATH
-
Search path for commands that groff
executes.
groffer [viewing_options] [man_options] [groff_options]
[file-spec...]
groffer filespec
|
|
Groffer displays manpages and groff
documents. It accepts the option flags from both
man and groff. The filespec
argument can be a filename or a manpage or section specified in the
format man:page or
man:section. For more information, see groff and man.
System administration command. Create new group account
group. Options -f and -r are
added by RedHat and may not be available on all distributions.
Options
- -f
-
Exit with error if group being added already exists. If a
gid requested with -g already exists and the -o option has not been specified, assign a
different gid as if -g had not been specified.
- -ggid
-
Assign numerical group ID. (By default, the first available number
above 500 is used.) The value must be unique unless the -o option is used.
- -o
-
Accept a nonunique gid with the -g option.
- -r
-
Add a system account. Assign the first available number lower than
499.
System administration command. Remove group from
system account files. You may still need to find and change
permissions on files that belong to the removed group.
System administration command. Modify group information for
group.
Options
- -g gid
-
Change the numerical value of the group ID. Any files that have the
old gid must be changed manually. The new
gid must be unique unless the -o option is used.
- -n name
-
Change the group name to name.
- -o
-
Override. Accept a nonunique gid.
Show the groups that each user belongs to
(default user is the owner of the current group). Groups are listed
in /etc/passwd and
/etc/group.
Options
- --help
-
Print help message.
- --version
-
Print version information.
System administration command. Remove corrupt or duplicate entries in
the /etc/group and
/etc/gshadow files. Generate warnings for other
errors found. grpck will prompt for
a "yes" or
"no" before deleting entries. If
the user replies "no," the program
will exit. If run in a read-only mode, the reply to all prompts is
"no." Alternate group and gshadow
files can be checked. If other errors are found,
the user will be encouraged to run the groupmod command.
Option
- -r
-
Read-only mode.
Exit codes
- 0
-
Success.
- 1
-
Syntax error.
- 2
-
One or more bad group entries found.
- 3
-
Could not open group files.
- 4
-
Could not lock group files.
- 5
-
Could not write group files.
System administration command. Like pwconv, the grpconv command creates a shadowed group file
to keep your encrypted group passwords safe from password-cracking
programs. grpconv creates the
/etc/gshadow file based on your existing
/etc/groups file and replaces your encrypted
password entries with x. If you add
new entries to the /etc/groups file, you can run
grpconv again to transfer the new
information to /etc/gshadow. It will ignore
entries that already have a password of x and convert those that do not. grpunconv restores the encrypted passwords to
your /etc/groups file and removes the
/etc/gshadow file.
GhostScript, an interpreter for Adobe Systems'
PostScript and PDF (Portable Document Format) languages. Used for
document processing. With - in place of files,
standard input is used.
Options
- -- filename arg1 ...
-
Take the next argument as a filename, but use all remaining arguments
to define ARGUMENTS in
userdict (not systemdict)
as an array of those strings before running the file.
- -gnumber1xnumber2
-
Specify width and height of device; intended for systems like the X
Window System.
- -q
-
Quiet startup.
- -rnumber, -rnumber1xnumber2
-
Specify X and Y resolutions (for the benefit of devices, such as
printers, that support multiple X and Y resolutions). If only one
number is given, it is used for both X and Y resolutions.
- -Dname=token, -dname=token
-
Define a name in systemdict with the given
definition. The token must be exactly one token (as defined by the
token operator) and must not contain any whitespace.
- -Dname, -dname
-
Define a name in systemdict with a null value.
- -Idirectories
-
Add the designated list of directories at the head of the search path
for library files.
- -Sname=string, -sname=string
-
Define a name in systemdict with a given
string as value.
Special names
- -dDISKFONTS
-
Causes individual character outlines to be loaded from the disk the
first time they are encountered.
- -dNOBIND
-
Disables the bind operator. Useful
only for debugging.
- -dNOCACHE
-
Disables character caching. Useful only for debugging.
- -dNODISPLAY
-
Suppresses the normal initialization of the output device. May be
useful when debugging.
- -dNOPAUSE
-
Disables the prompt and pause at the end of each page.
- -dNOPLATFONTS
-
Disables the use of fonts supplied by the underlying platform (e.g.,
the X Window System).
- -dSAFER
-
Disables the deletefile and
renamefile operators and the ability
to open files in any mode other than read-only.
- -dWRITESYSTEMDICT
-
Leaves systemdict writable.
- -sDEVICE=device
-
Selects an alternate initial output device.
- -sOUTPUTFILE=filename
-
Selects an alternate output file (or pipe) for the initial output
device.
Uncompress files compressed by gzip. See gzip for a list of options.
Compress executables. When run, these files automatically uncompress,
thus trading time for space. gzexe
creates backup files (filename~), which should be removed after testing the
original.
Option
- -d
-
Decompress files.
gzip [options] [files]
gunzip [options] [files]
zcat [options] [files]
|
|
Compress specified files (or read from standard input) with
Lempel-Ziv coding (LZ77). Rename compressed file to
filename.gz; keep ownership modes and
access/modification times. Ignore symbolic links. Uncompress with
gunzip, which takes all of gzip's options except those
specified. zcat is identical to
gunzip -c and takes the options
-fhLV, described here. Files
compressed with the compress command
can be decompressed using these commands.
Options
- -n, --fast, --best
-
Regulate the speed of compression using the specified digit
n, where -1 or
--fast indicates the fastest
compression method (less compression) and -9 or --best indicates the slowest compression
method (most compression). The default compression level is -6.
- -a, --ascii
-
ASCII text mode: convert end-of-lines using local conventions. This
option is supported only on some non-Unix systems.
- -c, --stdout, --to-stdout
-
Print output to standard output, and do not change input files.
- -d, --decompress, --uncompress
-
Same as gunzip.
- -f, --force
-
Force compression. gzip would
normally prompt for permission to continue when the file has multiple
links, its .gz version already exists, or it is
reading compressed data to or from a terminal.
- -h, --help
-
Display a help screen and then exit.
- -l, --list
-
Expects to be given compressed files as arguments. Files may be
compressed by any of the following methods: gzip, deflate, compress, lzh, or pack.
For each file, list uncompressed and compressed sizes (the latter
being always -1 for files compressed
by programs other than gzip),
compression ratio, and uncompressed name. With -v, also print compression method, the 32-bit
CRC of the uncompressed data, and the timestamp. With -N, look inside the file for the uncompressed
name and timestamp.
- -L, --license
-
Display the gzip license and quit.
- -n, --no-name
-
When compressing, do not save the original filename and timestamp by
default. When decompressing, do not restore the original filename if
present, and do not restore the original timestamp if present. This
option is the default when decompressing.
- -N, --name
-
Default. Save original name and timestamp. When decompressing,
restore original name and timestamp.
- -q, --quiet
-
Print no warnings.
- -r, --recursive
-
When given a directory as an argument, recursively compress or
decompress files within it.
- -S suffix, --suffix suffix
-
Append .suffix. Default is gz. A null suffix while decompressing causes
gunzip to attempt to decompress all
specified files, regardless of suffix.
- -t, --test
-
Test compressed file integrity.
- -v, --verbose
-
Print name and percent size reduction for each file.
- -V, --version
-
Display the version number and compilation options.
System administration command. Insert a note in the file
/var/log/wtmp; if the system is in runlevel 0 or
6, stop all processes; otherwise, call shutdown
-h.
Options
- -d
-
Suppress writing to /var/log/wtmp.
- -f
-
Call halt even when shutdown -nf would normally be called (i.e.,
force a call to halt, even when not
in runlevel 0 or 6).
- -h
-
Place hard drives in standby mode before halt or power off.
- -i
-
Shut down network interfaces before halt.
- -n
-
No sync before reboot or halt.
- -p
-
Perform power off when halting system.
- -n
-
Suppress normal call to sync.
- -w
-
Suppress normal execution; simply write to
/var/log/wtmp.
hdparm [options] [device]
|
|
Read or set the hard drive parameters. This command can be used to
tune hard drive performance; it is mostly used with IDE drives, but
can also be used with SCSI drives.
Options
The hdparm command accepts many
option flags, including some that can result in filesystem corruption
if misused. Flags can be used to set or get a parameter. To get a
parameter, just pass the flag without a value. To set a parameter,
follow the flag with a space and the appropriate value.
- -a [n]
-
Get or set the number of sectors to read ahead in the disk. The
default is 8 sectors (4KB); a larger value is more efficient for
large, sequential reads, and a smaller value is better for small,
random reads. Many IDE drives include this functionality in the drive
itself, so this feature is not always necessary.
- -A
-
Enable or disable the IDE read-ahead feature. Usually on by default.
- -b [n]
-
Get or set the bus state for the drive.
- -B
-
Get the Advanced Power Management (APM) data if the drive supports it.
- -c [n]
-
Get or set 32-bit I/O values for IDE drives. Acceptable values are 0
(32-bit support off), 1 (32-bit support on), and 3 (on, but only with
a sync sequence).
- -C
-
Check the power status of the drive. This will tell you unknown,
active/idle, standby, or sleeping. Use -S, -y,
-Y, and -Z to set the power status.
- -d [n]
-
Get or set the using_dma flag for
the drive, which may be 0 or 1.
- -D
-
Enable or disable defect handling features that are controlled by the
hard drive itself.
- -E n
-
Set CD-ROM read speed to n times normal audio
playback speed. Not normally necessary.
- -f
-
Flush and sync the buffer cache on exit.
- -g
-
Query and display drive size and geometry information, such as number
of cylinders, heads, and sectors.
- -h
-
Display a short help message.
- -i
-
Display the drive identification information obtained at boot time.
If the drive has changed since boot, this information may not be
current.
- -I
-
Display more detailed identification information for the drive.
- -k [n]
-
Get or set the keep_settings_over_reset variable. Valid
settings are 0 and 1, and a value of 1 will keep the -dmu options when rebooting (soft reset only).
- -K [n]
-
Get or set the keep_features_over_reset variable. Valid
settings are 0 and 1, and a value of 1 will keep settings for the
flags -APSWXZ over a soft reset.
- -L n
-
Set the door lock flag for the drive. Used for Syquest, ZIP, and JAZ
drives.
- -m [n]
-
Get or set the number of sectors used for multiple sector count
reading. A value of 0 disables the feature, and values of 2, 4, 8,
16, and 32 are common. Drives that try to support this feature and
fail may suffer corruption and data loss.
- -n [n]
-
Set to 0 or 1 to disable or enable the "ignore write
errors" flag. This can cause massive data loss if
used incorrectly, and is for development purposes only.
- -p n
-
Tune the IDE interface to use PIO mode n,
usually an integer between 0 and 5. Incorrect values can result in
massive data loss. Support for the PIO mode setting feature varies
between IDE chips, so tuning it is not for the faint of heart.
- -P n
-
Set the internal prefetch sector count. Not all drives support the
feature.
- -q
-
Suppress output for the flag after this one, unless it is the
-i, -v, -t, or
-T flag.
- -r [n]
-
Get or set the flag for read-only on the device. A value of 1 marks
the device as read-only.
- -R
-
This option should be used by experts only. It registers an IDE
interface. See the -U option for
further details.
- -S n
-
Set the amount of time a disk is inactive before it spins down and
goes into standby mode. Settings from 1 to 240 represent chunks of
five seconds (for timeout values between 5 seconds and 20 minutes);
values from 241 to 251 are increments of 30 minutes (for 30 minutes
to 5.5 hours). A value of 252 sets the timeout to 21 minutes, 253 to
the vendor default, and 255 to 20 minutes and 15 seconds.
- -T
-
Time cache reads to determine performance.
- -t
-
Time device reads to determine performance.
- -u [n]
-
Get or set the interrupt-unmask value for the drive. A value of 1
lets the drive unmask other interrupts and can improve performance;
used with older kernels and hardware it can cause data loss.
- -U
-
Unregister an IDE interface. Use this feature and the -R feature only with hot-swappable hardware,
such as very high-end servers and some laptops. It can damage or hang
other systems and should be used with caution.
- -v
-
Display all appropriate settings for device except -i.
- -W
-
Enable or disable the write-cache feature for the drive. The default
varies between drive manufacturers.
- -X n
-
Set the IDE transfer mode. Possible values include 34 (multiword DMA
mode2 transfers) and 66 (UltraDMA mode2 transfers), or any PIO mode
number plus 8. This option is suggested for experts only, and is
useful only with newer EIDE/IDE/ATA2 drives. Often used in
combination with -d.
- -y
-
Put the IDE drive into standby (spin-down) mode, saving power.
- -Y
-
Put the IDE drive into sleep mode.
- -z
-
Force kernel to reread the partition table.
- -Z
-
Disable automatic powersaving on some drives, which can prevent them
from idling or spinning down at inconvenient moments. This will
increase the electrical power consumption of your system.
Print the first few lines (default is 10) of one or more
files. If files is missing
or -, read from standard input. With more than one file, print a
header for each file.
Options
- -c num[b|k|m], --bytes num [b|k|m]
-
Print first num bytes or, if
num is followed by b, k, or
m, first num
512-byte blocks, 1-kilobyte blocks, or 1-megabyte blocks.
- --help
-
Display help and then exit.
- -n num, --lines num, -num
-
Print first num lines. Default is 10.
- -q, --quiet, --silent
-
Quiet mode; never print headers giving filenames.
- -v, --verbose
-
Print filename headers, even for only one file.
- --version
-
Output version information and then exit.
Examples
Display the first 20 lines of phone_list:
head -20 phone_list
Display the first 10 phone numbers having a 202 area code:
grep '(202)' phone_list | head
Display specified file or input in hexadecimal, octal, decimal, or
ASCII format. Option flags are used to specify the display format.
Options
- -b
-
Use a one-byte octal display, meaning the input offset is in
hexadecimal and followed by sixteen three-column octal data bytes,
filled in with zeroes and separated by spaces.
- -c
-
Use a one-byte character display, meaning the input offset is in
hexadecimal and followed by sixteen three-column entries, filled in
with zeroes and separated with spaces.
- -C
-
Canonical mode. Display hexadecimal offset, two sets of eight columns
of hexadecimal bytes, then a | followed by the ASCII representation
of those same bytes.
- -d
-
Use a two-byte decimal display. The input offset is again in
hexadecimal, but the display has only eight entries per line, of five
columns each, containing two bytes of unsigned decimal format.
- -e format_string
-
Choose a format string to be used to transform the output data.
Format strings consist of:
- Iteration count
-
The iteration count is optional. It determines the number of times to
use the transformation string. The number should be followed by a
slash character (/) to distinguish it from the byte count.
- Byte count
-
The number of bytes to be interpreted by the conversion string. It
should be preceded by a slash character to distinguish it from the
iteration count.
- Format characters
-
The actual format characters should be surrounded by quotation marks
and are interpreted as fprintf (see
printf) formatting strings, although
the *, h, l,
n, p, and q
options will not work as expected. Format string usage is discussed
at greater length in the hexdump
manpage.
- -f filename
-
Choose a file that contains several format strings. The strings
should be separated by newlines; the # character marks a line as a
comment.
- -n length
-
Limit the number of bytes of input to be interpreted.
- -o
-
Two-byte octal display, meaning a hexadecimal offset followed by
eight five-column data entries of two bytes each, in octal format.
- -s offset
-
Skip to specified offset. The offset number is
assumed to be decimal unless it starts with 0x or 0X
(hexadecimal), or O (octal). Numbers
may also be designated in megabytes, kilobytes, or half-kilobytes
with the addition of m, k, or b at
the end of the number.
- -v
-
Display all input data, even if it is the same as the previous line.
Normally, a duplicate line is replaced by an asterisk (*).
- -x
-
Display data in a two-byte hexadecimal format. The offset is, as
usual, in hexadecimal, and is followed by eight space-separated
entries, each of which contains four-column, two-byte chunks of data
in hexadecimal format.
host [options] name [server]
|
|
System administration command. Print information about hosts or zones
in DNS. Hosts may be IP addresses or hostnames; host converts IP addresses to hostnames by
default and appends the local domain to hosts without a trailing dot.
Default servers are determined in
/etc/resolv.conf. For more information about
hosts and zones, read Chapters 1 and 2 of DNS and
BIND (O'Reilly).
Options
- -a
-
Same as -t ANY.
- -c class
-
Search for specified resource record class (IN, CH,
CHAOS, HS, HESIOD,
or ANY). Default is IN.
- -d
-
Verbose output. Same as -v.
- -l
-
Perform reverse lookups for IPv6 addresses using IP6.INT domain and
"nibble" labels instead of IP6.ARPA
and binary labels.
- -n
-
Perform zone transfer. Same as -t
AXFR.
- -r
-
Do not ask contacted server to query other servers, but require only
the information that it has cached.
- -t type
-
Look for type entries in the resource record.
type may be any recognized query type, such as
A, AXFR, CNAME, NS, SOA, SIG, or ANY. If name is
a hostname, host will look for A
records by default. If name is an IPv4 or IPv6
address, it will look for PTR records.
- -v
-
Verbose. Include all fields from resource record, even time-to-live
and class, as well as "additional
information" and "authoritative
nameservers" (provided by the remote nameserver).
- -w
-
Never give up on queried server.
- -C
-
Display SOA records from all authoritative name servers for the
specified zone.
- -N n
-
Consider names with fewer than n dots in them to
be relative. Search for them in the domains listed in the search and domain directives of
/etc/resolv.conf. The default is usually 1.
- -R n
-
Retry query a maximum of n times. The defalt is
1.
- -T
-
Use TCP instead of UDP to query name server. This is implied in
queries that require TCP, such as AXFR requests.
- -W n
-
Wait a maximum of n seconds for reply.
Print the ID number in hexadecimal of the current host.
hostname [option] [nameofhost]
|
|
Set or print name of current host system. A privileged user can set
the hostname with the nameofhost argument.
Options
- -a, --alias
-
Display the alias name of the host (if used).
- -d, --domain
-
Print DNS domain name.
- -f, --fqdn, --long
-
Print fully qualified domain name.
- -F file, --file file
-
Consult file for hostname.
- -h, --help
-
Print a help message and then exit.
- -i, --ip-address
-
Display the IP address(es) of the host.
- -n, --node
-
Display or set the DECnet node name.
- -s, --short
-
Trim domain information from the printed name.
- -v, --verbose
-
Verbose mode.
- -V, --version
-
Print version information and then exit.
- -y, --yp, --nis
-
Display the NIS domain name. A privileged user can set a new NIS
domain name with nameofhost.
htdigest [-c] filename realm username
|
|
Create or update user authentication files used by the Apache web
server. The -c option is used if you
wish to create the file, and will overwrite any existing files rather
than update them. The three arguments are the file you wish to use as
the authentication file, the realm name to which the user belongs,
and the username you will update in the password file. You will be
prompted for a password when you run the command.
The Apache manual contains information about authentication
mechanisms, including more detail about using htdigest and the ways in which you can control
access to the resources served by Apache.
System administration command. Read or set the hardware clock. This
command maintains change information in
/etc/adjtime, which can be used to adjust the
clock based on how much it drifts over time. hwclock replaces the clock command. The single-letter options are
included for compatibility with the older command.
Options
You may specify only one of the following options:
- -a, --adjust
-
Adjust the hardware clock based on information in
/etc/adjtime and set the system clock to the new
time.
- --getepoch
-
Print the kernel's hardware clock epoch value, then
exit.
- -r, --show
-
Print the current time stored in the hardware clock.
- -s, --hctosys
-
Set the system time in accordance with the hardware clock.
- --setepoch, --epoch=year
-
Set the hardware clock's epoch to
year.
- --set --date=date
-
Set the hardware clock to the specified date, a
string appropriate for use with the date command.
- -v, --version
-
Print version and exit.
- -w, --systohc
-
Set the hardware clock in accordance with the system time.
The following may be used with the above options.
- --debug
-
Print information about what hwclock
is doing.
- --localtime
-
The hardware clock is stored in local time.
- --noadjfile
-
Disable /etc/adjtime facilities.
- --test
-
Do not actually change anything. This is good for checking syntax.
- -u, --utc
-
The hardware clock is stored in Universal Coordinated Time.
Convert the contents of one or more files from
one character encoding to another and write the results to standard
output.
Options
- -c
-
Omit invalid output characters.
- -f code1, --from-code=code1
-
Convert input characters from the code1 encoding.
- -?, --help
-
Print help message and exit.
- -l, --list
-
Print a list of valid encodings to standard output.
- -o file, --output=file
-
Write the converted output to file instead of
standard output.
- -s, --silent
-
Operate silently; don't print warning messages.
- -t code2, --to-code=code2
-
Convert input characters to the code2 encoding.
- --usage
-
Print a brief usage message showing only the command syntax and then
exit.
- -V, --version
-
Print version information and exit.
- --verbose
-
Operate verbosely; print progress messages.
Display information about yourself or another user: user ID, group
ID, effective user ID and group ID if relevant, and additional group
IDs.
Options
- -g, --group
-
Print group ID only.
- -G, --groups
-
Print supplementary groups only.
- -n, --name
-
With -u, -g, or -G,
print user or group name, not number.
- -r, --real
-
With -u, -g, or -G,
print real, not effective, user ID or group ID.
- -u, --user
-
Print user ID only.
- --help
-
Print help message and then exit.
- --version
-
Print version information.
in.identd [options] [kernelfile [kmemfile]]
|
|
TCP/IP command. Provide the name of the user whose process is running
a specified TCP/IP connection. You may specify the kernel and its
memory space.
Options
- -b
-
Run standalone; not for use with inetd.
- -d
-
Allow debugging requests.
- -ggid
-
Attempt to run in the group gid. Useful only
with -b.
- -h
-
Print help message, then exit.
- -i
-
Run as a daemon, one process per request.
- -l
-
Run using init.
- -m
-
Allow multiple requests per session.
- -n
-
Return user IDs instead of usernames.
- -o
-
When queried for the type of operating system, always return OTHER.
- -pport
-
Listen at port instead of the default, port 113.
- -tseconds
-
Exit if no new requests have been received before
seconds seconds have passed. Note that, with
-i or -w, the next new request will result in
identd being restarted. Default is
infinity (never exit).
- -uuid
-
Attempt to run as uid. Useful only with
-b.
- -w
-
Run as a daemon, one process for all requests.
- -Cfile
-
Read configuration information from file instead
of /etc/identd.conf.
- -E
-
Enable DES encryption using the last key from key file
/etc/identd.key.
- -Kn
-
Use a maximum of n threads to perform kernel
lookups. Default is 8.
- -Lfacility
-
Use the specified syslog
facility instead of
daemon.key.
- -N
-
Do not provide a username or user ID if the file
.noident exists in the user's
home directory.
- -Pfile
-
Store the process number for the identd daemon in file. By
default it's /etc/identd.pid.
- -V
-
Print version and exit.
ifconfig [interface]
ifconfig [interface address_family parameters addresses]
|
|
TCP/IP command. Assign an address to a network interface and/or
configure network interface parameters. ifconfig is typically used at boot time to
define the network address of each interface on a machine. It may be
used at a later time to redefine an interface's
address or other parameters. Without arguments, ifconfig displays the current configuration
for a network interface. Used with a single
interface argument, ifconfig displays that particular
interface's current configuration.
Arguments
- interface
-
String of the form name unit, for example,
en0.
- address_family
-
Since an interface may receive transmissions in differing protocols,
each of which may require separate naming schemes, you can specify
the address_family to change the interpretation
of the remaining parameters. You may specify inet (for TCP/IP, the default), ax25 (AX.25 Packet Radio), ddp (Appletalk Phase 2), or ipx (Novell).
- parameters
-
The following parameters may be set with
ifconfig:
- add address/prefixlength
-
Add an IPv6 address and prefix length.
- allmulti/-allmulti
-
Enable/disable sending of incoming frames to the
kernel's network layer.
- arp/-arp
-
Enable/disable use of the Address Resolution Protocol in mapping
between network-level addresses and link-level addresses.
- broadcast [address]
-
(inet only) Specify address to use
to represent broadcasts to the network. Default is the address with a
host part of all 1s (i.e., x.y.z.255
for a class C network).
- debug/-debug
-
Enable/disable driver-dependent debugging code.
- del address/prefixlength
-
Delete an IPv6 address and prefix length.
- down
-
Mark an interface "down"
(unresponsive).
- hw class address
-
Set the interface's hardware class and address.
class may be ether (Ethernet), ax25 (AX.25 Packet Radio), or ARCnet.
- io_addr addr
-
I/O memory start address for device.
- irq addr
-
Set the device's interrupt line.
- metric n
-
Set routing metric of the interface to n.
Default is 0.
- mem_start addr
-
Shared memory start address for device.
- media type
-
Set media type. Common values are 10base2, 10baseT, and AUI. If auto
is specified, ifconfig will attempt
to autosense the media type.
- mtu n
-
Set the interface's Maximum Transfer Unit (MTU).
- multicast
-
Set the multicast flag.
- netmask mask
-
(inet only) Specify how much of the
address to reserve for subdividing networks into subnetworks.
mask can be specified as a single hexadecimal
number with a leading 0x, with a dot
notation Internet address, or with a pseudo-network name listed in
the network table /etc/networks.
- pointopoint/-pointopoint [address]
-
Enable/disable point-to-point interfacing, so that the connection
between the two machines is dedicated.
- promisc/-promisc
-
Enable/disable promiscuous mode. Promiscuous mode allows the device
to receive all packets on the network.
- txqueuelen n
-
Specify the transmit queue length.
- tunnel addr
-
Create an IPv6-in-IPv4 (SIT) device, tunneling to IPv4 address
addr.
- up
-
Mark an interface "up" (ready to
send and receive).
- addresses
-
Each address is either a hostname present in the hostname database
(/etc/hosts), or an Internet address expressed
in the Internet standard dot notation.
C preprocessor (cpp) interface to
the make utility. imake ("include
make") solves the portability problem of make by allowing machine dependencies to be
kept in a central set of configuration files, separate from the
descriptions of the various items to be built. The targets are
contained in the Imakefile, a
machine-independent description of the targets to be built, written
as cpp macros. imake uses cpp to process the configuration files and the
Imakefile, and to generate machine-specific
Makefiles, which can then be used by make.
One of the configuration files is a template file, a master file for
imake. This template file (default
is Imake.tmpl) #includes the other configuration files that
contain machine dependencies such as variable assignments, site
definitions, and cpp macros, and
directs the order in which the files are processed. Each file affects
the interpretation of later files and sections of
Imake.tmpl. Comments may be included in
imake configuration files, but the
initial # needs to be preceded with
an empty C comment:
/**/# For more information, see cpp and
make. Also check out the Nutshell
Handbook Software Portability with imake
(O'Reilly).
Options
- -e
-
Execute the generated Makefile. Default is to
leave this to the user.
- -f filename
-
Name of per-directory input file. Default is
Imakefile.
- -s filename
-
Name of make description file to be
generated. If filename is a -, the output is written to stdout. The
default is to generate, but not execute, a
Makefile.
- -v
-
Print the cpp command line used to
generate the Makefile.
- -C filename
-
Use the specified name for the temporary input file for cpp instead of the default
Imakefile.c.
- -Ddefine
-
Set directory-specific variables. This option is passed directly to
cpp.
- -Idirectory
-
Directory in which imake template
and configuration files may be found. This option is passed directly
to cpp.
- -Ttemplate
-
Name of master template file used by cpp. This file is usually located in the
directory specified with the -I
option. The default file is Imake.tmpl.
- -Udefine
-
Unset directory-specific variables. This option is passed directly to
cpp.
Tools
Following is a list of tools used with imake:
- makedepend [options] files
-
Create header file dependencies in Makefiles.
make depend reads the named input source
files in sequence and parses them to process
#include, #define, #undef, #ifdef, #ifndef, #endif, #if,
and #else directives so that it can
tell which #include directives would
be used in a compilation. makedepend
determines the dependencies and writes them to the
Makefile. make
then knows which object files must be recompiled when a dependency
has changed. makedepend has the
following options:
- -- options --
-
Ignore any unrecognized options following a double hyphen. A second
double hyphen terminates this action. Recognized options between the
hyphens are processed normally.
- -a
-
Append dependencies to any existing ones instead of replacing
existing ones.
- -ffilename
-
Write dependencies to filename instead of to
Makefile.
- -m
-
Print a warning when encountering a multiple inclusion.
- -o suffix
-
Specify an object file suffix to use instead of the default
.o.
- -p prefix
-
Specify a prefix to prepend to object names. The prefix may be a
directory.
- -sstring
-
Use string as delimiter in file, instead of
# DO NOT DELETE THIS LINE -- make depend
depends on it.
- -v
-
Verbose. List all files included by main source file.
- -w n
-
Format output no wider than n characters.
Default is 78.
- -Dname
-
Define name with the given value (first form) or
with value 1 (second form).
- -Idir
-
Add directory dir to the list of directories
searched.
- -Ydir
-
Search only dir for include files. Ignore
standard include directories.
- mkdirhier dir...
-
Create directory dir and all missing parent
directories during file installation operations.
- xmkmf [option] [topdir] [curdir]
-
Bootstrap a Makefile from an
Imakefile. topdir specifies
the location of the project root directory.
curdir (usually omitted) is specified as a
relative pathname from the top of the build tree to the current
directory. The -a option is
equivalent to the following command sequence:
% xmkmf
% make Makefiles
% make includes
% make depend
Configuration files
Following is a list of the imake
configuration files:
- Imake.tmpl
-
Master template for imake.
Imake.tmpl includes all the other configuration
files, plus the Imakefile in the current
directory.
- Imake.params
-
Contains definitions that apply across sites and vendors.
- Imake.rules
-
Contains cpp macro definitions that
are configured for the current platform. The macro definitions are
fed into imake, which runs cpp to process the macros. Newlines (line
continuations) are indicated by the string @@\ (double at sign, backslash).
- site.def
-
Contains site-specific (as opposed to vendor-specific) information,
such as installation directories, what set of programs to build, and
any special versions of programs to use during the build. The
site.def file changes from machine to machine.
- Project.tmpl
-
File containing X-specific variables.
- Library.tmpl
-
File containing library rules.
- Server.tmpl
-
File containing server-specific rules.
- .cf
-
The .cf files are the vendor-specific
VendorFiles that live in
Imake.vb. A .cf file
contains platform-specific definitions, such as version numbers of
the operating system and the compiler and workarounds for missing
commands. The definitions in .cf files override
the defaults, defined in Imake.params.
The Imakefile
The Imakefile is a per-directory file that
indicates targets to be built and installed and rules to be applied.
imake reads the
Imakefile and expands the rules into
Makefile target entries. An
Imakefile may also include definitions of
make variables and list the
dependencies of the targets. The dependencies are expressed as
cpp macros, defined in
Imake.rules. Whenever you change an
Imakefile, you need to rebuild the
Makefile and regenerate header file
dependencies. For more information on imake, see Software Portability with
imake (O'Reilly).
TCP/IP command. The Interactive
Mail Access Protocol (IMAP) server daemon. imapd is invoked by inetd and listens on port 143 for requests
from IMAP clients. IMAP allows mail programs to access remote
mailboxes as if they were local. IMAP is a richer protocol than POP
because it allows a client to retrieve message-level information from
a server mailbox instead of the entire mailbox. IMAP can be used for
online and offline reading. The popular Pine mail client contains
support for IMAP.
inetd [options] [configuration_file]
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|
TCP/IP command. The internet services daemon. (On some
systems this command is replaced by xinetd.) Initialized at bootup, inetd creates sockets on behalf of other
services and listens to them simultaneously. When it receives an
incoming connection request, it spawns the appropriate server and
passes it the connection.
The following servers are commonly started by inetd: bootpd, bootpgw, fingerd, ftpd, imapd,
rexecd, rlogind, rshd, talkd,
telnetd, and tftpd. In addition to launching other
services, inetd runs a few basic
services of its own, including daytime, which returns the
system's time of day, and chargen, which generates a string of
characters.
Configuration file
inetd reads
information on the services it should support from the specified
configuration_file, or from the default
configuration file /etc/inetd.conf. inetd rereads its configuration file when it
receives a hangup signal, SIGHUP. Services may be added, deleted, or
modified when the configuration file is reread. Lines beginning with
# are treated as comments. Each
entry in the configuration file is a single line composed of the
following fields:
- service
-
The service name as found in /etc/services.
- type
-
Socket type, either stream for
TCP-based services or dgram for
UDP-based services.
- protocol
-
The transport protocol used by the service. This must be a protocol
found in /etc/protocols. It's
usually either tcp or udp.
- wait
-
For dgram sockets, this field
specifies whether inetd should wait
until the service is done to listen on the socket again, or should
resume listening right away. The value can be either wait or nowait. Single-threaded servers like most RPC
servers should use wait.
Multithreaded servers should use nowait.
- user
-
The user ID the process should run under. May be given a name or
number. To specify a group name as well, append a dot (.) to the user
ID, followed by the group ID.
- server
-
The full path to the server program to be executed. For inetd's own services, the
value of this field is internal.
Many entries specify the TCP logging tool tcpd in this field to wrap the server whose
command is given in the next field.
- cmdline
-
The command-line arguments to be passed to the server, beginning with
the name of the server program itself (argv[0]). inetd's internal services
have no command lines.
Options
- -d
-
Turn on socket-level debugging and print debugging information to
stdout.
- -q length
-
Specify the maximum number of pending connections to allow in a
socket queue. The default is 128. The minimum value is 8.
Files
- /etc/inetd.conf
-
Default configuration file.
- /var/run/inetd.pid
-
inetd's process ID.
GNU hypertext reader. Display online documentation previously built
from Texinfo input. Info files are arranged in a hierarchy and can
contain menus for subtopics. When entered without options, the
command displays the top-level info file (usually
/usr/local/info/dir). When
topics are specified, find a subtopic by
choosing the first topic from the menu in the
top-level info file, the next topic from the new
menu specified by the first topic, and so on.
The initial display can also be controlled by the -f and -n
options. If a specified topic has no info file
but does have a manpage, info
displays the manpage; if there is neither, the top-level info file is
displayed.
Options
- -d directories, --directory directories
-
Search directories, a colon-separated list, for
info files. If this option is not specified, use the INFOPATH environment variable or the default
directory (usually /usr/local/info).
- --dribble file
-
Store each keystroke in file, which can be used
in a future session with the --restore option to return to this place
in info.
- -f file, --file file
-
Display specified info file.
- -n node, --node node
-
Display specified node in the info file.
- -o file, --output file
-
Copy output to file instead of displaying it at
the screen.
- --help
-
Display brief help.
- --restore file
-
When starting, execute keystrokes in file.
- --subnodes
-
Display subtopics.
- --version
-
Display version.
- --vi-keys
-
Use vi-like key bindings.
init [bootflags] [runlevel]
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|
System administration command. Initialize system.
Boot flags
- -a
-
Set the AUTOBOOT environment
variable to yes. The boot loader will do this
automatically when booting with the default command line.
- -b
-
Boot directly into a single user shell for emergency recovery.
- -z characters
-
The specified characters are ignored, but will
make the command line take up a bit more room on the stack.
init uses the extra space to show the curent
runlevel when running the ps
command.
Files
init is the first process run by any
Unix machine at boot time. It verifies the integrity of all
filesystems and then creates other processes, using fork and exec, as specified by
/etc/inittab. Which processes may be run are
controlled by runlevel. All process terminations
are recorded in /var/run/utmp and
/var/log/wtmp. When the runlevel changes,
init sends SIGTERM and then, after
20 seconds, SIGKILL to all processes that cannot be run in the new
runlevel.
Runlevels
The current
runlevel may be changed by telinit,
which is often just a link to init.
The default runlevels vary from distribution to distribution, but
these are standard:
- 0
-
Halt the system.
- 1, s, S
-
Single-user mode.
- 6
-
Reboot the system.
- q, Q
-
Reread /etc/inittab.
Check the /etc/inittab file for runlevels on
your system.
insmod [options] file [symbol=value ...]
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|
System administration command. Load
the module file into the kernel, changing any
symbols that are defined on the command line. If the module file is
named file.o or file.mod,
the module will be named file.
Options
- -e file, --persist=file
-
Read persistent data from file. If module has no
persistent data, this option is ignored. If the
file parameter is the null string
"", use default file location.
- -f, --force
-
Force loading of module, even if problems are encountered.
- -h, --help
-
Print help message, then exit.
- -k, --autoclean
-
Mark module to be removed when inactive.
- -m, --map
-
Print a load map to standard output.
- -n, --noload
-
Do everything needed to load file, but do not load it. Used to debug
command line.
- -o name, --name=name
-
Name module name instead of using the object
file's name.
- -p, --probe
-
Check to see that the module can be successfully loaded.
- -q, --quiet
-
Don't print warnings or error messages.
- -r, --root
-
Load modules not owned by the root account. By default these are
rejected. This is a security risk.
- -s, --syslog
-
Send messages to syslog instead of standard output.
- -v, --verbose
-
Print additional information about progress of insmod.
- -x, --noexport
-
If module does not explicitly export its own symbol table, do not
export modules' external symbols.
- -y, --noksymoops
-
Do not add symbols used for debugging Oops to ksyms. These are required if the module has
persistent data.
- -L, --lock
-
Set a file lock on the module.
- -N, --numeric-only
-
When checking the module version against the kernel version, only
check the numeric part. This is the default for kernel version 2.5 or
later.
- -O file, --blob=file
-
Save binary blob of what is loaded into the kernel to
file.
- -P prefix, --prefix=prefix
-
Specify symbol versions to prefix to module names.
- -S, --Kallsyms
-
Always load modules with kallsyms
data, even when the kernel does not support it.
- -X, --export
-
If module does not explicitly export its own symbol table, export all
modules' external symbols. This is the default
behavior.
- -V, --version
-
Print version, then exit.
- -Y, --ksymoops
-
Add symbols used for debugging Oops to ksyms. These are required if the module has
persistent data.
install [options] [source] destination
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|
System administration command. Used primarily in Makefiles to update
files. install copies files into
user-specified directories. Similar to cp, but attempts to set permission modes,
owner, and group. The source may be a file or
directory, or a list of files and directories. The
destination should be a single file or
directory.
Options
- -b, --backup[=control]
-
Back up any existing files. When using the long version of the
command, the optional control parameter controls
the kind of backup. When no control is specified, install will attempt to read the control value
from the VERSION_CONTROL environment
variable. Accepted values are:
- none, off
-
Never make backups.
- numbered, t
-
Make numbered backups.
- existing, nil
-
Match existing backups, numbered or simple.
- simple, never
-
Always make simple backups.
- -d, --directory
-
Create any missing directories.
- -g group, --group group
-
Set group ID of new file to group (privileged
users only).
- --help
-
Print help message, then exit.
- -m mode, --mode mode
-
Set permissions of new file to mode (octal or
symbolic). By default, the mode is 0755.
- -o [owner], --owner[=owner]
-
Set ownership to owner or, if unspecified, to
root (privileged users only).
- -p, --preserve-timestamps
-
Preserve access and modification times on source files and
directories.
- -s, --strip
-
Strip symbol tables.
- -v, --verbose
-
Print name of each directory as it is created.
- --version
-
Print version, then exit.
- -C
-
Do not overwrite file when the target exists and is identical to the
new file. Preserve original timestamp.
- -D
-
Create leading components of destination except the last, then copy
source to destination.
- -S suffix, --suffix=suffix
-
Use suffix instead of the default backup suffix,
usually ~.
ipchains command [options]
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|
System administration command. Edit IP
firewall rules in the 2.2 Linux
kernel. A 2.2 Linux kernel compiled with firewall support will
examine the headers of all network packets and compare them to
matching rules to see what it should do with the packet. A firewall
rule consists of some matching criteria and a target, which is a
result to be applied if the packet matches the criteria. The rules
are organized into chains. You can use these rules to build a
firewall or just reject certain kinds of network connections.
Firewall rules are organized into chains,
ordered checklists that the kernel works through looking for matches.
There are three built-in chains: input, output, and forward. Packets entering the system are
tested against the input chain;
those exiting the system are checked against the output chain. If an incoming packet is
destined for some other system, it is checked against the forward chain. Each of these chains has a
default target (a policy) in case no match is
found. User-defined chains can be created and used as targets for
packets, but they have no default policies. If no match can be found
in a user-defined chain, the packet is returned to the chain from
which it was called and tested against the next rule in that chain.
ipchains changes only the rules in
the running kernel. When the system is powered off, all those changes
are lost. You can use the ipchains-save command to make a script you can
later run with ipchains-restore to
restore your firewall settings. Such a script is often called at
bootup, and many distributions have an ipchains initialization script that uses the
output from ipchains-save.
Commands
ipchains is always invoked with one
of the following commands:
- -A chain rules, --append chain rules
-
Append new rules to chain.
- -I chain number rules, --insert chain number rules
-
Insert rules into chain at
the ordinal position given by number.
- -D chain rules, --delete chain rules
-
Delete rules from chain.
Rules can be specified by their ordinal number in the chain as well
as by a general rule description.
- -R chain number rule, --replace chain number rule
-
Replace a rule in chain. The rule to be replaced
is specified by its ordinal number.
- -C chain rule, --check chain rules
-
Construct a network packet that matches the given
rule and check how chain
will handle it. The rule must describe the source, destination,
protocol, and interface of the packet to be constructed.
- -L [chain], --list $PARAMETER
-
List the rules in chain. If no chain is
specified, list the rules in all chains.
- -ML, --masquerading --list
-
List masquerading connections.
- -MS tcp tcpfin udp, --masquerading --set tcp tcpfin udp
-
Set timeout value in seconds for masquerading connections. -MS always takes three parameters, specifying
the timeout values for TCP sessions, for TCP sessions that have
received a FIN packet, and for UDP packets.
- -F chain, --flush chain
-
Remove all rules from chain.
- -Z [chain], --zero [chain]
-
Reset the packet and byte counters in chain. If
no chain is specified, all chains will be reset. When used without
specifying a chain and combined with the -L command, lists the current counter values
before they are reset.
- -N chain, --new-chain chain
-
Create a new chain. The chain's
name must be unique.
- -X [chain], --delete-chain chain
-
Delete chain. Only user-defined chains can be
deleted, and there can be no references to the chain to be deleted.
If no argument is given, all user-defined chains will be deleted.
- -P chain target, --policy chain target
-
Set the policy for a built-in chain; the target
itself cannot be a chain.
- -S tcp tcpfin udp, --set tcp tcpfin udp
-
Set masquerade timeout values for TCP sessions, TCP sessions after
receiving a FIN packet, and UDP sessions. Timeout values of 0
preserve the previous setting. This option valid only when used with
-M.
- -h [icmp]
-
Print a brief help message. If the option icmp is given, print a list of valid ICMP
types.
- -V, --version
-
Print version number, then exit.
Targets
A target can be the name of a chain or one of the following special
values:
- ACCEPT
-
Let the packet through.
- DENY
-
Drop the packet.
- MASQ
-
Masquerade the packet so it appears that it originated from the
current system. Reverse packets from masqueraded connections are
unmasqueraded automatically. This is a legal target only for the
forward chain, or user-defined
chains used in forwarding packets. To use this target, the kernel
must be compiled with support for IP masquerading.
- REDIRECT [port]
-
Redirect incoming packets to a local port on
which you are running a transparent proxy program. If the specified
port is 0 or is not given, the destination port of the packet is used
as the redirection port. REDIRECT is
a legal target only for the input
chain or for user-defined chains used in handling incoming packets.
The kernel must be compiled with support for transparent proxies.
- REJECT
-
Drop the packet and send an ICMP message back to the sender
indicating that the packet was dropped.
- RETURN
-
Return to the chain from which this chain was called and check the
next rule. If RETURN is the target
of a rule in a built-in chain, then the built-in
chain's default policy is applied.
Rule specification parameters
These options are used to create rules for use with the preceding
commands. Rules consist of some matching criteria and usually a
target to jump to (-j) if the match
is made. Many of the parameters for these matching rules can be
expressed as a negative with an exclamation point (!) meaning
"not." Those rules will match
everything except the given parameter.
- -p [!] name, --protocol [!]$PARAMETER
-
Match packets of protocol name. The value of
name can be given as a name or number as found
in the file /etc/protocols. The most common
values are tcp, udp, icmp, or
the special value all. The number 0
is equivalent to all, and this is
the default value when this option is not used.
- -s [!] address[/mask] [!] [port], --source [!] address[/mask] [!] [port]
-
Specifies the source address and
port of the packet that will match this rule.
The address may be supplied as a hostname, a network name, or an IP
address. The optional mask is the netmask to use
and may be supplied either in the traditional form (e.g.,
/255.255.255.0) or in the modern form (e.g., /24). The optional
port specifies the TCP, UDP, or ICMP type that
will match. You may supply a port specification only if
you've supplied the -p parameter with one of the tcp, udp or
icmp protocols. A colon can be used
to indicate an inclusive range of ports or ICMP values to be used
(e.g., 20:25 for ports 20 through 25). If the first
port parameter is missing, the default value is
0. If the second is omitted, the default value is 65535.
- -d [!] address[/mask] [!] [port], --destination [!] address[/mask] [port]
-
Match packets with the destination address. The
syntax for this command's parameters is the same as
for the -s option.
- -j target, --jump target
-
Jump to a special target or a user-defined chain. If this option is
not specified for a rule, matching the rule only increases the
rule's counters and the packet is tested against the
next rule.
- -i [!] name, --interface name
-
Match packets from interface name[+].
name is the network interface used by your
system (e.g., eth0 or ppp0). A +
can be used as a wildcard, so ppp+
would match any interface name beginning with ppp.
- [!] -f, [!]--fragment $PARAMETER
-
The rule applies to everything but the first fragment of a fragmented
packet.
- --source-port [!] port
-
Match packets from the source port. The syntax
for specifying ports can be found in the preceding description of the
-s option.
- --destination-port [!] port
-
Match packets with the destination port. The
syntax for specifying ports can be found in the preceding description
of the -s option.
- --icmp-type [!] type
-
Match packets with ICMP type name or number of
type.
Options
- -b, --bidirectional
-
Put rule in both the input and output chain so that packets will be
matched in both directions.
- -v, --verbose
-
Verbose mode.
- -n, --numeric
-
Print all IP address and port numbers in numeric form. By default,
names are displayed when possible.
- -l, --log
-
Log information for the matching packet to the system log.
- -t andmask xormask, --TOS andmask xormask
-
Change the Type Of Service field in the packet's
header. The TOS field is first ANDed with the 8-bit hexadecimal mask
andmask, then XORed with the 8-bit hexadecimal
mask xormask. Rules that would affect the least
significant bit (LSB) portion of the TOS field are rejected.
- -x, --exact
-
Expand all numbers in a listing (-L). Display the exact values of the packet
and byte counters instead of rounded figures.
- [!] -y, --syn
-
Match only incoming TCP connection requests, those with the SYN bit
set and the ACK and FIN bits cleared. This blocks incoming TCP
connections but leaves outgoing connections unaffected.
- --line-numbers
-
Used with the -L command. Add the
line number to the beginning of each rule in a listing indicating its
position in the chain.
- --no-warnings
-
Disable all warnings.
ipchains-restore [options]
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|
System administration command. Restore firewall rules. ipchains-restore takes commands generated by
ipchains-save and uses them to
restore the firewall rules for each chain. Often used by
initialization scripts to restore firewall settings on boot.
Options
- -f
-
Force updates of existing chains without asking.
- -v
-
Print rules as they are being restored.
- -p
-
If a nonexisting chain is targeted by a rule, create it.
ipchains-save [chain] [option]
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|
System administration command. Print the IP firewall rules currently
stored in the kernel to stdout. If no chain is
given, all chains will be printed. Output is usually redirected to a
file, which can later be used by ipchains-restore to restore the firewall.
Option
- - v
-
Print out rules to stderr as well as stdout, making them easier to
see when redirecting output.
System administration command. Remove interprocess communication
(IPC) message queues, shared memory segments, or semaphore arrays.
These may be specified either by numeric identifier or by key, using
the following options.
Options
- -m identifier, -M key
-
Remove specified shared memory segment and its associated data
structures after the last detach is performed.
- -q identifier, -Q key
-
Remove specified message queue and its associated data structures.
- -s identifier, -S key
-
Remove specified semaphore array and its associated data structures.
System administration command. Print report on interprocess
communication (IPC) message queues, shared memory segments, and
semaphore arrays for which the current process has read access.
Options can be used to specify the type of resources to report on and
the output format of the report.
Options
Resource specification options:
- -a
-
Report on all IPC facilities: shared memory segments, message queues,
and semaphore arrays. This is the default.
- -m
-
Report on shared memory segments.
- -q
-
Report on message queues.
- -s
-
Report on semaphore arrays.
Output format options:
- -c
-
Print creator and owner user IDs for IPC facilities.
- -l
-
Print resource maximum and minimum limits.
- -p
-
Print creator and last operation process identifiers.
- -t
-
Print attach, detach, and change times for shared memory segments,
last operation and change times for semaphore arrays, and send,
receive, and change times for message queues.
- -u
-
Print summary of current resource usage.
Other options:
- -h
-
Print help message, then exit.
- -i identifier
-
Used in combination with the -m,
-q, or -s options. Report only on the resource
specified by numeric identifier.
iptables command [options]
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|
System administration command. Configure
netfilter filtering rules. In the 2.4 kernel,
the ipchains
firewall capabilities are replaced
with the netfilter kernel module.
netfilter can be configured to work just like
ipchains, but it also comes with the
module iptables, which is similar to
ipchains but extensible. iptables rules consist of some matching
criteria and a target, a result to be applied if the packet matches
the criteria. The rules are organized into chains. You can use these
rules to build a firewall, masquerade your local area network, or
just reject certain kinds of network connections.
There are three built-in tables for iptables: one for network filtering (filter), one for Network Address Translation
(nat), and the last for specialized
packet alterations (mangle).
Firewall rules are organized into chains, ordered checklists of rules
that the kernel works through looking for matches. The filter table has three built-in chains:
INPUT, OUTPUT, and FORWARD. The INPUT and OUTPUT chains handle packets originating from
or destined for the host system. The FORWARD chain handles packets just passing
through the host system. The nat
table also has three built-in chains: PREROUTING, POSTROUTING, and OUTPUT. mangle has only two chains: PREROUTING and OUTPUT.
netfilter checks packets entering the system.
After applying any PREROUTING rules,
it passes them to the INPUT chain,
or to the FORWARD chain if the
packet is just passing through. Upon leaving, the system packets are
passed to the OUTPUT chain and then
on to any POSTROUTING rules. Each of
these chains has a default target (a policy) in case no match is
found. User-defined chains can also be created and used as targets
for packets but do not have default policies. If no match can be
found in a user-defined chain, the packet is returned to the chain
from which it was called and tested against the next rule in that
chain.
iptables changes only the rules in
the running kernel. When the system is powered off, all changes are
lost. You can use the iptables-save
command to make a script you can run with iptables-restore to restore your firewall
settings. Such a script is often called at bootup. Many distributions
have an iptables initialization
script that uses the output from iptables-save.
Commands
iptables is always invoked with one
of the following commands:
- -A chain rules, --append chain rules
-
Append new rules to chain.
- -I chain number rules, --insert chain number rules
-
Insert rules into chain at
the ordinal position given by number.
- -D chain rules, --delete chain rules
-
Delete rules from chain.
Rules can be specified by their ordinal number in the chain as well
as by a general rule description.
- -R chain number rule, --replace chain number rule
-
Replace a rule in chain. The rule to be replaced
is specified by its ordinal number.
- -C chain rule, --check chain rules
-
Check how chain will handle a network packet
that matches the given rule. The rule must
describe the source, destination, protocol, and interface of the
packet to be constructed.
- -L [chain], --list $PARAMETER
-
List the rules in chain, or all chains if
chain is not specified.
- -F [chain], --flush chain
-
Remove all rules from chain, or from all chains
if chain is not specified.
- -Z [chain], --zero [chain]
-
Zero the packet and byte counters in chain. If
no chain is specified, all chains will be reset. When used without
specifying a chain and combined with the -L command, list the current counter values
before they are reset.
- -N chain, --new-chain chain
-
Create a new chain. The chain's
name must be unique. This is how user-defined chains are created.
- -X [chain], --delete-chain [chain]
-
Delete the specified user-defined chain, or all
user-defined chains if chain is not specified.
- -P chain target, --policy chain target
-
Set the default policy for a built-in chain; the
target itself cannot be a chain.
- -E old-chain new-chain, --rename-chain old-chain new-chain
-
Rename old-chain to
new-chain.
- -h [icmp]
-
Print a brief help message. If the option icmp is given, print a list of valid ICMP
types.
Targets
A target may be the name of a chain or one of the following special
values:
- ACCEPT
-
Let the packet through.
- DROP
-
Drop the packet.
- QUEUE
-
Send packets to the user space for processing.
- RETURN
-
Stop traversing the current chain and return to the point in the
previous chain from which this one was called. If RETURN is the target of a rule in a built-in
chain, the built-in chain's default policy is
applied.
Rule specification parameters
These options are used to create rules for use with the preceding
commands. Rules consist of some matching criteria and usually a
target to jump to (-j) if the match
is made. Many of the parameters for these matching rules can be
expressed as a negative with an exclamation point (!) meaning
"not." Those rules will match
everything except the given parameter.
- -p [!] name, --protocol [!]$PARAMETER
-
Match packets of protocol name. The value of
name can be given as a name or number as found
in the file /etc/protocols. The most common
values are tcp, udp, icmp, or
the special value all. The number 0
is equivalent to all, and this is
the default value when this option is not used. If there are extended
matching rules associated with the specified protocol, they will be
loaded automatically. You need not use the -m option to load them.
- -s [!] address[/mask] [!] [port], --source [!] address[/mask] [!] [port]
-
Match packets with the source address. The
address may be supplied as a hostname, a network name, or an IP
address. The optional mask is the netmask to use and may be supplied
either in the traditional form (e.g., /255.255.255.0) or in the
modern form (e.g., /24).
- -d [!] address[/mask] [!] [port], --destination [!] address[/mask] [port]
-
Match packets from the destination address. See
the description of -s for the syntax
of this option.
- -j target, --jump target
-
Jump to a special target or a user-defined chain. If this option is
not specified for a rule, matching the rule only increases the
rule's counters, and the packet is tested against
the next rule.
- -i [!] name[+], --in-interface name[+]
-
Match packets being received from interface
name. name is the network
interface used by your system (e.g., eth0 or ppp0). A +
can be used as a wildcard, so ppp+
would match any interface name beginning with ppp.
- -o [!] name[+], --out-interface name[+]
-
Match packets being sent from interface name.
See the description of -i for the
syntax for name.
- [!] -f, [!]--fragment $PARAMETER
-
The rule applies only to the second or further fragments of a
fragmented packet.
- -c packets bytes, --set-counters packets bytes
-
Initialize packet and byte counters to the specified values.
Options
- -v, --verbose
-
Verbose mode.
- -n, --numeric
-
Print all IP address and port numbers in numeric form. By default,
text names are displayed when possible.
- -x, --exact
-
Expand all numbers in a listing (-L). Display the exact value of the packet and
byte counters instead of rounded figures.
- -m module, --match module
-
Explicitly load matching rule extensions associated with
module. See the next section.
- -h [icmp], --help [icmp]
-
Print help message. If icmp is
specified, a list of valid ICMP type names will be printed. -h can also be used with the -m option to get help on an extension module.
- --line-numbers
-
Used with the -L command. Add the
line number to the beginning of each rule in a listing, indicating
its position in the chain.
- --modprobe=command
-
Use specified command to load any necessary
kernel modules while adding or inserting rules into a chain.
Match extensions
Several kernel modules come with netfilter to extend matching
capabilities of rules. Those associated with particular protocols are
loaded automatically when the -p
option is used to specify the protocol. Others need to be loaded
explicitly with the -m option.
- tcp
-
Loaded when -p tcp is the only
protocol specified.
- --source-port [!] [port][:port], --sport [!] [port][:port]
-
Match the specified source ports. Using the colon specifies an
inclusive range of services to match. If the first port is omitted, 0
is the default. If the second port is omitted, 65535 is the default.
You can also use a dash instead of a colon to specify the range.
- --destination-port [!] [port][:port], --dport [!] [port][:port]
-
Match the specified destination ports. The syntax is the same as for
--source-port.
- --tcp-flags [!] mask comp
-
Match the packets with the TCP flags specified by
mask and comp.
mask is a comma-separated list of flags that
should be examined. comp is a comma-separated
list of flags that must be set for the rule to match. Valid flags are
SYN, ACK, FIN,
RST, URG, PSH,
ALL, and NONE.
- --tcp-option [!] n
-
Match if TCP option is set.
- --mss n[:n]
-
Match if TCP SYN or SYN/ACK packets have the specified MSS value or
fall within the specified range. Use this to control the maximum
packet size for a connection.
- [!] --syn
-
Match packets with the SYN bit set and the ACK and FIN bits cleared.
These are packets that request TCP connections; blocking them
prevents incoming connections. Shorthand for --tcp-flags SYN,RST,ACK SYN.
- udp
-
Loaded when -p udp is the only
protocol specified.
- --source-port [!] [port][:port], --sport [!] [port][:port]
-
Match the specified source ports. The syntax is the same as for the
--source-port option of the TCP
extension.
- --destination-port [!] [port][:port], --dport [!] [port][:port]
-
Match the specified destination ports. The syntax is the same as for
the --source-port option of the
TCP extension.
- icmp
-
Loaded when -p icmp is the only
protocol specified.
- --icmp-type [!] type
-
Match the specified ICMP type.
type may be a numeric ICMP type or one of the
ICMP type names shown by the command iptables
-p icmp -h.
- mac
-
Loaded explicitly with the -m option.
- --mac-source [!] address
-
Match the source address that transmitted the
packet. address must be given in colon-separated
hexbyte notation (for example, --mac-source 00:60:08:91:CC:B7).
- limit
-
Loaded explicitly with the -m
option. The limit extensions are
used to limit the number of packets matched. This is useful when
combined with the LOG target. Rules
using this extension match until the specified limit is reached.
- --limit rate
-
Match addresses at the given rate.
rate is specified as a number with an optional
/second, /minute, hour, or /day
suffix. When this option is not set, the default is 3/hour.
- --limit-burst [number]
-
Set the maximum number of packets to match in a
burst. Once the number has been reached, no more packets are matched
for this rule until the number has recharged. It recharges at the
rate set by the --limit option.
When not specified, the default is 5.
- multiport
-
Loaded explicitly with the -m
option. The multiport extensions
match sets of source or destination ports. These rules can be used
only in conjunction with -p tcp and
-p udp. Up to 15 ports can be
specified in a comma-separated list.
- --source-port [ports]
-
Match the given source ports.
- --destination-port [ports]
-
Match the given destination ports.
- --port [ports]
-
Match if the packet has the same source and destination port and that
port is one of the given ports.
- mark
-
Loaded explicitly with the -m
option. This module works with the MARK extension target.
- --mark value[/mask]
-
Match the given unsigned mark value. If a mask is specified, it is
logically ANDed with the mark before comparison.
- owner
-
Loaded explicitly with the -m
option. The owner extensions match
the user, group, process, and session IDs of a local
packet's creator. This makes sense only as a part of
the OUTPUT chain.
- --uid-owner userid
-
Match packets created by a process owned by
userid.
- --gid-owner groupid
-
Match packets created by a process owned by
groupid.
- --pid-owner processid
-
Match packets created by process ID processid.
- --sid-owner sessionid
-
Match packets created by a process in the session
sessionid.
- --cmd-owner command
-
Match if packet was created by a process with the name
command.
- state
-
Loaded explicitly with the -m
option. This module matches the connection state of a packet.
- --state states
-
Match the packet if it has one of the states in the comma-separated
list states. Valid states are INVALID, ESTABLISHED, NEW, and RELATED.
- tos
-
Loaded explicitly with the -m
option. This module matches the Type of Service field in a
packet's header.
- --tos value
-
Match the packet if it has a TOS of value.
value can be a numeric value or a Type of
Service name. iptables -m tos -h
will give you a list of valid TOS values.
- tostate
-
Loaded explicitly with the -m
option. This module matches the connection state of a packet.
- --state states
-
Match the packet if it has one of the states in the comma-separated
list states. Valid states are INVALID, ESTABLISHED, NEW, and RELATED.
- ah
-
Loaded explicitly with the -m
option. This module matches the SPIs in the AH header of IPSec
packets.
- --ahspi [!] n[:n]
-
Match the SPIs in the AH header against the specified value or range
of values.
- esp
-
Loaded explicitly with the -m
option. This module matches the SPIs in the ESP header of IPSec
packets.
- --ahspi [!] n[:n]
-
Match the SPIs in the ESP header against the specified value or range
of values.
- length
-
Loaded explicitly with the -m
option. This module matches the length of a packet.
- --length n[:n]
-
Match if the length of the packet is the same as the specified value
or is within the range of values.
- ttl
-
Loaded explicitly with the -m
option. This module matches the time-to-live (TTL) field in the IP
header.
- --ttl n
-
Match if the TTL is the same as the specified value.
Target extensions
Extension targets are optional additional targets supported by
separate kernel modules. They have their own associated options.
- LOG
-
Log the packet's information in the system log.
- --log-level level
-
Set the syslog level by name or number (as defined by
syslog.conf).
- --log-prefix prefix
-
Begin each log entry with the string prefix. The
prefix string may be up to 30 characters long.
- --log-tcp-sequence
-
Log the TCP sequence numbers. This is a security risk if your log is
readable by users.
- --log-tcp-options
-
Log options from the TCP packet header.
- --log-ip-options
-
Log options from the IP packet header.
- MARK
-
Used to mark packets with an unsigned integer value you can use later
with the mark matching extension.
Valid only with the mangle table.
- --set-mark value
-
Mark the packet with value.
- REJECT
-
Drop the packet and, if appropriate, send an ICMP message back to the
sender indicating the packet was dropped. If the packet was an ICMP
error message, an unknown ICMP type, or a nonhead fragment, or if too
many ICMP messages have already been sent to this address, no message
is sent.
- --reject-with type
-
Send specified ICMP message type. Valid values are icmp-net-unreachable, icmp-host-unreachable, icmp-port-unreachable, or icmp-proto-unreachable. If the packet was an
ICMP ping packet, type may also be echo-reply.
- TOS
-
Set the Type of Service field in the IP header. TOS is a valid target only for rules in the
mangle table.
- --set-tos value
-
Set the TOS field to value. You can specify this
as an 8-bit value or as a TOS name. You can get a list of valid names
using iptables -j TOS -h.
- SNAT
-
Modify the source address of the packet and all future packets in the
current connection. SNAT is valid
only as a part of the POSTROUTING
chain in the nat table.
- --to-source address[-address][port-port]
-
Specify the new source address or range of addresses. If a tcp or udp
protocol has been specified with the -p option, source ports may also be specified.
If none is specified, map the new source to the same port if
possible. If not, map ports below 512 to other ports below 512, those
between 512 and 1024 to other ports below 1024, and ports above 1024
to other ports above 1024.
- DNAT
-
Modify the destination address of the packet and all future packets
in the current connection. DNAT is
valid only as a part of the POSTROUTING chain in the nat table.
- --to-destination address[-address][port-port]
-
Specify the new destination address or range of addresses. The
arguments for this option are the same as the --to-source argument for the SNAT extension target.
- MASQUERADE
-
Masquerade the packet so it appears that it originated from the
current system. Reverse packets from masqueraded connections are
unmasqueraded automatically. This is a legal target only for chains
in the nat table that handle
incoming packets and should be used only with dynamic IP addresses
(like dial-up.) For static addresses use DNAT.
- --to-ports port[-port]
-
Specify the port or range of ports to use when masquerading. This
option is valid only if a tcp or
udp protocol has been specified with
the -p option. If this option is not
used, the masqueraded packet's port will not be
changed.
- REDIRECT
-
Redirect the packet to a local port. This is
useful for creating transparent proxies.
- --to-ports port[-port]
-
Specify the port or range of ports on the local system to which the
packet should be redirected. This option is valid only if a tcp or udp
protocol has been specified with the -p option. If this option is not used, the
redirected packet's port will not be changed.
- ULOG
-
Userspace logging. Multicast matching packets though a netlink
socket, which is a socket linking kernel space and userspace. One or
more userspace processes can subscribe to the multicast groups and
receive the packets.
- --ulog-nlgroup n
-
Send packet to the specified netlink group (1-32). The default group
is 1.
- --ulog-prefix prefix
-
Prefix packet messages with the specified prefix of 32 characters or
less.
- --ulog-cprange n
-
Copy up to n bytes of the packet to the netlink
socket. The default value, 0, copies an entire packet, regardless of
size.
- --ulog-qthreshold n
-
Transmit packets when n packets have been
queued. Default value is 1.
- TCPMSS
-
Alter the MSS value of TCP SYN packets.
- --set-mss n
-
Set the MSS value to n.
- --clamp-mss-to-pmtu
-
Set the MSS value to the outgoing interface's MTU
(maximum transmission unit) minus 40.
iptables-restore [options]
|
|
System administration command. Restore firewall rules from
information provided on standard input. iptables-restore takes commands generated by
iptables-save and uses them to
restore the firewall rules for each chain. This is often used by
initialization scripts to restore firewall settings on boot.
Options
- -c, --counters
-
Restore packet and byte counter values.
- -n, --noflush
-
Don't delete previous table contents.
System administration command. Print the IP firewall rules currently
stored in the kernel to stdout. Output may be redirected to a file
that can later be used by iptables-restore to restore the firewall.
Options
- -c, --counters
-
Save packet and byte counter values.
- -t name, --table name
-
Print data from the specified table only.
Interactively display the contents of the ISO9660 image
isoimage. Used to verify the integrity of the
directory inside the image. isodump
displays the first portion of the root directory and waits for
commands. The prompt show the extent number (zone) and offset within
the extent, and the contents display at the top of the screen.
Commands
- +
-
Search forward for the next instance of the search string.
- a
-
Search backward within the image.
- b
-
Search forward within the image.
- f
-
Prompt for a new search string.
- g
-
Prompt for a new starting block and go there.
- q
-
Exit.
Display information about ISO9660 images. You can use
isoinfo to list the contents of an
image, extract a file, or generate a find-like file list. The -i option is required to specify the image to
examine.
Options
- -d
-
Print information from the primary volume descriptor (PVD) of the
ISO9660 image, including information about Rock Ridge and Joliet
extensions if they are present.
- -f
-
Generate output similar to the output of a find
. -print command. Do not use with -l.
- -h
-
Print help information and exit.
- -i isoimage
-
Specify the path for the ISO9660 image to examine.
- -j charset
-
Convert any Joliet filenames to the specified character set.
- -J
-
Extract filename information from any Joliet extensions.
- -l
-
Generate output similar to the output of an ls
-lR command. Do not use with -f.
- -N sector
-
To help examine single-session CD files that are to be written to a
multisession CD. Specify the sector number at which the ISO9660 image
is to be written when sent to the CD writer.
- -p
-
Display path table information.
- -R
-
Extract permission, filename, and ownership information from any Rock
Ridge extensions.
- -T sector
-
To help examine multisession images that have already been burned to
a multisession CD. Use the specified sector number as the start of
the session to display.
- -x path
-
Extract the file at the specified path to standard output.
isosize [option] iso9660-img-file
|
|
Display the length of an ISO9660 filesystem contained in the
specified file. The image file can be a normal file or a block device
such as /dev/sr0. With no options, the length is
displayed in bytes. Only one of the two options can be specified.
Options
- -d num
-
Display the size in bytes divided by num.
- -x
-
Display the number of blocks and the blocksize (although the output
refers to blocks as sectors).
Verify the integrity of the specified ISO9660 image and write the
results to standard output.
Compare the words of one or more named files
with the system dictionary. Display unrecognized words at the top of
the screen, accompanied by possible correct spellings, and allow
editing via a series of commands.
Options
- -b
-
Back up original file in filename.bak.
- -d file
-
Search file instead of standard dictionary file.
- -m
-
Suggest different root/affix combinations.
- -n
-
Expect nroff or troff input file.
- -p file
-
Search file instead of personal dictionary file.
- -t
-
Expect TEX or
LATEX input file.
- -w chars
-
Consider chars to be legal, in addition to a-z
and A-Z.
- -x
-
Do not back up original file.
- -B
-
Search for missing blanks (resulting in concatenated words) in
addition to ordinary misspellings.
- -C
-
Do not produce error messages in response to concatenated words.
- -L number
-
Show number lines of context.
- -M
-
List interactive commands at bottom of screen.
- -N
-
Suppress printing of interactive commands.
- -P
-
Do not attempt to suggest more root/affix combinations.
- -S
-
Sort suggested replacements by likelihood that they are correct.
- -T type
-
Expect all files to be formatted by type.
- -W n
-
Never consider words that are n characters or
fewer to be misspelled.
- -V
-
Use hat notation (^L) to display
control characters, and M- to
display characters with the high bit set.
Interactive commands
- ?
-
Display help screen.
- space
-
Accept the word in this instance.
- number
-
Replace with suggested word that corresponds to
number.
- !command
-
Invoke shell and execute command in it. Prompt
before exiting.
- a
-
Accept word as correctly spelled, but do not add it to personal
dictionary.
- i
-
Accept word and add it (with any current capitalization) to personal
dictionary.
- l
-
Search system dictionary for words.
- q
-
Exit without saving.
- r
-
Replace word.
- u
-
Accept word and add lowercase version of it to personal dictionary.
- x
-
Skip to the next file, saving changes.
- ^L
-
Redraw screen.
- ^Z
-
Suspend ispell.
join [options] file1 file2
|
|
Join lines of two sorted files by matching on a common field. If
either file1 or file2 is -,
read from standard input.
Options
- -a filenum
-
Print a line for each unpairable line in file
filenum, in addition to the normal output.
- -e string
-
Replace missing input fields with string.
- -i, --ignore-case
-
Ignore case differences when comparing keys.
- -1 fieldnum1
-
The join field in file1 is
fieldnum1. Default is the first field.
- -2 fieldnum2
-
The join field in file2 is
fieldnum2. Default is the first field.
- -o fieldlist
-
Order the output fields according to fieldlist,
where each entry in the list is in the form
filenum.fieldnum. Entries
are separated by commas or blanks.
- -t char
-
Specifies the field-separator character (default is whitespace).
- -v filenum
-
Print only unpairable lines from file filenum.
- --help
-
Print help message and then exit.
- --version
-
Print the version number and then exit.
Print or set the current keyboard mode, which may be RAW, MEDIUMRAW, XLATE, or UNICODE.
Options
- -a
-
Set mode to XLATE (ASCII mode).
- -k
-
Set mode to MEDIUMRAW (keycode mode).
- -s
-
Set mode to RAW (scancode mode).
- -u
-
Set mode to UNICODE (UTF-8 mode).
System administration command. Control the rate at which the
keyboard repeats characters, as
well as its delay time. Using this command without options sets a
repeat rate of 10.9 characters per second; the default delay is 250
milliseconds. When Linux boots, however, it sets the keyboard rate to
30 characters per second.
Options
- -s
-
Suppress printing of messages.
- -r rate
-
Specify the repeat rate, which must be one of the following numbers
(all in characters per second): 2.0, 2.1, 2.3, 2.5, 2.7, 3.0, 3.3,
3.7, 4.0, 4.3, 4.6, 5.0, 5.5, 6.0, 6.7, 7.5, 8.0, 8.6, 9.2, 10.0,
10.9, 12.0, 13.3, 15.0, 16.0, 17.1, 18.5, 20.0, 21.8, 24.0, 26.7, or
30.0.
- -d delay
-
Specify the delay, which must be one of the following (in
milliseconds): 250, 500, 750, or 1000.
This command tells you what version of the Linux kernel you are
using. It is also used by modultils and the
/etc/modules.conf file to determine where to put
kernel modules. It accepts no arguments or options.
kill [options] [pids | commands]
|
|
Send a signal to terminate one or more process IDs. You must own the
process or be a privileged user. If no signal is specified, TERM is
sent.
This entry describes the /bin/kill
command, which offers several powerful features. There are also
built-in shell commands of the same name; the bash version is described in Chapter 7 and the tcsh
version in Chapter 8.
In particular, /bin/kill allows you
to specify a command name, such as gcc or xpdf,
instead of a process ID (PID). All processes running that command
with the same UID as the process issuing /bin/kill will be sent the signal.
If /bin/kill is issued with a
pid of 0, it sends the signal to all processes
of its own process group. If /bin/kill is issued with a
pid of -1, it sends the signal to all processes
except process 1 (the system's
init process).
Options
- -a
-
Kill all processes of the given name (if privileges allow), not just
processes with the same UID. To use this option, specify the full
path (e.g., /bin/kill -a gcc).
- -l
-
List all signals.
- -p
-
Print the process ID of the named process, but don't
send it a signal. To use this option, specify the full path (e.g.,
/bin/kill -p).
- -signal
-
The signal number (from
/usr/include/sys/signal.h) or name (from
kill -l). With a signal number of 9
(HUP), the kill cannot be caught by the process; use this to kill a
process that a plain kill
doesn't terminate. The default is TERM.
Kill processes by command name. If more than one process is running
the specified command, kill all of them. Treat command names that
contain a / as files; kill all
processes that are executing that file.
Options
- -signal
-
Send signal to process (default is TERM).
signal may be a name or a number.
- -e
-
Require an exact match to kill very long names (i.e., longer than 15
characters). Normally, killall kills
everything that matches within the first 15 characters. With
-e, such entries are skipped. (Use
-v to print a message for each
skipped entry.)
- -g
-
Kill the process group to which the process belongs.
- -i
-
Prompt for confirmation before killing processes.
- -l
-
List known signal names.
- -q
-
Quiet; do not complain of processes not killed.
- -v
-
Verbose; after killing process, report success and process ID.
- -V
-
Print version information.
- -w
-
Wait for all killed processes to die. Note that killall may wait forever if the signal was
ignored or had no effect, or if the process stays in zombie state.
The System V equivalent of killall,
this command kills all processes except those on which it depends.
System administration command. Control which kernel messages are
displayed on the console, prioritize all messages, and log them
through syslogd. On many operating
systems, syslogd performs all the
work of klogd, but on Linux the
features are separated. Kernel messages are gleaned from the
/proc filesystem and from system calls to
syslogd. By default, no messages
appear on the console. Messages are sorted into eight levels, 0-7,
and the level number is prepended to each message.
Priority levels
- 0
-
Emergency situation (KERN_EMERG).
- 1
-
A crucial error has occurred (KERN_ALERT).
- 2
-
A serious error has occurred (KERN_CRIT).
- 3
-
An error has occurred (KERN_ERR).
- 4
-
A warning message (KERN_WARNING).
- 5
-
The situation is normal but should be checked (KERN_NOTICE).
- 6
-
Information only (KERN_INFO).
- 7
-
Debugging messages (KERN_DEBUG).
Options
- -c level
-
Print all messages of a higher priority (lower number) than
level to the console.
- -d
-
Debugging mode.
- -f file
-
Print all messages to file; suppress normal
logging.
- -i
-
Signal executing daemon to reload kernel module symbols.
- -k file
-
Use file as source of kernel symbols.
- -n
-
Avoid auto-backgrounding. This is needed when klogd is started from init.
- -o
-
One-shot mode. Prioritize and log all current messages, then
immediately exit.
- -p
-
Reload kernel module symbol information whenever an Oops string is
detected.
- -s
-
Suppress reading of messages from the /proc
filesystem. Read from kernel message buffers instead.
- -v
-
Print version, then exit.
- -x
-
Don't translate instruction pointers (EIP).
klogd will not read the
System.map file.
- -I
-
Signal executing daemon to reload both static kernel symbols and
kernel module symbols.
- -2
-
Print two lines for each symbol, one showing the symbol and the other
showing its numerical value (address).
Files
- /usr/include/linux/kernel.h, /usr/include/sys/syslog.h
-
Sources for definitions of each logging level.
- /proc/kmsg
-
A file examined by klogd for
messages.
- /var/run/klogd.pid
-
klogd's process ID.
System administration command. Print a list of all exported kernel
symbols (name, address, and defining module, if applicable).
Options
- -a, --all
-
Include symbols from unloaded modules.
- -h, --noheader
-
Suppress header message.
- -m, --info
-
Include starting address and size. Useful only for symbols in loaded
modules.
- -H, --help
-
Print help message, then exit.
- -V, --version
-
Print version, then exit.
File
- /proc/ksyms
-
Another source of the same information.
last [options] [username] [ttynumber]
|
|
Display a list of the most recent logins, taken from the file
/var/log/wtmp by default. If you specify a tty
number or username, the output will display only the logins for that
user or terminal.
Options
- -n number, -number
-
Choose how many lines of logins to display. Thus, last -7 or last -n
7 displays seven lines.
- -R
-
Do not show the hostname from which logins originated.
- -a
-
Display the hostname from which logins originated.
- -d
-
Display both IP address and hostname.
- -f filename
-
Get the list of logins from a file you choose. The default source is
/var/log/wtmp.
- -i
-
Display IP address and hostname. Display the IP address in the
numbers-and-dots notation.
- -o
-
Read an old-style (libc5 application) wtmp file.
Not likely to be useful on newer systems.
- -x
-
Display shutdown messages and runlevel messages.
lastb [options] [username] [ttynumber]
|
|
Display a list of recent bad login attempts (from the
/var/log/btmp file). Accepts the same option
flags and arguments as last.
System administration command. Print the last login times for system
accounts. Login information is read from the file
/var/log/lastlog.
Options
- -tn
-
Print only logins more recent than n days ago.
- -uname
-
Print only login information for user name.
Combine several objfiles, in the specified
order, into a single executable object module
(a.out by default). ld is the link editor and is often invoked
automatically by compiler commands. ld accepts many options, the most common of
which are listed here.
Options
- -b format, --format=format
-
If ld is configured to accept more
than one kind of object file, this command can be used to specify the
input format. format should be a GNU Binary File
Descriptor (BFD) as described in the BFD library. Use objdump -i to list available formats.
- -call_shared
-
Link with dynamic libraries.
- -d, -dc, -dp
-
Force the assignment of space to common symbols.
- -defsym symbol=expression
-
Create the global symbol with the value
expression.
- -demangle[=style]
-
Force demangling of symbol names. Optionally set the demangling
style. Turn off demangling with -nodemangle.
- -e symbol
-
Set symbol as the address of the output
file's entry point.
- -f name
-
Set the DT_AUXILIARY field of ELF
shared object to name.
- -fini name
-
Set the DT_FINI field of ELF shared
object to the address of function name. The
default function is _fini.
- -h name
-
Set the DT_SONAME field of ELF
shared object to name.
- --help
-
Print help message, then exit.
- -i
-
Produce a linkable output file; attempt to set its magic number to
OMAGIC.
- -init name
-
Set the DT_INIT field of ELF shared
object to the address of function name. The
default function is _init.
- -larch, --library=archive
-
Include the archive file arch in the list of
files to link.
- -m linker
-
Emulate linker. List supported emulations with
the -V option.
- -n
-
Make text read-only; attempt to set NMAGIC.
- -o output
-
Place output in output, instead of
a.out.
- -oformat format
-
Specify output format.
- -q
-
Retain relocation sections and contents in linked executables.
- -r
-
Produce a linkable output file; attempt to set its magic number to
OMAGIC.
- -rpath dir
-
Add directory dir to the runtime library search
path. Ignore additional paths normally read from the LD_RUN_PATH environment variable.
- -rpath-link dirs
-
Specify path to search for shared libraries required by another
shared library. The dirs argument can be a
single directory, or multiple directories separated by colons. This
overrides search paths specified in shared libraries themselves.
- -s
-
Do not include any symbol information in output.
- -shared
-
Create a shared library.
- -static
-
Do not link with shared libraries.
- -sort-common
-
Do not sort global common symbols by size.
- -t
-
Print each input file's name as it is processed.
- --target-help
-
Print target-specific options, then exit.
- -u symbol
-
Force symbol to be undefined.
- -v, --version
-
Show version number.
- --verbose
-
Print information about ld; print
the names of input files while attempting to open them.
- -warn-common
-
Warn when encountering common symbols combined with other constructs.
- -warn-once
-
Provide only one warning per undefined symbol.
- -x
-
With -s or -S, delete all local symbols. These generally
begin with L.
- -z keyword
-
Mark the object for special behavior specified by
keyword. ld
recognizes the following keywords:
- combreloc
-
Object combines and sorts multiple relocation sections for dynamic
symbol lookup caching.
- defs
-
Disallow undefined symbols.
- initfirst
-
Initialize object first at runtime.
- interpose
-
Interpose object's symbol table before all but the
primary executable's symbol table.
- loadfltr
-
Process object's filter immediately at runtime.
- multidefs
-
Allow multiple definitions of a single symbol. Use the first
definition.
- nocombreloc
-
Disable combining multiple relocation sections.
- nocopyreloc
-
Disable copy relocation.
- nodefaultlib
-
Ignore default library search path when seeking dependencies for
object.
- nodelete
-
Do not unload object at runtime.
- nodlopen
-
Object is not available to dlopen.
- nodump
-
Object cannot be dumped by dldump.
- now
-
Non-lazy runtime binding.
- origin
-
Object may contain $ORIGIN.
- -E, --export-dynamic
-
Add all symbols to dynamic symbol table, not just those referenced by
linked objects.
- -EB
-
Link big-endian objects.
- -EL
-
Link little-endian objects.
- -F name
-
Set DT_FILTER field of ELF shared
object to name.
- -Ldir, --library-path=dir
-
Search directory dir before standard search
directories (this option must precede the -l option that searches that directory).
- -M
-
Display a link map on standard output.
- -Map file
-
Print a link map to file.
- -N
-
Allow reading of and writing to both data and text. Mark ouput if it
supports Unix magic numbers. Do not page-align data.
- -O level
-
Optimize. level should be 1, 2, 3, or 0. The
default is 1. 0 turns off optimization; 3 optimizes the most.
- -R file
-
Obtain symbol names and addresses from file, but
suppress relocation of file and its inclusion in
output.
- -S
-
Do not include debugger symbol information in output.
- -T file
-
Execute script file instead of the default
linker script.
- -Tbss address
-
Begin bss segment of output at address.
- -Tdata address
-
Begin data segment of output at address.
- -Ttext address
-
Begin text segment of output at address.
- -Ur
-
Synonymous with -r except when
linking C++ programs, where it resolves constructor references.
- -X
-
With -s or -S, delete local symbols beginning with
L.
- -V
-
Show version number and emulation linkers for -m option.
ldconfig [options] directories
|
|
System administration command. Examine the libraries in the given
directories,
/etc/ld.so.conf, /usr/lib,
and /lib; update links and cache where
necessary. Usually run in startup files or after the installation of
new shared libraries.
Options
- -D
-
Debug mode. Suppress all normal operations.
- -l
-
Library mode. Expect libraries as arguments, not directories.
Manually link specified libraries.
- -n
-
Suppress examination of /usr/lib and
/lib and reading of
/etc/ld.so.conf; do not cache.
- -N
-
Do not cache; only link.
- -p
-
Print all directories and candidate libraries in the cache. Used
without arguments.
- -v
-
Verbose mode. Include version number, and announce each directory as
it is scanned and links as they are created.
- -X
-
Do not link; only rebuild cache.
Files
- /lib/ld.so
-
Linker and loader.
- /etc/ld.so.conf
-
List of directories that contain libraries.
- /etc/ld.so.cache
-
List of the libraries found in those libraries mentioned in
/etc/ld.so.conf.
Display a list of the shared libraries each
program requires.
Options
- -d, --data-relocs
-
Process data relocations. Report missing objects.
- -r, --function-relocs
-
Process relocations for both data objects and functions. Report any
that are missing.
- -v, --verbose
-
Display ldd's
version.
- --help
-
Print help message, then exit.
- --version
-
Display the linker's version, then exit.
less [options] [filename]
|
|
less is a program for paging through
files or other output. It was written in reaction to the perceived
primitiveness of more (hence its
name). Some commands may be preceded by a number.
Options
- -[z]num, --window=num
-
Set number of lines to scroll to num. Default is
one screenful. A negative num sets the number to
num lines less than the current number.
- +[+]command
-
Run command on startup. If
command is a number, jump to that line. The
option ++ applies this command to each file in the command-line list.
- -?, --help
-
Print help screen. Ignore all other options; do not page through file.
- -a, --search-screen
-
When searching, begin after last line displayed. (Default is to
search from second line displayed.)
- -bbuffers, -buffers=buffers
-
Use buffers buffers for each file (default is
10). Buffers are 1 KB in size.
- -c, --clear-screen
-
Redraw screen from top, not bottom.
- -d, --dumb
-
Suppress dumb-terminal error messages.
- -e, --quit-at-eof
-
Automatically exit after reaching EOF twice.
- -f, --force
-
Force opening of directories and devices; do not print warning when
opening binaries.
- -g, --hilite-search
-
Highlight only string found by past search command, not all matching
strings.
- -hnum, --max-back-scroll=num
-
Never scroll backward more than num lines at
once.
- -i, --ignore-case
-
Make searches case-insensitive, unless the search string contains
uppercase letters.
- -jnum, --jump-target=num
-
Position target line on line num of screen.
Target line can be the result of a search or a jump. Count lines
beginning from 1 (top line). A negative num is
counted back from bottom of screen.
- -kfile, --lesskey-file=file
-
Read file to define special key bindings.
- -m, --long-prompt
-
Display more-like prompt, including
percent of file read.
- -n, --line-numbers
-
Do not calculate line numbers. Affects -m and -M
options and = and v commands (disables passing of line number to
editor).
- -ofile, --log-file=file
-
When input is from a pipe, copy output to file
as well as to screen. (Prompt for overwrite authority if
file exists.)
- -ppattern, --pattern=pattern
-
At startup, search for first occurrence of
pattern.
- -q, --quiet, --silent
-
Disable ringing of bell on attempts to scroll past EOF or before
beginning of file. Attempt to use visual bell instead.
- -r, --raw-control-chars
-
Display "raw" control characters
instead of using ^x notation. This sometimes
leads to display problems, which might be fixed by using -R instead.
- -s, --squeeze-blank-lines
-
Print successive blank lines as one line.
- -ttag, --tag=tag
-
Edit file containing tag. Consult
./tags (constructed by ctags).
- -u, --underline-special
-
Treat backspaces and carriage returns as printable input.
- -w, --hilite-unread
-
Show the line to which a movement command has skipped, phrases
displayed by a search command, or the first unread line during a
normal scroll by highlighting text in reverse video.
- -xn, --tabs=n
-
Set tab stops to every n characters. Default is
8.
- -yn, --max-forw-scroll=n
-
Never scroll forward more than n lines at once.
- -B, --auto-buffers
-
Do not automatically allocate buffers for data read from a pipe. If
-b specifies a number of buffers,
allocate that many. If necessary, allow information from previous
screens to be lost.
- -C, -CLEAR-SCREEN
-
Redraw screen by clearing it and then redrawing from top.
- -E, --QUIT-AT-EOF
-
Automatically exit after reaching EOF once.
- -F, --quit-if-one-screen
-
Exit without displaying anything if first file can fit on a single
screen.
- -G, --HILITE-SEARCH
-
Never highlight matching search strings.
- -I, --IGNORE-CASE
-
Make searches case-insensitive, even when the search string contains
uppercase letters.
- -J, --status-column
-
Used with -w or -W, highlight a single column on the left edge
of the screen instead of the whole text of an unread line.
- -Kcharset
-
Use the specified charset.
- -M
-
Prompt more verbosely than with -m,
including percentage, line number, and total lines.
- -N, --LINE-NUMBERS
-
Print line number before each line.
- -Ofile, --LOG-FILE=file
-
Similar to -o, but do not prompt
when overwriting file.
- -P[mM=]prompt
-
Set the prompt displayed by less at
the bottom of each screen to prompt. The
m sets the prompt invoked by the
-m option, the M sets the prompt invoked by the -M option, and the = sets the prompt invoked by the = command. Special characters (described in
the manpage for less), can be used
to print statistics and other information in these prompts.
- -Q, --QUIET, --SILENT
-
Never ring terminal bell.
- -R, --RAW-CONTROL-CHARS
-
Like r, but adjust screen to account
for presence of control characters.
- -S, --chop-long-lines
-
Cut, do not fold, long lines.
- -Tfile, --tag-file=file
-
With the -t option or :t command, read file
instead of ./tags.
- -U, --UNDERLINE-SPECIAL
-
Treat backspaces and carriage returns as control characters.
- -V, --version
-
Display version and exit.
- -W, --HILITE-UNREAD
-
Show phrases displayed by a search command, or the first unread line
of any forward movement that is more than one line, by highlighting
text in reverse video.
- -X, --no-init
-
Do not send initialization and deinitialization strings from termcap
to terminal.
Commands
Many
commands can be preceded by a numeric argument, referred to as
number in the command descriptions.
- SPACE, ^V, f, ^F
-
Scroll forward the default number of lines (usually one windowful).
- z
-
Similar to SPACE, but allows the
number of lines to be specified, in which case it resets the default
to that number.
- RETURN, ^N, e, ^E, j, ^J
-
Scroll forward. Default is one line. Display all lines, even if the
default is more lines than the screen size.
- d, ^D
-
Scroll forward. Default is one-half the screen size. The number of
lines may be specified, in which case the default is reset.
- b, ^B, ESC-v
-
Scroll backward. Default is one windowful.
- w
-
Like b, but allows the number of
lines to be specified, in which case it resets the default to that
number.
- y, ^Y, ^P, k, ^K
-
Scroll backward. Default is one line. Display all lines, even if the
default is more lines than the screen size.
- u, ^U
-
Scroll backward. Default is one-half the screen size. The number of
lines may be specified, in which case the default is reset.
- r, ^R, ^L
-
Redraw screen.
- R
-
Like r, but discard buffered input.
- F
-
Scroll forward. When an EOF is reached, continue trying to find more
output, behaving similarly to tail
-f.
- g, <, ESC-<
-
Skip to a line. Default is 1.
- G, >, ESC->
-
Skip to a line. Default is the last one.
- p, %
-
Skip to a position number percent of the way
into the file.
- {
-
If the top line on the screen includes a {, find its matching }. If
the top line contains multiple {s, use number to
determine which one to use in finding a match.
- }
-
If the bottom line on the screen includes a }, find its matching {.
If the bottom line contains multiple }s, use
number to determine which one to use in finding
a match.
- (
-
If the top line on the screen includes a (, find its matching ). If
the top line contains multiple (s, use number to
determine which one to use in finding a match.
- )
-
If the bottom line on the screen includes a ), find its matching (.
If the bottom line contains multiple )s, use
number to determine which one to use in finding
a match.
- [
-
If the top line on the screen includes a [, find its matching ]. If
the top line contains multiple [s, use number to
determine which one to use in finding a match.
- ]
-
If the bottom line on the screen includes a ], find its matching [.
If the bottom line contains multiple ]s, use
number to determine which one to use in finding
a match.
- ESC-^F
-
Behave like { but prompt for two characters, which it substitutes for
{ and } in its search.
- ESC-^B
-
Behave like } but prompt for two characters, which it substitutes for
{ and } in its search.
- m
-
Prompt for a lowercase letter and then use that letter to mark the
current position.
- '
-
Prompt for a lowercase letter and then go to the position marked by
that letter. There are some special characters:
- ^
-
Beginning of file.
- $
-
End of file.
- ^X^X
-
Same as '.
- /pattern
-
Find next occurrence of pattern, starting at
second line displayed. Some special characters can be entered before
pattern:
- !
-
Find lines that do not contain pattern.
- *
-
If current file does not contain pattern,
continue through the rest of the files in the command-line list.
- @
-
Search from the first line in the first file specified on the command
line, no matter what the screen currently displays.
- ?pattern
-
Search backward, beginning at the line before the top line. Treats
!, *, and @ as
special characters when they begin pattern, as
/ does.
- ESC-/pattern
-
Same as /*.
- ESC-?pattern
-
Same as ?*.
- n
-
Repeat last pattern search.
- N
-
Repeat last pattern search in the reverse
direction.
- ESC-n
-
Repeat previous search command but as though it were prefaced by *.
- ESC-N
-
Repeat previous search command but as though it were prefaced by *
and in the reverse direction.
- ESC-u
-
Toggle search highlighting.
- :e [filename]
-
Read in filename and insert it into the
command-line list of filenames. Without
filename, reread the current file.
filename may contain special characters:
- %
-
Name of current file
- #
-
Name of previous file
- ^X^V, E
-
Same as :e.
- :n
-
Read in next file in command-line list.
- :p
-
Read in previous file in command-line list.
- :x
-
Read in first file in command-line list.
- :f, =, ^G
-
Print filename, position in command-line list, line number on top of
window, total lines, byte number, and total bytes.
- -
-
Expects to be followed by a command-line option letter. Toggle the
value of that option or, if appropriate, prompt for its new value.
- -+
-
Expects to be followed by a command-line option letter. Reset that
option to its default.
- --
-
Expects to be followed by a command-line option letter. Reset that
option to the opposite of its default, where the opposite can be
determined.
- _
-
Expects to be followed by a command-line option letter. Display that
option's current setting.
- +command
-
Execute command each time a new file is read in.
- q, :q, :Q, ZZ
-
Exit.
- v
-
Not valid for all versions. Invoke editor specified by $VISUAL or $EDITOR,
or vi if neither is set.
- ! [command]
-
Not valid for all versions. Invoke $SHELL or sh.
If command is given, run it and then exit.
Special characters:
- %
-
Name of current file.
- #
-
Name of previous file.
- !!
-
Last shell command.
- | mark-letter command
-
Not valid for all versions. Pipe fragment of file (from first line on
screen to mark-letter) to
command. mark-letter may
also be:
- ^
-
Beginning of file.
- $
-
End of file.
- ., newline
-
Current screen is piped.
Prompts
The prompt interprets certain sequences specially. Those beginning
with % are always evaluated. Those
beginning with ? are evaluated if
certain conditions are true. Some prompts determine the position of
particular lines on the screen. These sequences require that a method
of determining that line be specified. See the -P option and the manpage for more
information.
lesskey [-o output-file | --output=output-file] [input-file]
|
|
Configure keybindings for the less
command using a configuration file. The input file defaults to
~/.lesskey and the output file to
~/.less unless you specify otherwise.
Configuration file format
The configuration file for lesskey
has one to three sections. These are marked by a line containing a #
symbol and the name of the section: #command, #line-edit, and #env.
- The #command section
-
The command section determines the keys used for actions within
less. Each line should contain the
key or key combination you wish to define, a space or tab, and the
name of the action to perform. You may also add an extra string at
the end, which will be performed at the end of the first action.
Keys you define should be entered as you plan to type them, with the
exception of the caret (^), space, tab, and backslash (\) characters,
which should be preceded by a backslash. In addition, the following
special keys are represented by escape sequences that begin with a
backslash:
- Backspace: \b
- Escape: \e
- Newline: \n
- Return: \r
- Tab: \t
- Up arrow: \ku
- Down arrow: \kd
- Right arrow: \kr
- Left arrow: \kl
- Page up: \kU
- Page down: \kD
- Home: \kh
- End: \ke
- Delete: \kx
The actions that can be defined are:
- invalid (creates error)
- noaction
- forw-line
- back-line
- forw-line-force
- forw-scroll
- back-scroll
- forw-screen
- back-screen
- forw-window
- back-window
- forw-screen-force
- forw-forever
- repaint-flush
- repaint
- undo-hilite
- goto-line
- percent
- left-scroll
- right-scroll
- forw-bracket
- back-bracket
- goto-end
- status
- forw-search
- back-search
- repeat-search
- repeat-search-all
- set-mark
- goto-mark
- examine
- next-file
- index-file
- prev-file
- toggle-option
- display-option
- pipe
- visual
- shell
- firstcmd
- help
- version (display version)
- digit (display number)
- quit
- The #line-edit section
-
The line editing section lets you choose keys for the line-editing
capabilities of less in a similar
manner to the #command section,
although without the "extra" string
after the command. The line editing actions that can be defined are:
- forw-complete
- back-complete
- expand
- literal
- right
- left
- word-left
- word-right
- insert
- delete
- word-delete
- word-backspace
- home
- end
- up
- down
- The #env section
-
The third section, like the second, is optional, and you can use it
to override environment variables that affect less. Each line consists of a variable, the
equals sign (=), and the value to which you wish to set the variable.
The most important ones are LESS,
which allows you to select additional flags to pass to less when you run it, and LESSCHARSET, which lets you choose a character
set. Check the less manpage for a
complete list of environment variables that affect the
program.
File transfer program with more features than ftp. The lftp
command allows FTP and HTTP protocol transfers, plus other protocols
including FISH (SSH based), FTPS, and HTTPS. It uses a shell-like
command interface and offers job control in a manner similar to
bash. lftp has two important reliability features:
it resumes failed or interrupted transactions, and it goes into the
background automatically if it is quit in the middle of a file
transfer.
Options
- -d
-
Run in debug mode.
- -e commands
-
Start, execute the specified commands, and then wait for further
instructions.
- -p portnumber
-
Connect to the specified port number.
- -u user[,pass]
-
Login to the server with the username (and, optionally, password) you
specify.
- -f scriptfile
-
Run the specified script file of lftp commands, then exit.
- -c commands
-
Run the commands specified, then exit.
Commands
The lftp commands are similar to
those for ftp. However, lftp lacks or uses different mechanisms for a
number of commands, including $,
ascii, binary, case,
and macdef. It also adds the
following:
- alias [name [value]]
-
Create an alias for a command. For example, you could set
dir to be an alias for ls
-lf.
- anon
-
Set the username to anonymous. This is the default username.
- at
-
Execute a command at a given time, as with the at command in an actual shell.
- bookmark [arguments]
-
The lftp bookmark command used with
the following arguments will add, delete, edit, import, or list
bookmarks, respectively:
add name url
del name
edit
import type
list
- cache
-
Work with the local memory cache. This command should be followed by
the arguments:
- stat
-
Display the status for the cache.
- on|off
-
Turn caching on or off.
- flush
-
Empty the cache.
- size n
-
Set the maximum size for the cache. Setting it to -1 means unlimited.
- expire nu
-
Set the cache to expire after n units of time.
You can set the unit to seconds (s),
minutes (m), hours (h), or days (d). For example, for a cache that expires
after an hour, use the syntax cache expire
1h.
- close
-
Where the ftp version of this
command just stops all sessions, this version closes idle connections
with the current server. If you have connections to multiple servers
and wish to close all idle connections, add the -a flag.
- command cmd args
-
Execute the specified lftp command,
with the specified arguments, ignoring any aliases created with the
alias command.
- mirror [options] [remotedir [localdir]]
-
Copy a directory exactly. The mirror
command accepts the following arguments:
- -c, --continue
-
If mirroring was interrupted, resume it.
- -e, --delete
-
Delete local files that are not present at the remote site.
- -s, --allow-suid
-
Keep the suid/sgid bits as set on the remote site.
- -n, --only-newer
-
Get only those files from the remote site that have more recent dates
than the files on the local system. Cannot be used with the -c argument.
- -r, --no-recursion
-
Do not get any subdirectories.
- --no-umask
-
Do not use umask when getting file modes. See umask for more information about file modes.
- -R, --reverse
-
Mirror files from the local system to the remote system. With this
argument, make sure that you specify the local directory first and
the remote directory second. If you do not specify both directories,
the second is assumed to be the same as the first. If you choose
neither, the operation occurs in the current working directories.
- -L, --dereference
-
When mirroring a link, download the file the link points to rather
than just the link.
- -N, --newer-than filename
-
Get all files newer than the file filename.
- -P, --parallel[=n]
-
Download n files in parallel.
- -i, --include regex
-
Get only the files whose names match the regular expression
regex. See grep
for more information about regular expressions.
- -x, --exclude regex
-
Do not get the files whose names match regex.
See grep for more information about
regular expressions.
- -t, time-prec n
-
Set the precision of time measurement for file comparison; if file
dates differ by amounts less than n,
they are assumed to be the same. You can specify
n in seconds (s), minutes (m), hours (h), or days (d).
- -T, --loose-time-prec n
-
Set the precision for loose time comparisons. You can specify
n in seconds (s), minutes (m), hours (h), or days (d).
- -v, --verbose=n
-
Set the verbose level. You can set n from 0 (no
output) to 3 (full output) using a number or by repeating the
v. For example, -vvv is level 3 verbose mode.
- --use-cache
-
Use the cache to get directory listings.
- --remove-source-files
-
Move, rather than copy, files when mirroring.
- set [setting | value]
-
Set one of the preference variables for lftp. If run without arguments, list the
variables that have been changed; without arguments and with the
-a or -d flags, list all values or default values,
respectively.
See the lftp manpage for a complete
list of preference variables that can be set.
- wait [n | all]
-
Wait for the job or jobs you specify by number, or all jobs, to
terminate.
Uses the lftp program to fetch the
specified URL, which may be HTTP, FTP, or any of the protocols
supported by lftp.
Options
lftpget takes only three options:
- -c
-
Continue or restart a paused transaction.
- -d
-
Display debugging output.
- -v
-
Verbose mode; display more information about transactions.
Create a link between two files. This is the same as the ln command, but it has no error checking
because it uses the link( ) system
call directly.
ln [options] sourcename [destname]
ln [options] sourcenames destdirectory
|
|
Create pseudonyms (links) for files, allowing them to be accessed by
different names. The first form links sourcename
to destname, where destname
is usually either a new filename or (by default) a file in the
current directory with the same name as
sourcename. If destname is
an existing file, it is overwritten; if destname
is an existing directory, a link named
sourcename is created in that directory. The
second form creates links in destdirectory, each
link having the same name as the file specified.
Options
- -b, --backup=[control]
-
Back up any existing files. When using the long version of the
command, the optional control parameter controls
the kind of backup. When no control is specified, ln will attempt to read the control value from
the VERSION_CONTROL environment
variable. Accepted values are:
- none, off
-
Never make backups.
- numbered, t
-
Make numbered backups.
- existing, nil
-
Match existing backups, numbered or simple.
- simple, never
-
Always make simple backups.
- -d, -F, --directory
-
Allow hard links to directories. Available to privileged users.
- -f, --force
-
Force the link (don't prompt for overwrite
permission).
- --help
-
Print a help message and then exit.
- -i, --interactive
-
Prompt for permission before removing files.
- -n, --no-dereference
-
Replace symbolic links to directories instead of dereferencing them.
--force is useful with this
option.
- -s, --symbolic
-
Create a symbolic link. This lets you link across filesystems, and
also see the name of the link when you run ls
-l (otherwise, there's no way to know the
name that a file is linked to).
- -S suffix, --suffix=suffix
-
Append suffix to files when making backups,
instead of the default ~.
- --target-directory= diectory
-
Create links in the specified diectory.
- -v, --verbose
-
Verbose mode.
- --version
-
Print version information and then exit.
loadkeys [options] [filename]
|
|
Load a keymap from a specified file, usually one of the keymaps
stored in /lib/kbd/keymaps. If you create your
own keymap file, the related commands showkey, keymaps, and dumpkeys will be useful as well.
Options
- -c, --clearcompose
-
Clear the compose, or accent, table in the kernel.
- -d, --default
-
Load the default keymap. The same as running loadkeys defkeymap.
- -h, --help
-
Display help and usage information.
- -m, --mktable
-
Instead of loading the table, output maps as C language declarations.
- -q, --quiet
-
Operate in quiet mode.
- -s, --clearstrings
-
Clear the string table in the kernel.
- -v, --verbose
-
Operate verbosely. For extra effect, repeat.
Print report on current locale settings. Locales determine the
country-specific settings for a system, including character
encodings, the formatting of dates, honorifics, diagnostic messages,
currency, printer paper sizes, and default measurements. Locale
settings are essentially a dictionary of settings specified by
keyword. The keywords are grouped together into related categories
whose names begin with LC_. Each
category has a related environment variable of the same name from
which it will read its locale setting. Supply keyword or category
names as name to examine their values. Multiple
names may be given. You can also use the special keyword charmap to see the current character mapping.
When executed with no arguments, locale prints the value of all locale-related
environment variables.
Options
- -a
-
Print all available locale settings installed on the system.
- -c
-
Print the category related to each name argument.
- -k
-
Print keywords along with their settings for each
name argument.
- -m
-
Print all available character maps.
Environment variables
- LANG
-
The default value for unset internationalization variables. If not
set, the system's default value is used.
- LC_ADDRESS
-
Postal settings, country, and language names and abbreviation.
- LC_COLLATE
-
String and character sorting and comparison settings.
- LC_CTYPE
-
Character attributes, including case conversion mappings, and
categories of characters (whitespace, digit, lower, upper,
punctuation, etc.).
- LC_IDENTIFICATION
-
Information related to the current locale definition, including its
title, source, revision, and contact information for its author.
- LC_MEASUREMENT
-
Measurement units, metric or other.
- LC_MESSAGES
-
Settings for yes/no prompts and other informative and diagnostic
messages.
- LC_MONETARY
-
Currency formats and symbols.
- LC_NAME
-
Formats for names and honorifics.
- LC_NUMERIC
-
Non-monetary number formats.
- LC_PAPER
-
Default paper sizes for printing and pagination.
- LC_TELEPHONE
-
Telephone number formats.
- LC_TIME
-
Date and time formats.
- LC_ALL
-
When set, overrides the values of all other internationalization
variables.
- NLSPATH
-
The path for finding message catalogues used in processing messages.
Examples
Print the category name and all keywords for date and time settings:
locale -ck LC_TIME
Print the strings used for days of the week and months of the year:
locale day mon
Search database(s) of filenames and print matches. *, ?, [, and ] are
treated specially; / and . are not. Matches include all files that
contain pattern unless
pattern includes metacharacters, in which case
locate requires an exact match.
Options
- -d path, --database=path
-
Search databases in path.
path must be a colon-separated list.
- -h, --help
-
Print a help message and then exit.
- --version
-
Print version information and then exit.
lockfile [options] filenames
|
|
Create semaphore file(s), used to limit access to a file. When
lockfile fails to create some of the
specified files, it pauses for 8 seconds and retries the last one on
which it failed. The command processes flags as they are encountered
(i.e., a flag that is specified after a file will not affect that
file).
Options
- -sleeptime
-
Number of seconds lockfile waits
before retrying after a failed creation attempt. Default is 8.
- -!
-
Invert return value. Useful in shell scripts.
- -l lockout_time
-
Time (in seconds) after a lockfile was last modified at which it will
be removed by force. See also -s.
- -ml, -mu
-
If the permissions on the system mail spool directory allow it or if
lockfile is suitably setgid,
lockfile can lock and unlock your
system mailbox with the options -ml
and -mu, respectively.
- -r retries
-
Stop trying to create files after
retries retries. The default is -1 (never stop
trying). When giving up, remove all created files.
- -s suspend_time
-
After a lockfile has been removed by force (see -l), a suspension of 16 seconds takes place by
default. (This is intended to prevent the inadvertent immediate
removal of any lockfile newly created by another program.) Use
-s to change the default 16 seconds.
logger [options] [message...]
|
|
TCP/IP command. Add entries to the system log (via syslogd). If no message is given on the
command line, standard input is logged.
Options
- -d
-
When writing to a socket with -s,
use a datagram instead of a stream.
- -f file
-
Read message from file.
- -i
-
Include the process ID of the logger
process.
- -p pri
-
Enter message with the specified priority pri.
Default is user.notice.
- -s
-
Log message to standard error as well as to the system log.
- -t tag
-
Mark every line in the log with the specified
tag.
- -u socket
-
Write log to socket instead of to the syslog.
- -
-
Accept no futher options. Consider whatever is to the right of the
hyphen as the message to be logged.
Log into the system. login asks for
a username (name can be supplied on the command
line) and password (if appropriate).
If successful, login updates
accounting files, sets various environment variables, notifies users
if they have mail, and executes startup shell files.
Only the root user can log in when /etc/nologin
exists. That file is displayed before the connection is terminated.
Furthermore, root may connect only on a tty that is listed in
/etc/securetty. If
~/.hushlogin exists, execute a quiet login. If
/var/adm/lastlog exists, print the time of the
last login.
Options
- -f
-
Suppress second login authentication.
- -h host
-
Specify name of remote host. Normally used by servers, not humans;
may be used only by root.
- -p
-
Preserve previous environment.
Consult /var/run/utmp for
user's login name. If found, print it; otherwise,
exit with an error message.
Options
- --help
-
Print a help message and then exit.
- --version
-
Print version information and then exit.
logrotate [options] config_files
|
|
System administration command. Manipulate log files according to
commands given in config_files.
Options
- -d, --debug
-
Debug mode. No changes will be made to log files.
- -f, --force
-
Force rotation of log files.
- -h, --help
-
Describe options.
- -m command, --mail command
-
Use the specified command to mail log files. The
default is /bin/mail -s.
- -s file, --state file
-
Save state information in file. The default is
/var/lib/logrotate.status.
- --usage
-
Show syntax and options.
- -v, --verbose
-
Describe what is being done and what log files are affected.
Commands
- compress
-
Compress old versions of log files with gzip.
- compresscmd command
-
Use command to compress log files. Default is
gzip.
- compressext extension
-
Append filename extension to
compressed files instead of the compress command's default.
- compressoptions options
-
Specify options to pass to the compress command. Default for gzip is -9
for maximum compression.
- copy
-
Copy log file, but do not change the original.
- copytruncate
-
Copy log file, then truncate it in place. For use with programs whose
logging cannot be temporarily halted.
- create [permissions] [owner] [group]
-
After rotation, re-create log file with the specified
permissions, owner, and
group. permissions must be
in octal. If any of these parameters is missing, the log
file's original attributes will be used.
- daily
-
Rotate log files every day.
- delaycompress
-
Don't compress log file until the next rotation.
- endscript
-
End a postrotate or prerotate script.
- extension extension
-
Give rotated log files the specified extension.
Any compression extension will be appended to this.
- ifempty
-
Rotate log file even if it is empty. Overrides the default notifempty option.
- include file
-
Read the file into current file. If
file is a directory, read all files in that
directory into the current file.
- mail address
-
Mail any deleted logs to address.
- mailfirst
-
When using the mail command, mail
the newly rotated log instead of the one being deleted.
- maillast
-
When using the mail command, mail
the log that is about to expire. This is the default behavior.
- missingok
-
Skip missing log files. Do not generate an error.
- monthly
-
Rotate log files only the first time logrotate is run in a month.
- nocompress
-
Override compress.
- nocopy
-
Override copy.
- nocopytruncate
-
Override copytruncate.
- nocreate
-
Override create.
- nodelaycompress
-
Override delaycompress.
- nomail
-
Override mail.
- nomissingok
-
Override missingok.
- noolddir
-
Override olddir.
- nosharedscipts
-
Override sharedscripts. Run
prerotate and postrotate scripts for each log rotated. This
is the default.
- notifempty
-
Override ifempty.
- olddir directory
-
Move logs into directory for rotation.
directory must be on the same physical device as
the original log files.
- postrotate
-
Begin a script of directives to apply after the log file is rotated.
The script ends when the endscript
directive is read.
- prerotate
-
Begin a script of directives to apply before a log file is rotated.
The script ends when the endscript
directive is read.
- rotate number
-
The number of times to rotate a log file before
removing it.
- size n[k|M]
-
Rotate log file when it is greater than n bytes.
n can optionally be followed by k for kilobytes or M for megabytes.
- sharedscripts
-
Run prescript and postscript only once for the session.
- start n
-
Use n as the starting number for rotated logs.
Default is 0.
- tabooext [+] extlist
-
Replace taboo extension list with the given
extlist. If +
is specified, add to existing list. The default list is .rpmorig .rpmsave ,v .swp .rpmnew ~.
- weekly
-
Rotate log files if more than a week has passed since their last
rotation.
- uncompresscmd command
-
Use command to uncompress log files. Default is
gunzip.
look [options] string [file]
|
|
Search for lines in file
(/usr/dict/words by default) that begin with
string.
Options
- -a
-
Use alternate dictionary /usr/dict/web2.
- -d
-
Compare only alphanumeric characters.
- -f
-
Search is not case-sensitive.
- -t character
-
Stop checking after the first occurrence of
character.
losetup [options] loopdevice [file]
|
|
System administration command. Set up and control loop devices.
Attach a loop device to a regular file or block device, detach a loop
device, or query a loop device. A loop device can be used to mount an
image file as if it were a normal device.
Options
- -d
-
Detach specified loopdevice.
- -e encryption
-
Use specified encryption when performing writes
and reads. Accepted values are NONE,
DES, and XOR. When using DES encryption, you will be
prompted for initialization values.
- -o offset
-
Start reading data at offset bytes from the
beginning of file.
System administration command. LPRng line printer control program. If
executed without a command, lpc
accepts commands from standard input. Some of the commands accept a
jobid parameter. A jobid
can be one or more job numbers, user names, lpd key characters, or key character and glob
patterns of the form X=pattern. It can also be
the keyword all, which matches all
jobs.
Options
- -a
-
Alias for the -Pall command. Operate
on all printer spool queues listed in the
printcap all
field.
- -A
-
Use authentication as specified in the AUTH environment variable.
- -Pprinter
-
Specify the print spool queue to operate on. A
printer may also specify a host (e.g.,
printer@host). The default queue is the queue
for whatever printer is listed in the PRINTER environment variable, or the first
entry in the /etc/printcap file. If the keyword
all is given instead of a printer
name, lpc will operate on printers
specified in the all field of the
/etc/printcap file on the appropriate host. If
no all field is specified, then
lpc will use lpd on the appropriate host to find all
available printers.
- -Sserver
-
Send commands to the specified server instead of
whatever server is listed in /etc/printcap or
set using the -P option.
- -Uuser
-
Execute commands as if they were made by user.
- -V
-
Print version number, then exit.
Commands
- ?, help [commands]
-
Get a list of commands or help on specific commands.
- active [printer@host]
-
Report whether lpd server is active.
- abort all|printer
-
Terminate current printer daemon and disable printing for the
specified printer.
- class all|printer restriction
-
Restrict class of jobs being printed. restriction may be a class, a glob match on a
particular control file entry of the form
X=globmatch, or the word
off to remove any existing
restrictions.
- clean all|printer
-
Remove files that cannot be printed from the specified printer queues.
- client all|printer
-
Show LPRng client configuration and printcap information.
- defaultq
-
List the default lpc queue.
- defaults
-
List lpc's default
configuration information.
- disable all|printer
-
Disable specified printer queues.
- down all|printer message
-
Disable specified printer queues and put message
in the printer status file.
- enable all|printer
-
Enable the specified printer queues.
- exit, quit
-
Exit lpc.
- help
-
Print help message.
- hold printer [jobid]
-
Hold jobs in the queue. Release with the release command.
- holdall all|printer
-
Automatically hold all new jobs until they are released with the
release command.
- kill all|printer
-
The same as performing abort
followed by start. Although it is a
convenient shorthand, sometimes the start command will not work due to race
conditions.
- lpd [printer@host]
-
Determine if lpd process is running.
Report PID if it is.
- lpq printer [options]
-
Run lpq command from inside
lpc.
- lprm printer jobid
-
Run lprm command from inside
lpc to remove one or more print
jobs.
- move source jobid destination
-
Move specified jobs from source printer to
destination printer.
- msg printer message
-
Change printer status message to message. An
empty message removes the current status
message.
- noholdall all|printer
-
Cancel holdall command.
- quit, exit
-
Exit lpc program.
- redirect source destination
-
Redirect all jobs sent to source printer to
destination printer. If
destination is off, turn off redirection.
- redo printer jobid
-
Reprint jobs.
- release printer [jobid]
-
Release held jobs for printing.
- reread [printer@host]
-
Request lpd server to reread
configuration and printcap information.
- server all|printer
-
Show printcap entries as used by lpd.
- start all|printer
-
Enable the printer queues and start printing daemons for the
specified printers.
- status all|printer
-
Return the status of the specified printers.
- stop all|printer
-
Disable the specified printer daemons after any current jobs are
completed.
- topq printer [jobid] [users]
-
Put the specifed jobs at the top of the printer's
queue in the order the jobs are listed.
- up all|printer
-
Enable print queues and restart daemons for the specified
printers.
TCP/IP command. LPRng line printer daemon. lpd is usually invoked at boot time from the
rc2 file. It makes a single pass through the
printer configuration file (traditionally
/etc/printcap) to find out about the existing
printers, and prints any files left after a crash. It then accepts
requests to print files in a queue, transfer files to a spooling
area, display a queue's status, or remove jobs from
a queue. In each case, it forks a child process for each request,
then continues to listen for subsequent requests.
A file lock in each spool directory prevents multiple daemons from
becoming active simultaneously. After the daemon has set the lock, it
scans the directory for files beginning wth cf.
Lines in each cf file specify files to be
printed or nonprinting actions to be performed. Each line begins with
a key character, which specifies information about the print job or
what to do with the remainder of the line. Key characters are:
- c
-
cifplot file.
- d
-
DVI file.
- f
-
Formatted file--name of a file to print that is already
formatted.
- g
-
Graph file.
- l
-
Formatted file, but suppress pagebreaks and printing of control
characters.
- n
-
ditroff file.
- p
-
File filtered using pr.
- t
-
troff file.
- v
-
File containing raster image.
- C
-
Classification--string to be used for the classification line on
the burst page.
- H
-
Hostname--name of machine where lpd was invoked.
- I
-
Indentation--number of characters to indent output.
- J
-
Job name--string to be used for the jobname on the burst page.
- L
-
Literal--contains identification information from the password
file and causes the banner page to be printed.
- M
-
Mail--send mail to the specified user when the current print job
completes.
- N
-
Filename--original name of data file to be printed.
- P
-
Person--login name of person who invoked lpd.
- T
-
Title--string to be used as the title for pr.
- U
-
Unlink--name of file to remove upon completion of printing.
- W
-
Width--page width in number of characters.
Options
- -p port
-
Bind lpd to
port instead of the default determined by
getservbyname, usually port 515.
- -F
-
Run lpd in foreground instead of as
a daemon.
- -L file
-
Log error and debugging messages to file instead
of syslogd.
- -V
-
Print version, then exit.
Files
- /etc/lpd.conf
-
LPRng configuration file.
- /etc/printcap
-
Printer description file.
- /etc/lpd.perms
-
Printer permissions.
- /var/spool/*
-
Spool directories.
- /var/spool/*/printcap
-
Printer-specific description file.
- /var/spool/*/printer
-
Queue lock file.
- /var/spool/*/control.printer
-
Queue control.
- /var/spool/*/active.printer
-
Active job.
- /dev/lp*
-
Printer devices.
Check the print spool queue for status of print jobs. For each job,
display username, rank in the queue, filenames, job number, and total
file size (in bytes). If user is specified,
display information only for that user. jobid
can be one or more job numbers, usernames, lpd key characters, or key character and glob
patterns of the form X=pattern.
Options
- -a
-
Report on all printers listed in the server's
printcap database.
- -l
-
Verbose mode. Print information about each file comprising a job. Use
-l multiple times to increase the
information provided.
- -s
-
Print one-line status summary for each queue and subqueue.
- -A
-
Use authentication.
- -L
-
Maximum verbosity. Print all available information about each file
comprising a job in a long display format.
- -Pprinter
-
Specify which printer to query. Without this option, lpq uses the printer set in the PRINTER or other printer-related environment
variables or the default system printer.
- -V
-
Print version, then exit.
- -tn
-
Display spool queues every n seconds.
The LPRng print spooler. Send files to the
printer spool queue. If no files are given,
accept standard input. On most Linux distributions, the LPRng print
spooler replaces the BSD print spooler. Some systems use the
alternative CUPS printing system. Both printing systems have
lpr commands with options that are
mostly compatible with BSD's lpr. We document LPRng's
lpr command here.
Options
- -b, -l
-
Expect a binary or literal file on which minimial processing should
be done. The file is assigned filter f, which passes it through the default input
filter (:if or :filter in the printcap file).
- -f
-
Use a filter that interprets the first character of each line as a
standard carriage control character.
- -h
-
Do not print the burst page.
- -i [cols]
-
Indent the output. Default is 8 columns. Specify number of columns to
indent with the cols argument.
- -k
-
Send data directly to the remote printer instead of creating a
temporary file. This may cause problems if the job is killed when
transferring the file, but can speed up large jobs.
- -l
-
Use a filter that allows control characters to be printed and
suppresses pagebreaks.
- -m address
-
Send mail to address if print job is
unsuccessful.
- -w n
-
Set page width to n characters.
- -A
-
Use authentication.
- -B
-
Filter all job files as specified in the printcap database, then
combine them into a single job file to be sent to the spooler.
- -C class
-
Set the job classification used on the burst page and to assign
priorities. class should be a letter from
A to Z, A being
the lowest priority and Z the
highest.
- -F filter
-
Set the print filter to use when printing
files. filter should be a
lowercase letter. The default is f.
The command used for each filter is defined in the
printer's printcap file.
- -G
-
Filter individual jobs before sending them to the spooler.
- -J name
-
Replace the job name on the burst page with
name. If omitted, use the first
file's name or STDIN.
- -K n, #n
-
Print n copies of each listed file.
- -Pprinter
-
Output to printer instead of the printer
specified in the PRINTER environment
variable or the system default.
- -R name
-
Place additional accounting information in the R field of the control file.
- -T title
-
Use title as the title when using pr.
- -U user
-
Specify a username for the job. Available only for privileged users.
- -V
-
Verbose mode. Print additional information about progress of the
print job. Additional -V options may
be given to increase the level of information printed.
- -X command
-
Use the specified external command to filter
files.
- -Y host%port
-
Bypass the print spooler. Connect directly to the specified host and
port and send the filtered file.
- -Z options
-
Pass additional options through to the print
spooler.
Obsolete options
The following options are all obsolete, though still functional. They
may be removed in later versions of lpr. We include them here for those working
with older systems or updating legacy shell scripts.
- -c
-
Expect data produced by cifplot. Use
filter c.
- -d
-
Expect data produced by TEX in the DVI
(device-independent) format. Use filter d.
- -g
-
Expect standard plot data produced by the plot routines. Use filter g.
- -n
-
Expect data from ditroff
(device-independent troff). Use
filter n.
- -p
-
Expect data preprocessed by the pr
command. Use default filter f. This
function may not be supported on some systems.
- -r
-
Remove files upon completion of spooling. Mostly
for compatibility with Berkeley lpr.
- -t
-
Expect data from troff
(phototypesetter commands). Use filter t.
- -v
-
Expect a raster image for devices like the Benson Varian. Use filter
v.
Remove a print job from the print spool queue. You must specify a job
number or numbers, which can be obtained from lpq. A jobid can be one
or more job numbers, usernames, lpd
key characters, or key character and glob patterns of the form
X=pattern. It can also be
the keyword all, which matches all
jobs. Only a privileged user may remove files belonging to another
user.
Options
- -a
-
Remove all jobs available to the user. Same as using the
jobid ALL.
- -A
-
Use authentication.
- -P printer
-
Specify printer queue. Normally, the default printer or printer
specified in the PRINTER environment
variable is used.
- -U user
-
Remove files as if command were executed by
user. Only a privileged user can use this
option.
- -V
-
Print version, then exit.
lpstat [options] [queues]
|
|
Show the status of the print queue or queues. With options that take
a list argument, omitting the list produces all
information for that option. list can be
separated by commas or, if enclosed in double quotes, by spaces. For
the LPRng print service, lpstat is a
frontend to the lpq program.
Options
- -a [list]
-
Show whether the list of printer or class names
is accepting requests.
- -c [list]
-
Show information about printer classes named in
list.
- -d
-
Show the default printer destination.
- -f [list]
-
Verify that the list of forms is known to
lp.
- -l
-
Use after -f to describe available
forms, after -p to show printer
configurations, or after -s to
describe printers appropriate for the specified character set or
print wheel.
- -o [list]
-
Show the status of output requests. list
contains printer names, class names, or request IDs.
- -p [list]
-
Show the status of printers named in list.
- -r
-
Show whether the print scheduler is on or off.
- -s
-
Summarize the print status (show almost everything).
- -t
-
Show all status information (report everything).
- -u [list]
-
Show request status for users on list. Use
all to show information on all
users.
- -A
-
Use authentication.
List contents of directories. If no names are
given, list the files in the current directory. With one or more
names, list files contained in a directory
name or that match a file
name. names can include
filename metacharacters. The options let you display a variety of
information in different formats. The most useful options include
-F, -R, -l, and
-s. Some options
don't make sense together (e.g., -u and -c).
Options
- -1, --format=single-column
-
Print one entry per line of output.
- -a, --all
-
List all files, including the normally hidden files whose names begin
with a period.
- -b, --escape
-
Display nonprinting characters in octal and alphabetic format.
- -c, --time-ctime, --time=status
-
List files by status change time (not creation/modification time).
- --color =when
-
Colorize the names of files depending on the type of file. Accepted
values for when are never, always, or auto.
- -d, --directory
-
Report only on the directory, not its contents.
- -f
-
Print directory contents in exactly the order in which they are
stored, without attempting to sort them.
- --full-time
-
List times in full, rather than use the standard abbreviations.
- -g
-
Long listing like -l, but
don't show file owners.
- -h
-
Print sizes in kilobytes and megabytes.
- --help
-
Print a help message and then exit.
- -i, --inode
-
List the inode for each file.
- --indicator-style=none
-
Display filenames without the flags assigned by -p or -f
(default).
- -k, --kilobytes
-
If file sizes are being listed, print them in kilobytes. This option
overrides the environment variable POSIXLY_CORRECT.
- -l, --format=long, --format=verbose
-
Long format listing (includes permissions, owner, size, modification
time, etc.).
- -m, --format=commas
-
Merge the list into a comma-separated series of names.
- -n, --numeric-uid-gid
-
Like -l, but use group ID and user
ID numbers instead of owner and group names.
- -o
-
Long listing like -l, but
don't show group information.
- -p, --filetype, --indicator-style=file-type
-
Mark directories by appending / to them.
- -q, --hide-control-chars
-
Show nonprinting characters as ?
(default for display to a terminal).
- -r, --reverse
-
List files in reverse order (by name or by time).
- -s, --size
-
Print file size in blocks.
- --show-control-chars
-
Show nonprinting characters verbatim (default for printing to a file).
- --si
-
Similar to -h, but uses powers of
1000 instead of 1024.
- -t, --sort=time
-
Sort files according to modification time (newest first).
- -u, --time=atime, --time=access, --time=use
-
Sort files according to file access time.
- --version
-
Print version information on standard output, then exit.
- -x, --format=across, --format=horizontal
-
List files in rows going across the screen.
- -v, --sort=version
-
Interpret the digits in names such as file.6 and
file.6.1 as versions, and order filenames by
version.
- -w, --width=n
-
Format output to fit n columns.
- -A, --almost-all
-
List all files, including the normally hidden files whose names begin
with a period. Does not include the . and .. directories.
- -B, --ignore-backups
-
Do not list files ending in ~ unless
given as arguments.
- -C, --format=vertical
-
List files in columns (the default format).
- -D, --dired
-
List in a format suitable for Emacs dired mode.
- -F, --classify, --indicator-style=classify
-
Flag filenames by appending / to directories, * to executable files,
@ to symbolic links, | to FIFOs, and = to sockets.
- -G, --no-group
-
In long format, do not display group name.
- -H, --dereference-command-line
-
When symbolic links are given on the command line, follow the link
and list information from the actual file.
- -I, --ignore pattern
-
Do not list files whose names match the shell pattern
pattern unless they are given on the command
line.
- -L, --dereference
-
List the file or directory referenced by a symbolic link rather than
the link itself.
- -N, --literal
-
Display special graphic characters that appear in filenames.
- -Q, --quote-name
-
Quote filenames with "; quote nongraphic characters.
- -R, --recursive
-
List directories and their contents recursively.
- -S, --sort=size
-
Sort by file size, largest to smallest.
- -Rfile, --reload-state file
-
Load state from file before starting execution.
- -U, sort=none
-
Do not sort files.
- -X, sort=extension
-
Sort by file extension, then by filename.
Print attributes of files on a Linux Second
Extended File System. See also chattr.
Options
- -a
-
List all files in specified directories.
- -d
-
List attributes of directories, not of contents.
- -v
-
List version of files.
- -R
-
List directories and their contents recursively.
- -V
-
List version of lsmod, then exit.
System administration command. List all loaded modules: name, size
(in 4KB units), and, if appropriate, a list of referring modules. The
same information is available in /proc/modules
if the /proc directory is enabled on the system.
Options
- -h, --help
-
Show usage.
- -V, --version
-
Show version of this command.
m4 [options] [macros] [files]
|
|
Macro processor for C and other files.
Options
- -e, --interactive
-
Operate interactively, ignoring interrupts.
- -dflags, --debug=flags
-
Specify flag-level debugging.
- --help
-
Print help message, then exit.
- -ln, --arglength=n
-
Specify the length of debugging output.
- -o file, --error-output=file
-
Place output in file. Despite the name, print
error messages on standard error.
- -p, --prefix-built-ins
-
Prepend m4_ to all built-in macro
names.
- -s, --synclines
-
Insert #line directives for the C
preprocessor.
- -tname, --tracename
-
Insert name into symbol table as undefined.
Trace macro from the point it is defined.
- --version
-
Print version, then exit.
- -Bn
-
Set the size of the pushback and argument collection buffers to
n (default is 4096).
- -Dname[=value], --define=name[=value]
-
Define name as value or, if
value is not specified, define
name as null.
- -E, --fatal-warnings
-
Consider all warnings to be fatal, and exit after the first of them.
- -Ffile, --freeze-state file
-
Record m4's frozen
state in file for later reloading.
- -G, --traditional
-
Behave like traditional m4, ignoring
GNU extensions.
- -Hn, --hashsize=n
-
Set symbol-table hash array to n (default is
509).
- -Idirectory, --include=directory
-
Search directory for include files.
- -Q, --quiet, --silent
-
Suppress warning messages.
- -Rfile, --reload-state file
-
Load state from file before starting execution.
- -Uname, --undefine=name
-
Undefine name.
Read mail or send mail to other users. The
mail utility allows you to compose,
send, receive, forward, and reply to mail. mail has two main modes: compose mode, in
which you create a message, and command mode, in which you manage
your mail.
While mail is a powerful utility, it
can be tricky for a novice user. It is most commonly seen nowadays in
scripts. Most Linux distributions include several utilities that are
richer in features and much easier to use: mailers built in to
browsers such as Netscape and Mozilla, graphical mail programs
distributed with GNOME (Evolution) and KDE (Kmail), and the
terminal-based, full-screen utilities pine and elm.
The GNU Emacs editor can also send and receive mail.
This section presents mail commands,
options, and files. To get you started, here are two of the most
basic commands.
To enter interactive mail-reading mode, type:
mail To begin writing a message to user, type:
mail user Enter the text of the message, one line at a time, pressing Enter at
the end of each line. To end the message, enter a single period
(.) in the first column of a new line and press
Enter.
Command-line options
- -b list
-
Set blind carbon copy field to comma-separated
list.
- -c list
-
Set carbon copy field to comma-separated list.
- -d
-
Print debugging information.
- -f [file]
-
Process contents of file instead of
/var/spool/mail/$user. If
file is omitted, process
mbox in the user's home
directory.
- -i
-
Do not respond to tty interrupt signals.
- -n
-
Do not consult /etc/mail.rc when starting up.
- -p
-
Read mail in POP mode.
- -s subject
-
Set subject to subject.
- -u
-
Process contents of /var/spool/mail/$user (the
default).
- -v
-
Verbose; print information about mail delivery to standard output.
- -N
-
When printing a mail message or entering a mail folder, do not
display message headers.
- -P
-
Disable POP mode.
Compose-mode commands
- ~!
-
Execute a shell escape from compose mode.
- ~?
-
List compose-mode escapes.
- ~b names
-
Add names to or edit the Bcc: header.
- ~c names
-
Add names to or edit the Cc: header.
- ~d
-
Read in the dead.letter file.
- ~e
-
Invoke text editor.
- ~f messages
-
Insert messages into message being composed.
- ~F messages
-
Similar to ~f, but include message
headers.
- ~h
-
Add to or change all headers interactively.
- ~m messages
-
Similar to ~f, but indent with a tab.
- ~M messages
-
Similar to ~m, but include message
headers.
- ~p
-
Print message header fields and message being sent.
- ~q
-
Abort current message composition.
- ~r filename
-
Append file to current message.
- ~s string
-
Change Subject: header to
string.
- ~t names
-
Add names to or edit the To: list.
- ~v
-
Invoke editor specified with the VISUAL environment variable.
- ~| command
-
Pipe message through command.
- ~: mail-command
-
Execute mail-command.
- ~~string
-
Insert string in text of message, prefaced by a
single tilde (~). If string contains
a ~, it must be escaped with a
\.
Command-mode commands
- ?
-
List summary of commands (help screen).
- !
-
Execute a shell command.
- - num
-
Print numth previous message; defaults to
immediately previous.
- alias (a)
-
Print or create alias lists.
- alternates (alt)
-
Specify remote accounts on remote machines that are yours. Tell mail
not to reply to them.
- chdir (c)
-
cd to home or specified directory.
- copy (co)
-
Similar to save, but do not mark
message for deletion.
- delete (d)
-
Delete message.
- dp
-
Delete current message and display next one.
- edit (e)
-
Edit message.
- exit (ex, x)
-
Exit mail without updating folder.
- file (fi)
-
Switch folders.
- folder (fold)
-
Read messages saved in a file. Files can be:
- #
-
Previous
- %
-
System mailbox
- %user
-
user's system mailbox
- &
-
mbox
- +folder
-
File in folder directory.
- folders
-
List folders.
- headers (h)
-
List message headers at current prompt.
- headers+ (h+)
-
Move forward one window of headers.
- headers- (h-)
-
Move back one window of headers.
- help
-
Same as ?.
- hold (ho)
-
Hold messages in system mailbox.
- ignore
-
Append list of fields to ignored fields.
- mail user (m)
-
Compose message to user.
- mbox
-
Move specified messages to mbox on exiting (the
default).
- next (n)
-
Type next message or next message that matches argument.
- preserve (pr)
-
Synonym for hold.
- print [list] (p)
-
Display each message in list.
- Print [list] (P)
-
Similar to print, but include header
fields.
- quit (q)
-
Exit mail and update folder.
- reply (r)
-
Send mail to all on distribution list.
- Reply (R)
-
Send mail to author only.
- respond
-
Same as reply.
- retain
-
Always include this list of header fields when printing messages.
With no arguments, list retained fields.
- save (s)
-
Save message to folder.
- saveignore
-
Remove ignored fields when saving.
- saveretain
-
Override saveignore to retain
specified fields.
- set (se)
-
Set or print mail options.
- shell (sh)
-
Enter a new shell.
- size
-
Print size of each specified message.
- source
-
Read commands from specified file.
- top
-
Print first few lines of each specified message.
- type (t)
-
Same as print.
- Type (T)
-
Same as Print.
- unalias
-
Discard previously defined aliases.
- undelete (u)
-
Restore deleted message.
- unread (U)
-
Mark specified messages as unread.
- unset (uns)
-
Unset mail options.
- visual (v)
-
Edit message with editor specified by the VISUAL environment variable.
- write (w)
-
Write message, without header, to file.
- xit (x)
-
Same as exit.
- z
-
Move mail's
attention to next windowful of text. Use z- to move it back.
Options
These options are used inside the .mailrc file.
The syntax is set
option or unset
option.
- append
-
Append (do not prepend) messages to mbox.
- ask
-
Prompt for subject.
- askbcc
-
Prompt for blind carbon copy recipients.
- askcc
-
Prompt for carbon copy recipients.
- asksub
-
Prompt for Subject line.
- autoprint
-
Print next message after a delete.
- chron
-
Display messages in chronological order, most recent last.
- debug
-
Same as -d on command line.
- dot
-
Interpret a solitary . as an EOF.
- folder
-
Define directory to hold mail folders.
- hold
-
Keep message in system mailbox upon quitting.
- ignore
-
Ignore interrupt signals from terminal. Print them as @.
- ignoreeof
-
Do not treat ^D as an EOF.
- metoo
-
Do not remove sender from groups when mailing to them.
- noheader
-
Same as -N on command line.
- nokerberos
-
Retrieve POP mail via POP3, not KPOP, protocol.
- nosave
-
Do not save aborted letters to dead.letter.
- pop-mail
-
Retrieve mail with POP3 protocol, and save it in
mbox.pop.
- prompt
-
Set prompt to a different string.
- Replyall
-
Switch roles of Reply and reply.
- quiet
-
Do not print version at startup.
- searchheaders
-
When given the specifier /x:y,
expand all messages that contain the string y in
the x header field.
- verbose
-
Same as -v on command line.
- verbose-pop
-
Display status while retrieving POP mail.
Special files
- calendar
-
Contains reminders that the operating system mails to you.
- .maildelivery
-
Mail delivery configuration file.
- .mailrc
-
Mail configuration file.
- triplog
-
Keeps track of your automatic response recipients.
- tripnote
-
Contains automatic message.
System administration command. List all messages in the sendmail mail queue. Equivalent to sendmail -bp.
Options
- -Ac
-
Show queue specified in /etc/mail/submit.cf
instead of queue specified in
/etc/mail/sendmail.cf.
- -v
-
Verbose mode.
System administration command. Display a formatted report of the
current sendmail mail statistics.
Options
- -c
-
Use configuration in /etc/mail/submit.cf instead
of /etc/mail/sendmail.cf.
- -f file
-
Use sendmail statistics file
file instead of the file specified in the
sendmail configuration file.
- -o
-
Don't show the name of the mailer in the report.
- -p
-
Print stats without headers or separators. Output suitable for use by
other programs. Reset statistics.
- -C file
-
Use sendmail configuration file
file instead of the default
sendmail.cf file.
- -P
-
Print stats without headers or separators. Output suitable for use by
other programs. Do not reset statistics.
mailto [options] recipients
|
|
Send mail with MIME types and text formatting. This program has a
very similar interface to that of the mail
program, with two differences: it only sends mail, and it adds a
number of text formatting and MIME handling features, described here.
For features not covered here, check the mail command. mailto uses the metamail backend and relies on the mailcap configuration files.
Text formatting
Mail formatting is handled with escape sequences that begin with the
tilde (~) character. Those for text
formatting are:
- ~b
-
Turn bold text on or off.
- ~i
-
Turn italic text on or off.
- ~jc, ~jl, ~jr
-
Set justification to center, left, or right.
- ~k
-
Toggle whether to send a blind copy to yourself.
- ~n
-
Hard line break (newline).
- ~>, ~<
-
Increase or decrease left margin.
- ~<R, ~>R
-
Increase or decrease right margin.
- ~Q
-
Quotation mode (indent and mark selection as excerpt).
- ~z
-
Append ~/.signature as the signature for this
message.
Including objects in mail
You can include a variety of objects in your messages, again using
tilde escape sequences. To do so, enter ~*, and the program will prompt you for the
type of data you wish to add. The available content types will vary
from installation to installation.
make [options] [targets] [macro definitions]
|
|
Update one or more targets according to
dependency instructions in a description file in the current
directory. By default, this file is called
makefile or Makefile.
Options, targets, and macro definitions can be in any order. Macro
definitions are typed as:
name=string For more information on make, see
Managing Projects with make
(O'Reilly).
Options
- -d, --debug
-
Print detailed debugging information.
- -e, --environment-overrides
-
Override makefile macro definitions
with environment variables.
- -f makefile, --file=makefile, --makefile=makefile
-
Use makefile as the description file; a filename
of - denotes standard input.
- -h, --help
-
Print options to make command.
- -i, --ignore-errors
-
Ignore command error codes (same as .IGNORE).
- -j [jobs], --jobs [=jobs]
-
Attempt to execute jobs jobs simultaneously or,
if no number is specified, as many jobs as possible.
- -k, --keep-going
-
Abandon the current target when it fails, but keep working with
unrelated targets.
- -l [load], --load-average [=load], --max-load [=load]
-
Attempt to keep load below load, which should be
a floating-point number. Used with -j.
- -n, --just-print, --dry-run, --recon
-
Print commands but don't execute (used for testing).
- -o file, --old-file=file, --assume-old=file
-
Never remake file or cause other files to be
remade on account of it.
- -p, --print-data-base
-
Print rules and variables in addition to normal execution.
- -q, --question
-
Query; return 0 if file is up to date; nonzero otherwise.
- -r, --no-built-in-rules
-
Do not use default rules.
- -s, --silent, --quiet
-
Do not display command lines (same as .SILENT).
- -t, --touch
-
Touch the target files without remaking them.
- -v, --version
-
Show version of make.
- -w, --print-directory
-
Display the current working directory before and after execution.
- --warn-undefined-variables
-
Print warning if a macro is used without being defined.
- -C directory, --directory directory
-
cd to directory
before beginning make operations. A
subsequent -C directive will cause
make to attempt to cd into a directory relative to the current
working directory.
- -I directory, --include-dir directory
-
Include directory in list of directories
containing included files.
- -S, --no-keep-going, --stop
-
Cancel previous -k options. Useful
in recursive makes.
- -W file, --what-if file, --new-file file, --assume-new file
-
Behave as though file has been recently updated.
Description file lines
Instructions in the description file are
interpreted as single lines. If an instruction must span more than
one input line, use a backslash (\) at the end of the line so that
the next line is considered a continuation. The description file may
contain any of the following types of lines:
- Blank lines
-
Blank lines are ignored.
- Comment lines
-
A pound sign (#) can be used at the beginning of a line or anywhere
in the middle. make ignores
everything after the #.
- Dependency lines
-
Depending on one or more targets, certain commands that follow will
be executed. Possible formats include:
targets : dependencies
targets : dependencies ; command
Subsequent commands are executed if dependency files (the names of
which may contain wildcards) do not exist or are newer than a target.
If no prerequisites are supplied, then subsequent commands are always
executed (whenever any of the targets are specified). No tab should
precede any targets.
- Conditionals
-
Conditionals are evaluated when the makefile is first read and
determine what make sees, i.e.,
which parts of the makefile are obeyed and which parts are ignored.
The general syntax for a conditional is:
conditional
Text if true
else
Text if false
endif
- ifeq (arg1, arg2), ifeq "arg1" "arg2"
-
True if the two arguments are identical. The arguments should either
be placed in parentheses and separated by a comma--(arg1,
arg2)--or individually quoted with either single or double
quotes.
- ifneq (arg1, arg2), ifneq "arg1" "arg2"
-
True if the two arguments are not identical. The arguments should
either be placed in parentheses and separated by a comma or
individually quoted with either single or double quotes.
- ifdef variable
-
True if variable has a nonempty value.
- ifndef variable
-
True if variable has an empty value.
- Suffix rules
-
These specify that files ending with the first suffix can be
prerequisites for files ending with the second suffix (assuming the
root filenames are the same). Either of these formats can be used:
.suffix.suffix:
.suffix:
The second form means that the root filename depends on the filename
with the corresponding suffix.
- Commands
-
Commands are grouped below the dependency line and are typed on lines
that begin with a tab. If a command is preceded by a hyphen (-),
make ignores any error returned. If
a command is preceded by an at sign (@), the command line
won't echo on the display (unless make is called with -n).
- Macro definitions
-
These have the following form:
name = string
or:
define name
string
endef
Blank space is optional around the =.
- Include statements
-
Similar to the C include directive, these have the form:
include files
Internal macros
- $?
-
The list of prerequisites that have
been changed more recently than the current target. Can be used only
in normal description file entries, not in suffix rules.
- $@
-
The name of the current target, except in description file entries
for making libraries, where it becomes the library name. Can be used
both in normal description file entries and in suffix rules.
- $<
-
The name of the current prerequisite that has been modified more
recently than the current target.
- $*
-
The name (without the suffix) of the current prerequisite that has
been modified more recently than the current target. Can be used only
in suffix rules.
- $%
-
The name of the corresponding .o file when the
current target is a library module. Can be used both in normal
description file entries and in suffix rules.
- $^
-
A space-separated list of all dependencies with no duplications.
- $+
-
A space-separated list of all dependencies, including duplications.
Pattern rules
These are a more general application of
the idea behind suffix rules. If a target and a dependency both
contain %, GNU make will substitute
any part of an existing filename. For instance, the standard suffix
rule:
$(cc) -o $@ $<
can be written as the following pattern rule:
%.o : %.c
$(cc) -o $@ $<
Macro modifiers
- D
-
The directory portion of any
internal macro name except $?. Valid
uses are:
$(*D) $$(@D) $(?D) $(<D)
$(%D) $(@D) $(^D)
- F
-
The file portion of any internal macro name except $?. Valid uses are:
$(*F) $$(@F) $(?F) $(<F)
$(%F) $(@F) $(^F)
Functions
- $(subst from,to,string)
-
Replace all occurrences of from with
to in string.
- $(patsubst pattern,to,string)
-
Similar to subst, but treat
% as a wildcard within
pattern. Substitute to for
any word in string that matches
pattern.
- $(strip string)
-
Remove all extraneous whitespace.
- $(findstring substring,mainstring)
-
Return substring if it exists within
mainstring; otherwise, return null.
- $(filter pattern,string)
-
Return those words in string that match at least
one word in pattern.
pattern may include the wildcard %.
- $(filter-out pattern,string)
-
Remove those words in string that match at least
one word in pattern.
pattern may include the wildcard %.
- $(sort list)
-
Return list, sorted in lexical order.
- $(dir list)
-
Return the directory part (everything up to the last slash) of each
filename in list.
- $(notdir list)
-
Return the nondirectory part (everything after the last slash) of
each filename in list.
- $(suffix list)
-
Return the suffix part (everything after the last period) of each
filename in list.
- $(basename list)
-
Return everything but the suffix part (everything up to the last
period) of each filename in list.
- $(addsuffix suffix,list)
-
Return each filename given in list with
suffix appended.
- $(addprefix prefix,list)
-
Return each filename given in list with
prefix prepended.
- $(join list1,list2)
-
Return a list formed by concatenating the two arguments word by word
(e.g., $(join a b,.c .o) becomes
a.c b.o).
- $(word n,string)
-
Return the nth word of
string.
- $(wordlist start,end,string)
-
Return words in string between word
start and word end,
inclusive.
- $(words string)
-
Return the number of words in string.
- $(firstword list)
-
Return the first word in the list list.
- $(wildcard pattern)
-
Return a list of existing files in the current directory that match
pattern.
- $(foreach variable,list,string)
-
For each whitespace-separated word in list,
expand its value and assign it to variable; then
expand string, which usually contains a function
referencing variable. Return the list of
results.
- $(if condition,then-string[,else-string])
-
Expand string condition if it expands to a
nonempty string, then expand the then-string. If
condition expands to an empty string, return the
empty string, or if specified, expand and return the
else-string.
- $(call variable,parameters)
-
Expand each item in comma-separated list
parameters and assign it to a temporary
variable, $(n), where n is an
incremented number beginning with 0. Then expand
variable, a string referencing these temporary
variables, and return the result.
- $(origin variable)
-
Return one of the following strings that describes how
variable was defined: undefined, default, environment, environment
override, file, command line, override, or automatic.
- $(shell command)
-
Return the results of command. Any newlines in
the result are converted to spaces. This function works similarly to
backquotes in most shells.
- $(error string)
-
When evaluated, generate a fatal error with the message
string.
- $(warning string)
-
When evaluated, generate a warning with the message
string.
Macro string substitution
- $(macro:s1=s2)
-
Evaluates to the current definition of $(macro), after
substituting the string s2 for every occurrence
of s1 that occurs either immediately before a
blank or tab or at the end of the macro definition.
Special target names
- .DEFAULT:
-
Commands associated with this target are executed if make can't find any
description file entries or suffix rules with which to build a
requested target.
- .DELETE_ON_ERROR:
-
If this target exists in a makefile, delete the target of any rule
whose commands return a nonzero exit status.
- .EXPORT_ALL_VARIABLES:
-
If this target exists, export all macros to all child processes.
- .IGNORE:
-
Ignore error codes. Same as the -i
option.
- .INTERMEDIATE:
-
This target's dependencies should be treated as
intermediate files.
- .NOTPARALLEL:
-
If this target exists in a makefile, run make serially, ignoring option -j.
- .PHONY:
-
Always execute commands under a target, even if it is an existing,
up-to-date file.
- .PRECIOUS:
-
Files you specify for this target are not removed when you send a
signal (such as an interrupt) that aborts make or when a command line in your
description file returns an error.
- .SECONDARY:
-
Like .INTERMEDIATE, this
target's dependencies should be treated as
intermediate files, but never automatically deleted.
- .SILENT:
-
Execute commands, but do not echo them. Same as the -s option.
- .SUFFIXES:
-
Suffixes associated with this target are meaningful in suffix rules.
If no suffixes are listed, the existing list of suffix rules is
effectively "turned off."
makedbm [options] infile outfile
makedbm [option]
|
|
NFS/NIS command. Create or dump an NIS dbm file. makedbm will take a text
infile and convert it to a gdbm database file named
outfile. This file is suitable for use with
ypserv. Each line of the input file
is converted to a single record. All characters up to the first TAB
or SPACE form the key, and the rest of the line is the data. If a
line ends with \&, the data for
that record is continued on to the next line. The # character is
given no special treatment. infile can be
-, in which case the standard input
is read.
makedbm generates two special keys:
the YP_MASTER_NAME key, which is the
value of the current host (unless another name is specified with
-m), and the YP_LAST_MODIFIED key, which is the date of
infile (or the current time if
infile is -).
Options
- -a
-
Add support for mail aliases.
- -b
-
Insert YP_INTERDOMAIN key into map.
This indicates that ypserv should
fall back to DNS lookups when a host's address is
not found in NIS.
- -c
-
Send a YPPROC_CLEAR signal to
ypserv, causing it to clear all
cached entries.
- -i file_name
-
Create a YP_INPUT_NAME key with the
value file_name.
- -l
-
Convert keys of the given map to lowercase.
- -m master_name
-
Specify the value of the YP_MASTER_NAME key. The default value is the
current hostname.
- --no-limit-check
-
Don't enforce NIS size limits for keys or data.
- -o file_name
-
Create a YP_OUTPUT_NAME key with the
value file_name.
- -r
-
Treat lines beginning with # as comments. Do not
include them in the data file.
- -s
-
Add the key YP_SECURE, indicating
that ypserv should accept
connections to the database only from secure NIS networks.
- -u filename
-
Undo a gdbm file--print out a
dbm file, one entry per line, with a
single space separating keys from values.
Example
It is easy to write shell scripts to convert standard files such as
/etc/passwd to the key value form used by
makedbm. For example, the awk program:
BEGIN { FS =":";OFS = "\t";}
{ print $1, $0}
takes the /etc/passwd file and converts it to a
form that can be read by makedbm to
make the NIS file passwd.byname. That is, the
key is a username and the value is the remaining line in the
/etc/passwd file.
makemap [options] type name
|
|
System administration command. Create database maps for use by
sendmail in keyed map lookups.
makemap will read from standard
input and create a database file of type type
with filename name.db. If the TrustedUser option is set in
/etc/sendmail.cf and makemap is invoked as root, the ouput file
will be owned by TrustedUser.
Input should be formatted as:
key value Comment lines with #. Indicate
parameter substitution with %n. Specify a literal
% character by entering it twice:
%%. The type
may be btree or hash.
Options
- -c size
-
Specify hash or B-Tree cache size.
- -d
-
Allow duplicate entries. Valid only with btree type maps.
- -e
-
Allow empty value data fields.
- -f
-
Suppress conversion of uppercase to lowercase.
- -l
-
List supported map types.
- -o
-
Append to existing file instead of replacing it.
- -r
-
If some keys already exist, replace them. (By default, makemap will exit when encountering a
duplicated key.)
- -s
-
Ignore safety checks.
- -t delimiter
-
Use delimiter instead of whitespace.
- -u
-
Undo a map--print out the specified database file, one entry per
line.
- -v
-
Verbose mode.
- -C file
-
Look up TrustedUser in the specified
sendmail configuration
file.
- -N
-
Append the zero-byte string terminator specified in sendmail's configuration file
to mapped entries.
man [options] [section] [title]
|
|
Display information from the online reference manuals. man locates and prints the named
title from the designated reference
section.
Traditionally, manpages are divided into nine sections, where section
1 consists of user commands, section 2 contains system calls, and so
forth. By default, all sections are consulted, so the
section option serves to bypass the most common
entry and find an entry of the same name in a different section
(e.g., man 2 nice).
Numerous other utilities, such as info, xman,
and the Konqueror browser, can also display manpages.
Options
- -7, --ascii
-
Expect a pure ASCII file, and format it for a 7-bit terminal or
terminal emulator.
- -a, --all
-
Show all pages matching title.
- -b
-
Leave blank lines in output.
- -d, --debug
-
Display debugging information. Suppress actual printing of manual
pages.
- -f, --whatis
-
Same as whatis command.
- -k, --apropos
-
Same as apropos command.
- -l, --local-file
-
Search local files, not system files, for manual pages. If i is given as filename,
search standard input.
- -m systems, --systems=systems
-
Search systems' manual pages.
systems should be a comma-separated list.
- -p preprocessors, --preprocessor=preprocessors
-
Preprocess manual pages with preprocessors
before turning them over to nroff,
troff, or groff. Always runs soelim first to read in files to be included
in this one. preprocessors can be any
combination of e for equations,
p for pictures, t for tables, and r for bibliographical references.
- -r prompt, --prompt=prompt
-
Set prompt if less is used as pager.
- -t, --troff
-
Format the manual page with /usr/bin/groff -Tgv
-mandoc. Implied by -T
and -Z.
- -u, --update
-
Perform a consistency check between manual page cache and filesystem.
- -w, -W, --path, --where
-
Print pathnames of entries on standard output.
- -D
-
Display debugging information about how the page was retrieved.
- -K directory
-
A kind of super-k option. Search for
a term in all manpages and display the name of each page, along with
a prompt asking whether you want to view the page.
- -L locale, --locale=locale
-
Assume current locale to be locale; do not
consult the setlocale( ) function.
- -M path, --manpath=path
-
Search for manual pages in path. Ignore
-m option.
- -Ppager, --pager=pager
-
Select paging program pager to display the entry.
- -S sections
-
Sections to look in for an entry. Like specifying
section on the command line, except that
multiple section numbers can be specified, separated by colons.
- -T device, --troff-device[=device]
-
Format groff or troff output for device,
such as dvi, latin1, X75,
and X100.
- -Z, --ditroff
-
Do not allow postprocessing of manual page after groff has finished formatting it.
Section names
Manual pages are divided into sections for various audiences:
- 1
-
Executable programs or shell commands.
- 2
-
System calls (functions provided by the kernel).
- 3
-
Library calls (functions within system libraries).
- 4
-
Special files (usually found in /dev).
- 5
-
File formats and conventions (e.g., /etc/passwd).
- 6
-
Games.
- 7
-
Macro packages and conventions.
- 8
-
System administration commands (usually only for a privileged user).
- 9
-
Kernel routines (nonstandard).
Attempt to determine path to manual pages. Check $MANPATH first; if that is not set, consult
/etc/man.conf, user environment variables, and
the current working directory. The manpath command is a symbolic link to
man, but most of the options are
ignored for manpath.
Options
- -d, --debug
-
Print debugging information.
- -h
-
Print help message and then exit.
mattrib [options] filenames
|
|
Change attributes of MS-DOS files. See mtools for more information.
Attributes
To set an attribute, use one of the following letters preceded by a
+ (to turn the attribute on) or
- (to turn it off):
- a
-
Archive; mark the file as a new file that should be archived by
backup programs.
- r
-
Read-only.
- s
-
System; files with this attribute are marked as operating system
files.
- h
-
Hide this file when displaying directory contents with DIR.
Options
- -/
-
When listing attributes, descend into all subdirectories recursively.
- -X
-
Concise output.
- -P
-
Display commands for mformat that
can reproduce the current attributes and settings for a given disk.
Check MS-DOS filesystems for bad blocks. See badblocks and mtools. As with other mtools items, the drive is named with a letter
rather than as a Unix device.
Dump raw data, especially for a disk image on a remote floppy
accessed through the floppyd tool.
See cat and mtools for more information. The only option
accepted, -w, accepts data from
stdin and writes it to the given device.
Change directory on an MS-DOS disk. See cd and mtools
for more information.
mcopy [options] sourcefile target
|
|
Copy files between Unix and MS-DOS format partitions. See cp and mtools
for more information.
Options
The mcopy option flags differ from
the flags passed to the Unix cp
command. The flags are:
- -t
-
Convert Unix line breaks to MS-DOS line breaks and vice versa when
copying text files.
- -b
-
Operate in batch mode; use for large copies of data.
- -s
-
Copy recursively.
- -P
-
Preserve attributes of copied files.
- -Q
-
If one copy fails, stop copying the rest. Useful if you think you may
run out of disk space.
- -a
-
Assume that all incoming files are ASCII and convert carriage
return/line feed to plain line feed.
- -T
-
Convert line breaks as with -a, but
also convert PC-8 characters to ISO-8859-1 characters. Replace
untranslatable characters with # or . for Unix and DOS respectively.
- -n
-
Do not ask for confirmation when overwriting Unix files. Use
-o to turn off confirmation for
overwriting DOS files.
- -m
-
Preserve file modification time.
- -v
-
Display the names of files as they are copied.
- -D clash-option
-
Specify the action to take if the specified directory name already
exists. See mmd for the possible
clash options.
mdel [option] filemdeltree [option] tree
|
|
Delete an MS-DOS file or file tree. See rm and mtools
for more information.
Option
- -v
-
Run in verbose mode, printing the names of the MS-DOS files to be
deleted.
List directory contents on an MS-DOS filesystem. See ls, dir, and
mtools for more information.
Options
- -/
-
Display output recursively, listing the contents of subdirectories.
- -a
-
Include hidden files in the output.
- -b
-
Produce a concise listing, showing each directory or file on a
separate line, with no heading or summary information.
- -f
-
Operate in fast mode, without determining the amount of free space.
Not required on FAT32 filesystems, which store the free space
information explicitly.
- -w
-
Produce wide output, printing filenames across the page with no file
size or creation date information.
- -V
-
Print version information and exit.
Display disk usage, in clusters, for a directory and its
subdirectories and files on an MS-DOS filesystem. See du and mtools
for more information, and see minfo
for the cluster size. Only one of -a
or -s can be specified.
Options
- -a
-
Show the space used by individual files in a directory as well as the
total space.
- -s
-
Show only the total space used.
merge [options] file1 file2 file3
|
|
Perform a three-way file merge. The effect is easiest to understand
if file2 is considered the original version of a
file, file3 an altered version of
file2, and file1 a later
altered version of file2.
After the merge, file1 contains both the changes
from file2 to file1 and the
changes from file2 to
file3. In other words,
file1 keeps its changes and incorporates the
changes in file3 as well. merge does not change
file2 or file3.
If a line from file2 was changed in different
ways in both file1 and
file3, merge
recognizes a conflict. By default, the command outputs a warning and
puts brackets around the conflict, with lines preceded by
<<<<<<< and >>>>>>>. A
typical conflict looks like this:
<<<<<<< file1
relevant lines from file1
= == == ==
relevant lines from file3
>>>>>>> file3 If there are conflicts, the user should edit the result and delete
one of the alternatives.
Options
- -e
-
Don't warn about conflicts.
- -p
-
Send results to standard output instead of overwriting
file1.
- -q
-
Quiet; do not warn about conflicts.
- -A
-
Output conflicts using the -A style
of diff3. This merges all changes
leading from file2 to file3
into file1 and generates the most verbose
output.
- -E
-
Output conflict information in a less verbose style than -A; this is the default.
- -L label
-
Specify up to three labels to be used in place of the corresponding
filenames in conflict reports. That is:
merge -L x -L y -L z file_a file_b file_c
generates output that looks as if it came from
x, y, and
z instead of from file_a,
file_b, and file_c.
- -V
-
Print version number.
Change the ability of other users to send write messages to your terminal. With no
options, display the permission status.
Options
- n
-
Forbid write messages.
- y
-
Allow write messages (the default).
metamail [options] [filename]
|
|
Normally invisible to users, metamail is used to send and display rich text
or multimedia email using MIME typing metadata. Mail-reading programs
normally call metamail to determine
how to handle the data, but metamail
can be called directly by developers who want to use it for their own
mail software, or by system administrators and power users adding
lines to their printcap files. Any argument
passed to metamail that is not
preceded by a hyphen (-) is assumed to be the name of a file
to read. If no filename is specified, standard input is assumed.
Options
- -b
-
The message is not in RFC 822 format; treat as the body of the
message. Requires -c.
- -B
-
Display the message in the background, if noninteractive. Cannot be
used with -p or -P.
- -c type
-
Use the specified content type instead of the one in the headers.
- -d
-
Don't ask before running an interpreter to view the
message. The default is to ask.
- -e
-
Remove ("eat") leading newlines in
the message body. Useful for MH-format mail.
- -f addr
-
Specify the name of the message sender. The default is to try to
determine the name from the header.
- -h
-
Specify that a message is to be printed. Automatically sets -d.
- -m mailer
-
Specify the mail program to be called by metamail.
- -p
-
If necessary, display the output one page at a time. The default is
to pipe the output through more, but
the environment variable METAMAIL_PAGER can be set to specify an
alternative command. Use -p rather
than piping the message to a pager.
- -P
-
Like -p, but also print
"Press RETURN to go on" at the end
of each page. Cannot be used with -B.
- -q
-
Run quietly.
- -r
-
Specify that metamail can be run as
root.
- -R
-
Run /usr/ucb/reset to reset the terminal before
performing any other I/O.
- -s subject
-
Specify the Subject field. By
default, the subject is determined from the headers.
- -T
-
Turn off the effect of the environment variable MM_TRANSPARENT. Intended to be used
recursively by metamail, and should
be used only when the program restarts itself in a terminal emulator
window.
- -w
-
Don't consult a mailcap file to
determine how to display the data, but simply decode each part and
write to a file in its raw format (which might be binary). Depending
on how metamail is called, the
filename is determined from the message headers, by asking the user,
or by generating a unique temporary filename.
- -x
-
Tell metamail that it is not running
on a terminal. The environment variable MM_NOTTY can be set instead of specifying
-x.
- -y
-
Try to "yank" a MIME-format message
from the body of the message.
- -z
-
Delete the input file when done.
metasend [options] [filename]
|
|
A largely developer-oriented interface for sending non-text email
using MIME typing metadata. If no arguments are specified, metasend prompts the user for the information
it needs. See mailto for a possible
alternative with a friendlier interface.
Options
- -/ subtype
-
Specify the MIME multipart subtype other than mixed.
- -b
-
Batch mode. All information must be provided on the command line.
- -c cc
-
Specify any CC addresses.
- -D string
-
Specify a string to be used as the Content-description value.
- -e encoding
-
Specify the encoding to use. Possible values are base64, quoted-printable, 7bit (no encoding is done), or x-uue.
- -E
-
The file to be included is already MIME-encoded and
doesn't need any Content- or other header fields added.
- -f file
-
The file to be included. If more than one file is specified with
separate -f options (see -n), they are combined into a single multipart
MIME object.
- -F from
-
The From address.
- -i content-id
-
The content ID value for the MIME entity. Must be a valid content ID
enclosed in angle brackets (<>).
- -I content-id
-
The content ID value for a multipart entity being created by
metasend. Must be a valid content ID
enclosed in angle brackets (<>).
- -m type
-
The MIME content type.
- -n
-
Specify that an additional file is to be included. Must appear after
one occurrence of at least -m,
-c, and -f and must be specified for each included
file.
- -ooutfile
-
Send the output to the specified file instead of delivering as mail.
- -P preamblefile
-
Specify a file containing alternative text for the preamble portion
of a multipart MIME message.
- -s subject
-
The Subject field.
- -S splitsize
-
Specify the maximum size before the file is split into parts to be
sent separately.
- -t to
-
The To field.
- -z
-
Delete temporary files even if the send fails.
Format a blank disk in MS-DOS format. See mtools for more information about how to
handle MS-DOS filesystems. After using mformat to format a disk, you should use
mbadblocks to check for bad blocks.
Options
The mformat command accepts many of
the same options as the MS-DOS FORMAT command:
- -v [label]
-
Choose a label for this volume. Maximum length is 11 characters.
- -f N
-
If you are using a floppy disk, use this flag and note the size of
the disk in kilobytes as 160, 180, 320, 360, 720, 1200, 1440, or
2280. For most relatively recent systems, only the last two are
relevant. If you are not using a floppy, you must use the -h, -t, or
-n flags.
- -t N
-
The number of tracks on the disk.
- -h N
-
The number of heads, or sides, on the disk (either 1 or 2).
- -n
-
The number of sectors per track.
You can also use a number of option flags that are not included in
the MS-DOS version of FORMAT,
including:
- -F
-
Format as a FAT32 partition.
- -S N
-
Size code. You are defining a sector that is the N+7th power of two.
- -X
-
Format as an XDF (OS/2) disk.
- -2
-
Use a 2m format.
- -3
-
Don't use a 2m format, even if the disk looks like a
2m disk.
- -C
-
Create a disk image file. Useful only for virtual disks.
- -M N
-
Set the software sector size to be different from the physical sector
size.
- -N serialno
-
Choose a serial number. Use -a for
an Atari-style serial number, stored in the OEM label.
- -c N
-
Set the cluster size to N sectors.
- -r N
-
Set the root directory size to N sectors for 12-
and 16-bit FAT formats.
- -L N
-
Set the length of the File Allocation Table (FAT).
mimencode [options] [filename] [-o output_file]
|
|
Translate to and from MIME encoding formats, the proposed standard
for Internet multimedia mail formats. By default, mimencode reads standard input and sends a
base64-encoded version of the input to standard output.
Options
- -b
-
Use the (default) base64 encoding.
- -o output_file
-
Send output to the named file rather than to standard output.
- -p
-
Translate decoded CRLF sequences into the local newline convention
during decoding, and do the reverse during encoding. This is
meaningful only when the default base64 encoding is in effect.
- -q
-
Use the quoted-printable encoding instead of base64.
- -u
-
Decode the standard input rather than encode it.
Display information about an MS-DOS filesystem. See mtools for more information.
mkdir [options] directories
|
|
Create one or more directories. You must have
write permission in the parent directory in order to create a
directory. See also rmdir. The
default mode of the new directory is 0777, modified by the system or
user's umask.
Options
- -m, --mode mode
-
Set the access mode for new directories. See
chmod for an explanation of
acceptable formats for mode.
- -p, --parents
-
Create intervening parent directories if they don't
exist.
- --verbose
-
Print a message for each directory created.
- --help
-
Print help message and then exit.
- --version
-
Print version number and then exit.
Examples
Create a read-only directory named personal:
mkdir -m 444 personal
The following sequence:
mkdir work; cd work
mkdir junk; cd junk
mkdir questions; cd ../..
can be accomplished by typing this:
mkdir -p work/junk/questions
mkdosfs [options] device [blocks]mkfs.msdos [options] device [blocks]
|
|
System administration command. Format device as
an MS-DOS filesystem. You may specify the number of blocks on the
device or allow mkdosfs to guess.
Options
- -b backup-sector
-
Specify sector for backup boot sector. The default value depends on
the number of reserved sectors, but is usually sector 6.
- -c
-
Scan device for bad blocks before execution.
- -f n
-
Specify number of File Allocation Tables (FATs) to create (either
1 or 2).
- -i volume-id
-
Use the specified 32-bit hexadecimal volume-id
instead of calculating a number based on the time of creation.
- -l file
-
Read list of bad blocks from file.
- -m message-file
-
Set the message to be used when the filesystem is booted without an
installed operating system to the contents of the file
message-file. The message may be up to 418 bytes
in size. If filename is a hyphen, read text from standard input.
- -n label
-
Set volume name for filesystem to label. The
volume name may be up to 11 characters long.
- -r maximum-entries
-
Set the maximum-entries allowed in the root
directory. The default is 112 or 224 for floppies and 512 for hard
disks.
- -s sectors
-
Set the number of disk sectors per cluster. The
number must be a power of 2.
- -v
-
Print verbose information about progress.
- -A
-
Create an Atari MS-DOS filesystem.
- -C
-
Create and format a file suitable for use on a floppy disk. The
device given on the command line should be a
filename, and the number of blocks must also be
specified.
- -F fat-size
-
Create File Allocation Tables (FATs) of size
fat-size. By default this will be between 12 and
16 bits. Set to 32 to create a FAT32 filesystem.
- -I
-
Force installation to a device without partitions. This is useful
when formating magneto-optical disks.
- -R reserved-sectors
-
Create the specified number of reserved-sectors.
The default depends on the size of the File Allocation Table (FAT).
For 32-bit FAT, the default is 32; for all other sizes, the default
is 1.
- -S sector-size
-
Create logical sectors of sector-size bytes.
Size must be a power of 2 and at least 512 bytes.
mke2fs [options] device [blocks]
mkfs.ext2 [options] device [blocks]
|
|
System administration command. Format device as
a Linux Second Extended Filesystem. You may specify the number of
blocks on the device or allow mke2fs
to guess.
Options
- -b block-size
-
Specify block size in bytes.
- -c
-
Scan device for bad blocks before execution.
- -f fragment-size
-
Specify fragment size in bytes.
- -i bytes-per-inode
-
Create an inode for each bytes-per-inode of
space. bytes-per-inode must be 1024 or greater;
it is 4096 by default.
- -j
-
Create an ext3 journal. This is the same as invoking mkfs.ext3.
- -l filename
-
Consult filename for a list of bad blocks.
- -m percentage
-
Reserve percentage percent of the blocks for use
by privileged users.
- -n
-
Don't create the filesystem, just show what would
happen if it were run. This option is overridden by -F.
- -o os
-
Set filesystem operating system type to os. The
default value is usually Linux.
- -q
-
Quiet mode.
- -r revision
-
Set filesystem revision number to revision.
- -v
-
Verbose mode.
- -F
-
Force mke2fs to run even if
filesystem is mounted or device is not a block special device. This
option is probably best avoided.
- -J parameterlist
-
Use specified parameterlist to create an ext3
journal. The following two parameters may be given in a
comma-separated list:
- size=journal-size
-
Create a journal of journal-size megabytes. The
size may be between 1024 filesystem blocks and 102,400 filesystem
blocks in size (e.g., 1-100 megabytes if using 1K blocks, 4-400
megabytes if using 4K blocks).
- device=journal-device
-
Use an external journal-device to hold the
filesystem journal. The journal-device can be
specified by name, by volume label, or by UUID.
- -L label
-
Set volume label for filesystem.
- -M directory
-
Set the last mounted directory for filesystem to
directory.
- -N inodes
-
Specify number of inodes to reserve for
filesystem. By default, this number is calculated from number of
blocks and inode size.
- -O featurelist
-
Use specified featurelist to create filesystem.
The sparse_super and filetype features are used by default on
kernels 2.2 and later. The following parameters may be given in a
comma-separated list:
- filetype
-
Store file type information in directory entries.
- has_journal
-
Create an ext3 journal. Same as using the -j option.
- journal_dev
-
Prepare an external journaling device by creating an ext3 journal on
device instead of formatting it.
- sparse_super
-
Save space on large filesystem by creating fewer superblock backup
copies.
- -R stride=size
-
Configure filesystem for a RAID array. Set stride size to
size blocks per stripe.
- -S
-
Write only superblock and group descriptors; suppress writing of
inode table and block and inode bitmaps. Useful only when attempting
to salvage damaged systems.
- -T use
-
Set bytes-per-inode based on the intended use of
the filesystem. Supported filesystem types are:
- news
-
Four kilobytes per inode.
- largefile
-
One megabyte per inode.
- largefile4
-
Four megabytes per inode.
- -V
-
Print version number, then exit.
Make one or more named pipes (FIFOs) with the specified names.
Options
- -m mode, --mode=mode
-
Set permission mode. Default is 666 with the bits in the umask
subtracted.
- --help
-
Print help information and exit.
- --version
-
Print version information and exit.
mkfs [options] [fs-options] filesys [blocks]
|
|
System administration command. Construct a filesystem on a device
(such as a hard disk partition). filesys is
either the name of the device or the mountpoint. mkfs is actually a frontend that invokes the
appropriate version of mkfs
according to a filesystem type specified by the -t option. For example, a Linux Second
Extended Filesystem uses mkfs.ext2
(which is the same as mke2fs);
MS-DOS filesystems use mkfs.msdos.
fs-options are options specific to the
filesystem type. blocks is the size of the
filesystem in 1024-byte blocks.
Options
- -V
-
Produce verbose output, including all commands executed to create the
specific filesystem.
- -t fs-type
-
Tells mkfs what type of filesystem
to construct.
Filesystem-specific options
These options must follow generic options and cannot be combined with
them. Most filesystem builders support these three options:
- -c
-
Check for bad blocks on the device before building the filesystem.
- -l file
-
Read the file file for the list of bad blocks on
the device.
- -v
-
Produce verbose ouput.
mkfs.ext3 [options] device size
|
|
Create a journaling ext3 filesystem. Options are identical to
mke2fs. See mkfs.
mkfs.minix [options] device size
|
|
System administration command. Create a MINIX filesystem. See
mkfs.
mkisofs [options] -o file pathspecs
|
|
Generate an ISO9660/Joliet/HFS filesystem for writing to a CD with a
utility such as cdrecord. (HFS is
the native Macintosh Hierarchical File System.) mkisofs takes a snapshot of a directory tree
and generates a binary image that corresponds to an ISO9660 or HFS
filesystem when it is written to a block device. Each specified
pathspec describes the path of a directory tree
to be copied into the ISO9660 filesystem; if multiple paths are
specified, the files in all the paths are merged to form the image.
Options
- -A id, -appid id
-
Specify a text string id that describes the
application to be written into the volume header.
- -abstract file
-
Specify the abstract filename. Overrides an ABST=file entry in
.mkisofsrc.
- -allow-lowercase
-
Allow ISO9660 filenames to be lowercase. Violates the ISO9660
standard.
- -allow-multidot
-
Allow more than one dot in ISO9660 filenames. Violates the ISO9660
standard.
- -b image
-
Specify the path and filename of the boot image to be used for making
a bootable CD based on the El Torito specification.
- -B sun-images
-
Specify a comma-separated list of boot images needed to make a
bootable CD for a Sun Sparc system.
- -biblio file
-
Specify bibliographic filename. Overrides a BIBLIO=file entry in
.mkisofsrc.
- -boot-info-table
-
Specify that a 56-byte table with information on the CD layout is to
be patched in at offset 8 of the boot file. If specified, the table
is patched into the source boot file, so make a copy if the file
isn't recreatable.
- -boot-load-seg addr
-
Specify the load segment address of the boot image for a no-emulation
El Torito CD.
- -boot-load-size size
-
Specify the number of virtual 512-byte sectors to load in
no-emulation mode. The default is to load the entire boot file. The
number may need to be a multiple of 4 to prevent problems with some
BIOSes.
- -c catalog
-
Specify the path, relative to the source
pathspec, and the filename of the boot catalog
for an El Torito bootable CD. Required for making a bootable CD.
- -C last-start,next-start
-
Required for creating a CDExtra or a second or higher-level session
for a multisession CD. last-start is the first
sector number in the last session on the disk, and
next-start is the first sector number for the
new session. Use the command:
cdrecord -msinfo
to get the values. Use -C with
-M to create an image that is a
continuation of the previous session; without -M, create an image for a second session on a
CDExtra (a multisession CD with audio data in the first session and
an ISO9660 filesystem image in the second).
- -[no-]cache-inodes
-
Cache [do not cache] inode and device numbers to find hard links to
files. The default on Linux is to cache. Use -no-cache-inodes for filesystems that do not
have unique inode numbers.
- -check-oldnames
-
Check all filenames imported from old sessions for mkisofs compliance with ISO9660 file-naming
rules. If not specified, check only those files with names longer
than 31 characters.
- -check-session file
-
Check all old sessions for mkisofs
compliance with ISO9660 file-naming rules. This option is the
equivalent of:
-M file -C 0,0 -check-oldnames
where file is the pathname or SCSI device
specifier that would be specified with -M.
- -copyright file
-
Specify the name of the file that contains the copyright information.
Overrides a COPY=file entry in
.mkisofsrc.
- -d
-
Omit trailing period from files that do not have one. Violates the
ISO9660 standard, but works on many systems.
- -D
-
Do not use deep directory relocation. Violates the ISO9660 standard,
but works on many systems.
- -dir-mode mode
-
Specify the mode for directories used to create the image.
Automatically enables the Rock Ridge extensions.
- -eltorito-alt-boot
-
Start with a new set of El Torito boot parameters. Allows putting
more than one El Torito boot image on a CD (maximum is 63).
- -exclude-list file
-
Check filenames against the globs contained in the specified file and
exclude any that match.
- -f
-
Follow symbolic links when generating the filesystem.
- -file-mode mode
-
Specify the mode for files used to create the image. Automatically
enables the Rock Ridge extensions.
- -force-rr
-
Do not use automatic Rock Ridge detection for the previous session.
- -G image
-
Specify the path and filename of the generic boot image for making a
generic bootable CD.
- -gid gid
-
Set the group ID to gid for the source files.
Automatically enables the Rock Ridge extensions.
- -graft-points
-
Allow the use of graft points for filenames, which permits paths to
be grafted at locations other than the root directory. -graft-points checks all filenames for graft
points and divides the filename at the first unescaped equals sign
(=).
- -gui
-
Switch the behavior for a GUI. Currently, the only effect is to make
the output more verbose.
- -hard-disk-boot
-
Specify that the boot image to be used to create an El Torito
bootable CD is a hard disk image and must begin with a master boot
record containing a single partition.
- -hidden glob
-
Set the hidden (existence) ISO9660 directory attribute for paths or
filenames matching the shell-style pattern glob.
To match a directory, the path must not end with a trailing /.
- -hidden-list file
-
Specify a file containing a list of globs that
are to be hidden with -hidden.
- -hide glob
-
Find paths or files that match the shell-style pattern
glob and hide them from being seen on the
ISO9660 or Rock Ridge directory. The files are still included in the
image file. If the pattern matches a directory, the contents of the
directory are hidden. To match a directory, the path must not end
with a trailing /. Use with the -hide-joliet option.
- -hide-joliet glob
-
Hide paths or files that match the shell-style pattern
glob so they will not be seen in the Joliet
directory. If the pattern matches a directory, the contents of the
directory are hidden. To match a directory, the path must not end
with a trailing /. Should be used with -hide.
- -hide-joliet-list file
-
Specify a file containing a list of globs to be
hidden with -hide-joliet.
- -hide-joliet-trans-tbl
-
Hide the TRANS.TBL files from the Joliet tree.
- -hide-list file
-
Specify a file containing a list of globs to be
hidden with -hide.
- -hide-rr-moved
-
Rename the directory RR_MOVED to
.rr_moved to hide it as much as possible from
the Rock Ridge directory tree. Use the -D option to omit the file entirely.
- -input-charset charset
-
Specify the character set for characters used in local filenames.
Specify help in place of a
charset for a list of valid character sets.
- -iso-level level
-
Set the ISO9660 conformance level. Possible values are:
- 1
-
Filenames are restricted to 8.3 characters and files may have only
one section.
- 2
-
Files may have only one section.
- 3
-
No restrictions.
- -J
-
Generate Joliet directory records in addition to regular ISO9660
filenames.
- -jcharset charset
-
The equivalent of -input-charset -J.
- -l
-
Allow full 31-character filenames instead of restricting them to the
MS-DOS-compatible 8.3 format.
- -L
-
Allow ISO9660 filenames to begin with a period.
- -log-file file
-
Send all messages to the specified log file.
- -m glob
-
Exclude files matching the shell-style pattern
glob.
- -M path
-
Specify the path to an existing ISO9660 image to be merged.
path can also be a SCSI device specified in the
same syntax as cdrecord's dev= parameter. May be used only with
-C.
- -max-iso9660-filenames
-
Allow up to 37 characters in ISO9660 filenames. Forces -N. Violates the ISO9660 standard.
- -N
-
Omit version numbers from ISO9660 filenames. Violates the ISO9660
standard. Use with caution.
- -new-dir-mode mode
-
Specify the mode to use for new directories in the image. The default
is 0555.
- -nobak, -no-bak
-
Do not include backup files on the ISO9660 filesystem.
- -no-boot
-
Mark the El Torito CD to be created as not bootable.
- -no-emul-boot
-
Specify that the boot image for creating an El Torito bootable CD is
a no-emulation image.
- -no-iso-translate
-
Do not translate the # and ~ characters. Violates the ISO9660
standard.
- -no-rr
-
Do not use Rock Ridge attributes from previous sessions.
- -no-split-symlink-components
-
Do not split symlink components.
- -no-split-symlink-fields
-
Do not split symlink fields.
- -o file
-
Specify the filename of the output ISO9660 filesystem image.
- -output-charset charset
-
Specify the output character set for Rock Ridge filenames. The
default is the input character set.
- -p prepid
-
Specify a text string of up to 128 characters describing the preparer
of the CD. Overrides a PREP=
parameter set in the file .mkisofsrc.
- -P pubid
-
Specify a text string of up to 128 characters describing the
publisher of the CD to be written to the volume header. Overrides a
PUBL= parameter set in
.mkisofsrc.
- -[no -]pad
-
Pad [do not pad] the ISO9660 filesystem by 16 sectors (32KB). If the
resulting size is not a multiple of 16 sectors, add sectors until it
is. The default is -pad.
- -path-list file
-
Specify a file that contains a list of pathspec
directories and filenames to add to the ISO9660 filesystem. Note that
at least one pathspec must be given on the
command line.
- -print-size
-
Print estimated filesystem size and exit.
- -quiet
-
Run in quiet mode; do not display progress output.
- -r
-
Like -R, but set UID and GID to
zero, set all file read bits to write, and turn off all file write
bits. If any execute bit is set for a file, set all execute bits; if
any search bit is set for a directory, set all search bits; if any
special mode bits are set, clear them.
- -R
-
Generate SUSP (System Use Sharing Protocol) and Rock Ridge records
using the Rock Ridge protocol.
- -relaxed-filenames
-
Allow ISO9660 filenames to include seven-digit ASCII characters
except lowercase characters. Violates the ISO9660 standard.
- -sort file
-
Sort file locations according to the rules in the specified file,
which contains pairs of filenames and weights, with one space or tab
between them. A higher weight puts the file closer to the beginning
of the media.
- -sysid id
-
Specify the system ID. Overrides a SYSI= parameter set in the file
.mkisofsrc.
- -T
-
Generate the file TRANS.TBL in each directory
for establishing the correct filenames on non-Rock Ridge-capable
systems.
- -table-name table
-
Use table as the translation table name instead
of TRANS.TBL. Implies -T. For a multisession image, the table name
must be the same as the previous session.
- -U
-
Allow untranslated filenames. Violates the ISO9660 standard. Forces
the options -d, -l, -L,
-n, -relaxed-filenames, -allow-lowercase, -allow-multidot, -no-iso-translate. Use with extreme caution.
- -ucs-level num
-
Set the Unicode conformance level to the specified number, which can
be between 1 and 3 (default is 3).
- -use-fileversion
-
Use file version numbers from the filesystem. The version number is a
string from 1 to 32767. The default is to set a version of 1.
- -v
-
Run in verbose mode. Specify twice to run even more verbosely.
- -V volid
-
Specify the volume ID (volume name or label) to be written to the
master block. Overrides a VOLI=
parameter specified in the file .mkisofsrc.
- -volset id
-
Specify the volume set ID. Overrides a VOLS= parameter specified in
.mkisofsrc.
- -volset-seqno num
-
Set the volume set sequence number to num. Must
be specified after -volset-size.
- -volset-size num
-
Set the volume set size (the number of CDs in a set) to
num. Must be specified before -volset-seqno.
- -x path
-
Exclude path from being written to the CD, where
path is the complete pathname derived from the
concatenation of the pathname from the command line and the path
relative to this directory. May be specified more than once to
exclude multiple paths.
HFS options
- -apple
-
Create an ISO9660 CD with Apple's extensions.
- -auto file
-
Set file as the Autostart file to make the HFS
CD use the QuickTime 2.0 Autostart feature. file
must be the name of an application or document at the top level of
the CD and must be less than 12 characters long.
- -boot-hfs-file file
-
Install file as the driver file that may make
the CD bootable on a Macintosh.
- -cluster-size size
-
Specify the size in bytes of a cluster or allocation units of PC
Exchange files. Implies the use of --exchange.
- -hfs
-
Create a hybrid ISO9660/HFS CD. Use with -map, -magic,
and/or the various --HFS
options.
- -hfs-bless folder
-
"Bless" the specified directory
(folder), specified as the full pathname as mkisofs. This is usually the System Folder and
is used in creating HFS bootable CDs. The pathname must be in quotes
if it contains spaces.
- -hfs-creator creator
-
Set the four-character default creator for all files.
- -hfs-type type
-
Set the four-character default type for all files.
- -hfs-unlock
-
Leave the HFS volume unlocked so other applications can modify it.
The default is to lock the volume.
- -hfs-volid id
-
Specify the volume name for the HFS partition. This name is assigned
to the CD on a Macintosh and replaces the ID set with the -V option.
- -hide-hfs glob
-
Hide files or directories matching the shell-style pattern
glob from the HFS volume, although they still
exist in the ISO9660 and/or Joliet directory. May be specified
multiple times.
- -hide-hfs-list file
-
The specified file contains a list of globs to be hidden.
- -input-hfs-charset charset
-
Specify the input character set used for HFS filenames when used with
the -mac-name option. The default is
cp10000 (Mac Roman).
- -mac-name
-
Use the HFS filename as the starting point for the ISO9660, Joliet,
and Rock Ridge filenames.
- -magic file
-
Use the specified magic file to set a file's creator
and type information based on the file's
magic number, which is usually the first few
bytes of the file. The magic file contains entries consisting of four
tab-separated columns specifying the byte offset, type, test, and a
message.
- -map file
-
Use the specified mapping file to set a file's
creator and type information based on the filename extension. Only
files that are not known Apple or Unix file types need to be mapped.
The mapping file consists of five-column entries specifying the
extension, file translation, creator, type, and a comment. Creator
and type are both four-letter strings.
- -no-desktop
-
Do not create empty Desktop files. The default is to create such
files.
- -output-hfs-charset charset
-
Specify the output character set used for HFS filenames. Defaults to
the input character set.
- -part
-
Generate an HFS partition table. The default is not to generate the
table.
- -probe
-
Search the contents of files for known Apple or Unix file types.
- --format
-
Look for Macintosh files of the specified file format type. The valid
formats are cap (Apple/Unix File
System (AUFS) CAP files), netatalk,
double, ethershare, ushare, exchange, sgi, xinet,
macbin, single, dave,
and sfm.
System administration command. Create a
lost+found directory in the current working
directory. Intended for Linux Second Extended Filesystems.
mknod [options] name type [major minor]
|
|
Create a special file (a file that can send or receive data). Special
files can be character files (read one character at a time), block
files (read several characters at a time), or FIFO pipes (see
mkfifo).
To choose which type of device to create, use one of the arguments:
- p
-
Create a FIFO file (named pipe). You do not need to specify the major
and minor device numbers.
- b
-
Create a block file. You must specify the major and minor device
numbers the file represents.
- c or u
-
Create a character file. You must specify the major and minor device
numbers the file represents.
Linux's /dev/MAKEDEV utility is
useful for creating one or more devices of a given type in a single
command.
Options
- --help
-
Print usage information and exit.
- -m mode, --mode=mode
-
Set the file mode of the device, as with chmod. The default mode is a=rw unless you have chosen other settings via
umask.
- --version
-
Print version information and exit.
mkpasswd [options] [user]
|
|
Generate a new password for the specified user. The passwords
produced are hard to guess and therefore more secure than passwords
made up by actual people. Some operating systems distribute a
different mkpasswd command, which
regenerates the user password database; if your system has this
version, check the manpage for instructions on how to use it.
If you do not specify a user, mkpasswd will display a new password. If you
do specify a user, make sure that you have permission to set their
password; this will usually mean being root.
Options
- -l n
-
Generate a password that is n characters long.
The default is 9.
- -d n
-
Generate a password with at least n digits in
it. The default is 2.
- -c n
-
Generate a password with at least n lowercase
letters in it. The default is 2.
- -C n
-
Set the minimum number of uppercase letters in the password. The
default is 2.
- -s n
-
Generate a password with at least n special
characters in it. The default is 1.
- -p programname
-
Set the program used to actually set the password. If you do not
choose one, the system will try to use yppasswd, or, if that is not installed,
passwd.
- -2
-
Choose characters in the password so that, on a QWERTY-style
keyboard, they alternate between left and right hand keys. This makes
it harder for someone to guess what the password is if they watch you
type it, but can make automated attacks easier.
- -v
-
Verbose mode; display the interaction between mkpasswd and the system as it sets the
password.
System administration command. Set up RAID array
devices as defined in the
/etc/raidtab configuration file. mkraid can be used to initialize a new array
or upgrade older RAID device arrays for the new kernel.
Initialization will destroy any data on the disk devices used to
create the array.
Options
- -c file, --configfile file
-
Use file instead of
/etc/raidtab.
- -f, --force
-
Initialize the devices used to create the RAID array even if they
currently have data.
- -h, --help
-
Print a usage message and then exit.
- -o, --upgrade
-
Upgrade an older array to the current kernel's RAID
version. Preserve data on the old array.
- -V, --version
-
Print version information and then exit.
mkswap [option] device [size]
|
|
System administration command. Create swap space on
device. You may specify its
size in blocks; each block is a page of about
4KB.
Option
- -c
-
Check for bad blocks before creating the swap space.
mktemp [options] template
|
|
Generate a unique temporary filename for use in a script. The
filename is based on the specified template, which may be any
filename with at least six Xs appended (e.g.,
/tmp/mytemp.XXXXXX). mktemp replaces the Xs with the current
process number and/or a unique letter combination. The file is
created with mode 0600 (unless -u is
specified) and the filename is written to standard output.
Options
- -d
-
Make a directory, not a file.
- -q
-
Fail silently in case of error. Useful to prevent error output from
being sent to standard error.
- -u
-
Operate in "unsafe" mode and unlink
the temporary file before mktemp
exits. Use of this option is not recommended.
mlabel [options] drive[label]
|
|
Label an MS-DOS filesystem (maximum of 11 characters). See mtools for more information.
Options
- -c
-
Overwrite any existing labels.
- -s
-
Show the existing label.
- -n
-
Create a random serial number for the disk.
- -N serialno
-
Choose a new serial number for the disk. It should be an 8-digit
hexadecimal number with no spaces in it.
Create a directory on an MS-DOS filesystem. See mkdir and mtools for more information.
Option
- -D clash-option
-
Specify the action to take if the specified directory name already
exists. The possible clash options are as follows. (The primary name
is the long name if it exists and the short name otherwise; the
secondary name is the short name if a long name exists.)
- a
-
Auto-rename the primary name.
- A
-
Auto-rename the secondary name.
- m
-
Ask the user what to do with the primary name.
- M
-
Ask the user what to do with the secondary name.
- o
-
Overwrite the primary name.
- O
-
Overwrite the secondary name.
- r
-
Rename the primary name, prompting the user for the name.
- R
-
Rename the secondary name, prompting the user for the name.
- s
-
Skip the primary name.
- S
-
Skip the secondary name.
mmount drive [mount-arguments]
|
|
Mount an MS-DOS filesystem, passing the
mount-arguments to mount. If no
mount-arguments are specified, the device name
is used. See mount and mtools for more information.
mmove [options] sourcefile targetfile
mmove [options] sourcefiles targetdir
|
|
Move or rename an MS-DOS file or directory within a single
filesystem. If no drive letter is specified for the target file or
directory, the source drive is assumed. If no drive letter is
specified for either the source or the target, drive a: is assumed. See mv and mtools
for more information.
Options
- -D clash-option
-
Specify the action to take if the specified target file or directory
already exists. See mmd for the
possible clash options.
- -v
-
Verbose; display names of the files or directories being moved.
modinfo [options] object-file
|
|
System administration command. Print information about kernel module
object-file. Information is read from tag names
in the mod-info section of the module file. By default it will print
the module's filename, description, author, license,
and parameters.
Options
- -a, --author
-
Print author information.
- -d, --description
-
Print module description.
- -fformat-string, --format format-string
-
Format output to match string. The format string
is essentially a printf style
string. Fields to be replaced are specified by a percent sign
followed by a tag name in curly braces, e.g., %{author} and %{filename}. A line containing the field
%{parm} will be repeated for each
known module parameter. author,
description, filename, licenses, and parm can also be represented by the shorter
versions, %a, %d, %n,
%l, and %p.
- -h, --help
-
Print usage message, then exit.
- -l, --license
-
Print module license information.
- -n, --filename
-
Print the module's filename.
- -p, --parameters
-
Print the module's typed parameters.
- -V, --version
-
Print version number of the module.
modprobe [options] [modules]
|
|
System administration command. With no options, attempt to load the
specified module, as well as all modules on which it depends. If more
than one module is specified, attempt to load further modules only if
the previous module failed to load. When specifying a module, use
only its name without its path or trailing .o.
Options
- -a, --all
-
Load all listed modules, not just the first one.
- -c, --showconfig
-
Print modprobe's
current configuration.
- -d, --debug
-
Print debugging information about module.
- -h, --help
-
Print help message, then exit.
- -k, --autoclean
-
Mark module to be removed when inactive by setting its autoclean
flag. This option is passed on to insmod.
- -l, --list
-
List modules. This option may be combined with -t to specify a type of module.
- -n, --show
-
Don't load or remove modules; only show what would
happen if modules were loaded or removed.
- -q, --quiet
-
Suppress warnings from insmod when
it fails to load a module. Continue processing other modules. This
option is passed on to insmod.
- -r, --remove
-
Remove the specified modules, as well as the modules on which they
depend.
- -s, --syslog
-
Send error messages to syslogd
instead of to standard error. This option is passed on to insmod.
- -t type, --type type
-
Load only a specific type of module. Consult
/etc/modules.conf for the directories in which
all modules of that type reside.
- -v, --verbose
-
Print commands as they are executed.
- -C file, --config file
-
Read additional configuration from file instead
of /etc/modules.conf.
- -V, --version
-
Print version, then exit.
Files
- /etc/modules.conf
-
Information about modules: which ones depend on others, and which
directories correspond to particular types of modules.
- /sbin/insmod, /sbin/rmmod, /sbin/depmod
-
Programs that modprobe relies on.
Display the named files on a terminal, one
screenful at a time. See less for an
alternative to more.
Options
- +num
-
Begin displaying at line number num.
- -num number
-
Set screen size to number lines.
- +/pattern
-
Begin displaying two lines before pattern.
- -c
-
Repaint screen from top instead of scrolling.
- -d
-
Display the prompt "Hit space to continue, Del to
abort" in response to illegal commands; disable
bell.
- -f
-
Count logical rather than screen lines. Useful when long lines wrap
past the width of the screen.
- -l
-
Ignore form-feed (Ctrl-L) characters.
- -p
-
Page through the file by clearing each window instead of scrolling.
This is sometimes faster.
- -s
-
Squeeze; display multiple blank lines as one.
- -u
-
Suppress underline characters.
Commands
All commands in more are based on
vi commands. You can specify a
number before many commands to have them executed multiple times. For
instance, 3:p causes more to skip back three files, the same as
issuing :p three times. The optional
number is indicated by num in the following
list.
- SPACE
-
Display next screen of text.
- z
-
Display next num lines of text, and redefine a
screenful to num lines. Default is one
screenful.
- RETURN
-
Display next num lines of text, and redefine a
screenful to num lines. Default is one line.
- d, ^D
-
Scroll num lines of text, and redefine scroll
size to num lines. Default is one line.
- q, Q, INTERRUPT
-
Quit.
- s
-
Display next screen of text.
- f
-
Skip forward two screens of text.
- b, ^B
-
Skip backward one screen of text.
- '
-
Return to point where previous search began.
- =
-
Print number of current line.
- /pattern
-
Search for pattern, skipping to
numth occurrence if an argument is specified.
- n
-
Repeat last search, skipping to numth occurrence
if an argument is specified.
- !cmd, :!cmd
-
Invoke shell and execute cmd in it.
- v
-
Invoke vi editor on the file at the
current line.
- ^L
-
Redraw screen.
- :n
-
Skip to next file.
- :p
-
Skip to previous file.
- :f
-
Print current filename and line number.
- .
-
Reexecute previous command.
Examples
Page through file in
"clear" mode, and display prompts:
more -cd file
Format doc to the screen, removing underlines:
nroff doc | more -u
View the manpage for the more
command; begin at the first appearance of the word
"scroll":
man more|more +/scroll
mount [options] [[device] directory]
|
|
System administration command. Mount a file structure. The file
structure on device is mounted on
directory. If no device is
specified, mount looks for an entry
in /etc/fstab to find what device is associated
with the given directory. The directory, which must already exist and
should be empty, becomes the name of the root of the newly mounted
file structure. If mount is invoked
with no arguments, it displays the name of each mounted device, the
directory on which it is mounted, its filesystem type, and any mount
options associated with the device.
Options
- -a
-
Mount all filesystems listed in /etc/fstab. Use
-t to limit this to all filesystems
of a particular type.
- -f
-
Fake mount. Go through the motions of checking the device and
directory, but do not actually mount the filesystem.
- -h
-
Print help message, then exit.
- -l
-
When reporting on mounted filesystems, show filesystem labels for
filesystems that have them.
- -n
-
Do not record the mount in /etc/mtab.
- -o option
-
Qualify the mount with a mount option. Many filesystem types have
their own options. The following are common to most filesystems:
- async
-
Read input and output to the device asynchronously.
- atime
-
Update inode access time for each access. This is the default
behavior.
- auto
-
Allow mounting with the -a option.
- defaults
-
Use all options' default values (async, auto,
dev, exec, nouser,
rw, suid).
- dev
-
Interpret any special devices that exist on the filesystem.
- exec
-
Allow binaries to be executed.
- _netdev
-
Filesystem is a network device requiring network access.
- noatime
-
Do not update inode access time for each access.
- noauto
-
Do not allow mounting via the -a
option.
- nodev
-
Do not interpret any special devices that exist on the filesystem.
- noexec
-
Do not allow the execution of binaries on the filesystem.
- nosuid
-
Do not acknowledge any suid or
sgid bits.
- nouser
-
Only privileged users will have access to the filesystem.
- remount
-
Expect the filesystem to have already been mounted, and remount it.
- ro
-
Allow read-only access to the filesystem.
- rw
-
Allow read/write access to the filesystem.
- suid
-
Acknowledge suid and sgid bits.
- sync
-
Read input and output to the device synchronously.
- user
-
Allow unprivileged users to mount or unmount the filesystem. The
defaults on such a system will be nodev, noexec, and nosuid, unless otherwise specified.
- users
-
Allow any user to mount or unmount the filesystem. The defaults on
such a system will be nodev,
noexec, and nosuid, unless otherwise specified.
- -r
-
Mount filesystem read-only.
- -s
-
Where possible, ignore mount options specified by -o that are not supported by the filesystem.
- -t type
-
Specify the filesystem type. Possible values include adfs, affs,
autofs, coda, cramfs,
devpts, efs, ext2,
ext3, hfs, hpfs,
iso9660, jfs, msdos,
ncpfs, nfs, ntfs,
proc, qnx4, reiserfs, romfs, smbfs,
sysv, tmpfs, udf,
ufs, umsdos, vfat,
xfs, and xiafs. The default type is iso9660. The type auto may also be used to set mount to autodetect the filesystem. When used
with -a, this option can limit the
types mounted. Use a comma-separated list to specify more than one
type to mount, and prefix a type with no to exclude that type.
- -v
-
Display mount information verbosely.
- -w
-
Mount filesystem read/write. This is the default.
- -F
-
When used with -a, fork a new
process to mount each system.
- -L label
-
Mount filesystem with the specified label.
- -O option
-
Limit systems mounted with -a by its
filesystem options. (As used with -o.) Use a comma-separated list to specify
more than one option, and prefix an option with no to exclude filesystems with that option.
Options -t and -O are cumulative.
- -U uuid
-
Mount filesystem with the specified uuid.
- -V
-
Print version, then exit.
Files
- /etc/fstab
-
List of filesystems to be mounted and options to use when mounting
them.
- /etc/mtab
-
List of filesystems currently mounted and the options with which they
were mounted.
- /proc/partitions
-
Used to find filesystems by label and uuid.
NFS/NIS command. NFS mount request server. mountd reads the file
/etc/exports to determine which filesystems are
available for mounting by which machines. It also provides
information about which filesystems are mounted by which clients. See
also nfsd.
Options
- -d kind, --debug kind
-
Specify debugging facility. Accepted values for
kind are general, call, auth,
parse, and all.
- -f file, --exports-file file
-
Read the export permissions from file instead of
/etc/exports.
- -h, --help
-
Print help message, then exit.
- -n, --no-tcp
-
Use UDP for mounts.
- -o n, --descriptors n
-
Allow no more than n open file descriptors. The
default is 256.
- -p n, --port n
-
Bind to specified port instead of accepting a port from portmapper.
- -v, --version
-
Print the version number, then exit.
- -F, --foreground
-
Run mountd in the foreground.
- -N n, --no-nfs-version n
-
Do not offer NFS version n.
- -V n, --nfs-version n
-
Explicity offer NFS version n.
Files
- /etc/exports
-
Information about mount permissions.
- /var/lib/nfs/rmtab
-
List of filesystems currently mounted by clients.
mpartition [options] drive
|
|
Create the MS-DOS partition specified by drive;
used mostly on proprietary Unix systems where fdisk is unavailable. See mtools for more information. When a partition
is being created, the default is for the number of sectors and heads
and the length to be automatically determined, but they can also be
specified as options.
Options
- -a
-
Activate the partition, making it the bootable partition.
- -b offset
-
The starting offset of the partition to be created, in sectors. The
default is the start of the disk (partition 1) or immediately after
the end of the previous partition.
- -B bootsector
-
Read the template master boot record from the file specified by
bootsector. Can be specified with -I.
- -c
-
Create the partition.
- -d
-
Deactivate the partition, making it nonbootable.
- -f
-
Allow overriding of safeguards that perform consistency checking
before any change is made to a partition. Can be specified with any
operation that modifies the partition table.
- -h heads
-
The number of heads for a partition being created.
- -I
-
Initialize the partition table and remove all partitions.
- -l length
-
The size of the partition to be created, in sectors.
- -p
-
Print a command line to re-create the partition. With -v, print the current partition table.
- -r
-
Remove the partition.
- -s sectors
-
The number of sectors per track of the partition to be created.
- -t cylinders
-
The number of cylinders of the partition to be created.
- -v
-
With -p, print the current partition
table; otherwise, for commands that modify the partition table, print
it after it has been modified.
- -vv
-
Print a hexadecimal dump of the partition table when reading and
writing it.
Command-line MP3 player. See mpg321.
mpg321 [options] file
mpg123 [options] file
|
|
Command-line MP3 players, often used as backends for GUI music
players. The files played may be local files or URLs. mpg321 and mpg123 behave the same way, except that
mpg123 lacks the option --skip-printing-frames.
Options
- -o devicetype
-
Name the type of audio device you are using. Valid types are
oss (Open Sound System), sun (Sun audio system), alsa (Advanced Linux Sound Architecture),
alsa09 (ALSA, version 0.9),
esd (Enlightened Sound Daemon), and
arts (Analog Real-Time Synthesizer).
- -a, --audiodevice device
-
Name the actual device (e.g., /dev/sound/dsp1)
you are using. This option is ignored if you have chosen -o arts. For
esd running on remote systems, you
must specify the host, and for alsa,
you must specify the card and device (default is 0:0).
- -g, --gain n
-
Set the volume (gain) to an integer between 1 and 100.
- -k, --skip n
-
Do not play the first n frames of the file or
stream.
- -n, --frames n
-
Play only the first n frames of the file or
stream.
- -@, --list filename
-
Specify a playlist file. The format of filename
is just a list of filenames, one file per line, to be played.
- -z, --shuffle
-
Shuffle the files in the playlist and any files supplied on the
command line, and play the list once. Each file will be played once.
- -Z, --random
-
Each time one file is finished playing, choose a new file at random.
Files may be played more than once, and mpg321 will continue playing songs at random
until it is stopped.
- -v, --verbose
-
Verbose mode. Display additional information about the file,
including ID3 tags and time played/time remaining.
- -s, --stdout
-
Mostly useful for developers, this option uses stdout instead of an
audio device for its output. The output is 16-bit PCM, little-endian
data.
- -w, --wav filename
-
Instead of playing the song, write the output to the
.wav file you specify. Choosing - as the filename sends the WAV data to
stdout. This option is usually used with the --cdr option.
- --cdr filename
-
Write to a CDR file. Choosing - as
the filename sends the data to stdout.
- --au filename
-
Instead of playing the file, write the output to the
.au file you specify. Choosing - as the filename sends the data to stdout.
- -t, --test
-
Test mode. Do not play or write any data.
- -q, --quiet
-
Quiet mode. This still plays the file, but does not display any data
about the file or about mpg321.
- -R
-
Operate in "remote control" mode,
allowing seek and pause. This option is useful almost exclusively for
developers of graphical frontends for mpg321.
- --stereo
-
Play in stereo. If audio is mono, send two identical streams as
stereo output.
- --aggressive
-
Aggressive mode takes a higher priority in the system if possible. It
requires root access because it can preempt processes owned by other
users.
- --skip-printing-frames n
-
Save CPU cycles by displaying a status update only once every
n frames. This option is not available in
mpg123.
- --help, --longhelp
-
Display usage information.
- -V, --version
-
Display the version of mpg321 and
then quit.
Delete an MS-DOS directory. The directory should be empty. To delete
a full directory and its contents, use mdeltree. See rmdir and mtools for more information.
Option
- -v
-
Operate in verbose mode, displaying each directory as it is deleted.
Rename an MS-DOS file. See rename
and mtools for more information.
Options
- -D clash-option
-
Specify the action to take if the specified new name already exists.
See mmd for the possible clash
options.
- -v
-
Operate verbosely, showing the names of files and directories as they
are renamed.
- -V
-
Print version information and exit.
Display the FAT clusters associated with a file on an MS-DOS system.
See mtools for more information.
mt [option] operation [count]
|
|
Control a magnetic tape drive used to back up or restore system data.
The operation argument determines what action
will be taken, and unless the -f or
--file option is used, the
action is applied to the default tape drive named in the TAPE environment variable. The
count argument determines how many times the
operation is to be repeated. If not specified, it defaults to 1.
Options
- -f, --file=device
-
Name the tape device to use. This may be a local device, character
special file (see mknod), or a
remote device, named as
host:/path/to/drive or
user@host:path/to/drive.
- --rsh-command=command
-
Choose a different command to use when connecting to a remote drive.
The default is set in MT_RSH, and is
normally either ssh or rsh.
- -V, --version
-
Print version number and exit.
Operations
mt can perform the following
operations on tape drives. Operations applicable only to SCSI tape
drives are marked as such.
- eof, weof n
-
Write n end-of-file (EOF) notations at the
current location on the tape.
- fsf n
-
Move forward n files, positioning the tape at
the first block of the next file.
- bsf n
-
Move backward n files, positioning the tape at
the first block of the previous file.
- fsr n
-
Move forward n records.
- bsr n
-
Move backward n records.
- bsfm n
-
Move backward n file marks, to a position on
side of the file mark closer to the beginning of the tape.
- fsfm n
-
Move forward n file marks, to a position on side
of the file mark closer to the beginning of the tape.
- asf n
-
Move to file number n on the tape. This is the
same as rewinding the tape and moving forward n
spaces with fsf.
- eom
-
Move to the end of recording on the tape. Usually used when preparing
to record new data onto the tape.
- rewind
-
Return to the beginning of the tape.
- offline, rewoffl
-
Rewind and unload the tape (if drive supports unload).
- status
-
Display the status of the tape drive.
- retension
-
Used when the tape has become loosely wound, usually because it has
been dropped, shaken, or transported. Rewinds the tape, moves forward
to the end of the tape, then rewinds again.
- erase
-
Erase the tape.
- fss n
-
SCSI drives only. Move forward n set marks.
- bss n
-
SCSI drives only. Move backward n set marks.
- wset n
-
SCSI drives only. Write n set marks at current
position.
- eod, seod
-
Move to the end of valid data on the tape. Similar to eom, but used with streamer tapes.
- setblk n
-
SCSI drives only. Set the block size to n bytes
per record.
- setdensity n
-
SCSI drives only. Set the data density for your tape drive to
n. The appropriate value should be in the tape
or tape drive documentation. For more information, see the densities operation.
- drvbuffer n
-
SCSI drives only. Set the buffer value. For no buffer, choose 0, and
for normal buffering, choose 1. Other values may have different
effects depending on the drive.
- stoptions n
-
SCSI drives only. Set the driver bits for the device; items are added
as with chmod. 1 is for write
buffering, 2 for asynchronous writing, 4 for read-ahead, and 8 for
debugging output.
- stwrthreshold n
-
SCSI drives only. Set the write threshold for the tape drive to
n kilobytes. This value may not be higher than
the driver buffer value.
- seek n
-
SCSI drives only. Seek to block n on the tape.
- tell
-
SCSI drives only. Tell the number of the current block on the tape.
- densities
-
SCSI tapes only. Display information about data densities on stdout.
- datacompression [n]
-
Works on some SCSI-2 DAT tapes only. If n is 0,
turn data compression off. If n is 1, display
the compression status. Other values turn compression on.
command [options] [arguments]
|
|
A collection of tools for working with MS-DOS files and filesystems,
especially for accessing files on floppy disks without mounting them
as Unix filesystems. The various commands are mattrib, mbadblocks, mcat, mcd, mcopy, mdel, mdeltree, mdir, mdu, mformat, minfo, mlabel, mmd, mmount, mmove, mpartition, mrd, mren, mshowfat, mtoolstest, mtype, and mzip.
For the purposes of mtools, all
MS-DOS file names begin with a drive letter and colon, followed by
the path. mtools accepts both / and
\ for directory separators. For example, an MS-DOS file might be
referred to as
a:/directory/subdirectory/file.txt. If you use
the backslash or any standard Unix wildcards or special characters,
put the filename in quotation marks.
FAT filesystem filenames are normally a maximum of eight characters
long with a three-letter extension, and are not case-sensitive. Even
in the more recent VFAT system, which does preserve case sensitivity,
two files with the same letters in their names, regardless of case,
cannot coexist. Unix filenames that are too long, that use reserved
characters (; + = [ ] ' , \ " * \ \
< > / ? : or |), or that conflict with MS-DOS devices (PRN, for
example) are converted to VFAT names. This means replacing reserved
characters with an underscore (_) and shortening files as needed,
replacing several characters with a single tilde (~).
Display the configuration for mtools. See mtools for more information.
Display the contents of an MS-DOS file, as with the MS-DOS command
type. See mtools for more information.
Options
- -s
-
Strip the high bit from the data.
- -t
-
View as a text file, changing carriage return/line feeds to line
feeds.
mv [option] sources target
|
|
Move or rename files and directories. The source (first column) and
target (second column) determine the result (third column):
File
|
name (nonexistent)
|
Rename file to name.
|
File
|
Existing file
|
Overwrite existing file with source file.
|
Directory
|
name (nonexistent)
|
Rename directory to name.
|
Directory
|
Existing directory
|
Move directory to be a subdirectory of existing directory.
|
One or more files
|
Existing directory
|
Move files to directory.
|
Options
- -b, --backup
-
Back up files before removing.
- -f, --force
-
Force the move, even if target file exists;
suppress messages about restricted access modes.
- --help
-
Print a help message and then exit.
- -i, --interactive
-
Query user before removing files.
- -u, --update
-
Do not remove a file or link if its modification date is the same as
or newer than that of its replacement.
- -v, --verbose
-
Print the name of each file before moving it.
- --version
-
Print version information and then exit.
- -S suffix, --suffix=suffix
-
Override the SIMPLE_BACKUP_SUFFIX
environment variable, which determines the suffix used for making
simple backup files. If the suffix is not set either way, the default
is a tilde (~).
- -V value, --version-control=value
-
Override the VERSION_CONTROL
environment variable, which determines the type of backups made. The
acceptable values for version control are:
- t, numbered
-
Always make numbered backups.
- nil, existing
-
Make numbered backups of files that already have them, simple backups
of the others. This is the default.
- never, simple
-
Always make simple backups.
Set modes or eject an MS-DOS-formatted ZIP or JAZ disk. See mtools for information about handling MS-DOS
filesystems. Unix-formatted ZIP and JAZ drives can be handled as you
would a floppy or other removable media, using the mount and umount commands.
Note that a ZIP drive is usually referred to as drive Z:, and a JAZ
drive as drive J:.
Options
- -e
-
Eject the disk.
- -f
-
Force eject (even if the disk is mounted). Must be used in
combination with -e.
- -r
-
Put disk into read-only mode.
- -w
-
Put disk into read/write mode.
- -P
-
Prevent writing to the disk without a password.
- -x
-
Prevent read or write access to the disk without a password.
- -u
-
Make the disk writable, but restore write protection on eject.
- -q
-
Query and display the disk status.
TCP/IP command. Internet domain name server. named is used by resolver libraries to provide
access to the Internet distributed naming database. With no
arguments, named reads
/etc/named.conf for any initial data and listens
for queries on a privileged port. See RFC 1034 and RFC 1035 for more
details.
There are several named binaries
available at different Linux archives, displaying various behaviors.
Here we describe named as provided
by Internet Software Consortium's Berkeley Internet
Name Domain (BIND) version 9.2.x.
Options
- -c file
-
Read configuration information from file instead
of /etc/named.conf.
- -d debuglevel
-
Print debugging information. debuglevel is a
number indicating the level of messages printed.
- -f
-
Run named in the foreground.
- -g
-
Run named in the foreground and send
all log messages to standard error.
- -n n
-
Specify the number of processors in a multiprocessor system. Normally
named can autodetect the number of
CPUs.
- -p port
-
Use port as the port number. Default is 53.
- -t dir
-
Change root to specified directory after reading command arguments
but before reading the configuration file. Useful only when running
with option -u.
- -u user
-
Set the user ID to user after completing any
privileged operations.
- -v
-
Print version, then exit.
File
- /etc/named.conf
-
Read when named starts up.
namei [options] pathname [pathname . . .]
|
|
Follow a pathname until a terminal point is found (e.g., a file,
directory, char device, etc.). If namei finds a symbolic link, it shows the link
and starts following it, indenting the output to show the context.
namei prints an informative message
when the maximum number of symbolic links this system can have has
been exceeded.
Options
- -m
-
Show mode bits of each file type in the style of ls
(e.g.,"rwxr-xr-x").
- -x
-
Show mountpoint directories with a D
rather than a d.
File type characters
For each line of output, namei
prints the following characters to identify the file types found:
- -
-
A regular file.
- ?
-
An error of some kind.
- b
-
A block device.
- c
-
A character device.
- d
-
A directory.
- f:
-
The pathname namei is currently
trying to resolve.
- l
-
A symbolic link (both the link and its contents are output).
- s
-
A socket.
nameif [options] [name macaddress]
|
|
System administration command. Assign an interface
name to a network device specified by
macaddress, the unique serial number that
identifies a network card. If no name and
macaddress are given, nameif will attempt to read addresses from the
configuration file /etc/mactab. Each line of the
configuration file should contain either a comment beginning with #
or an interface name and MAC address.
Options
- -c filename
-
Read interface names and MAC addresses from
filename instead of
/etc/mactab.
- -s
-
Send any error messages to syslog.
File
- /proc/ksyms
-
List of interface names and MAC addresses used to rename interfaces.
TCP/IP command. Show network status. Print information on active
sockets, routing tables, interfaces, masquerade connections, or
multicast memberships. By default, netstat lists open sockets.
Options
The first five options( -g,
-i, -r, -s, and
-M) determine what kind of
information netstat should display.
- -g, --groups
-
Show multicast group memberships.
- -i, --interface[=name]
-
Show all network interfaces, or just the interface specified by
name.
- -r, --route
-
Show kernel routing tables.
- -s, --statistics
-
Show statistics for each protocol.
- -M, --masquerade
-
Show masqueraded connections.
- -a, --all
-
Show all entries.
- -c, --continuous
-
Display information continuously, refreshing once every second.
- -e, --extend
-
Increase level of detail in reports. Use twice for maximum detail.
- -l, --listening
-
Show only listening sockets.
- -n, --numeric
-
Show network addresses, ports, and users as numbers.
- --numeric-hosts
-
Show host addresses as numbers, but resolve others.
- --numeric-ports
-
Show ports as numbers, but resolve others.
- --numeric-users
-
Show user ID numbers for users, but resolve others.
- -o, --timers
-
Include information on network timers.
- -p, --program
-
Show the process ID and name of the program owning the socket.
- --protocol=family
-
Show connections only for the specified address
family. Accepted values are inet, unix, ipx, ax25, netrom, and ddp.
- -t, --tcp
-
Limit report to information on TCP sockets.
- -u, --udp
-
Limit report to information on UDP sockets.
- -v, --verbose
-
Verbose mode.
- -w, --raw
-
Limit report to information on raw sockets.
- -C
-
Print routing information from the route cache.
- -F
-
Print routing information from the forward information database
(FIB). This is the default.
- -N, --symbolic
-
Where possible, print symbolic host, port, or user names instead of
numerical representatitons. This is the default behavior.
Rebuild the mail aliases database, /etc/aliases,
after a change. Return 0 on success, or a number greater than 0 if
there was an error. newaliases must
be run whenever /etc/aliases has been changed
for the change to take effect. Identical to sendmail -bi.
Change user's group ID to the specified group. If no
group is specified, change to the user's login
group. The new group is then used for checking permissions.
System administration command. Create or update system users from
entries in file. Each line in
file has the same format as an entry in
/etc/passwd except that passwords are
unencrypted, and group IDs can be given as a name or number. During
an update, the password age field is ignored if the user already
exists in the /etc/shadow password file. If a
group name or ID does not already exist, it will be created. If a
home directory does not exist, it will be created.
System administration command. Launch n kernel
threads for the Network File System (NFS) kernel module. The threads
will handle client filesystem requests. By default only one thread is
launched. Most systems require eight or more, depending on the number
of NFS clients using the system. Use nfsstat to check NFS performance.
Option
- -p port
-
Listen for NFS requests on port instead of the
default port 2049.
System administration command. Print statistics on NFS and remote
procedure call (RPC) activity for both clients and server.
Options
- -c
-
Display only client-side statistics.
- -n
-
Display only NFS statistics.
- -r
-
Display only RPC statistics.
- -s
-
Display only server-side statistics.
- -o facility
-
Only display statistics for the specified
facility. The following are valid values for
facility:
- fh
-
Server file handle cache.
- net
-
Network layer statistics.
- nfs
-
Same as -n.
- rc
-
Server request reply cache.
- rpc
-
Same as -r.
nice [option] [command [arguments]]
|
|
Execute a command (with its
arguments) with lower priority (i.e., be
"nice" to other users). With no
arguments, nice prints the default
scheduling priority (niceness). If nice is a child process, it prints the parent
process's scheduling priority. Niceness has a range
of -20 (highest priority) to 19 (lowest priority).
Options
- --help
-
Print a help message and then exit.
- -n adjustment, -adjustment, --adjustment=adjustment
-
Run command with niceness incremented by
adjustment (1-19); default is 10. A privileged
user can raise priority by specifying a negative
adjustment (e.g., -5).
- --version
-
Print version information and then exit.
Print the symbol table (name list) in alphabetical order for one or
more object files. If no object files are specified, perform
operations on a.out. Output includes each
symbol's value, type, size, name, and so on. A key
letter categorizing the symbol can also be displayed.
Options
- -a, --debug-syms
-
Print debugger symbols.
- --defined-only
-
Display only defined symbols.
- -f format, --format=format
-
Specify output format (bsd,
sysv, or posix). Default is bsd.
- -g, --extern-only
-
Print external symbols only.
- --help
-
Print help message, then exit.
- -l, --line-numbers
-
Print source filenames and line numbers for each symbol from
available debugging information.
- -n, -v, --numeric-sort
-
Sort the external symbols by address.
- -p, --no-sort
-
Don't sort the symbols at all.
- -r, --reverse-sort
-
Sort in reverse, alphabetically or numerically.
- -s, --print-armap
-
Include mappings stored by ar and
ranlib when printing archive
symbols.
- --size-sort
-
Sort by size.
- -t radix, --radix=radix
-
Use the specified radix for printing symbol
values. Accepted values are d for
decimal, o for octal, and x for hexadecimal.
- --target=format
-
Specify an object code format other than the
system default.
- -u, --undefined-only
-
Report only the undefined symbols.
- -A, -o, -print-file-name
-
Print input filenames before each symbol.
- -C, --demangle[=style]
-
Translate low-level symbol names into readable versions. You may
specify a style to use when demangling symbol names from a foreign
compiler.
- -D, --dynamic
-
Print dynamic, not normal, symbols. Useful only when working with
dynamic objects (some kinds of shared libraries, for example).
- -P, --portability
-
Same as -f posix.
- -S, --print-size
-
Print the size of defined symbols.
- -V, --version
-
Print nm's version
number on standard error.
nohup command [arguments]
nohup option
|
|
Run the named command with its optional command
arguments, continuing to run it even after you
log out (make command immune to hangups; i.e.,
no hangup). Terminal output is appended to the file
nohup.out by default. Modern shells preserve
background commands by default; this command is necessary only in the
original Bourne shell.
Options
- --help
-
Print usage information and exit.
- --version
-
Print version information and exit.
nslookup [-option...] [host_to_find | -[server ]]
|
|
TCP/IP command. Query Internet domain name servers. nslookup is deprecated; its functionality is
replaced by the dig and host commands. nslookup may not be included in some
distributions.
nslookup has two modes: interactive
and noninteractive. Interactive mode allows the user to query name
servers for information about various hosts and domains or to print a
list of hosts in a domain. It is entered either when no arguments are
given (default name server will be used) or when the first argument
is a hyphen and the second argument is the hostname or Internet
address of a name server. Noninteractive mode is used to print just
the name and requested information for a host or domain. It is used
when the name of the host to be looked up is given as the first
argument. Any of the
keyword=value pairs listed
under the interactive set command
can be used as an option on the command line by prefacing the keyword
with a -. The optional second argument specifies a name server.
Options
All of the options under the set
interactive command can be entered on the command line, with the
syntax -keyword[=value].
Interactive commands
- exit
-
Exit nslookup.
- finger [name] [>|>>filename]
-
Connect with finger server on current host, optionally creating or
appending to filename.
- help, ?
-
Print a brief summary of commands.
- host [server]
-
Look up information for host using the current
default server, or server if specified.
- ls -[ahd] domain [>|>>filename]
-
List information available for domain,
optionally creating or appending to filename.
The -a option lists aliases of hosts
in the domain. -h lists CPU and
operating system information for the domain. -d lists all contents of a zone transfer.
- lserver domain
-
Change the default server to domain. Use the
initial server to look up information about
domain.
- root
-
Change default server to the server for the root of the domain
namespace.
- server domain
-
Change the default server to domain. Use the
current default server to look up information about
domain.
- set keyword[=value]
-
Change state information affecting the lookups. Valid keywords are:
- all
-
Print the current values of the frequently used options to set.
- class=name
-
Set query class to IN (Internet),
CHAOS, HESIOD, or ANY. Default is IN.
- domain=name
-
Change default domain name to name.
- [no]debug
-
Turn debugging mode on or off.
- [no]d2
-
Turn exhaustive debugging mode on or off.
- [no]defname
-
Append default domain name to every lookup.
- [no]ignoretc
-
Ignore truncate error.
- [no]recurse
-
Tell name server to query or not query other servers if it does not
have the information.
- [no]search
-
With defname, search for each name in parent
domains of current domain.
- [no]vc
-
Always use a virtual circuit when sending requests to the server.
- port=port
-
Connect to name server using port.
- querytype=value
-
See type=value.
- retry=number
-
Set number of retries to number.
- root=host
-
Change name of root server to host.
- srchlist=domain
-
Set search list to domain.
- timeout=number
-
Change timeout interval for waiting for a reply to
number seconds.
- type=value
-
Change type of information returned from a query to one of:
A
|
Host's Internet address
|
ANY
|
Any available information
|
CNAME
|
Canonical name for an alias
|
HINFO
|
Host CPU and operating system type
|
MD
|
Mail destination
|
MG
|
Mail group member
|
MINFO
|
Mailbox or mail list information
|
MR
|
Mail rename domain name
|
MX
|
Mail exchanger
|
NS
|
Name server for the named zone
|
PTR
|
Hostname or pointer to other information
|
SOA
|
Domain start-of-authority
|
TXT
|
Text information
|
UINFO
|
User information
|
WKS
|
Supported well-known services
|
- view filename
-
Sort and list output of previous ls
command(s) with more.
nsupdate [options] [filename]
|
|
System administration command. Interactively submit dynamic DNS
update requests to a name server. Use nsupdate to add or remove records from a zone
without manually editing the zone file. Commands may be entered
interactively or read from filename. An update
message is built from multiple commands, some establishing
prerequisites, some adding or deleting resource records. Messages are
executed as a single transaction. A blank line or the send command will send the current message.
Lines beginning with a semicolon are treated as comments. For
additional information on dynamic DNS updates, see RFC 2136.
Options
- -d
-
Print additional tracing information usable for debugging.
- -k keyfile
-
Read encrypted transaction signature key from
keyfile. The key should be encrypted using the
HMAC-MD5 algorithm. Keyfiles are generated by the dnssec-keygen command.
- -v
-
Use TCP instead of UDP to send update requests.
- -y keyname:secret
-
Generate transaction signature from specified
keyname and secret.
Interactive commands
- key keyname secret
-
Generate transaction signature from specified
keyname and secret. This
command overrides command-line options -k or -y.
- local address [port]
-
Use local address and, if specified,
port to send updates.
- prereq nxdomain domain-name
-
Perform updates only if there are no preexisting records with the
name domain-name.
- prereq nxrset domain-name [class] type
-
Perform updates only if there are no preexisting records of the
specified type and class
for domain-name. When no
class is given, IN is assumed.
- prereq yxdomain domain-name
-
Perform updates only if there is a preexisting record with the name
domain-name.
- prereq nxrset domain-name [class] type [data.
-
Perform updates only if there is a preexisting record of the
specified type and class
for domain-name. If data is
given, the RDATA of the specified resource must match it exactly.
When no class is given, IN is assumed.
- send
-
Send the current message. Same as entering a blank line.
- server servername [port]
-
Update records on DS server servername instead
of the master server listed in the MNAME field of the appropriate
zone's SOA record.
- show
-
Print all commands in current message.
- update add domain-name [ttl] [class] type data
-
Add a resource record with the specified values.
- update delete domain-name [ttl] [class] [type [data]]
-
Delete resource records for domain-name. The
ttl field is always ignored, but if other fields
are given, only delete records that match all criteria.
- zone zonename
-
Apply updates to the specified zonename. If no
zone command is given, nsupdate attempts to determine the correct
zone based on other input.
objcopy [options] infile [outfile]
|
|
Copy the contents of the input object file to another file,
optionally changing the file format in the process (but not the
endian-ness). If outfile is not specified,
objcopy creates a temporary file and
renames it to infile when the copy is complete,
destroying the original input file. The GNU Binary File Descriptor
(BFD) library is used to read and write the object files.
Options
- --add-section section=file
-
Add a new section to the output object file with the specified
section name and the contents taken from the specified file.
Available only for formats that allow arbitrarily named sections.
- --alt-machine-code=n
-
If the output architecture has alternate machine codes, use the
nth code instead of the default.
- -b n, --byte=n
-
Copy only every nth byte. Header data is not
affected. The value of n can be from 0 to
interleave-1, where
interleave is specified by -i (default is 4). This option is useful for
creating files to program ROM and is typically used with srec as the output format.
- -B bfdarch, --binary-architecture=bfdarch
-
Set the output architecture to bfdarch (e.g.,
i386) for transforming a raw binary file into an object file.
Otherwise, this option is ignored. After the conversion, your program
can access data inside the created object file by referencing the
special symbols _binary_objfile_start, _binary_objfile_end, and _binary_objfile_size.
- --change-addresses=incr, --adjust-vma=incr
-
Change the VMA and LMA addresses of all sections, plus the start
address, by adding incr. Changing section
addresses is not supported by all object formats. Sections are not
relocated.
- --change-leading-char
-
For object formats that use a special character (such as an
underscore) to begin symbols, change the leading character when
converting between formats. If the character is the same in both
formats, the option has no effect. Otherwise, it adds, removes, or
changes the leading character as appropriate for the output format.
- --change-section-address section{=|+|-}val, --adjust-section-vma section{=|+|-}val
-
Set or change the VMA and LMA addresses of the specified section.
With =, set the section address to
the specified value; otherwise, add or subtract the value to get the
new address.
- --change-section-lma section{=|+|-}val
-
Set or change the LMA address of the specified section. With
=, set the section address to the
specified value; otherwise, add or subtract the value to get the new
address.
- --change-section-vma section{=|+|-}val
-
Set or change the VMA address of the specified section. With
=, set the section address to the
specified value; otherwise, add or subtract the value to get the new
address.
- --change-start incr, --adjust-start incr
-
Add incr to the start address to get a new start
address. Not supported by all object formats.
- --change-warnings, --adjust-warnings
-
Issue a warning if the section specified in one of the options
--change-section-address,
--change-section-lma, or
--change-section-vma does not
exist.
- --debugging
-
Convert debugging information if possible.
- -F bfdname, --target=bfdname
-
Set the binary format for both input and output files to the binary
file descriptor name bfdname. No format
translation is done. Use the -h
option for a list of supported formats for your system.
- -g, --strip-debug
-
Do not copy debugging information.
- -G symbol, --keep-global-symbol=symbol
-
Copy only the specified global symbol, making all other symbols local
to the file. May be specified multiple times.
- --gap-fill=val
-
Fill gaps between sections with the specified value; applies to the
load address (LMA) of the sections.
- -h, --help
-
Print help information, including a list of supported target object
formats, then exit.
- -i interleave, --interleave=interleave
-
Copy one out of every interleave bytes. Use
-b to set the byte to copy (default
is 4). This option is ignored if -b
is not specified.
- -I bfdname, --input-target=bfdname
-
Set the binary file format of the input file using its binary file
descriptor name, bfdname.
- -j section, --only-section=section
-
Copy only the specified section. May be specified multiple times.
- -K symbol, --keep-symbol=symbol
-
Copy only the specified symbol from the source file. May be specified
multiple times.
- --keep-global-symbols=filename
-
Apply the option --keep-global-symbol to each symbol
listed in the specified file. The file should have one symbol per
line, with comments beginning with a hash mark (#). May be specified
multiple times.
- --keep-symbols=file
-
Apply the option --keep-symbol
to each symbol listed in the specified file. The file should have one
symbol per line, with comments beginning with a hash mark (#). May be
specified multiple times.
- -L symbol, --localize-symbol=symbol
-
Make the specified symbol local. May be specified multiple times.
- --localize-symbols=filename
-
Apply the option --localize-symbol to each symbol listed
in the specified file. The file should have one symbol per line, with
comments beginning with a hash mark (#). May be specified multiple
times.
- -N symbol, --strip-symbol=symbol
-
Do not copy the specified symbol. May be specified multiple times.
- --no-change-warnings, --no-adjust-warnings
-
Do not issue a warning even if the section specified in one of the
options --change-section-address, --change-section-lma, or --change-section-vma does not exist.
- -O bfdname, --output-target=bfdname
-
Set the binary file format of the output file using its binary file
descriptor name, bfdname. The format srec generates S-records (printable ASCII
versions of object files), and binary generates a raw binary file. Use
-h for other available formats.
- -p, --preserve-dates
-
Preserve the input file's access and modification
dates in the output file.
- --pad-to=addr
-
Pad the output file up to the load address. Use the fill value
specified by --gap-fill
(default is 0).
- -R section, --remove-section=section
-
Do not copy any section with the specified name. May be specified
multiple times.
- --redefine-sym old=new
-
Change the name of the symbol old to
new.
- --remove-leading-char
-
If the first character of a global symbol is a special character
(such as an underscore) used by the input object file format, remove
it. Unlike --change-leading-char, this option always
changes the symbol name when appropriate, regardless of the output
object format.
- --rename-section oldname=newname[,flags]
-
Rename a section from oldname to
newname, optionally also changing the flags to
flags.
- -S, --strip-all
-
Do not copy relocation and symbol information.
- --set-section-flags section=flags
-
Set flags for the specified section as a comma-separated string of
flag names. Not all flags are meaningful for all object formats. The
possible flags are alloc, code, contents, data, debug,
load, noload, readonly, rom, and share.
- --set-start=val
-
Set the start address of the new file to the specified value. Not
supported by all object formats.
- --srec-forceS3
-
Force all srec output records to be
type S3 records.
- --srec-len=ival
-
Set the maximum length of srec
output records to the specified value. The length includes the
address, data, and crc
fields.
- --strip-symbols=filename
-
Apply the option --strip-symbol
to each symbol listed in the specified file. The file should have one
symbol per line, with comments beginning with a hash mark (#). May be
specified multiple times.
- --strip-unneeded
-
Strip all symbols not needed for relocation processing.
- -v, --verbose
-
Run in verbose mode, listing all object files modified; for archives,
list all archive members.
- -V, --version
-
Print version information and exit.
- -W symbol, --weaken-symbol=symbol
-
Make the specified symbol weak. May be specified multiple times.
- --weaken
-
Make all global symbols weak.
- --weaken-symbols=filename
-
Apply the option --weaken-symbol to each symbol listed in
the specified file. The file should have one symbol per line, with
comments beginning with a hash mark (#). May be specified multiple
times.
- -x, --discard-all
-
Do not copy nonglobal symbols.
- -X, --discard-locals
-
Do not copy compiler-generated local symbols (usually those starting
with L or ..).
objdump [options] objfiles
|
|
Display information about one or more object files. If an archive is
specified, objdump displays
information on each object file in the archive. At least one of the
options -a, -d, -D,
-f, -g, -G,
-h, -H, -p,
-r, -S, -t,
-T, -V, or -x
must be given to tell objdump what
information to show.
Options
- -a, --archive-header
-
If any input files are archives, display the archive header
information. The output includes the object file format of each
archive member.
- --adjust-vma=offset
-
Add offset to all section headers before dumping
information. Useful if the section addresses do not correspond to the
symbol table.
- -b bfdname, --target=bfdname
-
Set the binary file format using its binary file descriptor name,
bfdname. Use the -h option for a list of supported formats for
your system.
- -C [style], --demangle[=style]
-
Decode (demangle) low-level symbol names into user-level names,
optionally specifying a mangling style. Removes any initial
underscores and makes C++ function names readable.
- -d, --disassemble
-
Display assembler mnemonic names for the machine instructions.
Disassemble only sections that are expected to contain instructions.
- -D, --disassemble-all
-
Disassemble all sections, not just those expected to contain
instructions.
- -EB, --endian=big
- -EL, --endian=little
-
Specify whether the object files are big- or little-endian, for
disassembling. Useful for disassembling formats such as S-records
(printable ASCII versions of object files) that do not include that
information.
- -f, --file-header
-
Display overall header summary information.
- --file-start-context
-
When using -S and displaying source
code from a file that hasn't been displayed yet,
include context from the start of the file.
- -g, --debugging
-
Display debugging information.
- -G, --stabs
-
Display any stabs (debugging symbol table entries) information, in
addition to the contents of any sections requested.
- -h, --section-header, --header
-
Display section header summary information.
- -H, --help
-
Display help information and exit.
- -i, --info
-
Display the architectures and object formats available on your system
for use with -b or -m.
- -j name, --section=name
-
Display information for section name.
- -l, --line-numbers
-
Label the display with filename and source code line numbers
corresponding to the object code or relocation entries shown. Use
with -d, -D, or -r.
- -m arch, --architecture=arch
-
Specify the architecture for disassembling object files. Useful when
disassembling files such as S-records that do not include this
information.
- -M options, --disassembler-options=options
-
Pass target-specific information to the disassembler. Supported only
on some targets.
- --no-show-raw-insn
-
Do not show instructions in hexadecimal when disassembling. This is
the default with --prefix-addresses.
- -p, --private-headers
-
Display information specific to the object format. For some formats,
no additional information is displayed.
- --prefix-addresses
-
When disassembling, print the complete address on each line.
- -r, --reloc
-
Display relocation entries. With -b
or -D, the entries are intermixed
with the disassembly.
- -R, --dynamic-reloc
-
Print dynamic relocation entries. Meaningful only for dynamic objects
such as certain types of shared libraries.
- -s, --full-contents
-
Display the full contents of any requested sections.
- -S, --source
-
Display source code intermixed with disassembly, if possible. Implies
-d.
- --show-raw-insn
-
When disassembling, show instructions in hexadecimal as well as
symbolic form. This is the default except with --prefix-addresses.
- --start-address=addr
-
Start displaying data at the specified address. Applies to -d, -r, and
-s.
- --stop-address=addr
-
Stop displaying data at the specified address. Applies to -d, -r, and
-s.
- -t, --syms
-
Print symbol table entries.
- -T, --dynamic-syms
-
Print dynamic symbol table entries. Meaningful only for dynamic
objects such as certain types of shared libraries.
- -V, --version
-
Print version information and exit.
- -w, --wide
-
Format lines for output devices wider than 80 characters, and do not
truncate symbol table names.
- -x, --all-header
-
Display all available header information. Equivalent to specifying
-a -f -h -r -t.
- -z, --disassemble-zeroes
-
Disassemble blocks of zeroes. The default is to skip such blocks.
od [options] [files]
od --traditional [file] [[+]offset [[+]label]]
|
|
Dump the specified files to standard output. The default is to dump
in octal format, but other formats can be specified. With multiple
files, concatenate them in the specified order. If no files are
specified or file is -, read from standard
input. With the second form, using the --traditional option, only one file can
be specified.
Options
For the following options, see the later
"Arguments" section for an
explanation of the arguments bytes,
size, and type. If no
options are specified, the default is -A o -t
d2 -w 16.
- -a
-
Print as named characters. Same as -ta.
- -Aradix, --address-radix=radix
-
Specify the radix (base) for the file offsets printed at the
beginning of each output line. The possible values are:
- d
-
Decimal.
- n
-
None; do not print an offset.
- o
-
Octal; the default.
- x
-
Hexadecimal.
- -b
-
Print as octal bytes. Same as -toC.
- -c
-
Print as ASCII characters or backslash escapes. Same as -tc.
- -d
-
Print as unsigned decimal shorts. Same as -tu2.
- -f
-
Print as floating point. Same as -tfF.
- -h
-
Print as hexadecimal shorts. Same as -tx2.
- --help
-
Display a usage message and exit.
- -i
-
Print as decimal shorts. Same as -td2.
- -jbytes, --skip-bytes=bytes
-
Skip the specified number of input bytes before starting.
- -l
-
Print as decimal longs. Same as -td4.
- -Nbytes, --read-bytes=bytes
-
Format and print only the specified number of input bytes.
- -o
-
Print as octal shorts. Same as -to2.
- -sbytes, --strings[=bytes]
-
Output strings that are at least bytes ASCII
graphic characters long (default 3 if bytes is
not specified for --strings).
- -ttype, --format=type
-
Format the output according to type, where
type is a string of one or more of the
characters listed in the
"Arguments" section. If more than
one type is specified, each output line is written once in each
specified format. If a trailing z is appended to
type, od
appends any printable characters to the end of each output line.
- --traditional
-
Accept arguments in the traditional form, which takes a single file
specification with an optional offset and label as shown in the
second form of the command. offset is an octal
number indicating how many input bytes to skip over.
label specifies an initial pseudo-address, which
is printed in parentheses after any normal address. Both the offset
and the label can begin with an optional plus sign (+), and can have
a trailing decimal point (.) to force the offset to be interpreted as
a decimal number and/or a trailing b to multiply the number of bytes
skipped by offset by 512.
- -v, --output-duplicates
-
Print all lines, including duplicates. By default, only the first of
a series of identical lines is printed, and an asterisk is printed at
the beginning of the following line to indicate that there were
duplicates.
- --version
-
Display version information and exit.
- -wbytes, --width[=bytes]
-
Dump bytes input bytes to each output line.
Defaults to 16 if this option is omitted. If --width is specified but
bytes is omitted, the default is 32.
- -x
-
Print as hexadecimal shorts. Same as -tx2.
Arguments
- bytes
-
Specify a number of bytes. Treated as hexadecimal if it begins with
0x or 0X, as octal if it begins with 0, or as decimal otherwise.
Append b to multiply by 512, k to multiply by 1024, or m to multiply
by 10248576.
- size
-
Specified as part of type to indicate how many
bytes to use in interpreting each number. Types a and c do
not take a size. For other types, size is a
number. For type f,
size can also be one of the following:
- D
-
Double.
- F
-
Float.
- L
-
Long double.
For the remaining types (d,
o, u, x),
size can be one of the following in addition to
a number:
- C
-
Character.
- I
-
Integer.
- L
-
Long.
- S
-
Short.
- type
-
Specify the format type. The possible types are:
- a
-
Named character.
- c
-
ASCII character or backslash escape.
- dsize
-
Signed decimal, with size bytes per integer.
- fsize
-
Floating point, with size bytes per integer.
- o
-
Octal, with size bytes per integer.
- u
-
Unsigned decimal, with size bytes per integer.
- x
-
Hexadecimal, with size bytes per integer.
openvt [options] [--] [command] [arguments]
|
|
Locate the first available virtual terminal (VT) and run
command with any arguments
given. If no command is specified, the shell $SHELL is started.
Options
- --
-
Required before the command name to pass options to the command.
- -c vt
-
Use the specified VT number instead of the first available. You must
have write access to vt.
- -l
-
Run the command as a login shell, prepending a dash (-) to the
command name.
- -s
-
Switch to the new VT when the command is started.
- -u
-
Determine the owner of the current VT and log in as that user. You
must be root to use this option, which is also suitable for calling
by init. Don't use with -l.
- -v
-
Verbose mode.
- -w
-
Wait for the command to complete. If used with -s, switch back to the controlling terminal
when the command is done.
Create or change a password associated with a
user name. Only the owner or a privileged user
may change a password. Owners need not specify their
user name.
Merge corresponding lines of one or more files
into tab-separated vertical columns. See also cut, join,
and pr.
Options
- -
-
Replace a filename with the standard input.
- -dchar, --delimiters=char
-
Separate columns with char instead of a tab. You
can separate columns with different characters by supplying more than
one char.
- --help
-
Print a help message and then exit.
- -s, --serial
-
Merge lines from one file at a time.
- --version
-
Print version information and then exit.
Examples
Create a three-column file from files
x, y, and
z:
paste x y z > file
List users in two columns:
who | paste - -
Merge each pair of lines into one line:
paste -s -d"\t\n" list
patch [options] [original [patchfile]]
|
|
Apply the patches specified in patchfile to
original. Replace the original with the new,
patched version; move the original to
original.orig or original~.
The patch file is a difference listing produced by the diff command.
Options
- -b, --backup
-
Back up the original file.
- --backup-if-mismatch, --no-backup-if-mismatch
-
When not backing up all original files, these options control whether
a backup should be made when a patch does not match the original
file. The default is to make backups unless --posix is specified.
- -c, --context
-
Interpret patchfile as a context diff.
- -d dir, --directory=dir
-
cd to directory
before beginning patch operations.
- --dry-run
-
Print results of applying a patch, but don't change
any files.
- -e, --ed
-
Treat the contents of patchfile as ed commands.
- -f, --force
-
Force all changes, even those that look incorrect. Skip patches if
the original file does not exist; force patches for files with the
wrong version specified; assume patches are never reversed.
- -g num, --get num
-
Specify whether to check the original file out of source control if
it is missing or read-only. If num is a positive
number, get the file. If it is negative, prompt the user. If it is 0,
do not check files out of source control. The default is negative or
the value of the PATCH_GET
environment variable when set, unless the --posix option is given. Then the default
is 0.
- --help
-
Print help message, then exit.
- -i file, --input=file
-
Read patch from file instead of stdin.
- -l, --ignore-whitespace
-
Ignore whitespace while pattern matching.
- -n, --normal
-
Interpret patch file as a normal diff.
- -o file, --output=file
-
Print output to file.
- -p[num], --strip[=num]
-
Specify how much of preceding pathname to strip. A
num of 0 strips everything, leaving just the
filename. 1 strips the leading /.
Each higher number after that strips another directory from the left.
- --quoting-style=style
-
Set the quoting style used when printing names. The default style is
shell unless set by the environment
variable QUOTING_STYLE.
style may be one of the following:
- c
-
Quote as a C language string.
- escape
-
Like c, but without surrounding
double-quote characters.
- literal
-
Print without quoting.
- shell
-
Quote for use in shell when needed.
- shell-always
-
Quote for use in shell even if not needed.
- --posix
-
Conform more strictly to the POSIX standard.
- -r file, --reject-file=file
-
Place rejects (hunks of the patch file that patch fails to place within the original file)
in file. Default is
original.rej.
- -s, --silent, --quiet
-
Suppress commentary.
- -t, --batch
-
Skip patches if the original file does not exist.
- -u, --unified
-
Interpret patch file as a unified context diff.
- --verbose
-
Verbose mode.
- -v, --version
-
Print version number and exit.
- -z suffix, --suffix=suffix
-
Back up the original file in original.suffix.
- -B prefix, --prefix=prefix
-
Prepend prefix to the backup filename.
- -D string, --ifdef=string
-
Mark all changes with:
#ifdef
string
#endif
- -E, --remove-empty-files
-
If patch creates any empty files,
delete them.
- -F num, --fuzz=num
-
Specify the maximum number of lines that may be ignored (fuzzed over)
when deciding where to install a hunk of code. The default is 2.
Meaningful only with context diffs.
- -N, --forward
-
Ignore patches that appear to be reversed or to have already been
applied.
- -R, --reverse
-
Do a reverse patch: attempt to undo the damage done by patching with
the old and new files reversed.
- -T, --set-time
-
When original file timestamps match the times given in the patch
header, set timestamps for patched files according to the context
diff headers. Use option -f to force
date changes. Assume timestamps are in local time.
- -V method, --version-control=method
-
Specify method for creating backup files (overridden by -B):
- t, numbered
-
Make numbered backups.
- nil, existing
-
Back up files according to preexisting backup schemes, with simple
backups as the default. This is patch's default behavior.
- never, simple
-
Make simple backups.
- -Y prefix, --basename-prefix=prefix
-
Use the specified prefix with a
file's basename to create backup filenames. Useful
for specifying a directory.
- -Z, --set-utc
-
When original file timestamps match the times given in the patch
header, set timestamps for patched files according to the context
diff headers. Use option -f to force
date changes. Assume timestamps are in Coordinated Universal Time
(UTC).
Environment variables
- TMPDIR, TMP, TEMP
-
Specify the directory for temporary files; /tmp
by default.
- SIMPLE_BACKUP_SUFFIX
-
Suffix to append to backup files instead of
.orig or ~.
- QUOTING_STYLE
-
Specify how output should be quoted (see --quoting-style).
- PATCH_GET
-
Specify whether patch should
retrieve missing or read-only files from source control (see
-g).
- POSIXLY_CORRECT
-
When set, patch conforms more
strictly to the POSIX standard (see --posix).
- VERSION_CONTROL, PATCH_VERSION_CONTROL
-
Specify what method to use in naming backups (see -V).
pathchk [option] filenames
|
|
Determine validity and portability of filenames.
Specifically, determine if all directories within the path are
searchable and if the length of the filenames is
acceptable.
Options
- -p, --portability
-
Check portability for all POSIX systems.
- --help
-
Print a help message and then exit.
- --version
-
Print version information and then exit.
A powerful text-processing language that combines many of the most
useful features of shell programs, C, awk, and sed,
as well as adding extended features of its own. For more information,
see Learning Perl and Programming
Perl (both from O'Reilly).
Display the process IDs of the listed program or programs. pidof is actually a symbolic link to killall5.
Options
- -o pids
-
Omit all processes with the specified process IDs.
- -s
-
Return a single process ID.
- -x
-
Also return process IDs of shells running the named scripts.
System administration command. Confirm that a remote host is online
and responding. ping is intended for
use in network testing, measurement, and management. Because of the
load it can impose on the network, it is unwise to use ping during normal operations or from
automated scripts.
Options
- -a
-
Make ping audible. Beep each time
response is received.
- -b
-
Ping a broadcast address.
- -c count
-
Stop after sending (and receiving) count
ECHO_RESPONSE packets.
- -d
-
Set SO_DEBUG option on socket being
used.
- -f
-
Flood ping-output packets as fast as
they come back or 100 times per second, whichever is more. This can
be very hard on a network and should be used with caution. Only a
privileged user may use this option.
- -i wait
-
Wait wait seconds between sending each packet.
Default is to wait 1 second between each packet. This option is
incompatible with the -f option.
- -l preload
-
Send preload number of packets as fast as
possible before falling into normal mode of behavior.
- -n
-
Numeric output only. No attempt will be made to look up symbolic
names for host addresses.
- -p digits
-
Specify up to 16 pad bytes to fill out packet sent. This is useful
for diagnosing data-dependent problems in a network.
digits are in hex. For example, -p ff will cause the sent packet to be filled
with all 1s.
- -q
-
Quiet output--nothing is displayed except the summary lines at
startup time and when finished.
- -r
-
Bypass the normal routing tables and send directly to a host on an
attached network.
- -s packetsize
-
Specify number of data bytes to be sent. Default is 56, which
translates into 64 ICMP data bytes when combined with the 8 bytes of
ICMP header data.
- -t n
-
Set the IP Time to Live to n seconds.
- -v
-
Verbose; list ICMP packets received other than ECHO_RESPONSE.
- -w n
-
Exit ping after
n seconds.
- -A
-
Adapt to return interval of packets. Like -f ping,
sends packets at approximately the rate at which they are received.
This option may be used by an unprivileged user.
- -I name
-
Set source address to interface name.
name may also be specified as an IP address.
- -L
-
If destination is a multicast address, suppress loopback.
- -Q tos
-
Set Quality of Service on ICMP datagrams.
- -S size
-
Set send buffer (SNDBUF) size. The default is the size of one packet.
- -T option
-
Set IP timestamp options. Accepted option values
are:
- tsonly
-
Timestamps only.
- tsandaddr
-
Timestamps and addresses.
- tsprespec hosts
-
Timestamps with prespecified hops of one or more hosts.
- -M hint
-
Specify Path MTU Discovery strategy. Accepted values are do, want, or
dont.
- -R
-
Set the IP record route option, which will store the route of the
packet inside the IP header. The contents of the record route will be
printed if the -v option is given,
and will be set on return packets if the target host preserves the
record route option across echoes or the -l option is given.
- -U
-
Use older ping behavior and print
full user-to-user latency instead of network round trip time.
- -V
-
Print version, then exit.
NFS/NIS command. RPC program number to IP port mapper. portmap is a server that converts RPC program
numbers to IP port numbers. It must be running in order to make RPC
calls. When an RPC server is started, it tells portmap what port number it is listening to
and what RPC program numbers it is prepared to serve. When a client
wishes to make an RPC call to a given program number, it first
contacts portmap on the server
machine to determine the port number where RPC packets should be
sent. portmap must be the first RPC
server started.
Options
- -d
-
Run portmap in debugging mode. Does
not allow portmap to run as a
daemon.
- -v
-
Run portmap in verbose mode.
System administration command. Close out filesystems, shut down the
system, and power off. Because this command immediately stops all
processes, it should be run only in single-user mode. If the system
is not in runlevel 0 or 6, poweroff
calls shutdown -h, then performs a
poweroff.
Options
- -d
-
Suppress writing to /var/log/wtmp.
- -f
-
Call reboot or halt and not shutdown, even when shutdown would normally be called. This option
is used to force a hard halt or reboot.
- -h
-
Place hard drives in standby mode before halt or poweroff.
- -i
-
Shut down network interfaces before reboot.
- -n
-
Suppress normal call to sync.
- -w
-
Suppress normal execution; simply write to
/var/log/wtmp.
pppd [tty] [speed] [options]
|
|
System administration command. PPP stands for the Point-to-Point
Protocol; it allows datagram transmission over a serial connection.
pppd attempts to configure
tty for PPP (searching in
/dev) or, by default, the controlling terminal.
You can also specify a baud rate of speed.
pppd accepts many options. Only the
most common options are listed here.
Options
- asyncmap map
-
Specify which control characters cannot pass over the line.
map should be a 32-bit hex number, where each
bit represents a character to escape. For example, bit 00000001
represents the character 0x00; bit 80000000 represents the character
0x1f or _. You may specify multiple characters.
- auth
-
Require self-authentication by peers before allowing packets to move.
- call file
-
Read options from file in
/etc/ppp/peers/. Unlike the file option, call file may contain
privileged options, even when pppd
is not run by root.
- connect command
-
Connect as specified by command, which may be a
binary or shell command.
- crtscts
-
Use hardware flow control.
- debug
-
Log contents of control packets to syslogd.
- defaultroute
-
Add a new default route in which the peer is the gateway. When the
connection shuts down, remove the route.
- nodetach
-
Operate in the foreground. By default, pppd forks and operates in the background.
- disconnect command
-
Close the connection as specified by command,
which may be a binary or shell command.
- domain d
-
Specify a domain name of d.
- escape character-list
-
Escape all characters in character-list, which
should be a comma-separated list of hex numbers. You cannot escape
0x20-0x3f or 0x5e.
- file file
-
Consult file for options.
- init script
-
Run specified command or shell script to initialize the serial line.
- lock
-
Allow only pppd to access the device.
- mru bytes
-
Refuse packets of more than bytes bytes.
- mtu bytes
-
Do not send packets of more than bytes bytes.
- name name
-
Specify a machine name for the local system.
- netmask mask
-
Specify netmask (for example, 255.255.255.0).
- passive, -p
-
Do not exit if peer does not respond to attempts to initiate a
connection. Instead, wait for a valid packet from the peer.
- silent
-
Send no packets until after receiving one.
- [local_IP_address]:[remote_IP_address]
-
Specify the local and/or remote interface IP addresses, as hostnames
or numeric addresses.
Files
- /var/run/pppn.pid
-
pppd's process ID.
The n in pppn.pid is the
number of the PPP interface unit corresponding to this pppd process.
- /etc/ppp/ip-up
-
Binary or script to be executed when the PPP link becomes active.
- /etc/ppp/ip-down
-
Binary or script to be executed when the PPP link goes down.
- /etc/ppp/pap-secrets
-
Contains usernames, passwords, and IP addresses for use in PAP
authentication.
- /etc/ppp/options
-
System defaults. Options in this file are set
before the command-line options.
- ~/.ppprc
-
The user's default options. These are read before
command-line options but after the system defaults.
- /etc/ppp/options.ttyname
-
Name of the default serial port.
Convert a text file or files to a paginated, columned version, with
headers. If - is provided as the
filename, read from standard input.
Options
- +beg_pag[:end-pag], --pages=[beg_pag[:end-pag]
-
Begin printing on page beg_pag and end on
end-pag if specified.
- -num_cols, --columns=num_cols
-
Print in num_cols number of columns, balancing
the number of lines in the columns on each page.
- -a, --across
-
Print columns horizontally, not vertically.
- -c, --show-control-chars
-
Convert control characters to hat notation (such as ^C), and other unprintable characters to octal
backslash format.
- -d, --double-space
-
Double space.
- -D format, --date-format=format
-
Format the header date using format. See the
date command for the possible
formats.
- -e[tab-char[width]], --expand-tabs=[tab-char[width]]
-
Convert tabs (or tab-chars) to spaces. If
width is specified, convert tabs to
width characters (default is 8).
- -f, -F, --form-feed
-
Separate pages with form feeds, not newlines.
- -h header, --header=header
-
Use header for the header instead of the
filename.
- -i[out-tab-char[out-tab-width]], --output-tabs[=out-tab-char[out-tab-width]]
-
Replace spaces with tabs on output. Can specify alternative tab
character (default is tab) and width (default is 8).
- -J, --join-lines
-
Merge full lines; ignore -W if set.
- -l lines, --length=lines
-
Set page length to lines (default is 66). If
lines is less than 10, omit headers and footers.
- -m, --merge
-
Print all files, one per column.
- -n[delimiter[digits]], --number-lines[=delimiter[digits]]
-
Number columns, or, with the -m
option, number lines. Append delimiter to each
number (default is a tab) and limit the size of numbers to
digits (default is 5).
- -N num, --first-line-number=num
-
Start counting with num at the first line of the
first page printed. Also see +beg_page.
- -o width, --indent=width
-
Set left margin to width. Does not affect the
page width set with -w or -W.
- -r, --no-file-warnings
-
Continue silently when unable to open an input file.
- -s[delimiter], --separator[=delimiter]
-
Separate columns with delimiter (default is a
tab) instead of spaces.
- -S[string], --sep-string[=string]
-
Separate columns with string. Default is a tab
with -J and a space otherwise.
- -t, --omit-header
-
Suppress headers, footers, and fills at end of pages.
- -T, --omit-pagination
-
Like -t but also suppress form feeds.
- -v, --show-non-printing
-
Convert unprintable characters to octal backslash format.
- -w page_width, --width=page_width
-
Set the page width to page_width characters for
multi-column output. Default is 72.
- -W page_width, --page-width=page_width
-
Set the page width to always be page_width
characters. Default is 72.
- --help
-
Print a help message and then exit.
- --version
-
Print version information and then exit.
System administration command. praliases prints the current sendmail mail aliases. (Usually defined in the
/etc/aliases or
/etc/aliases.db file.)
Options
- -f file
-
Read the aliases from the specified file instead of sendmail's default alias
files.
- -C file
-
Read sendmail configuration from the
specified file instead of from
/etc/mail/sendmail.cf.
printenv [option] [variables]printenv option
|
|
Print values of all environment variables or, optionally, only the
specified variables.
Options
- --help
-
Print usage information and exit.
- --version
-
Print version information and exit.
printf formats [strings]printf option
|
|
Print strings using the specified
formats. formats can be
ordinary text characters, C-language escape characters, C format
specifications ending with one of the letters diouxXfeEgGcs or, more commonly, a set of
conversion arguments listed here.
Options
- --help
-
Print usage information and exit.
- --version
-
Print version information and exit.
Arguments
- %%
-
Print a single %.
- %b
-
Print string with \ escapes interpreted.
- %s
-
Print the next string.
- %n$s
-
Print the nth string.
- %[-]m[.n]s
-
Print the next string, using a field that is
m characters wide. Optionally, limit the field
to print only the first n characters of
string. Strings are right-adjusted unless the
left-adjustment flag, -, is
specified.
Examples
printf '%s %s\n' "My files are in" $HOME
printf '%-25.15s %s\n' "My files are in" $HOME
Report on active processes. ps has
three types of options. GNU long options start with two dashes, which
are required. BSD options may be grouped and do not start with a
dash, while Unix98 options may be grouped and require an initial
dash. The meaning of the short options can vary depending on whether
or not there is a dash. In options, list
arguments should either be separated by commas or put in double
quotes. In comparing the amount of output produced, note that
e prints more than a and l
prints more than f for each entry.
Options
- nums, p nums, -p nums, --pid=nums
-
Include only specified processes, which are given in a
space-delimited list.
- -nums, --sid=nums
-
Include only specified session IDs, which are given in a
space-delimited list.
- [-]a
-
As a, list all processes on a
terminal. As -a, list all processes
on a terminal except session leaders.
- [-]c
-
As -c, show different scheduler
information with -l. As c, show the true command name.
- -C cmds
-
Select by command name.
- --cols=cols, --columns=cols, --width=cols
-
Set the output width (the number of columns to display).
- -d
-
Select all processes except session leaders.
- -e, -A
-
Select all processes.
- e
-
Include environment information after the command.
- [-]f, --forest
-
As -f, display full listing. As
f or --forest, display
"forest" family tree format, with
ASCII art showing the relationships.
- -g list, -G list, --group=groups, --Group=groups
-
For -g, select by session leader if
list contains numbers, or by group if it
contains group names. For -G, select
by the group IDs in list. --group selects by effective group and
--Group selects by real group,
where groups can be either group names or group
IDs.
- h, --no-headers
-
Suppress header. If you select a BSD personality by setting the
environment variable PS_PERSONALITY
to bsd, then h prints a header on each page.
- -H
-
Display "forest" family tree
format, without ASCII art.
- --headers
-
Repeat headers.
- --help
-
Display help information and exit.
- --info
-
Print debugging information.
- [-]j
-
Jobs format. j prints more
information than -j.
- [-]l
-
Produce a long listing. -l prints
more information than l.
- L
-
Print list of field specifiers that can be used for output formatting
or for sorting.
- --lines=num, --rows=num
-
Set the screen height to num lines. If --headers is also set, the headers repeat
every num lines.
- [-]m
-
Show threads.
- n
-
Print user IDs and WCHAN numerically.
- -nfile, Nfile
-
Specify the System.map file for ps
to use as a namelist file. The map file must correspond to the Linux
kernel; e.g., /boot/System.map-2.4.19.
- -N, --deselect
-
Negate the selection.
- [-]o fields, --format=fields
-
As -o, o, or --format, specify user-defined format
with a list of fields to display.
- [-]O fields
-
As -O, is like -o, but some common fields are predefined. As
O, can be either the same as
-O in specifying fields to display,
or can specify single-letter fields for sorting. For sorting, each
field specified as a key can optionally have a leading + (return to
default sort direction on key) or - (reverse the default direction).
- r
-
Show only processes that are currently running.
- s
-
Display signal format.
- -s sessions
-
Show processes belonging to the specified sessions.
- -S, --cumulative
-
Include some dead child process data in parent total.
- [-]tttys, --tty=ttys
-
Display processes running on the specified terminals.
- T
-
Display all processes on this terminal.
- [-]u [users], --user=users
-
As u with no argument, display
user-oriented output . As -u or
--users, display by effective
user ID (and also support names), showing results for
users. With no argument, -u displays results for the current user.
- [-]U users, --User=users
-
As U, display processes for the
specified users. As -U or --User, display processes for
users by real user ID (and also support names).
- v
-
Display virtual memory format.
- [-]V, --version
-
Display version information and then exit.
- [-]w
-
Wide format. Don't truncate long lines.
- x
-
Display processes without an associated terminal.
- X
-
Use old Linux i386 register format.
- -y
-
Do not show flags; show rss instead
of addr.
Sort keys
- c, cmd
-
Name of executable.
- C, cmdline
-
Whole command line.
- f, flags
-
Flags.
- g, pgrp
-
Group ID of process.
- G, tpgid
-
Group ID of associated tty.
- j, cutime
-
Cumulative user time.
- J, cstime
-
Cumulative system time.
- k, utime
-
User time.
- K, stime
-
System time.
- m, min_flt
-
Number of minor page faults.
- M, maj_flt
-
Number of major page faults.
- n, cmin_flt
-
Total minor page faults.
- N, cmaj_flt
-
Total major page faults.
- o, session
-
Session ID.
- p, pid
-
Process ID.
- P, ppid
-
Parent's process ID.
- r, rss
-
Resident set size.
- R, resident
-
Resident pages.
- s, size
-
Kilobytes of memory used.
- S, share
-
Number of shared pages.
- t, tty
-
Terminal.
- T, start_time
-
Process's start time.
- U, uid
-
User ID.
- u, user
-
User's name.
- v, vsize
-
Bytes of virtual memory used.
- y, priority
-
Kernel's scheduling priority.
Fields
- %CPU
-
Percent of CPU time used recently.
- %MEM
-
Percent of memory used.
- ADDR
-
Address of the process.
- C, CMD, COMMAND
-
The command the process is running.
- ELAPSED
-
Elapsed time since the start of the process.
- F
-
Process flags:
- 001
-
Print alignment warning messages.
- 002
-
Being created.
- 004
-
Being shut down.
- 010
-
ptrace(0) has been called.
- 020
-
Tracing system calls.
- 040
-
Forked but didn't exec.
- 100
-
Used superuser privileges.
- 200
-
Dumped core.
- 400
-
Killed by a signal.
- GROUP
-
Effective group ID.
- NI
-
The nice value of the process. A
higher number indicates less CPU time.
- PAGEIN
-
Number of major page faults.
- PID
-
Process ID.
- PPID
-
Parent process ID.
- PRI
-
Process's scheduling priority. A higher number
indicates lower priority.
- RSS
-
Resident set size (the amount of physical memory), in kilobytes.
- SHARE
-
Shared memory.
- SIZE
-
Size of virtual image.
- STAT
-
Status:
- R
-
Runnable.
- T
-
Stopped.
- D
-
Asleep and not interruptible.
- S
-
Asleep.
- Z
-
Zombie.
- W
-
No resident pages (second field).
- N
-
Positive nice value (third field).
- STIME
-
Process start time.
- SWAP
-
Amount of swap used, in kilobytes.
- TIME
-
Cumulative CPU time.
- TRS
-
Size of resident text.
- TT, TTY
-
Associated terminal.
- UID
-
User ID.
- VSZ
-
Virtual memory size, in kilobytes.
- WCHAN
-
Kernel function in which process resides.
System administration command. Remove corrupt or duplicate entries in
the /etc/passwd and
/etc/shadow files. pwck will prompt for a
"yes" or
"no" before deleting entries. If
the user replies "no," the program
will exit. Alternate passwd and shadow files can
be checked. If correctable errors are found, the user will be
encouraged to run the usermod
command.
Option
- -r
-
Run in noninteractive read-only mode, answering all questions
no.
Exit status
- 0
-
Success.
- 1
-
Syntax error.
- 2
-
One or more bad password entries found.
- 3
-
Could not open password files.
- 4
-
Could not lock password files.
- 5
-
Could not write password files.
System administration command. Convert unshadowed entries in
/etc/passwd into shadowed entries in
/etc/shadow. Replace the encrypted password in
/etc/password with an x. Shadowing passwords
keeps them safe from password-cracking programs. pwconv creates additional expiration
information for the /etc/shadow file from
entries in your /etc/login.defs file. If you add
new entries to the /etc/passwd file, you can run
pwconv again to transfer the new
information to /etc/shadow. Already shadowed
entries are ignored. pwunconv
restores the encrypted passwords to your
/etc/passwd file and removes the
/etc/shadow file. Some expiration information is
lost in the conversion. See also grpconv and grpunconv.
Print the full pathname of the current working directory. See also
the dirs shell command, built in to
both bash and tcsh.
A powerful object-oriented scripting language often compared to Perl
or Java. python drives many of the
configuration scripts used in Red Hat and other Linux distributions.
For more information, see Learning Python and
Programming Python (both from
O'Reilly).
quota [options] [user|group]
|
|
Display disk usage and total space allowed for a designated user or
group. With no argument, the quota for the current user is displayed.
This command reports quotas for all filesystems listed in
/etc/mtab. Most users can display only their own
quota information, but the superuser can display information for any
user.
Options
- -F format
-
Show quota for the specified format. If not specified, autodetects
the format.
- -g
-
Given with a user argument, display the quotas
for the groups of which the user is a member instead of the
user's quotas. With no argument, shows group quotas
for the current user.
- -q
-
Display information only for filesystems in which the user is over
quota.
- -s
-
Try to choose units for displaying limits, space used, and inodes
used.
- -u
-
The default behavior. When used with -g, display both user and group quota
information.
- -v
-
Display quotas for filesystems even if no storage is currently
allocated.
Formats
- rpc
-
Quota over NFS.
- vfsold
-
Version 1 quota.
- vfsv0
-
Version 2 quota.
- xfs
-
Quota on XFS filesystem.
raidstart [options] [devices]
raidstop [options] [devices]
|
|
System administration command. Start or stop RAID
devices as defined in the RAID configuration
file, /etc/raidtab. If option -a (or --all) is used, no
devices need to be given; the command will be
applied to all the devices defined in the configuration file.
Options
- -a, --all
-
Apply command to all devices defined in the RAID configuration file.
- -c file, --configfile file
-
Use file instead of
/etc/raidtab.
- -h, --help
-
Print usage message and exit.
- -V, --version
-
Print version and exit.
ramsize [option] [image [size [offset]]]
|
|
System administration command. If no options are specified, print
usage information for the RAM disk. The pair of bytes at offset 504
in the kernel image normally specify the RAM size; with a kernel
image argument, print the information found at
that offset. To change that information, specify a new
size (in kilobytes). You may also specify a
different offset. rdev
-r is the same as ramsize.
Option
- -o offset
-
Same as specifying an offset as an argument.
ranlib filename
ranlib option
|
|
Generate an index for archive file filename.
Same as running ar -s.
Option
- -v, -V, --version
-
Print version information and exit.
rarpd [options] [interface]
|
|
System administration command. Respond to Reverse Address Resolution
Protocol (RARP) requests. Some machines (primarily diskless SUN
machines) will use RARP requests at boot time to discover their IP
address and retrieve boot images. The request contains the booting
machine's ethernet address, and rarpd tells it which IP to use. To answer
requests, rarpd checks the
ethers database (either the
/etc/ethers file or read from NIS+) and performs
DNS lookups as needed. rarpd will
respond to RARP requests only from machines for which it has a
bootable image, usually stored in the TFTP boot directory
/tftpboot. The daemon will bind to the given
interface if specified. This daemon replaces the
kernel-based RARP support found in kernels previous to 2.2.
Options
- -a
-
Do not bind to the specified interface.
- -b directory
-
Look for boot images in the specified directory
instead of the default /tftpboot.
- -d
-
Do not detach and run in daemon mode. Used for debugging.
- -e
-
Answer requests without checking the TFTP boot directory.
- -v
-
Verbose mode.
- -A
-
Respond to ARP requestes as well as RARP
requests.
raw [options] [rawnode [blockdevice]]
|
|
System administration command. Bind a raw character device to a block
device, or query current raw device bindings. The
rawnode should be a device in
/dev/raw. The blockdevice
may be specified by filename or by its major and minor device
numbers.
Options
- -a
-
Print information on all raw device bindings. Used with option
-q.
- -h
-
Print usage information, then exit.
- -q
-
Print information on binding of the specified
rawnode, or all raw nodes if accompanied with
the -a option.
rcp [options] file1 file2
rcp [options] file ... directory
|
|
Copy files between two machines. Each file or
directory is either a remote filename of the
form rname@rhost:path, or a local filename.
Options
- -k
-
Attempt to get tickets for remote host; query krb_realmofhost to determine realm.
- -p
-
Preserve modification times and modes of the source files.
- -r
-
If any of the source files are directories, descend into each
directory and recursively copy all files and directories within it.
The destination must be a directory.
- -x
-
Turns on DES encryption for all data passed by rcp.
The Revision Control System (RCS) keeps track of multiple versions of
files, letting you store and retrieve revisions and track the history
of the files. The rcs command
creates new RCS files and modifies attributes of existing files. See
Chapter 14 for more information on RCS and its
commands. See Chapter 15 for the newer and more
powerful CVS system.
rdate [options] [host...]
|
|
TCP/IP command. Retrieve the date and time from a host or hosts on
the network and optionally set the local system time.
Options
- -p
-
Print the retrieved dates.
- -s
-
Set the local system time from the host; must be specified by root.
rdev [options] [image [value [offset]]]
|
|
System administration command. If invoked with no arguments, show the
current root filesystem in /etc/mtab syntax.
Otherwise, change the values in the kernel image that specify the RAM
disk size (by default located at decimal byte offset 504 in the
kernel), VGA mode (default 506), and root device (default 508). You
must specify the kernel image to be changed, and
may specify a new value and a different
offset. Using rdev to change these values directly in an
image file is discouraged. These values can all be set by a boot
loader such as lilo or grub.
Options
- -o offset
-
Same as specifying an offset as an argument. The
offset is given in decimal.
- -r
-
Behave like ramsize.
- -v
-
Behave like vidmode.
- -R
-
Behave like rootflags.
System administration command. Remote file distribution client
program. rdist maintains identical
copies of files over multiple hosts. It reads commands from a file
named distfile to direct the updating of files
and/or directories. An alternative distfile can
be specified with the -f option or
the -c option.
Options
- -a num
-
Do not update filesystems with fewer than num
bytes free.
- -c name [login@]host[:dest]
-
Interpret the arguments as a small distfile,
where login is the user to log in as,
host is the destination host,
name is the local file to transfer, and
dest is the remote name where the file should be
installed.
- -d var=value
-
Define var to have value.
This option defines or overrides variable definitions in the
distfile. Set the variable
var to value.
- -f file
-
Read input from file (by default,
distfile). If file is
-, read from standard input.
- -l options
-
Specify logging options on the local machine.
- -m machine
-
Update only machine. May be specified multiple
times for multiple machines.
- -n
-
Suppress normal execution. Instead, print the commands that would
have been executed.
- -ooptions
-
Specify one or more options, which must be
comma-separated.
- chknfs
-
Suppress operations on files that reside on NFS filesystems.
- chkreadonly
-
Check filesystem to be sure it is not read-only before attempting to
perform updates.
- chksym
-
Do not update files that exist on the local host but are symbolic
links on the remote host.
- compare
-
Compare files; use this comparison rather than age as the criteria
for determining which files should be updated.
- follow
-
Interpret symbolic links, copying the file to which the link points
instead of creating a link on the remote machine.
- ignlnks
-
Ignore links that appear to be unresolvable.
- nochkgroup
-
Do not update a file's group ownership unless the
entire file needs updating.
- nochkmode
-
Do not update file mode unless the entire file needs updating.
- nochkowner
-
Do not update file ownership unless the entire file needs updating.
- nodescend
-
Suppress recursive descent into directories.
- noexec
-
Suppress rdist of executables that
are in a.out format.
- numchkgroup
-
Check group ownership by group ID instead of by name.
- numchkowner
-
Check file ownership by user ID instead of by name.
- quiet
-
Quiet mode; do not print commands as they execute.
- remove
-
Remove files that exist on the remote host but not the local host.
- savetargets
-
Save updated files in name.old.
- sparse
-
Check for sparse files, for example ndbm files.
- verify
-
Print a list of all files on the remote machine that are out of date,
but do not update them.
- whole
-
Preserve directory structure by creating subdirectories on the remote
machine. For example, if you rdist
the file /foo/bar into the directory
/baz, it would produce the file
/baz/foo/bar instead of the default
/baz/bar.
- younger
-
Do not update files that are younger than the master files.
- -p path
-
Specify the path to search for rdistd on the remote machine.
- -t seconds
-
Specify the timeout period (default 900 seconds) after which
rdist will sever the connection if
the remote server has not yet responded.
- -A num
-
Specify the minimum number of inodes that rdist requires.
- -D
-
Debugging mode.
- -F
-
Execute all commands sequentially, without forking.
- -L options
-
Specify logging options on the remote machine.
- -M num
-
Do not allow more than num child rdist processes to run simultaneously. Default
is 4.
- -P path
-
Specify path to the transport command to use on the local machine.
This is normally rsh, but may also
be ssh. The
path argument may also be specified as a
colon-separated list of acceptable transports to use in order of
preference.
- -V
-
Display version, then exit.
System administration command. Start the rdist server. Note that you
must specify the -S option unless you are simply querying for
version information with -V.
Options
- -D
-
Debugging mode.
- -S
-
Start the server.
- -V
-
Display the version number and exit.
readelf option[...] elffiles
|
|
Display information about about one or more ELF (Executable and
Linking Format) object files. At least one option is required to
specify the information to be displayed for each file. readelf does not currently work on archive
files or 64-bit ELF files.
Options
- -a, --all
-
Display all. Equivalent to -h -l -S -s -r -d -n
-V.
- -d, --dynamic
-
Display the dynamic section.
- -D, --use-dynamic
-
When displaying symbols, use the symbol table in the dynamic section,
not the symbols section.
- -e, --headers
-
Display all headers. Equivalent to -h -l
-s.
- -h, --file-header
-
Display the ELF header at the beginning of the file.
- --help
-
Display help information and exit.
- --histogram
-
Display a histogram of bucket bit lengths when displaying the symbol
tables.
- -l, --program-headers, --segments
-
Display the segment headers, if any.
- -n, --notes
-
Display the NOTE segment, if any.
- -r, --relocs
-
Display the relocation segment, if any.
- -s, --symbols, --syms
-
Display entries in symbol table sections, if any.
- -S, --section-headers, --sections
-
Display the section headers, if any.
- -u, --unwind
-
Display the unwind section, if any (currently applies only to IA64
ELF files).
- -v, --version
-
Display version information and exit.
- -V, --version-info
-
Display the version sections, if any.
- -w[option], --debug-dump[=option]
-
Display the debug sections. If specified with an option, display only
that section. The options shown here in parentheses are for -w; the words preceding them are for --debug-dump. The options are line (l),
info (i), abbrev
(a), pub-names (p), ranges
(r), macro (m),
frames (f), frames-interp (F), str
(s), and loc (o).
- -W, --wide
-
Don't break output lines at 80 columns. The default
is to break them.
- -x num, --hex-dump=num
-
Display a hexadecimal dump of the section number.
readlink file
readlink option
|
|
Print the contents of the symbolic link file,
that is, the name of the file to which the link points.
Options
- --help
-
Print usage information and exit.
- --version
-
Print version information and exit.
System administration command. Close out filesystems, shut down the
system, then reboot. Because this command immediately stops all
processes, it should be run only in single-user mode. If the system
is not in runlevel 0 or 6, reboot
calls shutdown -r.
Options
- -d
-
Suppress writing to /var/log/wtmp.
- -f
-
Call reboot even when shutdown would normally be called.
- -i
-
Shut down network interfaces before reboot.
- -n
-
Suppress normal call to sync.
- -w
-
Suppress normal execution; simply write to
/var/log/wtmp.
Rename files by replacing the first occurrence
of from in each filename with
to.
Example
Rename files that start with test so they start
with mytest:
% rename test mytest test*
renice [priority] [options] [target]
|
|
Control the scheduling priority of various processes as they run. May
be applied to a process, process group, or user
(target). A privileged user may alter the
priority of other users' processes.
priority must, for ordinary users, lie between 0
and the environment variable PRIO_MAX (normally 20), with a higher number
indicating increased niceness. A privileged user may set a negative
priority, as low as PRIO_MIN
(normally -20), to speed up processes.
Options
- +num
-
Specify number by which to increase current priority of process,
rather than an absolute priority number.
- -num
-
Specify number by which to decrease current priority of process,
rather than an absolute priority number.
- -g
-
Interpret target parameters as process group IDs.
- -p
-
Interpret target parameters as process IDs
(default).
- -u
-
Interpret target parameters as usernames.
reset [options] [terminal]
|
|
Clear screen (reset terminal). If terminal is
specified on the command line, the value is used as the terminal
type. reset is a symbolic link to
the tset command. Invoking the
command as reset is useful for
clearing your terminal when a program dies and leaves the terminal in
an abnormal state. You may have to run the command with a linefeed
character (usually Ctrl-J) before and after it:
Ctrl-JresetCtrl-J See the tset command for the
available options.
resize2fs [options] device [size]
|
|
System administration command. Enlarge or shrink an ext2 filesystem
on device so it has size
blocks. The filesystem size cannot be larger
than the underlying partition. This command changes only the
filesystem size, not the underlying partition. To change the
partition, use fdisk.
Options
- -d flags
-
Print debugging information on resize activity. The value of the
flags parameter determines what activity is
reported. Compute its value by summing the numbers of the items you
wish to debug:
- 1
-
Disk I/O.
- 2
-
Block relocations.
- 8
-
Inode relocations.
- 16
-
Inode table movement.
- -f
-
Force resize, overriding safety checks.
- -p
-
Print progress information for each resize task.
Reverse the order of characters on each line of the specified file
and print the results on standard output. If no file is specified,
rev reads from standard input.
TCP/IP command. Server for the rexec
routine, providing remote execution facilities with authentication
based on usernames and passwords. rexecd is started by inetd and must have an entry in inetd's configuration file,
/etc/inetd.conf. When rexecd receives a service request, the
following protocol is initiated:
The server reads characters from the socket up to a null byte. The
resulting string is interpreted as an ASCII number, base 10.
If the number received in Step 1 is nonzero, it is interpreted as the
port number of a secondary stream to be used for stderr. A second
connection is then created to the specified port on the
client's machine.
A null-terminated username of at most 16 characters is retrieved on
the initial socket.
A null-terminated, unencrypted password of at most 16 characters is
retrieved on the initial socket.
A null-terminated command to be passed to a shell is retrieved on the
initial socket. The length of the command is limited by the upper
bound on the size of the system's argument list.
rexecd then validates the user, as
is done at login time. If the authentication was successful,
rexecd changes to the
user's home directory and establishes the user and
group protections of the user.
A null byte is returned on the connection associated with stderr, and
the command line is passed to the normal login shell of the user. The
shell inherits the network connections established by rexecd.
Diagnostics
- Username too long
-
Name is longer than 16 characters.
- Password too long
-
Password is longer than 16 characters.
- Command too long
-
Command passed is too long.
- Login incorrect
-
No password file entry for the username exists.
- Password incorrect
-
Wrong password was supplied.
- No remote directory
-
chdir to home directory failed.
- Try again
-
fork by server failed.
- <shellname>:...
-
fork by server failed.
User's login shell could not be started.
richtext [options] [file]
|
|
Display MIME ("richtext") files on
an ASCII terminal on standard output, by means such as highlighting
bold or italic text and displaying underlined text correctly.
Intended primarily for use with metamail. If no file is specified, input is
taken from standard input.
Options
- -c
-
Don't do any formatting; simply correct the raw
richtext and write the results to standard output.
- -f
-
Use termcap-derived escape codes for
bold and italic text, even if richtext was called in a pipe.
- -m
-
In multibyte Japanese and Korean sequences, treat < as a real
<, not as the start of a richtext command.
- -n
-
Do not correct the raw richtext input.
- -o
-
Use overstrikes for underlines.
- -p
-
Use a pager to view the output. This option has no effect if standard
input or standard output is redirected.
- -s charset
-
Use the specified character set as the default. Valid values for
charset are us-ascii (default), iso-2022-jp, and iso-2022-kr.
- -t
-
Use * and _ instead of termcap-derived escape codes to highlight
text.
Remote login. rlogin connects the
terminal on the current local host system to the remote host system
rhost. The remote terminal type is the same as
your local terminal type. The terminal or window size is also copied
to the remote system if the server supports it.
Options
- -8
-
Allow an 8-bit input data path at all times.
- -ec
-
Specify escape character c (default is ~).
- -d
-
Debugging mode.
- -k
-
Attempt to get tickets from remote host, requesting them in the realm
as determined by krb_realm-ofhost.
- -l username
-
Specify a different username for the remote
login. Default is the same as your local username.
- -E
-
Do not interpret any character as an escape character.
- -L
-
Allow rlogin session to be run
without any output postprocessing (i.e., run in litout mode).
TCP/IP command. Server for the rlogin program, providing a remote login
facility, with authentication based on privileged port numbers from
trusted hosts. rlogind is invoked by
inetd when a remote login connection
is requested, and executes the following protocol:
The server checks the client's source port. If the
port is not in the range 512-1023, the server aborts the connection.
The server checks the client's source address and
requests the corresponding hostname. If the hostname cannot be
determined, the dot-notation representation of the host address is
used.
The login process propagates the client terminal's
baud rate and terminal type as found in the TERM environment variable.
Options
- -a
-
Verify hostname.
- -h
-
Permit superuser .rhosts files to be used.
Ignored if pluggable authentication module (PAM) support is enabled.
Control through /etc/pam.conf instead.
- -l
-
Do not authenticate hosts via a nonroot .rhosts
file. Ignored if pluggable authentication module (PAM) support is
enabled. Control through /etc/pam.conf instead.
- -n
-
Suppress keep-alive messages.
- -L
-
Do not authenticate hosts via .rhosts or
hosts.equiv files. Ignored if pluggable
authentication module (PAM) support is enabled. Control through
/etc/pam.conf instead.
Delete one or more files. To remove a file, you
must have write permission in the directory that contains the file,
but you need not have permission on the file itself. If you do not
have write permission on the file, you will be prompted (y or n) to
override.
Options
- -d, --directory
-
Remove directories, even if they are not empty. Available only to a
privileged user.
- -f, --force
-
Remove write-protected files without prompting.
- --help
-
Print a help message and then exit.
- -i, --interactive
-
Prompt for y (remove the file) or
n (do not remove the file).
- -r, -R, --recursive
-
If file is a directory, remove the entire
directory and all its contents, including subdirectories. Be
forewarned: use of this option can be dangerous.
- -v, --verbose
-
Verbose mode (print the name of each file before removing it).
- --version
-
Print version information and then exit.
- --
-
Mark the end of options. Use this when you need to supply a filename
beginning with -.
TCP/IP command. Handle remote mail received via uucp. rmail
transforms trace information from mail in UUCP format to the
equivalent RFC 822 format, then forwards messages to sendmail.
Options
- -D domain
-
Use domain instead of UUCP as the UUCP host name in From fields.
- -T
-
Print debugging information.
rmdir [options] directories
|
|
Delete the named directories (not the contents).
directories are deleted from the parent
directory and must be empty (if not, rm
-r can be used instead). See also mkdir.
Options
- --help
-
Print a help message and then exit.
- --ignore-fail-on-non-empty
-
Ignore failure to remove directories that are not empty.
- -p, --parents
-
Remove directories and any intervening parent
directories that become empty as a result. Useful for removing
subdirectory trees.
- --verbose
-
Verbose mode; print message for each directory as it is processed.
- --version
-
Print version information and then exit.
System administration command. Unload a module or list of modules
from the kernel. This command is successful only if the specified
modules are not in use and no other modules are dependent on them.
Options
- -a, --all
-
Autoclean modules; tag unused modules for future cleanings, and
remove any currently tagged modules. Tagged modules remain tagged
unless used between cleanings.
- -e, --persist
-
Save persistent data for specified modules, or for all modules
supporting persistence if none are specified. Do not unload modules.
- -h, --help
-
Print help message then exit.
- -r, --stacks
-
Recursively remove stacked modules (all modules that use the
specified module).
- -s, --syslog
-
Write messages to syslogd instead of
to the terminal.
- -v, --verbose
-
Verbose mode.
- -V, --version
-
Print modutils version number and
help message, then exit.
rootflags [option] image [flags [offset]]
|
|
System administration command. Set flags for a
kernel image. If no arguments are specified,
print flags for the kernel image.
flags is a 2-byte integer located at offset 498
in a kernel image. Currently the only effect of
flags is to mount the root filesystem in
read-only mode if flags is nonzero. You may
change flags by specifying the kernel
image to change, the new
flags, and the byte offset at which to place the
new information (the default is 498). Note that rdev -R is a synonym for rootflags. If LILO is used, rootflags is not needed.
flags can be set from the LILO prompt during a
boot.
Option
- -o offset
-
Same as specifying an offset as an argument.
route [options] [command]
|
|
TCP/IP command. Add or remove entries in the routing tables
maintained by routed. route accepts two commands: add, to add a route, and del, to delete a route. The two commands have
the following syntax:
add [-net | -host] address [modifiers]
del [-net | -host] address [modifiers] address is treated as a plain route unless
-net is specified or
address is found in
/etc/networks. -host can be used to specify that
address is a plain route whether or not it is
found in /etc/networks. Using route
modifiers, you can specify the gateway through
which to route packets headed for that address, its netmask, TCP mss,
or the device with which to associate the route; you can also mask
certain routes. Only a privileged user may modify the routing tables.
If no command is specified, route
prints the routing tables.
Options
- -n, --numeric
-
Show numerical addresses; do not look up hostnames. (Useful if DNS is
not functioning properly.)
- -e, --extend
-
Use netstat -r format to print
routing table. Use twice to print extended information. Same as
netstat -ree.
- -h, --help
-
Print help message, then exit.
- -v, --verbose
-
Verbose mode.
- -A family, --family
-
Specify an address family to use with an add or del
command. family may be inet, inet6,
ax25, netrom, ipx,
ddp, or x25.
- -C, --cache
-
Perform command on the routing cache instead of the forwarding
information base (FIB) routing table.
- -F, --fib
-
Perform command on the forwarding information base (FIB) routing
table. This is the default behavior.
- -V, --version
-
Print version and configuration options, then exit.
Route modifiers
- netmask mask
-
Use netmask mask.
- gw gateway
-
Route packets through gateway.
- metric n
-
Set routing metric to n.
- mss bytes
-
Set maximum segment size for connections over this route.
- reject
-
Cause route lookup for target to fail. Used to mask out networks from
a default route.
- [dev] interface
-
Associate route with specified device. When the
interface is given as the last argument on a
command line, the word dev is
optional.
routed [options] [logfile]
|
|
TCP/IP command. Network routing daemon. routed is invoked by a privileged user at boot
time to manage the Internet routing tables. The routing daemon uses a
variant of the Xerox NS Routing Information Protocol in maintaining
up-to-date kernel routing-table entries. When routed is started, it uses the SIOCGIFCONF
ioctl call to find those directly
connected interfaces configured into the system and marked up.
routed transmits a REQUEST packet on
each interface, then enters a loop, listening for REQUEST and
RESPONSE packets from other hosts. When a REQUEST packet is received,
routed formulates a reply based on
the information maintained in its internal tables. The generated
RESPONSE packet contains a list of known routes. Any RESPONSE packets
received are used to update the routing tables as appropriate.
When an update is applied, routed
records the change in its internal tables, updates the kernel routing
table, and generates a RESPONSE packet reflecting these changes to
all directly connected hosts and networks.
Options
- -d
-
Debugging mode. Log additional information to the
logfile.
- -g
-
Offer a route to the default destination.
- -q
-
Opposite of -s option.
- -s
-
Force routed to supply routing
information, whether it is acting as an internetwork router or not.
- -t
-
Stop routed from going into
background and releasing itself from the controlling terminal, so
that interrupts from the keyboard will kill the process.
Parse file, which should be written in the RPC
language, and produce a program written in C that implements the RPC
code. Place header code generated from file.x in
file.h, XDR routines in
file_xdr.c, server code in
file_svc.c, and client code in
file_clnt.c. Lines preceded by % are not parsed. By default, rpcgen produces Sun OS 4.1-compatible code.
- -a
-
Produce all files (client and server).
- -5
-
Produce SVR4-compatible code.
- -c
-
Create XDR routines. Cannot be used with other options.
- -C
-
Produce ANSI C code (the default).
- -K
-
Produce K&R C code.
- -Dname[=value]
-
Define the symbol name, and set it equal to
value or 1.
- -h
-
Produce a header file. With -T, make
the file support RPC dispatch tables. Cannot be used with other
options.
- -I
-
Produce an inetd-compatible server.
- -K secs
-
Specify amount of time that the server should wait after replying to
a request and before exiting. Default is 120. A
secs of -1 prevents the program from ever
exiting.
- -l
-
Produce client code. Cannot be used with other options.
- -m
-
Produce server code only, suppressing creation of a
"main" routine. Cannot be used with
other options.
- -N
-
New style. Allow multiple arguments for procedures. Not necessarily
backward compatible.
- -o [file]
-
Print output to file or standard output.
- -Sc
-
Print sample client code to standard output.
- -Ss
-
Create skeleton server code only.
- -t
-
Create RPC dispatch table. Cannot be used with other options.
- -T
-
Include support for RPC dispatch tables.
rpcinfo [options] [host] [program] [version]
|
|
NFS/NIS command. Report RPC information. program
can be either a name or a number. If a version
is specified, rpcinfo attempts to
call that version of the specified program.
Otherwise, it attempts to find all the registered version numbers for
the specified program by calling Version 0, and
then attempts to call each registered version.
Options
- -b program version
-
Make an RPC broadcast to the specified program
and version using UDP, and report all hosts that
respond.
- -d program version
-
Delete the specified version of
program's registration. Can be
executed only by the user who added the registration or a privileged
user.
- -n portnum
-
Use portnum as the port number for the -t and -u
options, instead of the port number given by the portmapper.
- -p [host]
-
Probe the portmapper on host and print a list of
all registered RPC programs. If host is not
specified, it defaults to the value returned by hostname.
- -t host program [version]
-
Make an RPC call to program on the specified
host using TCP, and report whether a response
was received.
- -u host program [version]
-
Make an RPC call to program on the specified
host using UDP, and report whether a response
was received.
Examples
To show all the RPC services registered on the local machine, use:
$ rpcinfo -p
To show all the RPC services registered on the machine named
klaxon, use:
$ rpcinfo -p klaxon
To show all machines on the local network that are running the
Network Information Service (NIS), use:
$ rpcinfo -b ypserv version | uniq
where version is the current NIS version
obtained from the results of the -p
switch earlier in this list.
The Red Hat Package Manager. A freely available packaging system for
software distribution and installation. RPM packages are built,
installed, and queried with the rpm
and rpmbuild commands. For detailed
information on RPM, see Chapter 5.
rsh [options] host [command]
|
|
Execute command on remote host, or, if no
command is specified, begin an interactive shell on the remote host
using rlogin.
Options
- -d
-
Enable socket debugging.
- -l username
-
Attempt to log in as username. By default, the
name of the user executing rsh is
used.
- -n
-
Redirect the input to rsh from the
special device /dev/null. (This should be done
when backgrounding rsh from a shell
prompt, to direct the input away from the terminal.)
TCP/IP command. Remote shell server for programs such as rcmd and rcp,
which need to execute a noninteractive shell on remote machines.
rshd is started by inetd and must have an entry in inetd's configuration file,
/etc/inetd.conf.
All options are exactly the same as those in rlogind, except for -L, which is unique to rshd.
Option
- -L
-
Log all successful connections and failed attempts via syslogd.
System administration command. Display the previous and current
system runlevels as reported in the utmp file.
The default utmp file is
/var/run/utmp. See init for a summary of runlevels.
run-parts [options] [directory]
|
|
System administration command. Run, in lexical order, all scripts
found in directory. Exclude scripts whose
filenames include nonalphanumeric characters (besides underscores and
hyphens).
Options
- --
-
Interpret all subsequent arguments as filenames, not options.
- --test
-
Print information listing which scripts would be run, but suppress
actual execution of them.
- --umask=umask
-
Specify umask. The default is 022.
TCP/IP command. Query statd for
system status on RPC hosts: current time,
uptime, and load averages (the average number of jobs in the run
queue).
Options
- -d
-
Report local time on each host.
- -h
-
Sort information by hostname.
- -l
-
Sort information by load average.
- -s
-
Print times in seconds. Useful for scripts.
- -t
-
Sort information by uptime.
TCP/IP command. Provide information on how long each machine on the
local network has been up and which users are logged into each. If a
machine has not reported in for 11 minutes, assume it is down. The
listing is sorted by hostname. ruptime depends on rwhod.
Options
- -a
-
Include users who have been idle for more than one hour.
- -l
-
Sort machines by load average.
- -r
-
Reverse the normal sort order.
- -t
-
Sort machines by uptime.
- -u
-
Sort machines by the number of users logged in.
TCP/IP command. List the users logged into host,
or to all local machines, in who
format (hostname, usernames). rusers
depends on rwhod.
Options
- -a
-
Include machines with no users logged in.
- -l
-
Include more information: tty, date, time, idle time, remote host.
System administration command. Report information on users logged
into the system. Answers queries from rusers.
TCP/IP command. Use RPC to print a message to all users logged into
host. If file is specified,
read the message from it; otherwise, read from standard input.
Report who is logged on for all machines on the local network
(similar to who). rwho depends on rwhod.
Option
- -a
-
List users even if they've been idle for more than
one hour.
TCP/IP command. System-status server that maintains the database used
by the rwho and ruptime programs. Its operation is predicated
on the ability to broadcast messages on a network. As a producer of
information, rwhod periodically
queries the state of the system and constructs status messages, which
are broadcast on a network. As a consumer of information, it listens
for other rwhod
servers' status messages, validates them, then
records them in a collection of files located in the directory
/var/spool/rwho. Messages received by the
rwhod server are discarded unless
they originated at an rwhod
server's port. Status messages are generated
approximately once every three minutes.
Options
- -a
-
Use both broadcast and point-to-point interfaces. This is the default.
- -b
-
Use only broadcast interfaces.
- -p
-
Use only point-to-point interfaces.
- -u user
-
Run daemon as specified user.
scp [options] file1[...] file2
|
|
Securely copy files between hosts on a network, using ssh. Part of the OpenSSH suite of network
tools. scp requests a password or
passphrase if required. The transfer can be between two remote hosts.
If more than one file is specified for file1,
file2 should be a directory; otherwise, only the
last file in the list is copied. file1 and
file2 can be specified in any of the following
ways:
file
host:file
user@host:file
Options
- -4
-
Use IPv4 addresses.
- -6
-
Use IPv6 addresses.
- -B
-
Run in batch mode. Don't ask for passwords or
passphrases.
- -c cipher
-
Specify the cipher to be used for encrypting the
data.
- -C
-
Enable ssh compression.
- -i file
-
Specify the file that contains the identity (private key) for RSA
authentication.
- -o option
-
Specify an option to pass to ssh.
- -p
-
Preserve modification time, access time, and mode.
- -P port
-
Connect to port on the remote host.
- -q
-
Don't display the progress meter.
- -r
-
Copy directories recursively.
- -S program
-
Specify the program to use for the encrypted connection. The program
must understand ssh options.
- -v
-
Verbose mode.
screen [options] [command [args]]
|
|
Provide ANSI/VT100 terminal emulation, making it possible to run
multiple full-screen pseudo-terminals from one real terminal, and
letting you manipulate and save your screen input and output, copy
and paste between windows, etc.
Options
- -a
-
Include all capabilities in each window's termcap.
- -A
-
Adapt all windows to the size of the current terminal. Default is to
try to use the previous window size.
- -c file
-
Use file as the configuration file instead of
the default $HOME/.screenrc.
- -d
-
Detach session running elsewhere. With -r, reattach to this terminal. With -R, reattach to this terminal or create it if
it doesn't already exist. With -RR, use the first session when reattaching if
more than one session is available.
- -D
-
Detach session running elsewhere, logging out before detaching. With
-r, reattach to this terminal. With
-R, reattach to this terminal or
create it if it doesn't already exist. With
-RR, do whatever is necessary to
create a new session.
- -e xy
-
Change command characters. Specify x as the
command character (default Ctrl-a)
and y as the character that generates a literal
command character (default a).
Specify in caret notation (e.g., ^A
for Ctrl-a).
- -f, -fn, -fa
-
Turn flow control on, off, or to automatic switching mode.
- -h num
-
Specify the size of the history scrollback buffer.
- -i
-
Cause the interrupt key (usually Ctrl-c) to interrupt the display immediately
when flow control is on. Use of this option is discouraged.
- -l, -ln
-
Turn login mode on or off for /etc/utmp updating.
- -ls, -list
-
Print list of pid.tty.host strings identifying
screen sessions.
- -L
-
Tell screen that automargin terminal
has a writable last position.
- -m
-
Ignore the $STY environment variable
and create a new session. With -d,
start session in detached mode; useful for scripts. With -D, start session in detached mode but
don't fork a new process; the command exits if the
session terminates.
- -O
-
Use optimal output mode for terminal rather than true VT100 emulation.
- -p window
-
Preselect the specified window if it exists.
- -q
-
Suppress error message printing on startup. Exit with nonzero return
code if unsuccessful.
- -r [pid.tty.host]
- -r sessionowner/[pid.tty.host]
-
Resume detached session. No other options except -d or -D can
be specified. With sessionowner, resume another
user's detached session; requires setuid root.
- -R
-
Attempt to resume the first session found, or start a new session
with the specified options. Set by default if screen is run as a login shell.
- -s shell
-
Set the default shell, overriding the $SHELL environment variable.
- -S name
-
Specify a name for the session being started.
- -t name
-
Set the window's title.
- -T term
-
Set $TERM to
term instead of
"screen".
- -U
-
Run in UTF-8 mode.
- -v
-
Print version information and exit.
- -wipe [match]
-
Like -ls, but remove destroyed
sessions instead of marking them dead. If a match is specified, it
should be in the same form as the argument to the -r option.
- -x
-
Attach to a session that is not detached. Requires multi-display mode.
- -X
-
Run specified command in specified session. Requires multi-display
mode, and session must not be password-protected.
Key bindings
screen commands consist of a command
character (Ctrl-a by default)
followed by another character. For many of the commands, you can also
specify the character as Ctrl-character; e.g.,
Ctrl-a Ctrl-d as well as Ctrl-a d. The default key bindings are listed
here. You can change the bindings for yourself in the
$HOME/.screenrc configuration file, or for all
users in /etc/screenrc. The term in parentheses
following the description is the equivalent configuration file
command for changing the key binding.
- Ctrl-a '
-
Prompt for window name or number to switch to. (select)
- Ctrl-a "
-
List all windows for selection. (windowlist
-b)
- Ctrl-a num
-
Switch to window num, where
num is a digit in the range 0-9 or - (the blank
window). (select
num)
- Ctrl-a Tab
-
Switch input focus to next region. (focus)
- Ctrl-a Ctrl-a
-
Toggle to previously displayed window. (other)
- Ctrl-a a
-
Send the command character (Ctrl-a)
to the window. (meta)
- Ctrl-a A
-
Prompt user to enter a name for the current window. (title)
- Ctrl-a b
-
Send a break to the window. (break)
- Ctrl-a B
-
Reopen the terminal line and send a break. (pow-break)
- Ctrl-a c
-
Create a new window with a shell and switch to it. (screen)
- Ctrl-a C
-
Clear the screen. (clear)
- Ctrl-a d
-
Detach screen from this terminal. (detach)
- Ctrl-a D D
-
Detach and log out. (pow-detach)
- Ctrl-a f
-
Toggle flow control between on, off, and auto. (flow)
- Ctrl-a F
-
Resize window to current region size. (fit)
- Ctrl-a Ctrl-g
-
Toggle visual bell mode. (vbell)
- Ctrl-a h
-
Write contents of the current window to the file
hardcopy.n. (hardcopy)
- Ctrl-a H
-
Begin/end logging of the current window to the file
screenlog.n. (log)
- Ctrl-a i
-
Show information about this window. (info)
- Ctrl-a k
-
Kill current window. (kill)
- Ctrl-a l
-
Refresh current window. (redisplay)
- Ctrl-a L
-
Toggle window's login slot. Requires that screen be configured to update the utmp database. (login)
- Ctrl-a m
-
Redisplay last message. (lastmsg)
- Ctrl-a M
-
Toggle monitoring of the current window. (monitor)
- Ctrl-a Space
- Ctrl-a n
-
Switch to next window. (next)
- Ctrl-a N
-
Show number and title of current window. (number)
- Ctrl-a Backspace
- Ctrl-a h
- Ctrl-a p
-
Switch to previous window. (prev)
- Ctrl-a q
-
Send a start signal (associated with Ctrl-q by terminals) to current window.
(xon)
- Ctrl-a Q
-
Delete all regions except the current one. (only)
- Ctrl-a r
-
Toggle current window's line-wrap setting.
(wrap)
- Ctrl-a s
-
Send a stop signal (associated with Ctrl-s by terminals) to current window.
(xoff)
- Ctrl-a S
-
Split current region into two new regions. (split)
- Ctrl-a t
-
Show system information, including time and date. (time)
- Ctrl-a v
-
Display version information. (version)
- Ctrl-a Ctrl-v
-
Enter digraph for entering characters that can't
normally be entered. (digraph)
- Ctrl-a w
-
List all windows. (windows)
- Ctrl-a W
-
Toggle 80/132 columns. (width)
- Ctrl-a x
-
Lock terminal. (lockscreen)
- Ctrl-a X
-
Kill the current region. (remove)
- Ctrl-a z
-
Suspend screen. (suspend)
- Ctrl-a Z
-
Reset virtual terminal to its
"power-on" values. (reset)
- Ctrl-a .
-
Write out a .termcap file. (dumptermcap)
- Ctrl-a ?
-
Show all key bindings. (help)
- Ctrl-a Ctrl-\
-
Kill all windows and terminate screen. (quit)
- Ctrl-a :
-
Enter command-line mode. (colon)
- Ctrl-a [
- Ctrl-a Esc
-
Enter copy/scrollback mode. (copy)
- Ctrl-a ]
-
Write contents of the paste buffer to the standard input queue of the
current window. (paste)
- Ctrl-a {
- Ctrl-a }
-
Copy and paste a previous line. (history)
- Ctrl-a >
-
Write paste buffer to a file. (writebuf)
- Ctrl-a <
-
Read screen-exchange file into paste buffer. (readbuf)
- Ctrl-a =
-
Remove file used by Ctrl-a < and
Ctrl-a >. (removebuf)
- Ctrl-a ,
-
Shows where screen comes from, where it went to, and why you can use
it. (license)
- Ctrl-a _
-
Start/stop monitoring the current window for inactivity. (silence)
- Ctrl-a *
-
List all currently attached displays. (displays)
Fork the current shell and make a typescript of a terminal session.
The typescript is written to file. If no
file is given, the typescript is saved in the
file typescript. The script ends when the forked
shell exits, usually with Ctrl-D or exit.
Options
- -a
-
Append to file or
typescript instead of overwriting the previous
contents.
- -f
-
Flush output after each write. Useful if another person is monitoring
the output file.
- -q
-
Operate in quiet mode.
- -t
-
Write timing data to standard error. Each entry has two fields: the
first is the elapsed time since the last output, and the second is
the number of characters in the current output.
sdiff -o outfile [options] from to
|
|
Find differences between the two files from and
to and merge interactively, writing the results
to outfile.
Options
- --
-
Treat remaining options as filenames, even if they begin with
-.
- -a, --text
-
Treat all files as text and compare line-by-line.
- -b, --ignore-space-change
-
Ignore differences in whitespace.
- -B, --ignore-blank-lines
-
Ignore added or missing blank lines.
- -d, --minimal
-
Use a different algorithm to find fewer changes. This option causes
sdiff to run more slowly.
- -H, --speed-large-files
-
Heuristically speed comparison of large files with many small
scattered changes.
- -i, --ignore-case
-
Ignore case changes.
- -I regexp, --ignore-matching-lines=regexp
-
Ignore any changes that insert or delete lines matching the regular
expression regexp.
- --ignore-all-space
-
Ignore whitespace when comparing lines.
- -l, --left-column
-
Print only the left column of common lines.
- -o file, --output=file
-
Write merged output to the specified file.
- -s, --suppress-common-lines
-
Suppress common lines.
- -t, --expand-tabs
-
Convert tabs to spaces in the output to preserve alignment.
- -v, --version
-
Print version information and exit.
- -w cols, --width=cols
-
Set the output to cols columns wide.
- -W
-
Ignore horizontal whitespace when comparing lines.
Interactive commands
- ed
-
Edit, then use both versions, with a header for each.
- eb
-
Edit, then use both versions.
- el
-
Edit, then use the left version.
- er
-
Edit, then use the right version.
- e
-
Edit a new version to replace the others.
- l
-
Use the left version.
- r
-
Use the right version.
- s
-
Silently include common lines.
- v
-
Verbosely include common lines.
- q
-
Quit.
sed [options] [command] [files]
|
|
Stream editor. Edit one or more files without
user interaction. See Chapter 12 for more
information.
sendmail [flags] [address...]
|
|
System administration command. sendmail is a mail transfer agent (MTA) or,
more simply, a mail router. It accepts mail from a
user's mail program, interprets the mail address,
rewrites the address into the proper form for the delivery program,
and routes the mail to the correct delivery program.
Command-line flags
- -Ac
-
Use local submission configuration file
/etc/mail/submit.cf, even when no mail is sent
from the command line.
- -Am
-
Use configuration file /etc/mail/sendmail.cf,
even when mail is sent from the command line.
- -Btype
-
Set message body type. Accepted values are 7BIT and 8BITMIME.
- -bx
-
Set operation mode to x. Operation modes are:
- a
-
Run in ARPAnet mode.
- d
-
Run as a daemon.
- D
-
Run as a daemon, but remain in the foreground.
- h
-
Print persistent host status information.
- H
-
Purge expired entries from persistent host status information.
- i
-
Initialize the alias database.
- m
-
Deliver mail (the default).
- p
-
Print the mail queue.
- s
-
Speak SMTP on input side.
- t
-
Run in test mode.
- v
-
Verify addresses; do not collect or deliver.
- -C file
-
Use configuration file file.
- -d level
-
Set debugging level.
- -F name
-
Set full name of user to name.
- -f name
-
Sender's name is name.
- -G
-
Relay message submission. Used by rmail.
- -i
-
Do not interpret dots on a line by themselves as a message terminator.
- -h cnt
-
Set hop count (number of times message has been processed by
sendmail) to
cnt.
- -L identifier
-
Use the specified log identifier for messages
sent to syslogd.
- -N conditions
-
Specify conditions for delivery status notification (DSN) as a
comma-separated list. Accepted values are never, delay,
failure, and success.
- -n
-
Do not alias or forward.
- -O option=value
-
Set an option specified by its long name. Options are described in
the next section.
- -oXvalue
-
Set an option specified by its short name X.
Options are described in the next section.
- -pprotocol
-
Receive messages via the protocol protocol.
- -q[time]
-
Process queued messages immediately, or at intervals indicated by
time (for example, -q30m for every half hour).
- -qp[time]
-
Same as -q, but create a persistent
process to handle the queue instead of initiating a new process at
each time interval.
- -qf
-
Process saved messages in the queue using the foreground process.
- -qG group
-
Process saved messages in the named queue group.
- -q[!]I substring
-
Process jobs for named queues containing
substring. Use ! to process mail for all queues
not containing substring.
- -q[!]R substring
-
Process jobs with recipients containing
substring. Use ! to process mail for recipients
not containing substring.
- -q[!]S substring
-
Process jobs from senders containing substring.
Use ! to process mail from senders not containing
substring.
- -R portion
-
When bouncing messages, return only the specified
portion of the bounced message.
portion may be hdrs for headers, or full for the full message.
- -r name
-
Obsolete form of -f.
- -t
-
Read header for To:, Cc:, and Bcc:
lines, and send to everyone on those lists.
- -v
-
Verbose mode.
- -V envid
-
Use envid as the original envelope ID.
- -X file
-
Log all traffic to file. Not to be used for
normal logging.
Configuration options
Command-line configuration options are the same options normally set
with an O in the sendmail configuration file. On the command
line they are set using -O and the
option's long name. Many of these options have short
name variations that are used with the -o option. Here we document items most likely
to be useful on the command line, providing both their short and long
name forms. Many of the commands call for
timeout values. These should be given as a
number followed by a letter indicating the interval: s for seconds, m for minutes, h for hours, or d for days. For example, 30s is 30 seconds, 10m is 10 minutes, 3d is 3 days. The default is minutes when no
letter is given.
- Aliasfile=file, Afile
-
Use alternate alias file.
- AliasWait=min, amin
-
If the D option is set, wait
min minutes for the aliases file to be rebuilt
before returning an alias database out-of-date warning.
- BlankSub=char, Bchar
-
Set unquoted space replacement character.
- CheckAliases, n
-
When running newaliases, validate
the right side of aliases.
- CheckpointInterval=num, Cnum
-
Checkpoint the queue when mailing to multiple recipients. sendmail will rewrite the list of recipients
after each group of num recipients has been
processed.
- ClassFactor=factor, zfactor
-
Multiplier for priority increments. This determines how much weight
to give to a message's precedence header. sendmail's default is 1800.
- ConnectionCacheSize=num, knum
-
Specify the maximum number of open connections to cache.
- ConnectionCacheTimeout=timeout, Ktimeout
-
Time out connections after timeout.
- ConnectionRateThrottle=num
-
Restrict SMTP connections per second to num.
- DefaultUser=uid[:gid], uuid[:gid]
-
Use user ID and group ID for mailers instead of 1:1. If no group ID is specified, the
user's default group is used.
- DefaultCharSet=label
-
Use the specified label for 8-bit data.
- DeliveryMode=x, dx
-
Set the delivery mode to x. Delivery modes are
d for deferred delivery, i for interactive (synchronous) delivery,
b for background (asynchronous)
delivery, and q for queue only
(i.e., deliver the next time the queue is run).
- DialDelay=seconds
-
Specify the number of seconds to wait before redialing after a
connection fails.
- DontPruneRoutes, R
-
Don't prune route addresses.
- EightBitMode=mode, 8mode
-
Specify how to handle 8-bit input. Accepted values for
mode are mimefy
(convert to 7-bit), pass (send as
is), or strict (bounce the message).
- ErrorHeader=text, Etext
-
Set error message header. text is either text to
add to an error message, or the name of a file. A filename must
include its full path and begin with a /.
- ErrorMode=x, ex
-
Set error processing to mode x. Valid modes are
m to mail back the error message,
w to write back the error message,
p to print the errors on the
terminal (default), q to throw away
error messages, and e to do special
processing for the BerkNet.
- FallbackMXhost=host, Vhost
-
Set fallback MX host. host should be the fully
qualified domain name of the fallback host.
- ForkEachJob, Y
-
Deliver each job that is run from the queue in a separate process.
This helps limit the size of running processes on systems with very
low amounts of memory.
- ForwardPath=path, Jpath
-
Set an alternative .forward search path.
- HelpFile=file, Hfile
-
Specify SMTP help file to use instead of
/etc/mail/helpfile.
- HoldExpensive, c
-
On mailers that are considered
"expensive" to connect to,
don't initiate immediate connection.
- IgnoreDots, i
-
Do not take dots on a line by themselves as a message terminator.
- LogLevel=n, Ln
-
Specify log level. Default is 9.
- MatchGECOS, G
-
Compare local mail names to the GECOS section in the password file.
- MaxDaemonChildren=num
-
Restrict incoming SMTP daemon to no more than num child processes.
- MaxHopCount=num, hnum
-
Allow a maximum of num hops per message.
- MeToo, m
-
Send to me (the sender) also if I am
in an alias expansion.
- MinFreeBlocks=minblocks, bminblocks
-
Require at least minblocks on the filesystem to
be free.
- MinQueueAge=timeout
-
Wait the specified time before processing a new job in the queue.
- NoRecipientAction=action
-
Specify what headers, if any, to add to a message without recipient
headers. Accepted values are none,
add-to, add-apparently-to, add-bcc, and add-to-undisclosed.
- OldStyleHeaders, o
-
If set, this message may have old-style headers. If not set, this
message is guaranteed to have new-style headers (i.e., commas instead
of spaces between addresses).
- PostmasterCopy=user, Puser
-
Send copies of all failed mail to user (usually
postmaster).
- PrivacyOptions=optionlist, poptionlist
-
Adjust the privacy of the SMTP daemon. The
optionlist argument should be a comma-separated
list of the following values:
- public
-
Make SMTP fully public (the default).
- needmailhelo
-
Require site to send HELO or ELHO before sending mail.
- needexpnhelo
-
Require site to send HELO or ELHO before answering an address
expansion request.
- needvrfyhelo
-
Like preceding argument, but for verification requests.
- noetrn
-
Deny requests to reverse the connection using extended TURN.
- noexpn
-
Deny all expansion requests.
- noverb
-
Deny requests for verbose mode.
- novrfy
-
Deny all verification requests.
- authwarnings
-
Insert special headers in mail messages advising recipients that the
message may not be authentic.
- goaway
-
Set all of the previous arguments (except public).
- nobodyreturn
-
Don't return message body with a delivery status
notification.
- noreceipts
-
Turn off delivery status notification on success.
- restrictexpand
-
Deny untrusted users access to aliases, forwards, or include files.
Restrict sendmail -bv and disallow
-v.
- restrictmailq
-
Allow only users of the same group as the owner of the queue
directory to examine the mail queue.
- restrictqrun
-
Limit queue processing to root and the owner of the queue directory.
- QueueDirectory=dir, Qdir
-
Select the directory in which to queue messages.
- QueueFactor=factor, qfactor
-
Multiplier (factor) for high-load queuing. Default is 600000.
- QueueLA=load, xload
-
Queue messages when load level is higher than
load.
- QueueTimeout=timeout, Ttimeout
-
Set the timeout on undelivered messages in the queue to the specified
time (overridden by Timeout.queuereturn).
- RecipientFactor=factor, yfactor
-
Penalize large recipient lists by factor.
- RefuseLA=load, Xload
-
Refuse SMTP connections when load is higher than
load.
- ResolverOptions=arg, I arg
-
Use DNS lookups and tune them. Queue messages on connection refused.
The arg arguments are identical to resolver
flags without the RES_ prefix. Each flag can be preceded by a plus or
minus sign to enable or disable the corresponding name server option.
There must be whitespace between the I and the first flag.
- RetryFactor=inc, Zinc
-
Increment priority of items remaining in queue by
inc after each job is processed. sendmail uses 90,000 by default.
- SaveFromLine, f
-
Save Unix-style From lines at the
front of messages.
- SendMimeErrors, j
-
Use MIME format for error messages.
- SevenBitInput, 7
-
Format all incoming messages in seven bits.
- StatusFile=file, Sfile
-
Save statistics in the named file.
- SuperSafe, s
-
Always instantiate the queue file, even when it is not strictly
necessary.
- TempFileMode=mode, Fmode
-
Set default file permissions for temporary files. If this option is
missing, default permissions are 0600.
- Timeout.queuereturn=timeout
-
Return undelivered mail that has been in the queue longer than the
specified timeout. The default is 5d (five days).
- TimeZoneSpec=timezone, ttimezone
-
Set name of the time zone.
- UseErrorsTo, l
-
Do not ignore Errors-To header.
- UserDatabaseSpec=database, Udatabase
-
Consult the user database for forwarding
information.
- Verbose, v
-
Run in verbose mode.
sendmail support files
- /usr/lib/sendmail
-
Traditional location of sendmail
binary.
- /usr/bin/newaliases
-
Link to /usr/lib/sendmail; rebuilds the alias
database from information in /etc/aliases.
- /usr/bin/mailq
-
Prints a listing of the mail queue.
- /etc/mail/sendmail.cf
-
Configuration file, in text form.
- /etc/mail/submit.cf
-
Configuration file used for local message submissions.
- /etc/mail/helpfile
-
SMTP help file.
- /etc/mail/statistics
-
Statistics file.
- /etc/aliases
-
Alias file, in text form.
- /etc/aliases.db
-
Alias file in dbm format. Created by
newaliases
- /var/spool/mqueue
-
Directory in which the mail queue and temporary files
reside.
seq [options] [first [increment]] last
|
|
Print the numbers from first through
last by increment. The
default is to print one number per line to standard output. Both
first and increment can be
omitted and default to 1, but if first is
omitted then increment must also be omitted. In
other words, if only two numbers are specified, they are taken to be
the first and last numbers. The numbers are treated as floating
point.
Options
- -f format, --format=format
-
Write the output using the specified printf floating-point format, which can be one
of %e, %f, or %g
(the default).
- --help
-
Print help message and exit.
- -s string, --separator=string
-
Use string to separate numbers in the output.
Default is newline.
- -w, --equal-width
-
Equalize the width of the numbers by padding with leading zeros. (Use
-f for other types of padding.)
- --version
-
Print version information and exit.
setfdprm [options] device [name]
|
|
Load disk parameters used when autoconfiguring floppy devices.
Options
- -c device
-
Clear parameters of device.
- -n device
-
Disable format-detection messages for device.
- -p device [name | parameters]
-
Permanently reset parameters for device. You can
use name to specify a configuration, or you can
specify individual parameters. The parameters that can be specified
are dev, size, sect,
heads, tracks, stretch, gap,
rate, spec1, or fmt_gap. Consult
/etc/fdprm for the original values.
- -y device
-
Enable format-detection messages for device.
setkeycodes scancode keycode
|
|
System administration command. Assign a keycode
event to the specified keyboard scancode. The
kernel matches these to its own keycodes. Scancodes in the range of
1-88 are hardwired in the kernel, but the remaining scancodes can be
assigned to keycodes in the range of 1-127. Use getkeycodes to see current assignments. Use
showkey to discover what scancode a
key is sending.
Display or change the led flag settings (NumLock, CapsLock, and
ScrollLock) for the current virtual terminal. With no options,
display the current settings for all three flags. Can be used in a
startup script to set the initial state of the leds.
Options
- +num, -num
-
Set or clear NumLock.
- +caps, -caps
-
Set or clear CapsLock
- +scroll, -scroll
-
Set or clear ScrollLock.
- -D
-
Change both the current and the default settings. Useful for always
having NumLock set, for example.
- -F
-
Only change the flags (and their settings may be reflected by the
keyboard leds). The default behavior.
- -L
-
Change the leds but not the flags, so the leds no longer reflect the
virtual terminal (VT) flags. Run setleds
-L with no other options to restore the default behavior.
- -v
-
Report the settings before and after the change.
Display or set Meta key handling for the current virtual terminal.
With no option, print the current Meta key mode. Otherwise, set the
mode and display the setting before and after the change.
Options
- esc, prefix, escprefix
-
Set the Meta key to send an escape sequence.
- meta, bit, metabit
-
Set the Meta key to set the high-order bit of the character.
setsid command [arguments]
|
|
System administration command. Execute the named command and optional
command arguments in a new session.
Set terminal attributes by writing to standard output a character
string to invoke the specified attributes.
Options
For Boolean options, the default value is on. Where 8-color is
specified, the possible colors are black, red, green, yellow, blue,
magenta, cyan, and white. Where 16-color is specified, the possible
colors include the 8-color colors, plus grey, bright red, bright
green, bright yellow, bright blue, bright magenta, bright cyan, and
bright white.
- -appcursorkeys [on|off]
-
Set cursor key application mode on or off. Virtual consoles only. Can
cause problems with vi.
- -append [num]
-
Write a snapshot of virtual console num to the
file specified with the -file
option, appending the snapshot to any existing contents. With no
argument, write a snapshot of the current virtual terminal.
- -background 8-color|default
-
Set background color. Virtual consoles only.
- -bfreq [freq]
-
Set the bell frequency in Hz (default 0).
- -blank [min]
-
Set the delay before the screen blanks to the specified number of
minutes. Virtual consoles only.
- -blength [millisec]
-
Set the bell duration in milliseconds (default 0).
- -blink [on|off]
-
Turn blinking mode on or off. If the terminal is not a virtual
console, -blink off also turns off
bold, half-bright, and reverse modes.
- -bold [on|off]
-
Turn bold on or off. If the terminal is not a virtual console,
-bold off also turns off blink,
half-bright, and reverse modes.
- -clear [all]
-
Clear the screen.
- -clear rest
-
Clear from the current cursor position to the end of the screen.
- -cleartabs [tab1...tabn]
-
With no arguments, clear all tab stops. Otherwise, clear the
specified tab stops. Virtual consoles only.
- -cursor [on|off]
-
Turn the cursor on or off.
- -default
-
Set rendering options to defaults.
- -dump [num]
-
Write a snapshot of virtual console num to the
file specified with the -file
option, overwriting any existing contents. With no argument, dump the
current virtual console. Overrides -append.
- -file file
-
Write output from the -dump or
-append option to the specified
file. If no filename is specified, write to the file
screen.dump in the current directory.
- -foreground 8-color|default
-
Set foreground color. Virtual consoles only.
- -half-bright [on|off]
-
Turn half-bright (dim) mode on or off. If the terminal is not a
virtual console, -half-bright off
also turns off bold, blink, and reverse modes.
- -hbcolor 16-color
-
Set color for half-bright characters. Virtual consoles only.
- -initialize
-
Display the terminal initialization string to reset the rendering
options and other attributes to their defaults.
- -inversescreen [on|off]
-
Invert the screen colors, swapping foreground and background, and
underline and half-bright. Virtual consoles only.
- -linewrap [on|off]
-
Turn line-wrapping on or off. Virtual consoles only.
- -msg [on|off]
-
Enable or disable the sending of kernel printk( ) messages to the console. Virtual
consoles only.
- -msglevel [num]
-
Set the console logging level for kernel printk( ) messages. The value of
num can be in the range 0-8. Messages more
important than the specified number are printed, with 8 printing all
kernel messages, and 0 equivalent to -msg
on. Virtual consoles only.
- -powerdown [min]
-
Set the VESA powerdown interval to the specified number of minutes,
from 0-60. If no value is specified for min,
defaults to 0, disabling powerdown.
- -powersave [mode]
-
Put the monitor in the specified VESA powersave mode. Specifying no
mode is equivalent to off. The
possible values of mode are:
- on, vsync
-
vsynch suspend mode.
- hsync
-
hsync suspend mode.
- powerdown
-
Powerdown mode.
- off
-
Turn off VESA powersaving features.
- -regtabs [num]
-
Clear all existing tab stops and set a regular tab stop pattern at
every num number (default 8).
num is a number in the range 1-160. Virtual
consoles only.
- -repeat [on|off]
-
Turn keyboard repeat on or off. Virtual consoles only.
- -reset
-
Display the terminal reset string to reset the terminal to its
power-on state.
- -reverse [on|off]
-
Turns reverse-video mode on or off. If the terminal is not a virtual
console, -reverse off also turns off
bold, half-bright, and blink modes.
- -store
-
Store the current rendering options as the defaults. Virtual consoles
only.
- -tabs [tab1...tabn]
-
Set tab stops at the specified cursor positions, which can range from
1 to 160. Virtual consoles only.
- -term term
-
Replace the value of the TERM
environment variable with term.
- -ulcolor 16-color
-
Set color for underlining. Virtual consoles only.
- -underline [on|off]
-
Turn underlining on or off.
An interactive file transfer program, similar to ftp except that it uses ssh to perform file transfers securely.
sftp connects to
host and logs in, prompting for a password if
required. The host can be specified in the following ways:
host
[user@]host[:file [file] ...]
[user@]host[:dir[/]] If user is specified, that username is used for
the login. If any files are specified, the sftp client automatically retrieves them after
the user has been authenticated and then exits. If a directory
dir is specified, the client starts in that
directory on the remote host. sftp
is part of the OpenSSH suite of network tools.
Options
- -1
-
Use SSH1. The default is to use SSH2.
- -b file
-
Run in batch mode, taking commands from the specified file. Requires
the use of a noninteractive authentication mechanism.
- -B bytes
-
Specify the size of the buffer sftp
uses for file transfers. Default is 32768 bytes.
- -C
-
Enable compression (uses ssh -C).
- -F file
-
Use file as the ssh configuration file instead of the default
system configuration file. The systemwide file is usually
/etc/ssh/ssh_config and per-user files are
$HOME/.ssh/config.
- -ooption
-
Pass an option to ssh. The passed
option is in the format used by ssh_config(5) (e.g., -oPORT=nn, where
nn is the port number). -o can appear more than once to pass multiple
options to ssh. This option is
useful for passing options that don't have an
equivalent sftp command-line option.
- -P server_path
-
Connect directly to the local sftp
server specified in server_path. Useful for
debugging.
- -R num
-
Specify the number of requests that may be outstanding at any time
(default 16).
- -s subsys|server_path
-
Specify the SSH2 subsystem or path to the sftp server on the remote system. Specifying
the path is useful for using sftp
via SSH1 or if the remote sshd does
not have an sftp subsystem
configured.
- -S program
-
Specify the name of a program that understands ssh options and that you want to use for the
encrypted connection.
- -v
-
Raise the logging level.
sh [options] [file [arguments]]
|
|
The standard Unix shell, a command interpreter into which all other
commands are entered. On Linux, this is just another name for the
bash shell. For more information,
see Chapter 7.
shar [options] files
shar -S [options]
|
|
Create shell archives ("shar"
files) that are in text format and can be mailed. These files may be
unpacked later by executing them with /bin/sh.
Other commands may be required on the recipient's
system, such as compress, gzip, and uudecode. The resulting archive is sent to
standard output unless the -o option
is given.
Options
- -a, --net-headers
-
Allows automatic generation of headers. The -n option is required if the -a option is used.
- -b bits, --bits-per-code=bits
-
Use -b bits as
a parameter to compress (when doing
compression). Default value is 12. The -b option automatically turns on -Z.
- -c, --cut-mark
-
Start the shar file with a line that says "Cut
here."
- -d delimiter, --here-delimiter=delimiter
-
Use delimiter for the files in the shar instead
of SHAR_EOF.
- -f, --basename
-
Causes only simple filenames to be used when restoring, which is
useful when building a shar from several directories or another
directory. (If a directory name is passed to shar, the substructure of that directory will
be restored whether or not -f is
used.)
- -g level, --level-for-gzip=level
-
Use -level as a parameter to gzip (when doing compression). Default is 9.
The -g option turns on the -z option by default.
- --help
-
Print a help summary on standard output, then exit.
- -l nn, --whole-size-limit=nn
-
Limit the output file size to nn kilobytes but
don't split input files. Requires use of -o.
- -m, --no-timestamp
-
Don't generate touch commands to restore the file
modification dates when unpacking files from the archive.
- -n name, --archive-name=name
-
Name of archive to be included in the header of the shar files.
Required if the -a option is used.
- --no-i18n
-
Do not produce internationalized shell archives; use default English
messages. By default, shar produces
archives that will try to output messages in the
unpacker's preferred language (as determined by
LANG/LC_MESSAGES).
- -o prefix, --output-prefix=prefix
-
Save the archive to files prefix.01 through
prefix.nn (instead of
sending it to standard output). This option must be used when either
-l or -L is used.
- -p, --intermix-type
-
Allow positional parameter options. The options -B, -T,
-z, and -Z may be embedded, and files to the right of
the option will be processed in the specified mode.
- --print-text-domain-dir
-
Print the directory shar looks in to
find message files for different languages, then immediately exit.
- -q, --quiet, --silent
-
Turn off verbose mode.
- -s who@where, --submitter=who@where
-
Supply submitter name and address, instead of allowing shar to determine it automatically.
- --version
-
Print the version number of the program on standard output, then exit.
- -w, --no-character-count
-
Do not check each file with wc -c
after unpacking. The default is to check.
- -x, --no-check-existing
-
Overwrite existing files without checking. Default is to check and
not overwrite existing files. If -c
is passed as a parameter to the script when unpacking (sh archive -c), existing files will be overwritten
unconditionally. See also -X.
- -z, --gzip
-
gzip and uuencode all files prior to packing. Must be
unpacked with uudecode and gunzip (or zcat).
- -B, --uuencode
-
Treat all files as binary; use uuencode prior to packing. This increases the
size of the archive, and it must be unpacked with uudecode.
- -D, --no-md5-digest
-
Do not use md5sum digest to verify
the unpacked files. The default is to check.
- -F, --force-prefix
-
Force the prefix character to be prepended to every line even if not
required. May slightly increase the size of the archive, especially
if -B or -Z is used.
- -L nn, --split-size-limit=nn
-
Limit output file size to nn kilobytes and split
files if necessary. The archive parts created with this option must
be unpacked in the correct order. Requires use of -o.
- -M, --mixed-uuencode
-
Pack files in mixed mode (the default). Distinguishes files as either
text or binary; binaries are uuencoded prior to packing.
- -P, --no-piping
-
Use temporary files instead of pipes in the shar file.
- -Q, --quiet-unshar
-
Disable verbose mode.
- -S, --stdin-file-list
-
Read list of files to be packed from standard input rather than from
the command line. Input must be in a form similar to that generated
by the find command, with one
filename per line.
- -T, --text-files
-
Treat all files as text.
- -V, --vanilla-operation
-
Produce shars that rely only upon the existence of sed and echo
in the unsharing environment.
- -X, --query-user
-
Prompt user to ask if files should be overwritten when unpacking.
- -Z, --compress
-
Compress and uuencode all files prior to packing.
Print keycodes, scancodes, or ASCII codes of keys pressed on the
keyboard. The default is to show keycodes. In keycode and scancode
mode, the program terminates 10 seconds after the last key is
pressed. In ASCII mode, press Ctrl-D to exit. This command may not
function properly under the X Window System, which also reads from
the console device.
Options
- -a, --ascii
-
Print the ASCII character, decimal, octal, and hexadecimal values of
keys pressed.
- -h, --help
-
Print version number and help message, then exit.
- -k, --keycodes
-
Print keycodes associated with key-press events. This is the default
mode.
- -s, --scancodes
-
Print the keyboard scancodes associated with key-press events.
showmount [options] [host]
|
|
NFS/NIS command. Show information about an NFS server. This
information is maintained by the mountd server on host.
The default value for host is the value returned
by hostname. With no options, show
the clients that have mounted directories from the host. showmount is usually found in
/usr/sbin, which is not in the default search
path.
Options
- -a, --all
-
Print all remote mounts in the format
hostname:directory, where
hostname is the name of the client and
directory is the root of the filesystem that has
been mounted.
- -d, --directories
-
List directories that have been remotely mounted by clients.
- -e, --exports
-
Print the list of exported filesystems.
- -h, --help
-
Provide a short help summary.
- --no-headers
-
Do not print headers.
- -v, --version
-
Report the current version of the program.
Overwrite a file to make the contents unrecoverable, and delete the
file afterwards if requested.
Options
- -
-
Shred standard output.
- -f, --force
-
Force permissions to allow writing to files.
- --help
-
Print help message and exit.
- -nnum, --iterations=num
-
Overwrite files num times (default is 25).
- -snum, --size=num
-
Shred num bytes. num can be
expressed with suffixes (e.g., K,
M, or G).
- -u, --remove
-
Remove file after overwriting. shred
does not remove the file unless this option is specified.
- -v, --verbose
-
Verbose mode.
- --version
-
Print version information and exit.
- -x, --exact
-
Shred the exact file size; do not round up to the next full block.
- -z, --zero
-
On the final pass, overwrite with zeros to hide the shredding.
shutdown [options] when [message]
|
|
System administration command. Terminate all processing.
when may be a specific time (in
hh:mm format), a number of
minutes to wait (in +m format), or now. A broadcast message
notifies all users to log off the system. Processes are signaled with
SIGTERM to allow them to exit
gracefully. /etc/init is called to perform the
actual shutdown, which consists of placing the system in runlevel 1.
Only privileged users can execute the shutdown command, although init may call shutdown with root privileges when the
CTRL-ALT-DEL key combination is pressed from the console keyboard.
Broadcast messages, default or defined, are displayed at regular
intervals during the grace period; the closer the shutdown time, the
more frequent the message.
Options
- -a
-
When called from init, shut down
only if one of the users listed in the file
/etc/shutdown.allow is currently logged in.
- -c
-
Cancel a shutdown that is in progress.
- -F
-
Force a filesystem check (fsck) on
reboot.
- -f
-
Reboot fast, by suppressing the normal call to fsck when rebooting.
- -h
-
Halt the system when shutdown is complete.
- -k
-
Print the warning message, but suppress actual shutdown.
- -r
-
Reboot the system when shutdown is complete.
- -t num
-
Ensure a num-second delay between killing
processes and changing the runlevel.
size [options] [objfile...]
|
|
Print the number of bytes of each section of
objfile and its total size. If
objfile is not specified,
a.out is used.
Options
- -d
-
Display the size in decimal and hexadecimal.
- --format=format
-
Imitate the size command from either
System V (--format sysv) or BSD
(--format berkeley).
- --help
-
Print help message, then exit.
- -o
-
Display the size in octal and hexadecimal.
- --radix=num
-
Specify how to display the size: in hexadecimal and decimal (if
num is 10 or 16) or hexadecimal and octal (if
num is 8).
- -t, --totals
-
Show object totals. Works only with Berkeley format listings.
- --target=bfdname
-
Specify object format by binary file descriptor name. Use -h for a list of supported object formats.
- -x
-
Display the size in hexadecimal and decimal.
- -A
-
Imitate System V's size command.
- -B
-
Imitate BSD's size
command.
- -V, --version
-
Print version, then exit.
skill [signal] [options] processes
snice [priority] [options] processes
|
|
Send a signal to processes or reset the
priority. The default signal for skill is TERM, and the default priority for snice is +4 but can be in the range +20
(slowest) to -20 (fastest). The selection options -c, -p,
-t, and -u are not required, but can be specified to
insure that processes are interpreted correctly.
Options
- -c
-
The next argument is a command.
- -i
-
Use interactive mode.
- -l, -L
-
List available signals.
- -n
-
Display the process ID, but take no other action.
- -p
-
The next argument is a process ID.
- -t
-
The next argument is a tty or pty.
- -u
-
The next argument is a username.
- -v
-
Verbose mode.
TCP/IP command. Attach serial lines as network interfaces, thereby
preparing them for use as point-to-point connections. Only a
privileged user may attach or detach a network interface.
Options
- -c command
-
Run command when the connection is severed.
- -d
-
Debugging mode.
- -e
-
Exit immediately after initializing the line.
- -h
-
Exit when the connection is severed.
- -l
-
Create UUCP-style lockfile in /var/spool/uucp.
- -L
-
Enable three-wire operation.
- -m
-
Suppress initialization of the line to 8-bit raw mode.
- -n
-
Similar to mesg -n.
- -p protocol
-
Specify protocol, which may be slip, adaptive, ppp, or kiss.
- -q
-
Quiet mode; suppress messages.
- -s speed
-
Specify line speed.
sleep amount[units]
sleep option
|
|
Wait a specified amount of time before executing
another command. units may be s (seconds), m (minutes), h (hours), or d (days). The default for
units is seconds.
Options
- --help
-
Print usage information and exit.
- --version
-
Print version information and exit.
snice [priority] [options] processes
|
|
Reset the priority for processes. The default
priority is +4. See skill for the
possible options.
Sort the lines of the named files. Compare
specified fields for each pair of lines; if no fields are specified,
compare them by byte, in machine collating sequence. If no files are
specified or if the file is -, the
input is taken from standard input. See also uniq, comm,
and join.
Options
- -b, --ignore-leading-blanks
-
Ignore leading spaces and tabs.
- -c, --check
-
Check whether files are already sorted and, if
so, produce no output.
- -d, --dictionary-order
-
Sort in dictionary order.
- -f, --ignore-case
-
Fold; ignore uppercase/lowercase differences.
- -g, --general-numeric-sort
-
Sort in general numeric order.
- --help
-
Print a help message and then exit.
- -i, --ignore-nonprinting
-
Ignore nonprinting characters (those outside ASCII range 040-176).
- -n
-
Sort in arithmetic order.
- -k n[,m], --key=n[,m]
-
Skip n-1 fields and stop at
m-1 fields (i.e., start sorting at the
nth field, where the fields are numbered
beginning with 1).
- -ofile
-
Put output in file.
- -m, --merge
-
Merge already sorted input files.
- -r, --reverse
-
Reverse the order of the sort.
- -s, --stable
-
Stabilize sort by disabling last-resort comparison.
- -tc, --field-separator=c
-
Separate fields with c (default is a tab).
- -u, --unique
-
Identical lines in input file appear only one time in output.
- -z, --zero-terminated
-
End lines with zero byte, not with newline.
- --version
-
Print version information and then exit.
- -M, --month-sort
-
Attempt to treat the first three characters as a month designation
(JAN, FEB, etc.). In comparisons, treat JAN < FEB and any invalid
name for a month as less than a valid month.
- -Ssize, --buffer-size=size
-
Set the size of the main memory buffer to size,
which may include a suffix; e.g., K (1024, the default) or M.
- -T tempdir, --temporary-directory=dir
-
Directory pathname to be used for temporary files.
Examples
List files by decreasing number of lines:
wc -l * | sort -r
Alphabetize a list of words, remove duplicates, and print the
frequency of each word:
sort -fd wordlist | uniq -c
Sort the password file numerically by the third field (user ID):
sort -nk3,4 -t: /etc/passwd
split [options] [infile [prefix]]
|
|
Split infile into equal-sized segments.
infile remains unchanged, and the results are
written to prefixaa, prefixab, and so on. The default prefix is x, giving the output files xaa, xab,
etc. If infile is - or missing, standard input is read. See also
csplit.
Options
- -n
-
Split infile into n new
files.
- -a n, --suffix-length=n
-
Use suffixes of length n (default is 2).
- -b n[b|k|m], --bytes=n[b|k|m]
-
Split infile into n-byte
segments. Alternate blocksizes may be specified:
- b
-
512 bytes.
- k
-
1 kilobyte.
- m
-
1 megabyte.
- -C bytes[b|k|m], --line-bytes=bytes[b|k|m]
-
Put a maximum of bytes into file; insist on
adding complete lines.
- -l n, --lines=n
-
Split infile into n-line
segments (default is 1000).
- --help
-
Print a help message and then exit.
- --verbose
-
Print a message for each output file.
- --version
-
Print version information and then exit.
- -
-
Take input from the standard input.
Examples
Break bigfile into 1000-line segments:
split bigfile
Join four files, then split them into 10-line files named
new.aa, new.ab, and so on.
Note that without the -, new. would be treated as a nonexistent input
file:
cat list[1-4] | split -10 - new.
ssh [options] hostname [command]
|
|
Securely log a user into a remote system and run commands on that
system. The version of ssh described
here is the OpenSSH client. ssh can
use either Version 1 (SSH1) or Version 2 (SSH2) of the SSH protocol.
SSH2 is preferable, as it provides better encryption methods and
greater connection integrity. The hostname can be specified either as
hostname or as
user@hostname. If a command is specified, the
user is authenticated, the command is executed, and the connection is
closed. Otherwise, a terminal session is opened on the remote system.
See later under "Escape characters"
for functions that can be supported through an escape character. The
default escape character is a tilde (~). The exit status returned
from ssh is the exit status from the
remote system or 255 if there was an error.
Options
- -1
-
Try only SSH1.
- -2
-
Try only SSH2.
- -4
-
Use only IPv4 addresses.
- -6
-
Use only IPv6 addresses.
- -a
-
Disable forwarding of the authentication agent connection.
- -A
-
Allow forwarding of the authentication agent connection. Can also be
specified on a per-host basis in a configuration file.
- -b bind_address
-
Specify the interface to transmit from when there are multiple
available interfaces or aliased addresses.
- -c blowfish|3des|des|ciphers
-
Select the cipher for encrypting the session. The default is
3des. For SSH2, a comma-separated
list of ciphers can also be specified, with the
ciphers listed in order of preference. des is supported only for legacy SSH1
compatibility and otherwise should not be used.
- -C
-
Enable compression. Useful mainly for slow connections. The default
compression level can be set on a per-host basis in the configuration
file with the CompressionLevel
option.
- -D port
-
Enable dynamic application-level port forwarding using
port on the local side. Can be specified in the
configuration file. Only root can forward privileged ports.
- -e char|^char|none
-
Set the escape character (default ~). The escape character must be
the first character on a line. If none is specified, disable the use of an
escape character.
- -f
-
Run interactively for user authentication, then go into background
mode for command execution. Implies -n.
- -F configfile
-
Specify a per-user configuration file (default is
$HOME/.ssh/config).
- -g
-
Allow remote hosts to connect to local forwarded ports.
- -i idfile
-
Use idfile to read identity (private key) for
RSA or DSA authentication. Default is
$HOME/.ssh/id_rsa or
$HOME/.ssh/id_dsa for SSH2, or
$HOME/.ssh/identity for SSH1. You can specify
more than one -i option on the
command line or in the configuration file.
- -I device
-
Specify a smartcard device from which to get the
user's private RSA key.
- -k
-
Disable Kerberos ticket and AFS token forwarding. Can be set on a
per-host basis in the configuration file.
- -l user
-
Log in as user on the remote system. Can be
specified on a per-host basis in the configuration file.
- -L port:host:hostport
-
Forward port on the local host to the specified
remote host and port. Can be specified in the configuration file.
Only root can forward privileged ports. For IPv6, an alternative
syntax is port/host/hostport.
- -m macspec
-
For SSH2, the contents of macspec specify
message authentication code (MAC) algorithms to use.
macspec is a comma-separated list of algorithms
in order of preference.
- -n
-
Get standard input as a redirection from
/dev/null. Used to prevent reading from standard
input, which is required when running ssh in the background. Useful for running X
programs on a remote host.
- -N
-
Do not execute a remote command. Useful with SSH2 for port forwarding.
- -o option
-
Specify options in configuration-file format. Useful for specifying
options that have no command-line equivalent.
- -p port
-
Specify the port on the remote host to which ssh is to connect. Can be specified on a
per-host basis in the configuration file.
- -P
-
Use a nonprivileged port for outgoing connections. Useful if a
firewall prevents connections from privileged ports.
- -q
-
Run quietly, suppressing warnings and error messages.
- -R port:host:hostport
-
Forward port on the remote host to the local
host:hostport. Can be specified in the
configuration file. You can forward privileged ports only if you are
logged in as root on the remote host. For IPv6, an alternative syntax
is port/host/hostport.
- -s
-
For SSH2, request invocation of a subsystem on the remote host to be
used for another application such as sftp. The desired subsystem is specified as
the remote command.
- -t
-
Force pseudo-tty allocation. Multiple -t options can be specified to force tty
allocation even when ssh has no
local tty.
- -T
-
Disable pseudo-tty allocation.
- -v
-
Verbose mode. Useful for debugging. Specify multiple -v options to increase verbosity.
- -x
-
Disable X11 forwarding.
- -X
-
Enable X11 forwarding. Can be specified on a per-host basis in the
configuration file.
Escape characters
- ~.
-
Disconnect.
- ~~
-
Send a single ~.
- ~#
-
List forwarded connections.
- ~&
-
Run ssh in the background at logout,
while waiting for a forwarded connection or X11 sessions to
terminate.
- ~?
-
Display the available escape characters.
- ~C
-
Open a command line. Useful for adding port forwardings when using
the -L and -R options.
- ~R
-
Request rekeying of the connection. Useful only for SSH2 and if the
peer supports it.
- ~^Z
-
Suspend the connection.
Environment variables
- DISPLAY
-
Set by SSH to hostname:n for forwarding X11
connections. hostname is the host where the
shell is running and n is an integer greater
than zero.
- HOME
-
The path to the user's home directory.
- LOGNAME
-
The same as USER; set only for
compatibility with systems that use LOGNAME.
- MAIL
-
The path to the user's mailbox.
- PATH
-
The default PATH as specified when
SSH was compiled.
- SSH_ASKPASS
-
Can be set to the name of a program to run to open an X11 window and
read the user's passphrase if ssh does not have an associated terminal.
- SSH_AUTH_SOCK
-
The path of a Unix-domain socket for communicating with the agent.
- SSH_CLIENT
-
Three space-separated values that contain the client IP address, the
client port number, and the server port number.
- SSH_ORIGINAL_COMMAND
-
The original command line, including arguments, if a forced command
is executed.
- SSH_TTY
-
The path to the tty device associated with the current shell or
command. Not set if there is no associated tty.
- TZ
-
The time zone, passed from the SSH daemon, if it was set when the
daemon was started.
- USER
-
The name of the user logging in.
Files
ssh uses the following files in the
user's home directory:
- $HOME/.rhosts
-
Lists host/user pairs allowed to log in. Used with rhosts authentication.
- $HOME/.shosts
-
Like .rhosts, but allows
rhosts authentication without permitting login
with rlogin or rsh.
- $HOME/.ssh/authorized_keys
-
Lists RSA/DSA public keys that can be used to log in as this user.
- $HOME/.ssh/config
-
The user's configuration file.
- $HOME/.ssh/environment
-
Additional environment variable definitions.
- $HOME/.ssh/identity, $HOME/.ssh/id_dsa, $HOME/.ssh/id_rsa
-
The authentication identity of the user for SSH1 RSA, SSH2 DSA, and
SSH2 RSA, respectively.
- $HOME/.ssh/identity.pub, $HOME/.ssh/id_dsa.pub, $HOME/.ssh/id_rsa.pub
-
The public key for user authentication for SSH1 RSA, SSH2 DSA, and
SSH2 RSA, respectively.
- $HOME/.ssh/known_hosts
-
Contains host keys for all hosts the user has logged into that are
not already in the systemwide file at
/etc/ssh/ssh_known_hosts.
- $HOME/.ssh/rc
-
Contains commands executed by ssh
after the user has logged in but before the shell or command is
started.
ssh-add [options] [files]
ssh-add -e|-s reader
|
|
Add RSA or DSA identities to the authentication agent (see ssh-agent), which must be running and must be
an ancestor of the current process. With no arguments specified, add
the files $HOME/.ssh/id_rsa,
$HOME/.ssh/id_dsa, and
$HOME/.ssh/identity. If any
files are specified, add those instead,
prompting for a passphrase if required.
Options
- -d
-
Remove an identity from the agent instead of adding one.
- -D
-
Delete all identities from the agent.
- -e reader
-
Remove key in specified smartcard reader.
- -l
-
List fingerprints of all identities known to the agent.
- -L
-
List public key parameters of all identities known to the agent.
- -s
-
Add key in smartcard reader.
- -t life
-
Set maximum lifetime when adding identities to an agent. The value of
life can be in seconds or another time format
specified in sshd.
- -x
-
Lock the agent with a password.
- -X
-
Unlock the agent.
ssh-agent [options] [command [arguments]]
|
|
Hold private keys used for public key authentication. ssh-agent is usually executed at the beginning
of an X or login session; then all other windows or programs given as
command are run as clients of ssh-agent. When a command is specified, the
command and any arguments are executed. The agent dies when the
command completes. Use ssh-add to
add keys to the agent. Operations that require a private key are
performed by the agent, which returns the results to the requestor.
Options
- -a bind_addr
-
Bind the agent to the socket bind_addr (default is
/tmp/ssh-nnnnnnnn/agent, where
nnnnnnnn is a generated number).
- -c
-
Write csh commands to standard
output. This is the default if the environment variable SHELL looks like a csh-type shell.
- -d
-
Debug mode.
- -k
-
Kill the current agent.
- -s
-
Write Bourne shell commands to standard output. This is the default
if the environment variable SHELL
does not look like a csh-type
command.
Generate, manage, and convert authentication keys for ssh.
Options
- -b bits
-
Specify the number of bits in the key. The minimum is 512 and the
default is 1024.
- -B
-
Show the bubblebabble digest (a digest represented as a string that
looks like real words) for the private or public key file specified
with -f.
- -c
-
Change the comment in the private and public key files (for RSA1 keys
only).
- -C comment
-
Specify the new comment.
- -D reader
-
Download the RSA public key from the smartcard in
reader.
- -e
-
Read an OpenSSH private or public key file and write it in SECSH
Public Key File Format to standard output for exporting to a
commercial SSH.
- -f file
-
Specify the filename of the key file.
- -i
-
Read an SSH2-compatible unencrypted private or public key file and
write an OpenSSH-compatible key to standard output. Used to import
keys from a commercial SSH.
- -l
-
Show fingerprint of public or private RSA1 key file specified with
-f.
- -N passphrase
-
Specify the new passphrase.
- -p
-
Change the passphrase for a private key file. Prompt for the file,
the old passphrase, and twice for the new passphrase.
- -P passphrase
-
Specify the old passphrase.
- -q
-
Operate in quiet mode.
- -t type
-
Specify the type of key to create. Possible values of
type are rsa1
for SSH1, and rsa or dsa for SSH2.
- -U reader
-
Upload an existing RSA private key to the smartcard in
reader.
- -y
-
Read a private OpenSSH-format file and print a public key to standard
output.
Gather public and private host keys from a number of hosts. Can be
used in scripts.
Options
- -4
-
Use IPv4 addresses only.
- -6
-
Use IPv6 addresses only.
- -f file
-
Read hostnames or addrlist namelist pairs from
file. If - is
specified instead of a filename, read hosts or addrlist
namelist pairs from standard input.
- -p port
-
Specify the port to connect to on the remote host.
- -t type
-
Specify the type of key to get from the scanned hosts. Possible
values are rsa1 for SSH1 (default)
or rsa or dsa for SSH2. Specify multiple values in a
comma-separated list.
- -T timeout
-
Specify the timeout for attempting a connection, in seconds.
- -v
-
Verbose mode.
TCP/IP command. Server for the ssh
program, providing a secure remote login and remote execution
facility equivalent to rlogin and
rsh. Normally started at boot,
sshd listens for incoming
connections, forking a new daemon when one is detected. The forked
daemon handles authentication, command execution, and encryption.
Most implementations of sshd support
both SSH protocols 1 and 2. The following options are those used by
OpenSSH, OpenBSD's Secure Shell implementation.
Options
- -b bits
-
Use the specified number of bits in the server
key. Default is 768.
- -d
-
Run sshd in the foreground and send
verbose debug information to the system log. Process only one
connection. Use the specified number of bits in
the server key. This option may be specified from one to three times.
Each additional -d increases the
level of information sent to the system log.
- -e
-
Send output to standard error instead of the system log.
- -f file
-
Read configuration information from file instead
of the default configuration file
/etc/ssh/sshd_config.
- -g seconds
-
Set the grace time a client has to authenticate itself before the
server disconnects and exits. The default is 600 seconds. A value of
means there is no limit.
- -h keyfile
-
Read the host's cryptographic key from the specified
keyfile instead of from the default file
/etc/ssh/ssh_host_key for SSH protocol 1, and
the default files /etc/ssh/ssh_host_rsa_key and
/etc/ssh/ssh_host_dsa_key for SSH protocol 2.
The -h option may be given more than
once to specify multiple keyfiles.
- -i
-
Use when running sshd from inetd.
- -k seconds
-
Set how often the version 1 server key should be regenerated. Default
value is 3600 seconds. If set to 0 seconds, the key will never be
regenerated.
- -o setting
-
Pass a configuration file setting as an option.
- -p port
-
Listen for connections on port. The default is
22. More than one -p option may be
specified. This option overrides ports specified in a configuration
file.
- -q
-
Send no messages to the system log.
- -t
-
Test configuration files and keys, then exit.
- -u namelength
-
Specify the length of the remote hostname field in the UTMP structure
as specifed in utmp.h. A
namelength of 0 will cause sshd to write dotted decimal values instead of
hostnames to the utmp file and prevent DNS
requests unless required by the authentication mechanism.
- -D
-
Do not detach from the foreground process.
- -4
-
Use only IPv4 addresses.
- -6
-
Use only IPv6 addresses.
Print out the contents of an inode as they appear to the stat system call in a human-readable format.
The error messages "Can't stat
file" and "Can't
lstat file" usually mean the file
doesn't exist.
"Can't readlink
file" generally indicates that something is wrong
with a symbolic link.
Options
- -c format
-
Display the output as specified by format.
- -f
-
Display information about the filesystem where the file is located,
not about the file itself.
- -l
-
For links, display information about the files found by following the
links.
- -s
-
For SE (Security Enhanced) Linux, show security information, if
it's available, in addition to stat's normal output.
- -t
-
Print the output tersely, in a form suitable for parsing by other
programs.
- -v
-
Print version information and exit.
Output
stat and stat
-l display the following:
Device number
Inode number
Access rights
Number of hard links
Owner's user ID and name, if available
Owner's group ID and name, if available
Device type for inode device
Total size, in bytes
Number of blocks allocated
I/O blocksize
Last access time
Last modification time
Last change time
Security context for SE Linux
If -f is specified, stat displays the following information about
the filesystem:
Format
The printf(3) flag characters
#, 0, -,
+, and space can be used in
format. In addition, the field width and
precision options can be used.
If -c format is
specified, the following sequences can be used for
format:
- %a
-
Access rights in octal
- %A
-
Access rights in human-readable form
- %b
-
Number of blocks allocated
- %c
-
SE Linux security context
- %d
-
Device number in decimal
- %D
-
Device number in hex
- %f
-
Raw mode in hex
- %F
-
File type
- %g
-
Owner's group ID
- %G
-
Owner's group name
- %h
-
Number of hard links
- %i
-
Inode number
- %n
-
Filename
- %N
-
Quoted filename. If file is a symbolic link, include path to original.
- %o
-
I/O blocksize
- %s
-
Total size, in bytes
- %S
-
SE Linux SID (security identifier)
- %t
-
Major device type in hex
- %T
-
Minor device type in hex
- %u
-
Owner's user ID
- %U
-
Owner's username
- %x
-
Last access time
- %X
-
Last access time as seconds since the Epoch
- %y
-
Last modification time (modification of the file contents)
- %Y
-
Last modification time as seconds since the Epoch
- %z
-
Time of last change (modification of the inode)
- %Z
-
Time of last change as seconds since the Epoch
If both -c
format and -f
are specified, the following sequences can be used for
format:
- %a
-
Free blocks available to nonroot user
- %b
-
Total data blocks in filesystem
- %c
-
Total file nodes in filesystem
- %d
-
Free file nodes in filesystem
- %f
-
Free blocks in filesystem
- %i
-
Filesystem ID, _ _val[0] in hex
- %I
-
Filesystem ID, _ _val[1] in hex
- %l
-
Maximum filename length
- %n
-
Filename
- %s
-
Optimal transfer blocksize
- %t
-
Type in hex
- %T
-
Type in human-readable form
Examples
Sample output from the command stat
/:
stat /
File: "/"
Size: 4096 Blocks: 8 IO Block: 4096 Directory
Device: 303h/771d Inode: 2 Links: 19
Access: (0755/drwxr-xr-x) Uid: ( 0/ root) Gid: ( 0/ root)
Access: Thu Jan 2 04:02:40 2003
Modify: Wed Jan 1 23:03:20 2003
Change: Wed Jan 1 23:03:20 2003
Sample output with -f, displaying
information about the filesystem:
stat -f /
File: "/"
ID: 0 0 Namelen: 255 Type: ext2/ext3
Blocks: Total: 2612475 Free: 1869472 Available: 1736735 Size: 4096
Inodes: Total: 1329696 Free: 1150253
System administration command. The NFS status server, statd, reports server status to clients like
the rup command.
Options
- -d
-
Debugging mode; log verbose information to standard error.
- -F
-
Run statd in the foreground.
- -n hostname, --name hostname
-
Specify a name to use for the local hostname. By default this is read
using the gethostname function.
- -o port, --outgoing-port port
-
Specify the port that statd should use for its outgoing requests to
other servers. When not specified, a port is assigned by portmap.
- -p port, --port port
-
Specify the incoming port that statd should listen on. When not specified, a
port is assigned by portmap.
- -V
-
Print version information, then exit.
- -?
-
Print help message, then exit.
strace [options] command [arguments]
|
|
Trace the system calls and signals for command
and arguments. strace shows you how data is passed between
the program and the system kernel. With no options, strace prints a line to stderr for each system
call. It shows the call name, arguments given, return value, and any
error messages generated. A signal is printed with both its signal
symbol and a descriptive string.
Options
- -a n
-
Align the return values in column n.
- -c
-
Count all calls and signals and create a summary report when the
program has ended.
- -d
-
Debug mode. Print debugging information for strace on stderr.
- -e [keyword=][!]values
-
Pass an expression to strace to
limit the types of calls or signals that are traced or to change how
they are displayed. If no keyword is given,
trace is assumed. The
values can be given as a comma-separated list.
Preceding the list with an exclamation mark (!) negates the list. The
special values all and none
are valid, as are the values listed with the
following keywords.
- abbrev=names
-
Abbreviate output from large structures for system calls listed in
names.
- read=descriptors
-
Print all data read from the given file
descriptors.
- signal=symbols
-
Trace the listed signal symbols (for example,
signal=SIGIO,SIGHUP).
- trace=sets
-
sets may be a list of system call names or one
of the following:
file
|
Calls that take a filename as an argument
|
ipc
|
Interprocess communication
|
network
|
Network-related
|
process
|
Process management
|
signal
|
Signal-related
|
- raw=names
-
Print arguments for the given system calls in hexadecimal.
- verbose=names
-
Unabbreviate structures for the given system calls. Default is
none.
- write=descriptors
-
Print all data written to the given file
descriptors.
- -f
-
Trace forked processes.
- -ff
-
Write system calls for forked processes to separate files named
filename.pid when using the -o option.
- -h
-
Print help and exit.
- -i
-
Print instruction pointer with each system call.
- -o filename
-
Write output to filename instead of stderr. If
filename starts with the pipe symbol |, treat
the rest of the name as a command to which output should be piped.
- -O n
-
Override strace's
built-in timing estimates, and just subtract n
microseconds from the timing of each system call to adjust for the
time it takes to measure the call.
- -p pid
-
Attach to the given process ID and begin tracking. strace can track more than one process if more
than one option -p is given. Type
Ctrl-c to end the trace.
- -q
-
Quiet mode. Suppress attach and detach messages from strace.
- -r
-
Relative timestamp. Print time in microseconds between system calls.
- -s n
-
Print only the first n characters of a string.
Default value is 32.
- -S value
-
Sort output of -c option by the
given value. value may be
calls, name, time,
or nothing. Default is time.
- -T
-
Print time spent in each system call.
- -t
-
Print time of day on each line of output.
- -tt
-
Print time of day with microseconds on each line of output.
- -ttt
-
Print timestamp on each line as number of seconds since the Epoch.
- -u username
-
Run command as username. Needed when tracing
setuid and setgid programs.
- -V
-
Print version and exit.
- -v
-
Verbose. Do not abbreviate structure information.
- -x
-
Print all non-ASCII strings in hexadecimal.
- -xx
-
Print all strings in hexadecimal.
strfile [options] input_file [output_file]
unstr [-c delimiter] input_file[.ext] [output_file]
|
|
strfile creates a random-access file
for storing strings. The input file should be a file containing
groups of lines separated by a line containing a single percent sign
(or other specified delimiter character). strfile creates an output file that contains a
header structure and a table of file offsets for each group of lines,
allowing random access of the strings. The output file, if not
specified on the command line, is named
sourcefile.dat. unstr undoes the work of strfile, printing out the strings contained in
the input file in the order they are listed in the header file data.
If no output file is specified, unstr prints to standard output; otherwise, it
prints to the file specified. unstr
can also globally change the delimiter character in a strings file.
Options
Of the following options, only -c
can be used with unstr. All other
options apply only to strfile.
- -c delimiter
-
Change the delimiting character from the percent sign to
delimiter. Valid for both strfile and unstr.
- -i
-
Ignore case when ordering the strings.
- -o
-
Order the strings alphabetically.
- -r
-
Randomize access to the strings.
- -s
-
Run silently; don't give a summary message when
finished.
- -x
-
Set the STR_ROTATED bit in the
header str_flags field.
Search each file specified and print any
printable character strings found that are at least four characters
long and followed by an unprintable character.
Options
- -, -a, --all
-
Scan entire object files; default is to scan only the initialized and
loaded sections for object files.
- -e encoding, --encoding=encoding
-
Specify the character encoding of the strings to be found. Possible
values are:
- b
-
16-bit big-endian
- B
-
32-bit big-endian
- l
-
16-bit little-endian
- L
-
32-bit little-endian
- s
-
Single-byte character, such as ASCII, ISO-8859, etc. (the default)
- -f, --print-file-name
-
Print the name of the file before each string.
- -min-len, -n min-len, --bytes=min-len
-
Print only strings that are at least min-len
characters.
- -o
-
The same as -t o.
- -t base, --radix=base
-
Print the offset within the file before each string, in the format
specified by base:
- d
-
Decimal
- o
-
Octal
- x
-
Hexadecimal
- --target=format
-
Specify an alternative object code format to the system default.
Valid targets include elf32-i386,
a.out-i386-linux, efi-app-ia32, elf32-little, elf32-big, srec, symbolsrec, tekhex, binary, ihex,
and trad-core.
- --help
-
Print help message and then exit. The help message includes a list of
valid targets.
- -v, --version
-
Print version information and then exit.
Remove symbols from object files, thereby
reducing file sizes and freeing disk space.
Options
- -Fbfdname, --target=bfdname
-
Specify object format for both input and output by binary file
descriptor name bfdname. Use option -h to see a list of supported formats.
- -I bfdname, --input-target=bfdname
-
Expect object format bfdname for input.
- --help
-
Print help message, then exit.
- -K symbol, --keep-symbol=symbol
-
Delete all symbols except the specified symbol.
This option may be used more than once.
- -N symbol, --strip-symbol=symbol
-
Remove symbol from the source file.
- -O bfdname, --output-target=bfdname
-
Use object format bfdname for output.
- -o file
-
Write stripped object to file instead of
replacing the original. Only one object file at a time may be
stripped when using this option.
- -p, --preserve-dates
-
Preserve access and modification times.
- -R section, --remove-section=section
-
Delete section.
- -S, -g, -d, --strip-debug
-
Strip debugging symbols.
- -s, --strip-all
-
Strip all symbols.
- --strip-unneeded
-
Remove symbols not needed for relocation processing.
- -V, --version
-
Print version and exit.
- -v, --verbose
-
Verbose mode.
- -X, --discard-locals
-
Strip local symbols that were generated by the compiler.
- -x, --discard-all
-
Strip nonglobal symbols.
Set terminal I/O options for the current standard input device.
Without options, stty reports the
terminal settings that differ from those set by running stty sane, where ^ indicates the Ctrl key and
^` indicates a null value. Most modes can be negated using an
optional - (shown in brackets). The corresponding description is also
shown in brackets. Some arguments use non-POSIX extensions; these are
marked with *.
Options
- -a, --all
-
Report all option settings.
- -F, --device
-
Open the specified device and use it instead of standard input.
- -g, --save
-
Report settings in stty-readable
form (i.e., hex).
- --help
-
Print help message and exit.
- --version
-
Print version information and exit.
Control modes
- n
-
Set terminal baud rate to n (e.g., 2400).
- [-]clocal
-
[Enable] disable modem control.
- [-]cread
-
[Disable] enable the receiver.
- [-]crtscts*
-
[Disable] enable RTS/CTS handshaking.
- csbits
-
Set character size to bits, which must be 5, 6,
7, or 8.
- [-]cstopb
-
[1] 2 stop bits per character.
- [-]hup
-
[Do not] hang up connection on last close.
- [-]hupcl
-
Same as previous.
- ispeed n
-
Set terminal input baud rate to n.
- ospeed n
-
Set terminal output baud rate to n.
- [-]parenb
-
[Disable] enable parity generation and detection.
- [-]parodd
-
Use [even] odd parity.
Flow control modes
The following flow control modes are available by combining the
ortsfl, ctsflow, and rtsflow flags:
ortsfl rtsflow ctsflow
|
Enable unidirectional flow control.
|
ortsfl rtsflow -ctsflow
|
Assert RTS when ready to send.
|
ortsfl -rtsflow ctsflow
|
No effect.
|
ortsfl -rtsflow -ctsflow
|
Enable bidirectional flow control.
|
-ortsfl rtsflow ctsflow
|
Enable bidirectional flow control.
|
-ortsfl rtsflow -ctsflow
|
No effect.
|
-ortsfl -rtsflow ctsflow
|
Stop transmission when CTS drops.
|
-ortsfl -rtsflow -ctsflow
|
Disable hardware flow control.
|
Input modes
- [-]brkint
-
[Do not] signal INTR on break.
- [-]icrnl
-
[Do not] map CR to NL on input.
- [-]ignbrk
-
[Do not] ignore break on input.
- [-]igncr
-
[Do not] ignore CR on input.
- [-]ignpar
-
[Do not] ignore parity errors.
- [-]inlcr
-
[Do not] map NL to CR on input.
- [-]inpck
-
[Disable] enable input parity checking.
- [-]istrip
-
[Do not] strip input characters to 7 bits.
- [-]iuclc*
-
[Do not] map uppercase to lowercase on input.
- [-]ixany*
-
Allow [XON] any character to restart output.
- [-]ixoff, [-]tandem
-
[Enable] disable sending of START/STOP characters.
- [-]ixon
-
[Disable] enable XON/XOFF flow control.
- [-]parmrk
-
[Do not] mark parity errors.
- [-]imaxbel*
-
When input buffer is too full to accept a new character, [flush the
input buffer] beep without flushing the input buffer.
Output modes
- bsn
-
Select style of delay for backspaces (0 or 1).
- crn
-
Select style of delay for carriage returns (0-3).
- ffn
-
Select style of delay for formfeeds (0 or 1).
- nln
-
Select style of delay for linefeeds (0 or 1).
- tabn
-
Select style of delay for horizontal tabs (0-3).
- vtn
-
Select style of delay for vertical tabs (0 or 1).
- [-]ocrnl*
-
[Do not] map CR to NL on output.
- [-]ofdel*
-
Set fill character to [NULL] DEL.
- [-]ofill*
-
Delay output with [timing] fill characters.
- [-]olcuc*
-
[Do not] map lowercase to uppercase on output.
- [-]onlcr*
-
[Do not] map NL to CR-NL on output.
- [-]onlret*
-
On the terminal, NL performs [does not perform] the CR function.
- [-]onocr*
-
Do not [do] output CRs at column 0.
- [-]opost
-
[Do not] postprocess output.
Local modes
- [-]echo
-
[Do not] echo every character typed.
- [-]echoe, [-]crterase
-
[Do not] echo ERASE character as BS-space-BS string.
- [-]echok
-
[Do not] echo NL after KILL character.
- [-]echonl
-
[Do not] echo NL.
- [-]icanon
-
[Disable] enable canonical input (ERASE, KILL, WERASE, and RPRINT
processing).
- [-]iexten
-
[Disable] enable extended functions for input data.
- [-]isig
-
[Disable] enable checking of characters against INTR, SUSPEND, and
QUIT.
- [-]noflsh
-
[Enable] disable flush after INTR or QUIT.
- [-]tostop*
-
[Do not] send SIGTTOU when background processes write to the terminal.
- [-]xcase*
-
[Do not] change case on local output.
- [-]echoprt, [-]prterase*
-
When erasing characters, echo them backward, enclosed in \ and /.
- [-]echoctl. [-]ctlecho*
-
Do not echo control characters literally. Use hat notation (e.g.,
^Z).
- [-]echoke [-]crtkill*
-
Erase characters as specified by the echoprt and echoe settings (default is echoctl and echok settings).
Control assignments
- ctrl-char c
-
Set control character to c.
ctrl-char is dsusp (flush input and then send stop),
eof, eol, eol2
(alternate end-of-line), erase,
intr, lnext (treat next character literally),
kill, rprnt (redraw line), quit, start,
stop, susp, swtch,
or werase (erase previous word).
c can be a literal control character, a
character in hat notation (e.g., ^Z), in hex (must begin with 0x), in octal
(must begin with 0), or in decimal. Disable the control character
with values of ^- or undef.
- min n
-
Set the minimum number of characters that will satisfy a read until
the time value has expired when -icanon is set.
- time n
-
Set the number of tenths of a second before reads time out if the
min number of characters have not
been read when -icanon is set.
- line i*
-
Set line discipline to i (1-126).
Combination modes
- [-]cooked
-
Same as [raw]-raw.
- [-]evenp, [-]parity
-
Same as [-]parenb and cs[8]7.
- [-]parity
-
Same as [-]parenb and cs[8]7.
- ek
-
Reset ERASE and KILL characters to Ctrl-h and Ctrl-u, their defaults.
- [-]lcase
-
[Unset] set xcase, iuclc, and olcuc.
- [-]LCASE
-
Same as [-]lcase.
- [-]nl
-
[Unset] set icrnl and onlcr. -nl
also unsets inlcr, igncr, ocrnl,
and onlret, icrnl, onlcr.
- [-]oddp
-
Same as [-]parenb, [-]parodd, and
cs7[8].
- [-]raw
-
[Disable] enable raw input and output (no ERASE, KILL, INTR, QUIT,
EOT, SWITCH, or output postprocessing).
- sane
-
Reset all modes to reasonable values.
- [-]tabs*
-
[Expand to spaces] preserve output tabs.
- [-]cbreak
-
Same as [icanon]-icanon.
- [-]pass8
-
Same as -parenb -istrip cs8.
- [-]litout
-
Same as -parenb -istrip cs8.
- [-]decctlq*
-
Same as -ixany.
- crt
-
Same as echoe echoctl echoke.
- dec
-
Same as echoe echoctl echoke -ixany.
Additionally, set INTERRUPT to ^C,
ERASE to DEL, and KILL to ^U.
Special settings
- ispeed speed
-
Specify input speed.
- ospeed speed
-
Specify output speed.
- rows rows*
-
Specify number of rows.
- cols columns, columns columns*
-
Specify number of columns.
- size*
-
Display current row and column settings.
- speed
-
Display terminal speed.
su [option] [user] [shell_args]
|
|
Create a shell with the effective user ID user.
If no user is specified, create a shell for a
privileged user (i.e., become a superuser). Enter EOF to terminate.
You can run the shell with particular options by passing them as
shell_args (e.g., if the shell runs bash, you can specify -c command to execute
command via bash, or -r
to create a restricted shell).
Options
- -, -l, --login
-
Go through the entire login sequence (i.e., change to
user's environment).
- -c command, --command=command
-
Execute command in the new shell and then exit
immediately. If command is more than one word,
it should be enclosed in quotes. For example:
su -c 'find / -name \*.c -print' nobody
- -f, --fast
-
Start the shell with the -f option,
which suppresses the reading of the .cshrc or
.tcshrc file. Applies to csh and tcsh.
- -m, -p, --preserve-environment
-
Do not reset environment variables.
- -s shell, --shell=shell
-
Execute shell, not the shell specified in
/etc/passwd, unless shell
is restricted.
- --help
-
Print a help message and then exit.
- --version
-
Print version information and then exit.
If you are allowed, execute command as the
superuser. Authorized users of sudo
and the commands they are permitted to execute are listed in the
sudo configuration file,
/etc/sudoers. If an unauthorized user attempts
to run a command, sudo will inform
an administrator via email. By default, it will send the message to
the root account. Users attempting to run commands are prompted for
their password. Once authenticated, sudo sets a timestamp for the user. For five
minutes from the timestamp, the user may execute further commands
without being prompted for their password. This grace period may be
overriden by settings in the /etc/sudoers file.
Options
- -b
-
Execute command in the background.
- -h
-
Print help message, then exit.
- -k
-
Revoke user's sudo
permissions. Similar to -K, but
changes user's timestamp to the Epoch instead of
revoking it.
- -l
-
List all allowed and forbidden commands for the user on the current
host, then exit.
- -p promptstring
-
Use the specified promptstring to prompt for a
password. The string may contain escape codes %u and %h,
which will be replaced with the current user's login
name and local hostname.
- -s
-
Run the shell specified in the SHELL
environment variable, or the default shell specified in
/etc/passwd. If a command is given, it should be
a shell script and not a binary file.
- -u user
-
Run command as the specified user instead of the
root user. This may also be specified as a user ID number using
#uid.
- -v
-
Update timestamp for user. Prompt for password if necessary.
- -H
-
Set the HOME environment variable to
the home directory of the target user.
- -K
-
Remove user's timestamp.
- -L
-
List parameters that may be set as defaults for a user in the
/etc/sudoers file.
- -P
-
Preserve initial user's group membership.
- -S
-
Read password from standard input instead of from the console.
- -V
-
Print version number, then exit. When run by the root user, print
sudo's defaults and
the local network address as well.
- --
-
Stop reading command-line arguments.
Calculate and print a checksum and the number of (1KB) blocks for
file. If no files are specified, or
file is -, read from standard input. Useful for
verifying data transmission.
Options
- -r
-
The default setting. Use the BSD checksum algorithm.
- -s, --sysv
-
Use alternate checksum algorithm as used on System V. The blocksize
is 512 bytes.
- --help
-
Print a help message and then exit.
- --version
-
Print the version number and then exit.
swapoff [options] [devicelist]
|
|
System administration command. Stop making devices and files
specified in devicelist available for swapping
and paging.
Option
- -a
-
Consult /etc/fstab for devices marked sw. Use those in place of the
device argument.
- -h
-
Print help message and then exit.
- -V
-
Display version number and then exit.
System administration command. Make the listed
devices available for swapping and paging.
Options
- -a
-
Consult /etc/fstab for devices marked sw. Use those in place of the
devices argument.
- -e
-
Used with -a. Don't
complain about missing devices.
- -h
-
Print help message, then exit.
- -p priority
-
Specify a priority for the swap area. Higher
priority areas will be used up before lower priority areas are used.
- -s
-
Print swap usage summaries, then exit.
- -V
-
Print version information, then exit.
System administration command. Write filesystem buffers to disk.
sync executes the sync( ) system call. If the system is to be
stopped, sync must be called to
ensure filesystem integrity. Note that shutdown automatically calls sync before shutting down the system.
sync may take several seconds to
complete, so the system should be told to sleep briefly if you are about to manually
call halt or reboot. Note that shutdown is the preferred way to halt or
reboot your system, as it takes care of sync-ing and other housekeeping for you.
System administration command. Examine or modify kernel parameters at
runtime using the /proc/sys filesystem. While
many of these kernel keys can be altered by other utilities,
sysctl provides a single interface
to kernel settings.
Options
- -a, -A
-
Display all available values.
- -e
-
Ignore requests for unknown keys.
- -n
-
Do not print the keyname when printing values.
- -p
-
Reset keys from information specified in
/etc/sysctl.conf.
- -w key=value
-
Write a new value to the specified key.
System administration command. sysklogd provides both syslogd and klogd functionality. By default, it is meant
to behave exactly like the BSD version of syslogd. While the difference should be
completely transparent to the user, sysklogd supports an extended syntax. It is
invoked as syslogd.
sysklogd logs system messages into a
set of files described by the configuration file
/etc/syslog.conf. Each message is one line. A
message can contain a priority code, marked by a number in angle
brackets at the beginning of the line. Priorities are defined in
<sys/syslog.h>. syslogd reads from an Internet domain socket
specified in /etc/services. To bring syslogd down, send it a terminate signal. See
also klogd.
Options
- -a socket
-
Add socket to the list of sockets syslogd listens to.
- -d
-
Turn on debugging.
- -f configfile
-
Specify alternate configuration file.
- -h
-
Forward messages from remote hosts to forwarding hosts.
- -l hostlist
-
Specify hostnames that should be logged with just the hostname, not
the fully qualified domain name. Multiple hosts should be separated
by a colon (:).
- -m markinterval
-
Select number of minutes between mark messages.
- -n
-
Avoid auto-backgrounding. This is needed when starting syslogd from init.
- -p socket
-
Send log to socket instead of
/dev/log.
- -r
-
Receive messages from the network using an Internet domain socket
with the syslog service.
- -s domainlist
-
Strip off domain names specified in domainlist
before logging. Multiple domain names should be separated by a colon
(:).
- -v
-
Print version number, then exit.
- -x
-
Disable domain name lookups for remote messages.
TCP/IP command. See sysklogd.
Named for the common command cat,
tac prints files in reverse to
standard output. Without a filename or with -, it reads from standard
input. By default, tac reverses the
order of the lines, printing the last line first.
Options
- -b, --before
-
Print separator (by default a newline) before the string it delimits.
- -r, --regex
-
Expect separator to be a regular expression.
- -s string, --separator=string
-
Specify alternate separator (default is newline).
- --help
-
Print a help message and then exit.
- --version
-
Print version information and then exit.
Print the last 10 lines of each named file (or
standard input if - is specified) on
standard output. If more than one file is specified, the output
includes a header at the beginning of each file:
= =>filename<= =
Options
- -n[k]
-
Begin printing at nth item from end-of-file.
k specifies the item to count: l (lines, the default), b (blocks), or c (characters).
- -k
-
Same as -n, but use the default count of 10.
- +n[k]
-
Like -n, but start at nth
item from beginning of file.
- +k
-
Like -k, but count from beginning of file.
- -c num{bkm}, --bytes num{bkm}
-
Print last num bytes. An alternate blocksize may
be specified:
- b
-
512 bytes
- k
-
1 kilobyte
- m
-
1 megabyte
- -f, --follow[=name|descriptor]
-
Don't quit at the end of file;
"follow" file as it grows and end
when the user presses Ctrl-c. Following by file descriptor is the
default, so -f, --follow, and --follow=descriptor are equivalent. Use
--follow=name to track the
actual name of a file even if the file is renamed, as with a rotated
log file.
- -F
-
Identical to --follow=name
--retry.
- --help
-
Print a help message and exit.
- -n num, --lines=num
-
Print the last num lines.
- --max-unchanged-stats=num
-
Used with --follow=name to
reopen a file whose size hasn't changed after
num iterations (default 5), to see if it has
been unlinked or renamed (as with rotated log files).
- --pid=pid
-
Used with -f to end when process ID
pid dies.
- -q, --quiet, --silent
-
Suppress filename headers.
- --retry
-
With -f, keep trying to open a file
even if it isn't accessible when tail starts or if it becomes inaccessible
later.
- -s sec, --sleep-interval=sec
-
With -f, sleep approximately
sec seconds between iterations. Default is 1
second.
- -v, --verbose
-
With multiple files, always output the filename headers.
- --version
-
Print version information and then exit.
Examples
Show the last 20 lines containing instances of .Ah:
grep '\.Ah ' file | tail -20
Show the last 10 characters of variable name:
echo "$name" | tail -c
Print the last two blocks of bigfile:
tail -2b bigfile
Talk to another user. person is either the login
name of someone on your own machine or user@host
on another host. To talk to a user who is logged in more than once,
use ttyname to indicate the appropriate terminal
name. Once communication has been established, the two parties may
type simultaneously, with their output appearing in separate windows.
To redraw the screen, type Ctrl-L. To exit, type your interrupt
character; talk then moves the
cursor to the bottom of the screen and restores the terminal.
TCP/IP command. Remote user communication server. talkd notifies a user that somebody else wants
to initiate a conversation. A talk
client initiates a rendezvous by sending a CTL_MSG of type LOOK_UP to the server. This causes the server
to search its invitation tables for an existing invitation for the
client. If the lookup fails, the caller sends an ANNOUNCE message, causing the server to
broadcast an announcement on the callee's login
ports requesting contact. When the callee responds, the local server
responds with the rendezvous address, and a stream connection is
established through which the conversation takes place.
Options
- -d
-
Write debugging information to the syslogd log file.
- -p
-
Log malformed packets to /var/log/talkd.packets.
tar [options] [tarfile] [other-files]
|
|
Copy files to or restore
files from an archive medium. If any
files are directories, tar acts on the entire subtree. Options need
not be preceded by - (though they
may be). The exception to this rule is when you are using a
long-style option (such as --modification-time). In that case, the
exact syntax is:
tar --long-option -function-options files For example:
tar --modification-time -xvf tarfile.tar
Function options
You must use exactly one of these, and it must come before any other
options:
- -c, --create
-
Create a new archive.
- -d, --diff, --compare
-
Compare the files stored in tarfile with
other-files. Report any differences: missing
files, different sizes, different file attributes (such as
permissions or modification time).
- --delete
-
Delete from the archive. This option cannot be used with magnetic
tape.
- -r, --append
-
Append other-files to the end of an existing
archive.
- -t, --list
-
Print the names of other-files if they are
stored on the archive (if other-files are not
specified, print names of all files).
- -u, --update
-
Add files if not in the archive or if modified.
- -x, --extract, --get
-
Extract other-files from an archive (if
other-files are not specified, extract all
files).
- -A, --catenate, --concatenate
-
Concatenate a second tar file to the end of the first.
Options
- [drive][density]
-
Set drive (0-7) and storage density (l, m, or
h, corresponding to low, medium, or
high). Not available in all versions of tar.
- --anchored
-
Exclude patterns must match the start of the filename (the default).
- --atime-preserve
-
Preserve original access time on extracted files.
- -b n, --blocking-factor=n
-
Set blocksize to n x 512 bytes.
- --backup[=type]
-
Back up files rather than deleting them. If no backup type is
specified, a simple backup is made with ~ as the suffix. (See also --suffix.) The possible values of
type are:
- t, numbered
-
Make numbered backups.
- nil, existing
-
Make numbered backups if there are already numbered backups,
otherwise make simple backups.
- never, simple
-
Always make simple backups.
- --checkpoint
-
List directory names encountered.
- --exclude=pattern
-
Remove files matching pattern from any list of
files.
- -f file, --file=file
-
Store files in or extract files from archive
file. Note that file may
take the form
hostname:filename.
- --force-local
-
Interpret filenames in the form
hostname:filename as local
files.
- -g file, --listed-incremental=file
-
Create new-style incremental backup.
- --group=group
-
Use group as the group for files added to the
archive.
- -h, --dereference
-
Dereference symbolic links and archive the files they point to rather
than the symbolic link.
- --help
-
Print help message and exit.
- -i, --ignore-zeros
-
Ignore zero-sized blocks (i.e., EOFs).
- --ignore-case
-
Ignore case when excluding files.
- --ignore-failed-read
-
Ignore unreadable files to be archived. Default behavior is to exit
when encountering these.
- -j, --bzip2, -i
-
Compress files with bzip2 before
archiving them, or uncompress them with bunzip2 before extracting them.
- -l, --one-file-system
-
Do not archive files from other filesystems.
- -k, --keep-old-files
-
When extracting files, do not overwrite files with similar names.
Instead, print an error message.
- -m, --touch
-
Do not restore file modification times; update them to the time of
extraction.
- --mode=permissions
-
Use permissions when adding files to an archive.
The permissions are specified the same way as for the chmod command.
- --newer-mtime=date
-
Add only files whose contents have changed since
date to the archive.
- --no-anchor
-
Exclude patterns may match anything following a slash.
- --no-ignore-case
-
Do not ignore case when excluding files.
- --no-same-permissions
-
Do not extract permissions information when extracting files from the
archive. This is the default for users, and therefore affects only
the superuser.
- --no-recursion
-
Do not move recursively through directories.
- --no-same-owner
-
When extracting, create files with yourself as owner.
- --no-wildcards
-
Don't use wildcards when excluding files; treat
patterns as strings.
- --no-wildcards-match-slash
-
Wildcards do not match slash when
excluding files.
- --null
-
Allow filenames to be null-terminated with -T. Override -C.
- --numeric-owner
-
Use the numeric owner and group IDs rather than the names.
- -o, --old-archive, --portability
-
Create old-style archive in Unix V7 rather than ANSI format.
- --overwrite
-
Overwrite existing files and directory metadata when extracting from
archive.
- --overwrite-dir
-
Overwrite existing directory metadata when extracting from archive.
- --owner=owner
-
Set owner as the owner of extracted files
instead of the original owner. owner is first
assumed to be a username, then, if there is no match, a numeric user
ID.
- -p, --same-permissions, --preserve-permissions
-
Keep permissions of extracted files the same as the originals.
- --posix
-
Create a POSIX-compliant archive.
- --preserve
-
Equivalent to invoking both the -p
and -s options.
- --record-size=size
-
Treat each record as having size bytes, where
size is a multiple of 512.
- --recursion
-
Move recursively through directories.
- --recursive-unlink
-
Remove existing directory hierarchies before extracting directories
with the same name.
- --remove-files
-
Remove originals after inclusion in archive.
- --rsh-command=command
-
Do not connect to remote host with rsh; instead, use
command.
- -s, --same-order, --preserve-order
-
When extracting, sort filenames to correspond to the order in the
archive.
- --same-owner
-
When extracting, create files with the same ownership as the
originals.
- --show-omitted-dirs
-
List directories being omitted when operating on an archive.
- --suffix=suffix
-
Use suffix instead of the default ~ when
creating a backup file.
- --totals
-
Print byte totals.
- --use-compress-program=program
-
Compress archived files with program, or
uncompress extracted files with program.
- -v, --verbose
-
Verbose. Print filenames as they are added or extracted.
- --version
-
Print version information and exit.
- --volno-file=file
-
Use/update the volume number in file.
- -w, --interactive, --confirmation
-
Wait for user confirmation (y)
before taking any actions.
- --wildcards
-
Use wildcards when excluding files.
- --wildcards-match-slash
-
Wildcards match / when excluding files.
- -z, --gzip, --gunzip, --ungzip
-
Compress files with gzip before
archiving them, or uncompress them with gunzip before extracting them.
- -B, --read-full-records
-
Reblock while reading; used for reading from 4.2BSD pipes.
- -C directory, --directory=directory
-
cd to directory
before beginning tar operation.
- -F script, --info-script=script, --new-volume-script=script
-
Implies -M (multiple archive files).
Run script at the end of each file.
- -G, --incremental
-
Create old-style incremental backup.
- -K file, --starting-file=file
-
Begin tar operation at
file in archive.
- -L length, --tape-length=length
-
Write a maximum of length x 1024
bytes to each tape.
- -M, --multivolume
-
Expect archive to be multivolume. With -c, create such an archive.
- -N date, --newer=date, --after-date=date
-
Ignore files older than date.
- -O, --to-stdout
-
Print extracted files to standard output.
- -P, --absolute-names
-
Do not remove initial slashes (/) from input filenames.
- -R, --block-number
-
Display archive's block number in messages.
- -S, --sparse
-
Treat sparse files more efficiently when adding to archive.
- -T file, --files-from=file
-
Consult file for files to extract or create.
- -U, --unlink-first
-
Remove each existing file from the filesystem before extracting from
the archive.
- -V name, --label=name
-
Name this volume name.
- -W, --verify
-
Check archive for corruption after creation.
- -X file, --exclude-from file
-
Consult file for list of files to exclude.
- -Z, --compress, --uncompress
-
Compress files with compress before
archiving them, or uncompress them with uncompress before extracting them.
Examples
Create an archive of /bin and
/usr/bin (c),
show the command working (v), and
store on the tape in /dev/rmt0:
tar cvf /dev/rmt0 /bin /usr/bin
List the tape's contents in a format like ls -l:
tar tvf /dev/rmt0
Extract the /bin directory:
tar xvf /dev/rmt0 /bin
Create an archive of the current directory and store it in a file
backup.tar:
tar cvf - `find . -print` > backup.tar
(The - tells tar to store the
archive on standard output, which is then redirected.)
TCP/IP command. Monitor incoming TCP/IP requests (such as those for
telnet, ftp, finger,
exec, rlogin). Provide checking and logging
services; then pass the request to the appropriate daemon.
tcsh [options] [file [arguments]]
|
|
An extended version of the C shell, a command interpreter into which
all other commands are entered. For more information, see Chapter 8.
Accept output from another command and send it both to standard
output and to files (like a T or fork in the
road).
Options
- -a, --append
-
Append to files; do not overwrite.
- -i, --ignore-interrupts
-
Ignore interrupt signals.
- --help
-
Print a help message and then exit.
- --version
-
Print version information and then exit.
Example
s -l | tee savefile View listing and save for later
telinit [option] [runlevel]
|
|
System administration command. Signal init to change the system's
runlevel. telinit is actually just a
link to init, the ancestor of all
processes.
Option
- -t seconds
-
Send SIGKILL seconds after SIGTERM. Default is
20.
Runlevels
The default runlevels vary from distribution to distribution, but
these are standard:
- 0
-
Halt the system.
- 1, s, S
-
Single user.
- 6
-
Reboot the system.
- a, b, c
-
Process only entries in /etc/inittab that are
marked with runlevel a, b, or c.
- q, Q
-
Reread /etc/inittab.
Check the /etc/inittab file for runlevels on
your system.
telnet [options] [host [port]]
|
|
Access remote systems. telnet is the
user interface that communicates with another host using the Telnet
protocol. If telnet is invoked
without host, it enters command mode, indicated
by its prompt, telnet>, and
accepts and executes the commands listed after the following options.
If invoked with arguments, telnet
performs an open command (shown in
the following list) with those arguments. host
indicates the host's official name, alias, or
Internet address. port indicates a port number
(default is the Telnet port).
The Telnet protocol is often criticized because it uses no encryption
and makes it easy for snoopers to pick up user passwords. Most sites
now use ssh instead.
Options
- -a
-
Automatic login to the remote system.
- -b hostalias
-
Use bind to bind the local socket to
an aliased address or the address of an interface other than the one
that would be chosen by connect.
- -c
-
Disable reading of the user's .telnetrc file.
- -d
-
Turn on socket-level debugging.
- -e [escape_char]
-
Set initial telnet escape character
to escape_char. If
escape_char is omitted, no escape character is
predefined.
- -f
-
With Kerberos V5 authentication, allow forwarding of the local
credentials to the remote system.
- -k realm
-
With Kerberos authentication, obtain tickets for the remote host in
realm, instead of in the remote
host's realm.
- -l user
-
When connecting to remote system and if remote system understands
ENVIRON, send
user to the remote system as the value for
variable USER. Implies the -a option.
- -n tracefile
-
Open tracefile for recording the trace
information.
- -r
-
Emulate rlogin. The default escape
character for this mode is a tilde (~); an escape character followed
by a dot causes telnet to disconnect
from the remote host; a ^Z instead
of a dot suspends telnet; and a
^] (the default telnet escape character) generates a normal
telnet prompt. These codes are
accepted only at the beginning of a line.
- -x
-
Turn on datastream encryption if possible.
- -8
-
Request 8-bit operation.
- -E
-
Disable the escape character functionality.
- -F
-
With Kerberos V5 authentication, allow local credentials to be
forwarded to the remote system, including any that were already
forwarded to the local environment.
- -K
-
Do not allow automatic login to the remote system.
- -L
-
Specify an 8-bit data path on output.
- -X atype
-
Disable the atype type of authentication.
Commands
- Ctrl-Z
-
Suspend telnet.
- ! [command]
-
Execute a single command in a subshell on the local system. If
command is omitted, an interactive subshell will
be invoked.
- ? [command]
-
Get help. With no arguments, print a help summary. If a command is
specified, print the help information for just that command.
- close
-
Close a Telnet session and return to command mode.
- display argument ...
-
Display all or some of the set and
toggle values.
- environ [arguments [...]]
-
Manipulate variables that may be sent through the TELNET ENVIRON option. Valid arguments for
environ are:
- ?
-
Get help for the environ command.
- define variable value
-
Define variable to have a value of
value.
- undefine variable
-
Remove variable from the list of environment
variables.
- export variable
-
Mark variable to have its value exported to the
remote side.
- unexport variable
-
Mark variable to not be exported unless
explicitly requested by the remote side.
- list
-
Display current variable values.
- send variable
-
Send the environment variable variable.
- logout
-
If the remote host supports the logout command, close the telnet session.
- mode [type]
-
Depending on state of Telnet session, type is
one of several options:
- ?
-
Print out help information for the mode command.
- character
-
Disable TELNET LINEMODE option, or,
if remote side does not understand the option, enter
"character-at-a-time" mode.
- [-]edit
-
Attempt to [disable] enable the EDIT
mode of the TELNET LINEMODE option.
- [-]isig
-
Attempt to [disable] enable the TRAPSIG mode of the LINEMODE option.
- line
-
Enable LINEMODE option, or, if
remote side does not understand the option, enter
"old line-by-line" mode.
- [-]softtabs
-
Attempt to [disable] enable the SOFT_TAB mode of the LINEMODE option.
- [-]litecho
-
[Disable] enable LIT_ECHO mode.
- open[-l user] host [port]
-
Open a connection to the named host. If no
port number is specified, attempt to contact a
Telnet server at the default port.
- quit
-
Close any open Telnet session and then exit telnet.
- send arguments
-
Send one or more special character sequences to the remote host.
Following are the arguments that may be specified:
- ?
-
Print out help information for send
command.
- abort
-
Send Telnet ABORT sequence.
- ao
-
Send Telnet AO sequence, which should cause the remote system to
flush all output from the remote system to the
user's terminal.
- ayt
-
Send Telnet AYT (Are You There) sequence.
- brk
-
Send Telnet BRK (Break) sequence.
- do cmd
- dont cmd
- will cmd
- wont cmd
-
Send Telnet DO cmd sequence, where
cmd is a number between 0 and 255 or a symbolic
name for a specific telnet command.
If cmd is ? or
help, this command prints out help
(including a list of symbolic names).
- ec
-
Send Telnet EC (Erase Character) sequence, which causes the remote
system to erase the last character entered.
- el
-
Send Telnet EL (Erase Line) sequence, which causes the remote system
to erase the last line entered.
- eof
-
Send Telnet EOF (End Of File) sequence.
- eor
-
Send Telnet EOR (End Of Record) sequence.
- escape
-
Send current Telnet escape character (initially ^]).
- ga
-
Send Telnet GA (Go Ahead) sequence.
- getstatus
-
If the remote side supports the Telnet STATUS command, getstatus sends the subnegotiation request
that the server send its current option status.
- ip
-
Send Telnet IP (Interrupt Process) sequence, which causes the remote
system to abort the currently running process.
- nop
-
Send Telnet NOP (No Operation) sequence.
- susp
-
Send Telnet SUSP (Suspend Process) sequence.
- synch
-
Send Telnet SYNCH sequence, which causes the remote system to discard
all previously typed (but not read) input.
- set argument value
- unset argument value
-
Set any one of a number of telnet
variables to a specific value or to TRUE. The special value off disables the function associated with the
variable. unset disables any of the
specified functions. The values of variables may be interrogated with
the aid of the display command. The
variables that may be specified are:
- ?
-
Display legal set and unset commands.
- ayt
-
If telnet is in LOCALCHARS mode, this character is taken to be
the alternate AYT character.
- echo
-
This is the value (initially ^E)
that, when in "line-by-line" mode,
toggles between doing local echoing of entered characters and
suppressing echoing of entered characters.
- eof
-
If telnet is operating in LINEMODE or in the old
"line-by-line" mode, entering this
character as the first character on a line will cause the character
to be sent to the remote system.
- erase
-
If telnet is in LOCALCHARS mode and operating in the
"character-at-a-time" mode,
entering this character will send a Telnet EC sequence to the remote
system.
- escape
-
This is the Telnet escape character (initially ^]), which causes entry into the Telnet
command mode when connected to a remote system.
- flushoutput
-
If telnet is in LOCALCHARS mode and the flushoutput character is entered, a Telnet AO
sequence is sent to the remote host.
- forw1
-
If Telnet is in LOCALCHARS mode,
this character is taken to be an alternate end-of-line character.
- forw2
-
If Telnet is in LOCALCHARS mode,
this character is taken to be an alternate end-of-line character.
- interrupt
-
If Telnet AO is in LOCALCHARS mode
and the interrupt character is
entered, a Telnet IP sequence is sent to the remote host.
- kill
-
If Telnet IP is in LOCALCHARS mode
and operating in the
"character-at-a-time" mode,
entering this character causes a Telnet EL sequence to be sent to the
remote system.
- lnext
-
If Telnet EL is in LINEMODE or the
old "line-by-line" mode, this
character is taken to be the terminal's lnext character.
- quit
-
If Telnet EL is in LOCALCHARS mode
and the quit character is entered, a
Telnet BRK sequence is sent to the remote host.
- reprint
-
If Telnet BRK is in LINEMODE or the
old "line-by-line" mode, this
character is taken to be the terminal's reprint character.
- rlogin
-
Enable rlogin mode. Same as using
the -r command-line option.
- start
-
If the Telnet TOGGLE-FLOW-CONTROL
option has been enabled, this character is taken to be the
terminal's start
character.
- stop
-
If the Telnet TOGGLE-FLOW-CONTROL
option has been enabled, this character is taken to be the
terminal's stop
character.
- susp
-
If Telnet is in LOCALCHARS mode or
if the LINEMODE is enabled, the
suspend character causes a Telnet
SUSP sequence to be sent to the remote host.
- tracefile
-
This is the file to which output generated by netdata is written.
- worderase
-
If Telnet BRK is in LINEMODE or the
old "line-by-line" mode, this
character is taken to be the terminal's worderase character. Defaults for these are
the terminal's defaults.
- slc [state]
-
Set state of special characters when Telnet LINEMODE option has been enabled.
- ?
-
List help on the slc command.
- check
-
Verify current settings for current special characters. If
discrepancies are discovered, convert local settings to match remote
ones.
- export
-
Switch to local defaults for special characters.
- import
-
Switch to remote defaults for special characters.
- status
-
Show current status of telnet. This
includes the peer you are connected to as well as the current mode.
- toggle arguments [...]
-
Toggle various flags that control how Telnet responds to events. The
flags may be set explicitly to true
or false using the set and unset
commands listed previously. The valid arguments are:
- ?
-
Display legal toggle commands.
- autoflush
-
If autoflush and LOCALCHARS are both true, then when the
ao or quit characters are recognized, Telnet refuses
to display any data on the user's terminal until the
remote system acknowledges that it has processed those Telnet
sequences.
- autosynch
-
If autosynch and LOCALCHARS are both true, then when the
intr or quit character is entered, the resulting
Telnet sequence sent is followed by the Telnet SYNCH sequence.
Initial value for this toggle is
false.
- binary
-
Enable or disable the Telnet BINARY
option on both the input and the output.
- inbinary
-
Enable or disable the Telnet BINARY
option on the input.
- outbinary
-
Enable or disable the Telnet BINARY
option on the output.
- crlf
-
If this toggle value is true,
carriage returns are sent as CR-LF.
If false, carriage returns are sent as CR-NUL. Initial value is false.
- crmod
-
Toggle carriage return mode. Initial value is false.
- debug
-
Toggle socket-level debugging mode. Initial value is false.
- localchars
-
If the value is true, flush,
interrupt, quit, erase,
and kill characters are recognized
locally, then transformed into appropriate Telnet control sequences.
Initial value is true.
- netdata
-
Toggle display of all network data. Initial value is false.
- options
-
Toggle display of some internal telnet protocol processing that pertains to
Telnet options. Initial value is false.
- prettydump
-
When netdata and prettydump are enabled, the output from the
netdata command is reorganized into
a more user-friendly format, spaces are put between each character in
the output, and an asterisk precedes any Telnet escape sequence.
- skiprc
-
Toggle whether to process ~/.telnetrc file.
Initial value is false, meaning the file is processed.
- termdata
-
Toggle printing of hexadecimal terminal data. Initial value is false.
- z
-
Suspend telnet; works only for
tcsh.
TCP/IP command. Telnet protocol server. telnetd is invoked by the Internet server for
requests to connect to the Telnet port (port 23 by default).
telnetd allocates a pseudo-terminal
device for a client, thereby creating a login process that has the
slave side of the pseudo-terminal serving as stdin, stdout, and
stderr. telnetd manipulates the
master side of the pseudo-terminal by implementing the Telnet
protocol and by passing characters between the remote client and the
login process.
The Telnet protocol is often criticized because it uses no encryption
and makes it easy for snoopers to pick up user passwords. Most sites
now use ssh instead.
Options
- -a type
-
When compiled with authentication support, this option sets the
authentication type. Accepted values are:
- debug
-
Debug authentication code.
- user
-
Allow only authenticated remote users with permission to access their
accounts without giving a password.
- valid
-
Allow only authenticated remote users. Use login for any additional verification needed
to access an account.
- none
-
No authentication required, but accept it if offered. Use login for any further verification needed to
access an account.
- off
-
Disable authentication.
- -debug [port]
-
Start telnetd manually instead of
through inetd.
port may be specified as an alternate TCP port
number on which to run telnetd.
- -D modifier(s)
-
Debugging mode. This allows telnet
to print out debugging information to the connection, enabling the
user to see what telnet is doing.
Several modifiers are available for the debugging mode:
- netdata
-
Display data stream received by telnetd.
- options
-
Print information about the negotiation of the Telnet options.
- ptydata
-
Display data written to the pseudo-terminal device.
- report
-
Print options information, as well
as some additional information about what processing is going on.
- -edebug
-
When compiled with support for encryption, enable encryption
debugging code.
- -h
-
Don't print host-specific information until after
login is complete.
- -L command
-
Use command for login instead of
/bin/login.
- -n
-
Disable checking for lost connections with TCP keep-alives.
- -X type
-
Disable authentication type.
test expression
[expression]
|
|
Evaluate an expression and, if its value is
true, return a zero exit status; otherwise, return a nonzero exit
status. In shell scripts, you can use the alternate form [expression]. This command is generally used with
conditional constructs in shell programs. Also exists as a built-in
in most shells.
File testers
The syntax for all of these options is test option file. If the
specified file does not exist, they return false. Otherwise, they
test the file as specified in the option description.
- -b
-
Is the file block special?
- -c
-
Is the file character special?
- -d
-
Is the file a directory?
- -e
-
Does the file exist?
- -f
-
Is the file a regular file?
- -g
-
Does the file have the set-group-ID bit set?
- -k
-
Does the file have the sticky bit set?
- -L
-
Is the file a symbolic link?
- -p
-
Is the file a named pipe?
- -r
-
Is the file readable by the current user?
- -s
-
Is the file nonempty?
- -S
-
Is the file a socket?
- -t [file-descriptor]
-
Is the file associated with file-descriptor (or
1, standard output, by default) connected to a terminal?
- -u
-
Does the file have the set-user-ID bit set?
- -w
-
Is the file writable by the current user?
- -x
-
Is the file executable?
- -O
-
Is the file owned by the process's effective user ID?
- -G
-
Is the file owned by the process's effective group
ID?
File comparisons
The syntax for file comparisons is test file1 option file2.
A string by itself, without options, returns true if
it's at least one character long.
- -nt
-
Is file1 newer than file2?
Check modification date, not creation date.
- -ot
-
Is file1 older than file2?
Check modification date, not creation date.
- -ef
-
Do the files have identical device and inode numbers?
String tests
The syntax for string tests is test
option string or test string1 [!]=
string2.
- -z
-
Is the string 0 characters long?
- -n
-
Is the string at least 1 character long?
- string1 = string2
-
Are the two strings equal?
- string1 != string2
-
Are the strings unequal?
Expression tests
Note that an expression can consist of any of the previous tests.
- ! expression
-
Is the expression false?
- expression -a expression
-
Are the expressions both true?
- expression -o expression
-
Is either expression true?
Integer tests
The syntax for integer tests is test
integer1 option integer2. You may substitute
-l string for
an integer; this evaluates to
string's length.
- -eq
-
Are the two integers equal?
- -ne
-
Are the two integers unequal?
- -lt
-
Is integer1 less than
integer2?
- -le
-
Is integer1 less than or equal to
integer2?
- -gt
-
Is integer1 greater than
integer2?
- -ge
-
Is integer1 greater than or equal to
integer2?
tftp [options] [host [port]]
|
|
User interface to TFTP (IPv4 Trivial File Transfer Protocol), which
allows users to transfer files to and from a remote machine. The
remote host may be specified, and optionally the
port, in which case tftp uses host as the
default host for future transfers. The version of tftp described here is tftp-hpa.
Options
- -v
-
Verbose mode.
- -V
-
Print version and configuration information and exit.
Commands
Once tftp is running, it issues the
prompt:
tftp>
and recognizes the following commands:
- ? [command...]
- help [command...]
-
Print help information. If no command is specified, list the commands
and a brief usage message. With a command, list the usage message for
that command.
- ascii
-
Shorthand for mode ascii.
- binary
-
Shorthand for mode binary.
- connect hostname [port]
-
Set the hostname, and optionally the
port, for transfers.
- get filename
- get remotename localname
- get filename1 filename2 filename3...filenameN
-
Get a file or set of files from the specified remote sources. The
filename can be specified as host:filename to
set both host and filename at the same time. In that case, the last
host specified becomes the default for future file transfers.
- mode transfer-mode
-
Set the mode for transfers. transfer-mode may be
ascii, netascii, binary, octet, or image. The default is ascii.
- put filename
- put localfile remotefile
- put filename1 filename2...filenameN remote-directory
-
Transfer a file or set of files to the specified remote file or
directory. The destination can be specified as
host:filename to set both host and filename at
the same time. In that case, the last host specified becomes the
default for future file transfers. If
remote-directory is specified, the remote host
is assumed to be a Unix-style system that uses / as the directory
path separator.
- quit
-
Exit tftp.
- rexmt retransmission-timeout
-
Set the per-packet retransmission timeout, in seconds.
- status
-
Print status information: whether tftp is connected to a remote host (i.e.,
whether a host has been specified for the next connection), the
current mode, whether verbose and tracing modes are on, and the
values for retransmission timeout
and total transmission timeout.
- timeout total-transmission-timeout
-
Set the total transmission timeout, in seconds.
- trace
-
Toggle packet tracing.
- verbose
-
Toggle verbose mode.
in.tftpd [options] [directories]
|
|
TCP/IP command. IPv4 Trivial File Transfer Protocol server. in.tftpd is normally started by inetd and operates at the port indicated in
the tftp Internet service
description in /etc/services. Only publicly
readable files may be accessed. By default, only files that already
exist and are publicly writable can be written. In addition, if any
directories are specified, access is restricted
to files in those directories. The version of tftp described here is tftp-hpa.
Options
- -a [address][:port]
-
Specify the address and port to listen to when run in standalone mode
with -l. By default, use the address
and port in /etc/services.
- -c
-
Allow new files to be written. The default permissions allow anyone
to read and write the files. Use -p
or -U to set other permissions.
- -l
-
Run tftpd in standalone mode, not
from inetd. This mode ignores
-t.
- -m remap-file
-
Remap filenames based on rules specified in
remap-file. Each line in the file contains an
operation, an egrep-style regular
expression (regex), and optionally a replacement pattern. If the
regex matches any part of a filename, the operation is performed. The
operation is specified as any of the letters shown in the next
section, alone or in combination. Comment lines begin with #.
- -p
-
Use only normal system access controls for the user specified with
-u (the tftpd username).
- -r option
-
Never accept the specified RFC 2347 option (see the later section
"Standards"). The possible options
are blksize, blksize2 (not based on a standard; like
blksize but the blocksize must be a
power of 2), tsize (transfer size),
and timeout.
- -s
-
On startup, change root directory to the directory specified as
directory on the command line. With -s, only one directory should be specified.
Recommended for security and compatibility with certain boot ROMs.
- -t timeout
-
When run from inetd, specify how
long, in seconds, to wait for another connection before timing out
and terminating the server. Default timeout is 900 (15 minutes). If
server is terminated, inetd spawns a
new server on receiving a new request.
- -u username
-
Specify the name of the tftpd user.
The default user is nobody.
- -U umask
-
Set the umask for newly created files. Without -p, the default is 0. With -p, it is inherited from the calling process.
- -v
-
Increase verbosity. Specify multiple times for greater verbosity.
- -V
-
Print version and configuration information and exit.
Filename remapping rules
- a
-
If this rule matches, refuse the request and send an
"access denied" error to the
client.
- e
-
If this rule matches, execute it and then end rule processing.
- g
-
Repeat the rule until it no longer matches. Used with r.
- G
-
Apply this rule to GET (RRQ) requests only.
- i
-
Use case-insensitive regex matching. The default is for
case-sensitive matching.
- P
-
Apply this rule to PUT (WRQ) requests only.
- r
-
Replace the matching substring with the replacement pattern.
- s
-
If this rule matches, execute it and then restart rule processing
with the first rule.
The replacement pattern can include the following escape sequences:
- \0
-
The entire string matching the regex.
- \1...\9
-
The strings matched by each of the first nine substrings in the regex.
- \i
-
The IP address of the requesting host, in dotted-quad notation.
- \x
-
The IP address of the requesting host, in hexadecimal notation.
- \\
-
Literal backslash.
- \whitespace
-
Literal whitespace.
- \#
-
Literal hash mark.
Standards
RFC 1123, Requirements for Internet Hosts--Application and
Support
RFC 1350, The TFTP Protocol (Revision 2)
RFC 2347, TFTP Option Extension
RFC 2348, TFTP Blocksize Option
RFC 2349, TFTP Timeout Interval and Transfer Size Options
time [options] command [arguments]
|
|
Run the specified command, passing it any
arguments, and time the execution. Note that
there is also a shell time command,
so you might need to specify the full path, usually /usr/bin/time, to
run this version of time. time displays its results on standard error.
The output includes elapsed time, user CPU time, system CPU time, and
other information such as memory used and number of I/Os. The output
can be formatted using printf format
strings specified with the -f option
or the TIME environment variable.
Options
- --
-
The end of the options. Anything after the -- is the command or one of its
arguments.
- -a, --append
-
Used with -o to append the output to
file instead of overwriting it.
- -f format, --format=format
-
Specify the output format. Overrides any format specified in the
TIME environment variable.
- --help
-
Print help message and exit.
- -o file, --output=file
-
Send the output from time to the
specified file instead of to standard error. If
file exists, it is overwritten.
- -p, --portability
-
Use portable output format (POSIX).
- -v, --verbose
-
Give verbose output, providing all available information.
- -V, --version
-
Print version information and exit.
Resources
The following resources can be specified in format strings:
- c
-
Number of involuntary context switches because of time slice expiring.
- C
-
Name and arguments of command being timed.
- D
-
Average size of unshared data area, in kilobytes.
- e
-
Elapsed real time, in seconds.
- E
-
Elapsed real time as hours:minutes:seconds.
- F
-
Number of major (I/O-requiring) page faults.
- I
-
Number of filesystem inputs.
- k
-
Number of signals delivered to the process.
- K
-
Average total (data+stack+text) memory use, in kilobytes.
- M
-
Maximum resident set size, in kilobytes.
- O
-
Number of filesystem outputs.
- p
-
Average unshared stack size, in kilobytes.
- P
-
Percent of CPU used.
- r
-
Number of socket messages received.
- R
-
Number of minor (recoverable) page faults.
- s
-
Number of socket messages received.
- S
-
Total CPU seconds used by the system on behalf of the process.
- t
-
Average resident set size, in kilobytes.
- U
-
Total CPU seconds used directly by the process.
- w
-
Number of voluntary context switches.
- W
-
Number of times the process was swapped out of main memory.
- x
-
Exit status of the command.
- X
-
Average shared text size, in kilobytes.
- Z
-
System page size, in bytes.
Example
Time the execution of the command ls
-l and display the user time, system time, and exit status
of the command:
/usr/bin/time -f "\t%U user,\t%S system,\t%x status" ls -Fs
Display system load average in graph format. If
tty is specified, print it to that terminal.
Options
- -d delay
-
Specify the delay, in seconds, between updates.
- -s scale
-
Specify scale (number of characters between each graph tick). A
smaller number results in a larger scale.
- -V
-
Print version information and exit.
Provide information (frequently refreshed) about the most
CPU-intensive processes currently running. You do not need to include
a - before options. See ps for
explanations of the field descriptors.
Options
- -b
-
Run in batch mode; don't accept command-line input.
Useful for sending output to another command or to a file.
- -c
-
Show command line in display instead of just command name.
- -C
-
For SMP systems, display total CPU information in addition to
information for the individual CPUs.
- -d delay
-
Specify delay between refreshes.
- -h
-
Print a help message and exit.
- -i
-
Suppress display of idle and zombie processes.
- -n num
-
Update display num times, then exit.
- -p pid
-
Monitor only processes with the specified process ID.
- -q
-
Refresh without any delay. If user is privileged, run with highest
priority.
- -s
-
Secure mode. Disable some (dangerous) interactive commands.
- -S
-
Cumulative mode. Print total CPU time of each process, including dead
child processes.
- -v
-
Print version information and exit.
Interactive commands
- space
-
Update display immediately.
- c
-
Toggle display of command name or full command line.
- f, F
-
Add fields to or remove fields from the display.
- h, ?
-
Display help about commands and the status of secure and cumulative
modes.
- H
-
Prompt for a process ID and show all threads for that process.
- k
-
Prompt for process ID to kill and signal to send (default is 15) to
kill it.
- i
-
Toggle suppression of idle and zombie processes.
- l
-
Toggle display of load average and uptime information.
- m
-
Toggle display of memory information.
- n, #
-
Prompt for number of processes to show. If 0 is entered, show as many
as will fit on the screen (default).
- o, O
-
Change order of displayed fields.
- q
-
Exit.
- r
-
Apply renice to a process. Prompt
for PID and renice value. Suppressed
in secure mode.
- s
-
Change delay between refreshes. Prompt for new delay time, which
should be in seconds. Suppressed in secure mode.
- t
-
Toggle display of processes and
CPU states lines.
- A
-
Sort by age, with newest first.
- ^L
-
Redraw screen.
- M
-
Sort tasks by resident memory usage.
- N
-
Sort numerically by process ID.
- P
-
Sort tasks by CPU usage (default).
- S
-
Toggle cumulative mode. (See the -S
option.)
- T
-
Sort tasks by time/cumulative time.
- W
-
Write current setup to ~/.toprc. This is the
recommended way to write a top
configuration file.
Field descriptions
The first five entries in the following list describe the lines that
appear at the top of the top
display. The rest are the fields that can be displayed for each task
(sizes are in kilobytes). Use the interactive f command to add or remove fields.
- uptime
-
Display the time the system has been up, and three load averages
consisting of the average number of processes ready to run in the
last 1, 5, and 15 minutes.
- processes
-
The total number of processes running when the last update was taken,
shown as the number of running, sleeping, stopped, or undead tasks.
- CPU states
-
The percentage of CPU time spent in user mode, in system mode, on
tasks with a negative nice value, and idle.
- Mem
-
Memory statistics, including total available memory, free memory,
memory used, shared memory, and memory used for buffers.
- Swap
-
Swap-space statistics, including total, available, and used.
- PID
-
Process ID.
- PPID
-
Parent process ID.
- UID
-
User ID of task's owner.
- USER
-
Username of task's owner.
- PRI
-
Priority.
- NI
-
Nice value.
- PAGEIN
-
Page fault count.
- SIZE
-
Total size of the task's code, data, and stack space.
- TSIZE
-
Code size.
- DSIZE
-
Data plus stack size.
- TRS
-
Resident text size.
- SWAP
-
Size of swapped-out portion of task.
- D
-
Size of pages marked dirty.
- LC
-
Last-used processor, for multiprocessor systems.
- RSS
-
Total amount of physical memory used.
- SHARE
-
Amount of shared memory used.
- STAT
-
State of the task. Values are S
(sleeping), D (uninterruptible sleep), R (running), Z (zombies), or T
(stopped or traced), possibly followed by < (negative nice value),
N (positive nice value), or W (swapped out).
- WCHAN
-
Address or name of the kernel function in which the task is currently
sleeping.
- TIME
-
Total CPU time used by task and any children.
- %CPU
-
Share of CPU time since last update, as percentage of total CPU time.
- %MEM
-
Share of physical memory.
- TTY
-
Controlling tty.
- COMMAND
-
Command line (truncated if too long) if task is in memory, or command
name in parentheses if swapped out.
- FLAGS
-
Task flags.
For one or more files, update the access time
and modification time (and dates) to the current time and date.
touch is useful in forcing other
commands to handle files a certain way; for example, the operation of
make, and sometimes find, relies on a file's
access and modification time. If a file doesn't
exist, touch creates it with a
filesize of 0.
Options
- -a, --time=atime, --time=access, --time=use
-
Update only the access time.
- -c, --no-create
-
Do not create any file that doesn't already exist.
- -d time, --date time
-
Change the time value to the specified time
instead of the current time. time can use
several formats and may contain month names, time zones, a.m. and
p.m. strings, etc.
- -m, --time=mtime, --time=modify
-
Update only the modification time.
- -r file, --reference file
-
Change times to be the same as those of the specified
file, instead of the current time.
- -t time
-
Use the time specified in time instead of the
current time. This argument must be of the format
[[cc]yy]mmddhhmm[.ss],
indicating optional century and year, month, date, hours, minutes,
and optional seconds.
- --help
-
Print help message and then exit.
- --version
-
Print the version number and then exit.
tr [options] [string1 [string2]]
|
|
Translate characters. Copy standard input to standard output,
substituting characters from string1 to
string2 or deleting characters in
string1.
Options
- -c, --complement
-
Complement characters in string1 with respect to
ASCII 001-377.
- -d, --delete
-
Delete characters in string1 from output.
- -s, --squeeze-repeats
-
Squeeze out repeated output characters in
string2.
- -t, --truncate-set1
-
Truncate string1 to the length of
string2 before translating.
- --help
-
Print help message and then exit.
- --version
-
Print the version number and then exit.
Special characters
Include brackets ([ ]) where shown.
- \a
-
^G (bell)
- \b
-
^H (backspace)
- \f
-
^L (form feed)
- \n
-
^J (newline)
- \r
-
^M (carriage return)
- \t
-
^I (tab)
- \v
-
^K (vertical tab)
- \nnn
-
Character with octal value nnn
- \\
-
Literal backslash
- char1-char2
-
All characters in the range char1 through
char2. If char1 does not
sort before char2, produce an error.
- [char*]
-
In string2, expand char to
the length of string1.
- [char*number]
-
Expand char to number occurrences. [x*4] expands to xxxx, for instance.
- [:class:]
-
Expand to all characters in class, where
class can be:
- alnum
-
Letters and digits
- alpha
-
Letters
- blank
-
Whitespace
- cntrl
-
Control characters
- digit
-
Digits
- graph
-
Printable characters except space
- lower
-
Lowercase letters
- print
-
Printable characters
- punct
-
Punctuation
- space
-
Whitespace (horizontal or vertical)
- upper
-
Uppercase letters
- xdigit
-
Hexadecimal digits
- [=char=]
-
The class of characters to which char belongs.
Examples
Change uppercase to lowercase in a file:
cat file | tr 'A-Z' 'a-z'
Turn spaces into newlines (ASCII code 012):
tr ' ' '
' < file
Strip blank lines from file and save
in new.file (or use 011 to change successive tabs into one tab):
cat file | tr -s "" "
" > new.file
Delete colons from file and save
result in new.file:
tr -d : < file > new.file
traceroute [options] host [packetsize]
|
|
TCP/IP command. Trace route taken by packets to reach network host.
traceroute attempts tracing by
launching UDP probe packets with a small TTL (time-to-live), then
listening for an ICMP "time
exceeded" reply from a gateway.
host is the destination hostname or the IP
number of the host to reach. packetsize is the
packet size in bytes of the probe datagram. Default is 40 bytes.
Options
- -d
-
Turn on socket-level debugging.
- -g addr
-
Enable the IP LSRR (Loose Source Record Route) option in addition to
the TTL tests, to ask how someone at IP address
addr can reach a particular target.
- -i interface
-
Specify the network interface for getting the source IP address for
outgoing probe packets. Useful with a multi-homed host. Also see the
-s option.
- -I
-
Use ICMP ECHO requests instead of UDP datagrams.
- -m max_ttl
-
Set maximum time-to-live used in outgoing probe packets to
max-ttl hops. Default is 30.
- -n
-
Show numerical addresses; do not look up hostnames. (Useful if DNS is
not functioning properly.)
- -p port
-
Set base UDP port number used for probe packets to
port. Default is (decimal) 33434.
- -q n
-
Set number of probe packets for each time-to-live setting to the
value n. Default is 3.
- -r
-
Bypass normal routing tables and send directly to a host on an
attached network.
- -s src_addr
-
Use src_addr as the IP address that will serve
as the source address in outgoing probe packets.
- -t tos
-
Set the type-of-service in probe packets to tos
(default 0). The value must be a decimal integer in the range 0 to
255.
- -v
-
Verbose; received ICMP packets (other than TIME_EXCEEDED and
PORT_UNREACHABLE) will be listed.
- -w wait
-
Set time to wait for a response to an outgoing probe packet to
wait seconds (default is 5).
- -x
-
Toggle IP checksums, usually to turn them off. IP checksums are
always calculated if -I is
specified.
- -z msecs
-
Set the delay between probes, in milliseconds. The default is 0.
See groff.
A null command that returns a successful (0) exit status. See also
false.
tset [options] [terminal]
reset [options] [terminal]
|
|
Initialize a terminal. The terminal to be initialized is whichever is
found first from the value of terminal, the
value of the TERM environment
variable, or the default terminal type. See also the reset command.
Options
- -echar
-
Set the erase character to char.
- -ichar
-
Set the interrupt character to char.
- -I
-
Do not send terminal or tab initialization strings to the terminal.
- -kchar
-
Set line kill character to char.
- -m arg
-
Specify a mapping from a port type to a terminal, where
arg looks like this:
[port type][operator][baud rate][:]terminal type
operator can be any combination of < (less
than), > (greater than), @ (equal), and ! (not). The terminal type
is a string (e.g., vt100 or
xterm).
- -q
-
Print the terminal type on standard output but do not initialize the
terminal.
- -Q
-
Don't display values for the erase, interrupt, and
line kill characters.
- -r
-
Print the terminal type to standard error.
- -s
-
Print the shell commands that initialize the TERM environment variable on standard output.
- -V
-
Print the version of ncurses used
for this program and exit.
Print the filename of the terminal connected to standard input.
Options
- --help
-
Print help message and exit.
- -s, --silent, --quiet
-
Print nothing to standard output, but return an exit status.
- --version
-
Display version information and exit.
System administration command. Tune the parameters of a Linux Second
Extended Filesystem by adjusting various parameters. You must specify
the device on which the filesystem resides; it
must not be mounted read/write when you change its parameters.
Options
- -c max-mount-counts
-
Specify the maximum number of mount counts between two checks on the
filesystem.
- -C mount-count
-
Specify the mount count. For use with -c to force a check the next time the system
boots.
- -e behavior
-
Specify the kernel's behavior when encountering
errors. behavior must be one of:
- continue
-
Continue as usual.
- remount-ro
-
Remount the offending filesystem in read-only mode.
- panic
-
Cause a kernel panic.
- -f
-
Force completion even if there are errors.
- -g group
-
Allow group (a group ID or name) to use reserved
blocks.
- -i interval[d|w|m]
-
Specify the maximum interval between filesystem checks. Units may be
in days (d), weeks (w), or months (m). If interval is 0,
checking will not be time-dependent.
- -j
-
Add an ext3 journal to the filesystem. If specified without -J, use the default journal parameters.
- -J jrnl-options
-
Specify ext3 journal parameters as a comma-separated list of
option=value pairs. The specified options
override the default values. Only one size or device option can be
specified for a filesystem. Possible options are:
- device=ext-jrnl
-
Attach to the journal block device on ext-jrnl,
which must exist and must have the same blocksize as the filesystem
to be journaled. ext-jrnl can be specified by
its device name, by the volume label (LABEL=label), or by the
Universal Unique Identifier (UUID) stored in the
journal's ext2 superblock (UUID=uuid; see uuidgen). Create the external journal with:
mke2fs -O jrnl-dev ext-jrnl
- size=jrnl-size
-
The size of the journal in megabytes. The size must be at least
equivalent to 1024 blocks and not more than 102,400 blocks.
- -l
-
Display a list of the superblock's contents.
- -L label
-
Specify the volume label of filesystem. The label must be no more
than 16 characters.
- -m percentage
-
Specify the percentage of blocks that will be reserved for use by
privileged users.
- -M dir
-
Specify the filesystem's last-mounted directory.
- -O option
-
Set or clear the specified filesystem options in the
filesystem's superblock. Specify multiple options as
a comma-separated list. Prefixing an option with a caret (^) clears the option. No prefix or a plus sign
(+) causes the option to be set. Run
e2fsck after changing filetype or sparse_super. The following options can be
cleared or set:
- filetype
-
Save file type information in directory entries.
- has_journal
-
Create an ext3 journal. Same as the -j option.
- sparse_super
-
Save space on large filesystems by limiting the number of backup
superblocks. Same as -s.
- -r num
-
Specify the number of blocks that will be reserved for use by
privileged users.
- -s [0|1]
-
Turn the sparse superblock feature on or off. Run e2fsck after changing this feature.
- -T time
-
Set the time e2fsck was last run.
The time specification is international date format, with the time
optional; i.e., YYYYMMDD[[HHMM]SS]. If time is
specified as time-last-checked, the
current time is used.
- -u user
-
Allow user (a user ID or name) to use reserved
blocks.
- -U uuid
-
Set the UUID of the filesystem to a UUID generated by uuidgen or to one of the following:
- clear
-
Clear the existing UUID.
- random
-
Randomly generate a new UUID.
- time
-
Generate a new time-based UUID.
System administration command. Control a line
printer's device parameters. Without options, print
information about device(s).
Options
- -a [on|off]
-
Specify whether or not to abort if the printer encounters an error.
By default, do not abort.
- -c n
-
Retry device n times if it refuses a character.
(Default is 250.) After exhausting n, sleep
before retrying.
- -i irq
-
Use irq for specified parallel port. Ignore
-t and -c. If 0, restore noninterrupt driven
(polling) action.
- -o [on|off]
-
Specify whether to abort if device is not online or is out of paper.
- -q [on|off]
-
Specify whether to print current IRQ setting.
- -r
-
Reset port.
- -s
-
Display printer's current status.
- -t time
-
Specify a delay of time in jiffies to sleep
before resending a refused character to the device. A jiffy is
defined as either one tick of the system clock or one AC cycle time;
it should be approximately 1/100 of a second.
- -w time
-
Specify a delay of time in jiffies to sleep
before resending a strobe signal.
- -C [on|off]
-
Specify whether to be extremely careful in checking for printer
error. Obsolete; the default beginning with Linux 2.1.131.
- -T [on|off]
-
Tell the lp driver whether it can
trust the IRQ. Useful only if using with interrupts, to handle IRQ
printing efficiently. Requires at least Linux 2.1.131.
Translate underscores to underlining. The process will vary by
terminal type. Some terminals are unable to handle underlining.
Options
- -i
-
When on a separate line, translate - to underline instead of
translating underscores.
- -t terminal-type
-
Specify terminal type. By default, TERM is consulted.
umount [options] [directory|special-device]
|
|
System administration command. Unmount a filesystem. umount announces to the system that the
removable file structure previously mounted on the specified
directory is to be removed. umount
also accepts the special-device to indicate the
filesystem to be unmounted; however, this usage is obsolete and will
fail if the device is mounted on more than one directory. Any pending
I/O for the filesystem is completed, and the file structure is
flagged as clean. A busy filesystem cannot be unmounted.
Options
- -a
-
Unmount all filesystems that are listed in
/etc/mtab.
- -d
-
If the unmounted device was a loop device, free the loop device too.
See also the losetup command.
- -f
-
Force the unmount. This option requires kernel 2.1.116 or later.
- -h
-
Print help message and exit.
- -l
-
Lazy unmount. Detach the filesystem from the hierarchy immediately,
but don't clean up references until it is no longer
busy. Requires kernel 2.4.11 or later.
- -n
-
Unmount, but do not record changes in /etc/mtab.
- -O options
-
Unmount only filesystems with the specified options in
/etc/fstab. Specify multiple options as a
comma-separated list. Add no as a
prefix to an option to indicate filesystems that should not be
unmounted.
- -r
-
If unmounting fails, try to remount read-only.
- -t type
-
Unmount only filesystems of type type. Multiple
types can be specified as a comma-separated list, and any type can be
prefixed with no to specify that
filesystems of that type should not be unmounted.
- -v
-
Verbose mode.
- -V
-
Print version information and exit.
Print information about the machine and operating system. Without
options, print the name of the operating system (Linux).
Options
- -a, --all
-
Combine all the system information from the other options.
- -i, --hardware-platform
-
Print the system's hardware platform.
- -m, --machine
-
Print the name of the hardware the system is running on.
- -n, --nodename
-
Print the machine's hostname.
- -o, --operating-system
-
Print the operating system name.
- -p, --processor
-
Print the type of processor (not available on all versions).
- -r, --kernel-release
-
Print the release number of the kernel.
- -s, --kernel-name
-
Print the name of the kernel (Linux). This is the default action.
- -v, --kernel-version
-
Print build information about the kernel.
- --help
-
Display a help message and then exit.
- --version
-
Print version information and then exit.
uncompress [options] files
|
|
Uncompress files that were compressed (i.e., whose names end in
.Z). uncompress
takes all the same options as compress except -r and -b.
unexpand [options] [files]
|
|
Convert strings of initial whitespace, consisting of at least two
spaces and/or tabs, to tabs. Read from standard input if given no
file or a file named -.
Options
- -a, --all
-
Convert all, not just initial, strings of spaces and tabs.
- -nums, -t nums, --tabs nums
-
nums is a comma-separated list of integers that
specify the placement of tab stops. If a single integer is provided,
the tab stops are set to every integer spaces.
By default, tab stops are eight spaces apart. With -t and --tabs, the list may be separated by
whitespace instead of commas. This option implies -a.
- --help
-
Print help message and then exit.
- --version
-
Print the version number and then exit.
unicode_start [font [umap]]
|
|
Put keyboard and console in Unicode mode, setting the font to
font and the Unicode map to
umap if the font doesn't have
its own map. If no font is specified, use the default.
Take keyboard and console out of Unicode mode.
uniq [options] [file1 [file2]]
|
|
Remove duplicate adjacent lines from sorted
file1, sending one copy of each line to
file2 (or to standard output). Often used as a
filter. Specify only one of -d or
-u. See also comm and sort.
Options
- -n, -f n, --skip-fields=n
-
Ignore first n fields of a line. Fields are
separated by spaces or by tabs.
- +n, -s n, --skip-chars=n
-
Ignore first n characters of a field.
- -c, --count
-
Print each line once, prefixing number of instances.
- -d, --repeated
-
Print duplicate lines once but no unique lines.
- -D, --all-repeated[=method]
-
Print all duplicate lines. -D takes
no delimiter method. The delimiter method method
takes one of the values none
(default), prepend, or separate. Blank lines are used as the
delimiter.
- -i, --ignore-case
-
Ignore case differences when checking for duplicates.
- -u, --unique
-
Print only unique lines (no copy of duplicate entries is kept).
- -w n, --check-chars=n
-
Compare only first n characters per line
(beginning after skipped fields and characters).
- --help
-
Print a help message and then exit.
- --version
-
Print version information and then exit.
Examples
Send one copy of each line from list
to output file list.new:
uniq list list.new
Show which names appear more than once:
sort names | uniq -d
Unpack a shell archive (shar file). unshar scans mail messages looking for the
start of a shell archive. It then passes the archive through a copy
of the shell to unpack it. unshar
accepts multiple files. If no files are given, standard input is
used.
Options
- -c, --overwrite
-
Overwrite existing files.
- -d directory, --directory=directory
-
Change to directory before unpacking any files.
- -e, --exit-0
-
Sequentially unpack multiple archives stored in same file. This uses
the clue that many shar files are
terminated by an exit 0 at the beginning of a line. (Equivalent to
-E "exit
0".)
- -E string, --split-at=string
-
Like -e, but allows you to specify
the string that separates archives.
- -f, --force
-
Same as -c.
- --help
-
Print help message and then exit.
- --version
-
Print the version number and then exit.
System administration command. update is a daemon that controls how often the
kernel's disk buffers are flushed to disk. update is also known as bdflush. The daemon forks a couple of
processes to call system functions flush(
) and sync( ). When
called by an unprivileged user, no daemon is created. Instead,
update calls sync( ) and then exits. By default, update
will wake up every 5 seconds and flush(
) some dirty buffers. If that doesn't
work, it will try waking up every 30 seconds to sync( ) the buffers to disk. Not all of the
listed options are available in every version of update.
Options
- -d
-
Display the kernel parameters. This does not start the update daemon.
- -f seconds
-
Call flush( ) at this interval.
Default is 5.
- -h
-
Help. Print a command summary.
- -s seconds
-
Call sync( ) at this interval.
Default is 30.
- -0 percent
-
Flush buffers when the specified percent of the
buffer cache is dirty.
- -1 blocks
-
The maximum number of dirty blocks to write out per wake cycle.
- -2 buffers
-
The number of clean buffers to try to obtain each time the free
buffers are refilled.
- -3 blocks
-
Flush buffers if dirty blocks exceed blocks when
trying to refill the buffers.
- -4 percent
-
Percent of buffer cache to scan when looking for free clusters.
- -5 seconds
-
Time for a data buffer to age before being flushed.
- -6 seconds
-
Time for a nondata buffer to age before being flushed.
- -7 constant
-
The time constant to use for load average.
- -8 ratio
-
How low the load average can be before trimming back the number of
buffers.
Print the current time, how long the system has been running, the
number of users currently logged in (which may include the same user
multiple times), and system load averages. This output is also
produced by the first line of the w
command.
Option
- -V
-
Print version information and exit.
System administration command. Create new user accounts or update
default account information. Unless invoked with the -D option, user must be
given. useradd will create new
entries in system files. Home directories and initial files may also
be created as needed.
Options
- -c comment
-
Comment field.
- -d dir
-
Home directory. The default is to use user as
the directory name under the home directory
specified with the -D option.
- -e date
-
Account expiration date.
date is in the format MM/DD/YYYY. Two-digit year
fields are also accepted. The value is stored as the number of days
since January 1, 1970. This option requires the use of shadow
passwords.
- -f days
-
Permanently disable account this many days after
the password has expired. A value of -1 disables this feature. This
option requires the use of shadow passwords.
- -g group
-
Initial group name or ID number. If a different
default group has not been specified using the -D option, the default group is 1.
- -G groups
-
Supplementary groups given by name or number in
a comma-separated list with no whitespace.
- -k [dir]
-
Copy default files to the user's home directory.
Meaningful only when used with the -m option. Default files are copied from
/etc/skel/ unless an alternate
dir is specified.
- -m
-
Make user's home directory if it does not exist. The
default is not to make the home directory.
- -M
-
Do not create a home directory for the user, even if the system
default in /etc/login.defs is to create one.
- -n
-
Red Hat-specific option. Turn off the Red Hat default that creates a
group with the same name as the username and puts the user in that
group.
- -o
-
Override. Accept a nonunique uid with the
-u option. (Probably a bad idea.)
- -p passwd
-
The encrypted password, as returned by crypt(3).
- -r
-
Red Hat-specific option. Create a system account with a non-expiring
password and a UID lower than the minimum defined in
/etc/login.defs. Do not create a home directory
for the account unless -m is also
specified.
- -s shell
-
Login shell.
- -u uid
-
Numerical user ID. The value must be unique unless the -o option is used. The default value is the
smallest ID value greater than 99 and greater than every other
uid.
- -D [options]
-
Set or display defaults. If options are
specified, set them. If no options are specified, display current
defaults. The options are:
- -b dir
-
Home directory prefix to be used in creating home directories. If the
-d option is not used when creating
an account, the user name will be appended to
dir.
- -e date
-
Expire date. Requires the use of shadow
passwords.
- -f days
-
Number of days after a password expires to
disable an account. Requires the use of shadow passwords.
- -g group
-
Initial group name or ID number.
- -s shell
-
Default login shell.
System administration command. Delete all entries for
user in system account files.
Option
- -r
-
Remove the home directory of user and any files
contained in it.
System administration command. Modify user
account information.
Options
- -c comment
-
Comment field.
- -d dir
-
Home directory.
- -e date
-
Account expiration date.
date is in the format MM/DD/YYYY; two-digit year
fields are also accepted. The value is stored as the number of days
since January 1, 1970. This option requires the use of shadow
passwords.
- -f days
-
Permanently disable account this many days after
the password has expired. A value of -1 disables this feature. This
option requires the use of shadow passwords.
- -g group
-
Initial group name or number.
- -G groups
-
Supplementary groups given by name or number in
a comma-separated list with no whitespace. user
will be removed from any groups to which it currently belongs that
are not included in groups.
- -l name
-
Login name. This cannot be changed while the
user is logged in.
- -L
-
Lock user's password by putting a ! in front of it. This option cannot be used
with -p or -U.
- -o
-
Override. Accept a nonunique uid with the
-u option.
- -p pw
-
Encrypted password, as returned from crypt(3).
- -s shell
-
Login shell.
- -u uid
-
Numerical user ID. The value must be unique unless the -o option is used. Any files owned by
user in the user's home
directory will have their user ID changed automatically. Files
outside of the home directory will not be changed.
user should not be executing any processes while
this is changed.
- -U
-
Unlock the user's password by removing the ! that -L put
in front of it. This option cannot be used with -p or -L.
Print a space-separated list of each login session on the host. Note
that this may include the same user multiple times. Consult
file or, by default,
/var/log/utmp or
/var/log/wtmp.
Options
- --help
-
Print usage information and exit.
- --version
-
Print version information and exit.
usleep [microseconds]usleep [options]
|
|
Sleep some number of microseconds (default is 1).
Options
- -?, --help
-
Print help information and then exit.
- --usage
-
Print usage message and then exit.
- -v, --version
-
Print version information.
uudecode [-o outfile] [file]
|
|
Read a uuencoded file and re-create the original file with the
permissions and name set in the file (see uuencode). The -o option specifies an alternate output file.
uuencode [-m] [file] name
|
|
Encode a binary file. The encoding uses only
printable ASCII characters and includes the permissions and
name of the file. When file
is reconverted via uudecode, the
output is saved as name. If the
file argument is omitted, uuencode can take standard input, so a single
argument is taken as the name to be given to the file when it is
decoded. With the -m option, base64
encoding is used.
Examples
It's common to encode a file and save it with an
identifying extension, such as .uue. This
example encodes the binary file flower12.jpg,
names it rose.jpg, and saves it to a
.uue file:
% uuencode flower12.jpg rose.jpg > rose.uue
Encode flower12.jpg and mail it:
% uuencode flower12.jpg flower12.jpg | mail [email protected]
Create a new Universal Unique Identifier (UUID) and print it to
standard output. The generated UUID consists of five hyphen-separated
groups of hex digits (e.g., 3cdfc61d-87d3-41b5-ba50-32870b33dc67).
The default is to generate a random-based UUID, but this requires
that a high-quality random-number generator be available on the
system.
Options
- -r
-
Generate a random-based UUID.
- -t
-
Generate a time-based UUID.
vacationvacation [options] [user]
|
|
Automatically return a mail message to the sender announcing that you
are on vacation.
Use vacation with no options to
initialize the vacation mechanism. The process performs several
steps.
Creates a .forward file in your home directory. The .forward file
contains: \user, "|/usr/bin/vacation user" user is your login name. The action of this file is to actually deliver the mail to user (i.e., you) and to run the incoming mail through vacation.
Creates the .vacation.pag and
.vacation.dir files. These files keep track of
who has sent you messages so that they receive only one
"I'm on vacation"
message from you per week.
Starts an editor to edit the contents of
.vacation.msg. The contents of this file are
mailed back to whomever sends you mail. Within its body, $subject is replaced with the contents of the
incoming message's Subject line.
Remove or rename the .forward file to disable
vacation processing.
Options
The -a and -r options are used within a
.forward file; see the example.
- -a alias
-
Mail addressed to alias is actually mail for the
user and should produce an automatic reply.
- -i
-
Reinitialize the .vacation.pag and
.vacation.dir files. Use this right before
leaving for your next vacation.
- -r interval
-
By default, no more than one message per week is sent to any sender;
this option changes that interval. interval is a
number with a trailing s, m, h,
d, or w indicating seconds, minutes, hours, days, or
weeks, respectively. If interval is infinite, only one reply is sent to each
sender.
Example
Send no more than one reply every three weeks to any given sender:
$ cd
$ vacation -I
$ cat .forward
\jp, "|/usr/bin/vacation -r3w jp"
$ cat .vacation.msg
From: [email protected] (J. Programmer, via the vacation program)
Subject: I'm out of the office ...
Hi. I'm off on a well-deserved vacation after finishing
up whizprog 1.0. I will read and reply to your mail
regarding "$SUBJECT" when I return.
Have a nice day.
Verbosely list directory contents. Equivalent to ls -lb. By default, list the current
directory. Directory entries are sorted alphabetically unless
overridden by an option. vdir takes
the same options as ls.
A screen-oriented text editor based on ex. For more information on vi, see Chapter 11.
vidmode [option] image [mode [offset]]
|
|
System administration command. Set the video mode for a kernel
image. If no arguments are specified, print
current mode value. mode is
a 1-byte value located at offset 506 in a kernel image. You may
change the mode by specifying the kernel
image to change, the new
mode, and the byte offset at which to place the
new information (the default is 506). Note that rdev -v is a synonym for vidmode. If LILO is used, vidmode is not needed. The video mode can be
set from the LILO prompt during a boot.
Modes
- -3
-
Prompt
- -2
-
Extended VGA
- -1
-
Normal VGA
- 0
-
Same as entering 0 at the prompt
- 1
-
Same as entering 1 at the prompt
- 2
-
Same as entering 2 at the prompt
- 3
-
Same as entering 3 at the prompt
- n
-
Same as entering n at the prompt
Option
- -o offset
-
Same as specifying an offset as an argument.
An enhanced version of the vi screen
editor. Both vi and vim are covered in Chapter 11.
vmstat [options] [interval [count]]
|
|
Print report on virtual memory statistics, including information on
processes, memory, swap space, I/O, system and CPU usage. vmstat will first report average values since
the last system reboot. If given a sampling period
interval in seconds, it will print additional
statistics for each interval. If specified, vmstat will exit when it has completed
count reports. Otherwise, it will continue until
it receives a Ctrl-C, printing a new header line each time it fills
the screen.
Options
- -n
-
Don't print new header lines when the screen is full.
- -V
-
Print version number, then exit.
Fields
- procs
-
- r
-
Processes waiting for run time.
- b
-
Uninterruptable sleeping processes.
- w
-
Swapped but runnable processes.
- memory
-
- swpd
-
Virtual memory used, in kilobytes.
- free
-
Idle memory, in kilobytes.
- buff
-
Memory used as buffers, in kilobytes.
- swap
-
- si
-
Memory swapped in from disk each second, in kilobytes.
- so
-
Memory swapped out to disk each second, in kilobytes.
- io
-
- bi
-
Blocks sent to block devices each second.
- bo
-
Blocks received from block devices each second.
- system
-
- in
-
Interrupts per second, including clock interrupts.
- cs
-
Context switches per second.
- cpu
-
- us
-
Percentage of CPU time consumed by user processes.
- sy
-
Percentage of CPU time consumed by system processes.
- id
-
Percentage of CPU time spent idle.
Return the volume name for a device such as a CD-ROM that was
formatted with an ISO-9660 filesystem. The default device file
devfile is /dev/cdrom.
Print summaries of system usage, currently logged-in users, and what
those users are doing. w is
essentially a combination of uptime,
who, and ps
-a. Display output for one user by specifying
user.
Options
- -f
-
Toggle printing the from (remote hostname) field.
- -h
-
Suppress headings and uptime
information.
- -s
-
Use the short format.
- -u
-
Ignore the username while figuring out the current process and CPU
times.
- -V
-
Display version information.
File
- /var/run/utmp
-
List of users currently logged in.
wall [file]
wall [message]
|
|
Write to all users. Depending on your Linux distribution, wall uses one of the two syntaxes shown. In
both versions, the default is for wall to read a message from standard input and
send the message to all users currently logged in, preceded by
"Broadcast Message from...". With
the first syntax, which comes with Debian for example, if
file is specified, wall reads input from that file rather than
from standard input, and only the superuser can write to a terminal
if the user has disallowed messages. With the second syntax,
distributed by Red Hat for example, the text of the message can be
included on the command line, and the message is limited to 20 lines.
watch [options] command [cmd_options]
|
|
Run the specified command repeatedly (by default, every 2 seconds)
and display the output so you can watch it change over time. The
command and any options are passed to sh
-c, so you may need to use quotes to get correct results.
Options
- -d, --differences[=cumulative]
-
Highlight changes between iterations. If cumulative is specified, the highlighting
remains on the screen throughout, giving a cumulative picture of the
changes.
- -h, --help
-
Display help message and exit.
- -n secs, --interval=secs
-
Run the command every secs seconds.
- -v, --version
-
Print version information and exit.
Print byte, word, and line counts for each file. Print a total line
for multiple files. If no
files are given, read standard input. See other
examples under ls and sort.
Options
- -c, --bytes
-
Print byte count only.
- -l, --lines
-
Print line count only.
- -L, --max-line-length
-
Print length of longest line.
- -m, --chars
-
Print character count only.
- -w, --words
-
Print word count only.
- --help
-
Print help message and then exit.
- --version
-
Print the version number and then exit.
Examples
Count the number of users logged in:
who | wc -l
Count the words in three essay files:
wc -w essay.[123]
Count lines in the file named by variable $file (don't display
filename):
wc -l < $file
Search the short manual page descriptions in the whatis database for each
keyword and print a one-line description to
standard output for each match. Like apropos, except that it searches only for
complete words. Equivalent to man
-f.
Locate the binary, source, and manual page files for specified
commands/files. The supplied filenames are first stripped of leading
pathname components and any (single) trailing extension of the form
.ext (for example, .c).
Prefixes of s. resulting from use of source code
control are also dealt with. whereis
then attempts to locate the desired program in a list of standard
Linux directories (/bin,
/etc, /usr/bin,
/usr/local/bin/, etc.).
Options
- -b
-
Search only for binaries.
- -f
-
Terminate the last directory list and signal the start of filenames.
Required when the -B, -M, or -S
option is used.
- -m
-
Search only for manual sections.
- -s
-
Search only for sources.
- -u
-
Search for unusual entries, that is, files that do not have one entry
of each requested type. Thus, the command whereis -m -u * asks for those files in the
current directory that have no documentation.
- -B directories
-
Change or otherwise limit the directories to search for binaries.
- -M directory
-
Change or otherwise limit the directories to search for manual
sections.
- -S directory
-
Change or otherwise limit the directories to search for sources.
Example
Find all files in /usr/bin that are not
documented in /usr/share/man/man1 but that have
source in /usr/src:
% cd /usr/bin
% whereis -u -M /usr/share/man/man1 -S /usr/src -f *
which [options] [--] [commands]
|
|
List the full pathnames of the files that would be executed if the
named commands had been run. which searches the user's
$PATH environment variable.
tcsh has a built-in which command that has no options. To use the
options with tcsh, specify the full
pathname (e.g., /usr/bin/which).
Options
- -a, --all
-
Print all matches, not just the first.
- -i, --read-alias
-
Read aliases from standard input and write matches to standard
output. Useful for using an alias for which.
- --read-functions
-
Read shell functions from standard input and report matches to
standard output. Useful for also using a shell function for which itself.
- --skip-alias
-
Ignore --read-alias if present.
Useful for finding normal binaries while using --read-alias in an alias for which.
- --skip-dot
-
Skip directories that start with a dot.
- --skip-functions
-
Ignore --read-functions if
present. Useful when searching for normal binaries while using
--read-functions in an alias or
function for which.
- --skip-tilde
-
Skip directories that start with a tilde (~) and executables in
$HOME.
- --show-dot
-
If a matching command is found in a directory that starts with a dot,
print ./cmdname instead of the full pathname.
- --show-tilde
-
Print a tilde (~) to indicate the user's home
directory. Ignored if the user is root.
- --tty-only
-
Stop processing options on the right if not on a terminal.
- -v, -V, --version
-
Print version information and then exit.
- --help
-
Print help information and then exit.
Example
which cc ls
/usr/bin/cc
ls: aliased to ls -sFC
who [options] [file]
who am i
|
|
Show who is logged into the system. With no options, list the names
of users currently logged in, their terminal, the time they have been
logged in, and the name of the host from which they have logged in.
An optional system file (default is
/etc/utmp) can be supplied to give additional
information.
Options
- am i
-
Print the username of the invoking user.
- --help
-
Print a help message and then exit.
- -i, -u, --idle
-
Include idle times. An idle time of . indicates activity within the
last minute; one of old indicates no
activity in more than a day.
- -l, --lookup
-
Attempt to include canonical hostnames via DNS.
- -m
-
Same as who am i.
- -q, --count
-
"Quick." Display only the usernames
and total number of users.
- --version
-
Print version information and then exit.
- -w, -T, --mesg, --message, --writable
-
Include user's message status in the output:
- +
-
mesg y (write messages allowed)
- -
-
mesg n (write messages refused)
- ?
-
Cannot find terminal device
- -H, --heading
-
Print headings.
Example
This sample output was produced at 8 a.m. on April 17:
$ who -uH
NAME LINE TIME IDLE PID COMMENTS
Earvin ttyp3 Apr 16 08:14 16:25 2240
Larry ttyp0 Apr 17 07:33 . 15182
Since Earvin has been idle since yesterday afternoon (16 hours), it
appears that he isn't at work yet. He simply left
himself logged in. Larry's terminal is currently in
use.
Print current user ID. Equivalent to id
-un.
whois[options] query[@server[:port]]
fwhois [options] query[@server[:port]]
|
|
Search a whois database for a domain
name, IP address, or NIC name. The information returned varies, but
usually contains administrative and technical contacts so that you
can find a person to handle problems at that domain. By default, the
command returns information on .com,
.net, and .edu domains, but
other hosts can be queried for other domains using
host or the -h
option.
Options
- --
-
Indicates the end of options. A subsequent string that begins with a
hyphen on the command line is taken as a query string.
- -h server
-
Query the whois server on the
specified host. Same as host on the command
line. By default, queries the server in the environment variable
NICNAMESERVER or WHOISSERVER if either is set, otherwise
queries whois.crsnic.net.
- -n
-
Disable recursion.
- -p port
-
Connect to the specified port. Same as port on
the command line. Default is 43.
- -r
-
Force recursion when the server responds with the name of another
server. The default when the default name server is used.
- -t timeout
-
Set a timeout period of timeout seconds.
- -v
-
Verbose. Display the query before sending it to the server.
Initiate or respond to an interactive conversation with
user. A write
session is terminated with EOF. If the user is logged into more than
one terminal, specify a tty number. See also
talk; use mesg to keep other users from writing to your
terminal.
xargs [options] [command]
|
|
Execute command (with any initial arguments),
but read remaining arguments from standard input instead of
specifying them directly. xargs
passes these arguments in several bundles to
command, allowing command
to process more arguments than it could normally handle at once. The
arguments are typically a long list of filenames (generated by
ls or find, for example) that get passed to
xargs via a pipe.
Options
- -0, --null
-
Expect filenames to be terminated by NULL instead of whitespace. Do
not treat quotes or backslashes specially.
- -e[string], --eof[=string]
-
Set EOF to _ or, if specified, to string.
- --help
-
Print a summary of the options to xargs and then exit.
- -i[string], --replace[=string]
-
Edit all occurrences of { }, or string, to the
names read in on standard input. Unquoted blanks are not considered
argument terminators. Implies -x and
-l 1.
- -l[lines], --max-lines[=lines]
-
Allow no more than lines nonblank input lines on
the command line (default is 1). Implies -x.
- -n args, --max-args=args
-
Allow no more than args arguments on the command
line. May be overridden by -s.
- -p, --interactive
-
Prompt for confirmation before running each command line. Implies
-t.
- -P max, --max-procs=max
-
Allow no more than max processes to run at once.
The default is 1. A maximum of 0 allows as many as possible to run at
once.
- -r, --no-run-if-empty
-
Do not run command if standard input contains only blanks.
- -s max, --max-chars=max
-
Allow no more than max characters per command
line.
- -t, --verbose
-
Verbose mode. Print command line on standard error before executing.
- -x, --exit
-
If the maximum size (as specified by -s) is exceeded, exit.
- --version
-
Print the version number of xargs
and then exit.
Examples
grep for
pattern in all files on the system:
find / -print | xargs grep pattern > out &
Run diff on file pairs (e.g.,
f1.a and f1.b, f2.a
and f2.b, etc.):
echo $* | xargs -n2 diff
The previous line would be invoked as a shell script, specifying
filenames as arguments. Display file, one word
per line (same as deroff -w):
cat file | xargs -n1
Move files in olddir to newdir, showing each command:
ls olddir | xargs -i -t mv olddir/{ } newdir/{ }
TCP/IP command. The extended Internet services daemon. (On some
systems this replaces inetd.)
Similar to inetd, xinetd saves system resources by listening to
multiple sockets on the behalf of other server programs, invoking
necessary programs as requests are made for their services. Beyond
this, xinetd provides better logging
facilities, including remote user ID, access times, and
server-specific information. It also provides access control
facilities. Not limited to system administration use, it can launch
services that are not listed in /etc/services.
Unprivileged users can use this tool to start their own servers.
Options
- -cc num
-
Perform an internal state consistency check every
num seconds.
- -d
-
Turn on debugging support.
- -f file
-
Read configuration from the specified file
instead of /etc/xinetd.conf.
- -filelog file
-
Write log messages to the specified file. Cannot
be combined with -syslog or
-debug.
- -limit num
-
Start no more than num concurrent processes.
- -logprocs num
-
Limit processes used to look up remote user IDs to
num.
- -p file
-
Write xinetd's
process ID to file.
- -stayalive
-
Keep running even when no services have been specified.
- -syslog facility
-
Log messages to the specified syslogd facility. Accepted values are
daemon, auth, user,
and localn,
where n can range from 0 to 7. Cannot be
combined with -syslog or -debug. The default behavior is to write
messages to syslogd using the
daemon facility.
Configuration files
By default xinetd reads its
configuration information from file
/etc/xinetd.conf. Lines in this file beginning
with # are treated as comments. The entries for each service differ
completely from /etc/inetd entries. xinetd configuration entries for services
follow the pattern:
service servicename
{
attribute1 = valueset1
attribute2 = valueset2
}
Some attributes allow assignment operators other than
=. Other operators are +=, to
add to a value set, and -=, to remove a value from
a value set. There are many attributes available to control services;
the following are the most common:
- deny_time
-
Set the time in minutes to deny access to an address that sets off a
SENSOR. Other accepted values are
NEVER and FOREVER. See the flags attribute.
- disable
-
Accept a Boolean yes or no. When disabled, xinetd will ignore the entry.
- flags
-
Accept a set of the following values defining xinetd's behavior:
- IDONLY
-
Accept only connections when the remote user's ID
can be verified by an identification server. Cannot be used with
USERID logging.
- INTERCEPT
-
Intercept packets to ensure they are coming from allowed locations.
Cannot be used with internal or multithreaded services.
- IPv4
-
Service is an IPv4 service.
- IPv6
-
Service is an IPv6 service.
- KEEPALIVE
-
Set flag on socket, enabling periodic checks to determine if the line
is still receiving data.
- NAMEINARGS
-
Expect the first argument for the server_args attribute to be the command to
run. This flag is necessary to wrap services with tcpd.
- NODELAY
-
Set socket's NODELAY flag.
- NOLIBWRAP
-
Don't use xinetd's internal TCP
wrapping facilities.
- NORETRY
-
If service fails to fork, don't try to fork again.
- SENSOR
-
Instead of launching a service, add IP addresses that attempt to
access this service to a list of denied addresses for a time
specified by the deny_time
attribute.
- group
-
Specify a group ID for the server process. This may be used only when
xinetd runs as root.
- nice
-
Set service priority. This attribute accepts the same values as the
renice command.
- id
-
Specify a unique identifier for the service. Useful when creating
multiple entries with the servicename. For
example, two versions of the echo service, one supporting UDP and the
other TCP, might be given the identifiers echo-stream and echo-dgram.
- log_on_failure
-
Specify values to log when a server cannot be started. Accepted
values are HOST, USERID, or just ATTEMPT.
- log_on_success
-
Specify values to log when a server is started. Accepted values are
PID, HOST, USERID,
EXIT, and DURATION.
- no_access
-
Specify hosts that should not be allowed access to a service. May be
given as an IP address, a netmask, a hostname, a network name from
/etc/networks, or a group of IP addresses like
so: 192.168.1.{10,11,12,15,32}.
- only_from
-
Restrict access to the service to the specified hosts. This attribute
accepts the same values as no_access.
- port
-
Specify the service port to listen to. This attribute is required for
non-RPC services not listed in /etc/services. If
the service is listed, the value of port cannot differ from what is listed.
- protocol
-
Specify protocol to use, usually tcp
or udp. The protocol must be listed
in /etc/protocols. This attribute is required
for RPC services as well as services not found in
/etc/services.
- rpc_version
-
The RPC version used by the service. This can be a single number or a
range of numbers from x-y. This attribute is
required for RPC services.
- rpc_number
-
Specify RPC ID number. This is required only for services not listed
in /etc/rpc; otherwise it's
ignored.
- server
-
The program to execute for the service. When using tcpd to wrap a service, also set the NAMEINARGS flag and use the
server's program name as the first argument for
server_args. This attribute is
required for all non-internal services.
- server_args
-
Arguments to pass to the server program.
- socket_type
-
Specify the socket type to create. Accepted values are stream, dgram, raw,
and seqpacket.
- type
-
Describe the type of service. Accepted values are RPC, INTERNAL, and UNLISTED.
- user
-
Specify a user ID for the server process. This may be used only when
xinetd runs as root.
- wait
-
Determine whether services should be treated as single-threaded
(yes) and xinetd should wait until the server exits to
resume listening for new connections, or multithreaded (no) and xinetd should not wait to resume listening.
This attribute is required for all serices.
Files
- /etc/xinetd.conf
-
Default configuration file.
- /etc/xinetd.d
-
Common directory containing configuration files included from
/etc/xinetd.conf.
Given a file containing context-free grammar,
convert file into tables for subsequent parsing
and send output to y.tab.c. This command name
stands for yet another compiler-compiler. See also flex, bison,
and lex & yacc (O'Reilly).
Options
- -b prefix
-
Prepend prefix, instead of
y, to the output file.
- -d
-
Generate y.tab.h, producing #define statements that relate yacc's token codes to the
token names declared by the user.
- -l
-
Exclude #line constructs from code
produced in y.tab.c. (Use after debugging is
complete.)
- -o outfile
-
Write generated code to outfile instead of the
default y.tab.c.
- -p prefix
-
Change the symbol yacc uses for
symbols it generates from the default yy to prefix.
- -r
-
Produce separate files for code and tables named
y.code.c and y.tab.c,
respectively.
- -t
-
Compile runtime debugging code.
- -v
-
Generate y.output, a file containing diagnostics
and notes about the parsing tables.
yes [strings]
yes [option]
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Print the command-line arguments, separated by spaces and followed by
a newline, until killed. If no arguments are given, print y followed by a newline until killed. Useful
in scripts and in the background; its output can be piped to a
program that issues prompts.
Options
- --help
-
Print a help message and then exit.
- --version
-
Print version information and then exit.
NFS/NIS command. NIS binder process. ypbind is a daemon process typically activated
at system startup time. Its function is to remember information that
lets client processes on a single node communicate with some
ypserv process. The information
ypbind remembers is called a
binding--the association of a domain name
with the Internet address of the NIS server and the port on that host
at which the ypserv process is
listening for service requests. This information is cached in the
file /var/yp/bindings/domainname.version.
Options
- -c
-
Check configuration file for syntax errors, then exit.
- -broadcast
-
Ignore configuration information in /etc/yp.conf
and directly request configuration information from a remote system
using ypset.
- -broken-server
-
Allow connections to servers using normally illegal port numbers.
Sometimes needed for compatibility with other versions of ypserv.
- -f file
-
Read configuration information, from file
instead of /etc/yp.conf.
- -no-ping
-
Don't ping remote servers to make sure they are
alive.
- --version
-
Print version information then exit.
- -ypset
-
Allow remote machine to change the local server's
bindings. This option is very dangerous and should be used only for
debugging the network from a remote machine.
- -ypsetme
-
ypset requests may be issued from
this machine only. Security is based on IP address checking, which
can be defeated on networks on which untrusted individuals may inject
packets. This option is not recommended.
- -debug
-
Run in the foreground process instead of detaching and running as a
daemon.
NFS/NIS command. Print values in an NIS database specified by
map name or nickname.
Options
- -d domain
-
Specify domain other than default domain.
- -h host
-
Specify a ypbind
host other than the default.
- --help, -?
-
Print help message, then exit.
- -k
-
Display keys for maps in which values are null or key is not part of
value.
- -t
-
Do not translate mname to map name.
- --version, -?
-
Print version number, then exit.
- -x
-
Display map nickname table listing the nicknames
(mnames) known and map name associated with each
nickname. Do not require an mname argument.
NFS/NIS command. Change your information stored in
/etc/passwd and displayed when you are fingered;
distribute the change over NIS. Without options, ypchfn enters interactive mode and prompts for
changes. To make a field blank, enter the keyword none. The superuser can change the information
for any user. See also yppasswd and ypchsh.
Options
- -f
-
Behave like ypchfn (default).
- -l
-
Behave like ypchsh.
- -p
-
Behave like yppasswd.
NFS/NIS command. Build and install an NIS database on an NIS server.
ypinit can be used to set up a
master server, slave server, or slave copier. Only a privileged user
can run ypinit.
Options
- -m
-
Indicate that the local host is to be the NIS master server.
- -s master_name
-
Set up a slave server database. master_name
should be the hostname of an NIS server, either the master server for
all the maps, or a server on which the database is up to date and
stable.
ypmatch [options] key...mname
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NFS/NIS command. Print value of one or more keys
from an NIS map specified by mname.
mname may be either a map name or a map
nickname.
Options
- -d domain
-
Specify domain other than default domain.
- -k
-
Before printing value of a key, print key itself, followed by a colon
(:).
- -t
-
Do not translate nickname to map name.
- -x
-
Display map nickname table listing the nicknames
(mnames) known, and map name associated with
each nickname. Do not require an mname argument.
yppasswd [options] [name]
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NFS/NIS command. Change login password in Network Information
Service. Create or change your password, and distribute the new
password over NIS. The superuser can change the password for any
user. See also ypchfn and ypchsh.
Options
- -f
-
Update the password information field (the GECOS field). Using this option is the same as
ypchfn.
- -l
-
Update the login shell. Using this option is the same as ypchsh.
- -p
-
Update the password. This is the default behavior for yppasswd.
- --help, -?
-
Print help message, then exit.
- --version, -?
-
Print version number, then exit.
NFS/NIS command. Server for modifying the NIS password file.
yppasswdd handles password-change
requests from yppasswd. It changes a
password entry only if the password represented by yppasswd matches the encrypted password of
that entry and if the user ID and group ID match those in the
server's /etc/passwd file. Then
it updates /etc/passwd and the password maps on
the local server. If the server was compiled with the CHECKROOT=1 option, the password is also
checked against the root password.
Options
- -D dir
-
Specify a directory that contains the passwd and
shadow files for rpc.yppasswdd to use instead of
/etc/passwd and
/etc/shadow. Useful to prevent all users in the
NIS database from automatically gaining access to the NIS server.
- -e chsh|chfn]
-
Permit users to change the shell or user information in the GECOS field of their
passwd entry. By default, rpc.yppasswdd does not permit users to change
these fields.
- -E program
-
Specify a program to edit the passwd and
shadow files instead of rpc.yppasswdd. The program should return 0 for
successful completion, 1 for successful completion but the pwupdate program should not be run to update
the NIS server's maps, and anything else if the
change failed.
- -p pwfile
-
Specify an alternative passwd file to
/etc/passwd, to prevent all users in the NIS
database from automatically gaining access to the NIS server.
- --port num
-
Specify a port that rpc.yppasswdd
will try to register itself, allowing a router to filter packets to
the NIS ports.
- -s shadowfile
-
Use shadowfile instead of
/etc/passwd for shadow password support.
- --version
-
Print version information and whether the package was compiled with
CHECKROOT.
- -x program
-
Modify files using the specified program instead
of using internal default functions. rpc.yppasswdd passes information to
program in the following format:
username o:oldpassword p:password s:shell g:gcos
Any of the fields p, s, or g may
be missing.
NFS/NIS command. Determine version of NIS map at NIS server.
yppoll asks a ypserv process for the order number and the
hostname of the master NIS server for the map.
Options
- -h host
-
Ask the ypserv process at
host about the map parameters. If
host is not specified, the hostname of the NIS
server for the local host (the one returned by ypwhich) is used.
- -d domain
-
Use domain instead of the default domain.
yppush [options] mapnames
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NFS/NIS command. Force propagation of changed NIS map. yppush copies a new version of an NIS map,
mapname, from the master NIS server to the slave
NIS servers. It first constructs a list of NIS server hosts by
reading the NIS map ypservers with
the -d option's
domain argument. Keys within this map are the
ASCII names of the machines on which the NIS servers run. A map
transfer request is sent to the NIS server at each host, along with
the information needed by the transfer agent to call back the
yppush. When the attempt has been
completed and the transfer agent has sent yppush a status message, the results may be
printed to standard error. Normally invoked by
/var/yp/Makefile after commenting out the
NOPUSH=true line.
Options
- -d domain
-
Specify a domain.
- -h host
-
Specify one or a group of systems to which a map should be
transferred instead of using the list of servers in the ypservers map. Multiple -h options can be specified to create a list
of hosts.
- -p count
-
Send maps to count NIS slaves simultaneously (in
parallel). By default, yppush sends
maps to one server at a time (serially).
- -t secs
-
Specify a timeout value in seconds. The timeout determines how long
yppush will wait for a response from
a slave server before sending a map transfer request to the next
server. The default timeout is 90 seconds, but for big maps a longer
timeout may be needed.
- -v
-
Verbose; print message when each server is called and for each
response. Specify twice to make yppush even more verbose.
NFS/NIS command. NIS server process. ypserv is a daemon process typically activated
at system startup time. It runs only on NIS server machines with a
complete NIS database. Its primary function is to look up information
in its local database of NIS maps. The operations performed by
ypserv are defined for the
implementor by the NIS protocol specification, and for the programmer
by the header file <rpcvc/yp_prot.h>.
Communication to and from ypserv is
by means of RPC calls. On startup or when receiving the signal
SIGHUP, ypserv parses the file
/etc/ypserv.conf. ypserv supports securenets, which can be used to restrict
access to a given set of hosts.
Options
- -b, --dns
-
Query the DNS service for host information if not found in the hosts
maps.
- -d [path], --debug [path]
-
Run in debugging mode without going into background mode, and print
extra status messages to standard error for each request. If
path is specified, use it instead of
/var/yp.
- -p port, --port port
-
Bind to the specified port. For use with a router to filter packets
so that access from outside hosts can be restricted.
- -v, --version
-
Print version information and exit.
Files and directories
- /etc/yp.conf
-
Configuration file.
- /var/yp/[domainname]/
-
Location of NIS databases.
- /var/yp/Makefile
-
Makefile that is responsible for creating NIS
databases.
- /var/yp/securenets
-
securenets information containing
netmask/network pairs separated by whitespace.
NFS/NIS command. Point ypbind at a
particular server. ypset tells
ypbind to get NIS services for the
specified domain from the ypserv
process running on server.
server indicates the NIS server to bind to and
can be specified as a name or an IP address.
Options
- -d domain
-
Use domain instead of the default domain.
- -h host
-
Set ypbind's
binding on host instead of the local host.
host can be specified as a name or an IP
address.
NFS/NIS command. Check configuration of NIS services by calling
various NIS functions. Without arguments, yptest queries the NIS server for the local
machine.
Options
- -d domainname
-
Use domainname instead of the current
host's default domain. This option may cause some
tests to fail.
- -h host
-
Test ypserv on the specified
host instead of the current host. This option
may cause some tests to fail.
- -m map
-
Use the specified map instead of the default map.
- -u user
-
Run tests as user instead of as nobody.
NFS/NIS command. Return hostname of NIS server or map master. Without
arguments, ypwhich cites the NIS
server for the local machine. If host is
specified, that machine is queried to find out which NIS master it is
using.
Options
- -d domain
-
Use domain instead of the default domain.
- -m [map]
-
Find master NIS server for a map. No host can be specified with
-m. map may be
a map name or a nickname for a map. If no map is specified, display a
list of available maps.
- -t mapname
-
Inhibit nickname translation.
- -Vn
-
Version of ypbind (default is V2).
- -x
-
Display map nickname table. Do not allow any other options.
NFS/NIS command. Transfer an NIS map from the server to the local
host by making use of normal NIS services. ypxfr creates a temporary map in the directory
/var/yp/domain (where
domain is the default domain for the local
host), fills it by enumerating the map's entries,
and fetches the map parameters and loads them. If run interactively,
ypxfr writes its output to the
terminal. However, if it is invoked without a controlling terminal,
its output is sent to syslogd.
Options
- -C tid prog ipadd port
-
This option is for use only by ypserv. When ypserv invokes ypxfr, it specifies that ypxfr should call back a yppush process at the host with IP address
ipadd, registered as program number
prog, listening on port
port, and waiting for a response to transaction
tid.
- -c
-
Do not send a "Clear current map"
request to the local ypserv process.
- -d domain
-
Specify a domain other than the default domain.
- -f
-
Force the transfer to occur even if the version on the master server
is older than the local version.
- -h host
-
Get the map from host instead of querying NIS
for the map's master server.
host may be specified by name or IP address.
- -p dir
-
Use dir as the path to the NIS map directory
instead of /var/yp.
- -s domain
-
Specify a source domain from which to transfer a
map that should be the same across domains (such as the
services.byname map).
Read one or more files that have been compressed
with gzip or compress and write them to standard output.
Read standard input if no files are specified or
if - is specified as one of the
files; end input with EOF. zcat is
identical to gunzip -c and takes the
options -fhLV, as described for
gzip/gunzip.
Read compressed files and pass them uncompressed to the cmp command, along with any command-line
options. If a second file is not specified for comparison, look for a
file called file.gz.
Read compressed files and pass them, uncompressed, to the diff command, along with any command-line
options. If a second file is not specified for comparison, look for a
file called file.gz.
System administration command. Dump a list of all known time zones
or, if an argument is provided, a specific zone or list of zones.
Include each zone's current time with its name.
Options
- -c year
-
Specify a cutoff year to limit verbose output. Meaningful only with
-v.
- -v
-
Verbose mode. Include additional information about each zone.
Rename all gzipped files to
filename.gz, unless file already has a
.gz extension.
Uncompress files and pass to grep,
along with any command-line arguments. If no files are provided, read
from (and attempt to uncompress) standard input. May be invoked as
zegrep or zfgrep and will in those cases invoke
egrep or fgrep.
System administration command. Create time conversion information
files from the file or files specified. If the specified file is -,
read information from standard input.
Options
- -d directory
-
Place the newly created files in directory.
Default is /usr/local/etc/zoneinfo.
- -l timezone
-
Specify a timezone to use for local time.
zic links the zone information for
timezone with the zone localtime.
- -p timezone
-
Set the default rules for handling POSIX-format environment variables
to the zone name specified by timezone.
- -s
-
Store time values only if they are the same when signed as when
unsigned.
- -v
-
Verbose mode. Include extra error checking and warnings.
- -y command
-
Check year types with command. Default is
yearistype.
- -L file
-
Consult file for information about leap seconds.
The source files for zic should be
formatted as a sequence of rule lines, zone lines, and link lines. An
optional file containing leap-second rules can be specified on the
command line. Rule lines describe how time should be calculated. They
describe changes in time, daylight savings time, and any other
changes that might affect a particular time zone. Zone lines specify
which rules apply to a given zone. Link lines link similar zones
together. Leap lines describe the exact time when leap seconds should
be added or subtracted. Each of these lines is made up of fields.
Fields are separated from one another by any number of whitespace
characters. Comment lines are preceded by #. The fields used in each line are listed in
the next section.
Rule line fields
The format of a rule line is:
Rule NAME FROM TO TYPE IN ON AT SAVE LETTERS
- NAME
-
Name this set of rules.
- FROM
-
Specify the first year to which this rule applies. Gregorian calendar
dates are assumed. Instead of specifying an actual year, you may
specify minimum or maximum
for the minimum or maximum year representable as an integer.
- TO
-
Specify the last year to which this rule applies. Syntax is the same
as for the FROM field.
- TYPE
-
Specify the type of year to which this rule should be applied. The
wildcard - instructs that all years
be included. Any given year's type will be checked
with the command given with the -y
option or the default yearistype
year type. An exit status of 0 is taken to mean
the year is of the given type; an exit status of 1 means that it is
not of the given type (see -y
option).
- IN
-
Specify month in which this rule should be applied.
- ON
-
Specify day on which this rule should be applied. Whitespace is not
allowed. For example:
- 1
-
The 1st.
- firstSun
-
The first Sunday.
- Sun>=3
-
The first Sunday to occur before or on the 3rd.
- AT
-
Specify the time after which the rule is in effect. For example, you
may use 13, 13:00, or 13:00:00 for 1:00 p.m. You may include one of
several suffixes (without whitespace between):
- s
-
Local standard time.
- u, g, z
-
Universal time.
- w
-
Wall clock time (default).
- SAVE
-
Add this amount of time to the local standard time. Formatted like
AT, without suffixes.
- LETTERS
-
Specify letter or letters to be used in time zone abbreviations (for
example, S for EST). For no abbreviation, enter -.
Zone line fields
The format of a zone line is:
Zone NAME GMTOFF RULES/SAVE FORMAT [UNTIL]
- NAME
-
Time zone name.
- GMTOFF
-
The amount of hours by which this time zone differs from GMT.
Formatted like AT. Negative times are subtracted
from GMT; by default, times are added to it.
- RULES/SAVE
-
Either the name of the rule to apply to this zone or the amount of
time to add to local standard time. To make the zone the same as
local standard time, specify -.
- FORMAT
-
The format of time zone abbreviations. Specify the variable part with
%s.
- UNTIL
-
Change the rule for the zone at this date. The next line must specify
the new zone information and therefore must omit the string
"Zone" and the
NAME field.
Link line fields
The format of a link line is:
Link LINK-FROM LINK-TO
- LINK-FROM
-
The name of the zone that is being linked.
- LINK-TO
-
An alternate name for the zone that was specified as
LINK-FROM.
Leap line fields
The format of a leap line is:
Leap YEAR MONTH DAY HH:MM:SS CORR R|S
- YEAR MONTH DAY HH:MM:SS
-
Specify when the leap second happened.
- CORR
-
Uses + or - to show whether the second was added or skipped.
- R|S
-
Rolling or Stationary. Describe whether the leap second should be
applied to local wall clock time or GMT, respectively.
Uncompress files and allow paging through them. Equivalent to running
zmore with the environment variable
PAGER set to less. See zmore for the available commands.
Similar to more. Uncompress files
and print them one screenful at a time. Works on files compressed
with compress, gzip, or pack, and with uncompressed files.
Commands
- space
-
Print next screenful.
- ispace
-
Print next i lines.
- d, ^D
-
Print next i, or 11, lines.
- iz
-
Print next i lines or a screenful.
- is
-
Skip i lines. Print next screenful.
- if
-
Skip i screens. Print next screenful.
- q, Q, :q, :Q
-
Go to next file or, if current file is the last, exit zmore.
- e, q
-
Exit zmore when the prompt
"--More--(Next file:
file)" is displayed.
- s
-
Skip next file and continue when the prompt
"--More--(Next file:
file)" is displayed.
- =
-
Print line number.
- i/expr
-
Search forward for ith occurrence (in all files)
of expr, which should be a regular expression.
Display occurrence, including the two previous lines of context.
- in
-
Search forward for the ith occurrence of the
last regular expression searched for.
- !command
-
Execute command in shell. If
command is not specified, execute last shell
command. To invoke a shell without passing it a command, enter \!.
- .
-
Repeat the previous command.
Uncompress .Z files and recompress
them in .gz format.
Options
- -9
-
Optimal (and slowest) compression method.
- -f
-
Recompress even if filename.gz already exists.
- -t
-
Test new .gz files before removing
.Z files.
- -v
-
Verbose mode.
- -K
-
If the original .Z file is smaller
than the .gz file, keep it.
- -P
-
Pipe data to conversion program. This saves disk space.
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