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= man =
= man =
[https://www.maketecheasier.com/read-linux-man-page/ How to Easily Read a Linux Man Page]
* [https://www.howtogeek.com/663440/how-to-use-linuxs-man-command-hidden-secrets-and-basics/ How to Use Linux’s man Command: Hidden Secrets and Basics]
* Underlined or Italicized Text: It means you need to replace it with an appropriate argument.
* [https://www.maketecheasier.com/read-linux-man-page/ How to Easily Read a Linux Man Page]
* Ellipses: It means that argument or expression is repeatable.
** Underlined or Italicized Text: It means you need to replace it with an appropriate argument.
** Ellipses: It means that argument or expression is repeatable.


== Navigation ==
== Navigation ==
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By default, the man program normally uses a terminal '''pager''' program such as '''less''' to format its output.
By default, the man program normally uses a terminal '''pager''' program such as '''less''' to format its output.


[https://www.tecmint.com/view-colored-man-pages-in-linux/ Add the following to "~/.bashrc" file]  
[https://www.tecmint.com/view-colored-man-pages-in-linux/ Add the following to "~/.bashrc" file]. For example, '''LESS_TERMCAP_mb''' customizes the appearance of blink text in the '''less''' pager (or '''man''' command) and '''LESS_TERMCAP_us''' customizes the appearance of underlined text in the '''less''' pager.
<pre>
<pre>
export LESS_TERMCAP_mb=$'\e[1;32m'
# Customize less colors
export LESS_TERMCAP_md=$'\e[1;32m'
export LESS_TERMCAP_mb=$'\e[1;32m' # Blinking text: bold green
export LESS_TERMCAP_me=$'\e[0m'
export LESS_TERMCAP_md=$'\e[1;34m' # Bold text: bold blue
export LESS_TERMCAP_se=$'\e[0m'
export LESS_TERMCAP_me=$'\e[0m'     # End mode
export LESS_TERMCAP_so=$'\e[01;33m'
export LESS_TERMCAP_so=$'\e[01;47;34m' # Standout: bold white on blue
export LESS_TERMCAP_ue=$'\e[0m'
export LESS_TERMCAP_se=$'\e[0m'     # End standout mode
export LESS_TERMCAP_us=$'\e[1;4;31m'
export LESS_TERMCAP_us=$'\e[1;4;31m' # Underlined text: bold underlined red
export LESS_TERMCAP_ue=$'\e[0m'    # End underline
</pre>
</pre>
(New way, The '''most''' Pager) [https://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/unix-linux-color-man-pages-configuration/ How To Display Color Man Pages in Linux and Unix] or [https://www.howtogeek.com/683134/how-to-display-man-pages-in-color-on-linux/ How to Display man Pages in Color on Linux].


== Navigate to another man page within a man page ==
== Navigate to another man page within a man page ==
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* [https://superuser.com/questions/357048/how-do-you-switch-between-linux-manual-pages How do you switch between Linux manual pages?]
* [https://superuser.com/questions/357048/how-do-you-switch-between-linux-manual-pages How do you switch between Linux manual pages?]


<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
{{Pre}}
$ whatis printf
$ whatis printf
printf (1)          - format and print data
printf (1)          - format and print data
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Printf (3o)          - Formatted output functions.
Printf (3o)          - Formatted output functions.
$ man 3 printf
$ man 3 printf
</syntaxhighlight>
</pre>


== Read man pages in vi without using temporary files ==
== Read man pages in vi without using temporary files ==
[https://stackoverflow.com/a/16740302 What is a way to read man pages in vim without using temporary files]
[https://stackoverflow.com/a/16740302 What is a way to read man pages in vim without using temporary files]
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
{{Pre}}
man find | vi -
man find | vi -
</syntaxhighlight>
</pre>


== Search man page referenced by ==
== Search man page referenced by ==
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== TLDR pages/cheat sheet: alternative to Man ==
== TLDR pages/cheat sheet: alternative to Man ==
* [https://fossbytes.com/tldr-pages-linux-man-pages-alternative/ TLDR pages: Simplified Alternative To Linux Man Pages]. Be sure to install the latest versions of [[Node.js|nodejs and npm]]. It works on Ubuntu 16.04. Example:  
<ul>
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
<li>https://tldr.sh/ </li>
<li>[https://fossbytes.com/tldr-pages-linux-man-pages-alternative/ TLDR pages: Simplified Alternative To Linux Man Pages]. Be sure to install the latest versions of [[Node.js|nodejs and npm]]. Tested on Ubuntu 16.04, 20.04. Example:
{{Pre}}
$ npm install -g tldr
$ tldr tar
$ tldr tar
</syntaxhighlight>
</pre>
A full list of commands is on [https://tldr.sh/assets/tldr-book.pdf TLDR Pages].
</li>
<li>[https://ostechnix.com/display-linux-commands-cheatsheets-with-tealdeer-tool/ Display Linux Commands Cheatsheets With Tealdeer In Terminal]
A full list of commands is on [https://tldr.sh/assets/tldr-book.pdf TLDR Pages]. </li>
</ul>


== Cheat.sh (better than TLDR) ==
== Cheat.sh (better than TLDR) ==
[https://www.linuxuprising.com/2019/07/cheatsh-shows-cheat-sheets-on-command.html?m=1 Cheat.sh Shows Cheat Sheets On The Command Line Or In Your Code Editor]. There are different ways to use it. One way does not require to install anything as long as we have the '''curl''' command.
[https://www.linuxuprising.com/2019/07/cheatsh-shows-cheat-sheets-on-command.html?m=1 Cheat.sh Shows Cheat Sheets On The Command Line Or In Your Code Editor]. There are different ways to use it. One way does not require to install anything as long as we have the '''curl''' command.
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
{{Pre}}
curl cheat.sh/tar
curl cheat.sh/tar


curl cht.sh/python/random+list # Python programming language cheat sheet for random list
curl cht.sh/python/random+list # Python programming language cheat sheet for random list
</syntaxhighlight>
</pre>
My test shows cheat.sh can find more commands and it gives colored output.
My test shows cheat.sh can find more commands and it gives colored output.


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[https://opensource.com/article/16/11/managing-devices-linux Managing devices in Linux] -> Fun with device files.
[https://opensource.com/article/16/11/managing-devices-linux Managing devices in Linux] -> Fun with device files.


== Change console fonts ==
== Change/increase console fonts ==
https://www.linux.com/learn/intro-to-linux/2018/1/how-change-your-linux-console-fonts
* https://www.linux.com/learn/intro-to-linux/2018/1/how-change-your-linux-console-fonts
* https://youtu.be/LOg4xfDQafc


= Desktops/Workspaces =
= Desktops/Workspaces =
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[https://www.lifewire.com/complete-list-of-linux-mint-4064592 Complete List of Linux Mint 18 Keyboard Shortcuts for Cinnamon] for more examples.
[https://www.lifewire.com/complete-list-of-linux-mint-4064592 Complete List of Linux Mint 18 Keyboard Shortcuts for Cinnamon] for more examples.
= Mouse =
[https://www.linuxuprising.com/2019/11/how-to-bind-mouse-buttons-to-keyboard.html?m=1 How To Bind Mouse Buttons To Keyboard Keys Or Commands (Linux Using X11)]


= Virtual memory =
= Virtual memory =
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* http://www.datastart.cn/tech/2017/05/20/hcache.html
* http://www.datastart.cn/tech/2017/05/20/hcache.html


= Memory =
= Memory: free command =
[https://www.makeuseof.com/tag/manage-linux-ram/ Is Linux Eating Your RAM? How to Manage Your Memory]
* [https://www.makeuseof.com/tag/manage-linux-ram/ Is Linux Eating Your RAM? How to Manage Your Memory]
* [https://www.howtogeek.com/456943/how-to-use-the-free-command-on-linux/ How to Use the free Command on Linux] (*detailed and comprehensive)
* [https://www.howtogeek.com/659529/how-to-check-memory-usage-from-the-linux-terminal/ How to Check Memory Usage From the Linux Terminal]


Three types of memory reported by the '''free''' command.
Three types of memory reported by the '''free''' command.
* Used: RAM that is currently in use by an application.
* Used: RAM that is currently in use by an application.
* Available: RAM that may be in use for disk caching but can be freed up for applications.
* Available: RAM that may be in use for disk caching but can be freed up for applications. [https://stackoverflow.com/a/41426746 What is 'available' vs 'free' memory in free command?]. '''Available = Estimation of how much memory is available for starting new applications, without swapping.'''
* Shared: Amount of memory used by the tmpfs file systems.
* Free: RAM that is not in use by an application or disk caching.
* Free: RAM that is not in use by an application or disk caching.
* '''Total =  Used + Free + Buffers/Cache'''


How to Clear RAM Memory Cache and Buffer
How to Clear RAM Memory Cache and Buffer
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
{{Pre}}
# To clear pagecache, enter the following command:
# To clear pagecache, enter the following command:
echo 1 > /proc/sys/vm/drop_caches
echo 1 > /proc/sys/vm/drop_caches
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# To clear pagecache, dentries, and inodes all together, change the number to 3:
# To clear pagecache, dentries, and inodes all together, change the number to 3:
echo 3 > /proc/sys/vm/drop_caches
echo 3 > /proc/sys/vm/drop_caches
</syntaxhighlight>
</pre>
 
== How do I determine the number of RAM slots in use ==
<pre>
sudo dmidecode -t memory
</pre>


== Logging memory ==
== Logging memory ==
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* [https://www.linux.com/learn/how-much-memory-installed-and-being-used-your-linux-systems How Much Memory Is Installed and Being Used on Your Linux Systems?]
* [https://www.linux.com/learn/how-much-memory-installed-and-being-used-your-linux-systems How Much Memory Is Installed and Being Used on Your Linux Systems?]
* [https://stackoverflow.com/questions/1868210/how-to-log-the-memory-consumption-on-linux How to log the memory consumption on Linux?]
* [https://stackoverflow.com/questions/1868210/how-to-log-the-memory-consumption-on-linux How to log the memory consumption on Linux?]
* [https://www.2daygeek.com/linux-commands-check-memory-usage/ 8 Commands to Check Memory Usage on Linux]
* [https://www.binarytides.com/linux-command-check-memory-usage 5 commands to check memory usage on Linux]
* [https://www.binarytides.com/linux-command-check-memory-usage 5 commands to check memory usage on Linux]
** '''free -m''', '''free -h''', ''' watch -n 10 free -m''' (free -s 10 gives an error 'seconds argument `10' failed)
** '''free -m''', '''free -h''', ''' watch -n 10 free -m''' (free -s 10 gives an error 'seconds argument `10' failed)
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** '''htop'''
** '''htop'''


== ps_mem: Shows Per-Program Memory Usage On Linux ==
== Shows Per-Program Memory Usage On Linux ==
https://www.linuxuprising.com/2019/04/psmem-shows-per-program-memory-usage-on.html. In this case I have 6 tabs open in chrome and 12 tabs for firefox.
* '''atop''' command. '''atop -m''' and press p (per program). Look at the 'RSIZE' column.
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
** [https://unix.stackexchange.com/a/209915 Sum the memory usages of all the processes of a program?]
** [https://www.redhat.com/sysadmin/analyzing-linux-server-performance-atop  Analyzing Linux server performance with atop]
** [https://haydenjames.io/use-atop-linux-server-performance-analysis/ atop – For Linux server performance analysis]
* [https://unix.stackexchange.com/a/235988 How to view summaric memory usage of groups of commands (instead of processes)]. '''ps -C firefox --no-headers -o pmem'''. The result is one column. It shows the percentage not the actual memory. And it cannot catch some programs like "Web Content" or "WebExtensions" associated with Firefox.
* '''ps_mem''': https://www.linuxuprising.com/2019/04/psmem-shows-per-program-memory-usage-on.html.
{{Pre}}
$ pip install ps_mem
$ pip install ps_mem
$ ps_mem -p $(pgrep -d, -u $USER)
$ ps_mem -p $(pgrep -d, -u $USER)
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---------------------------------
---------------------------------
                           3.2 GiB
                           3.2 GiB
</syntaxhighlight>
</pre>


== Check RAM information ==
== Check RAM information ==
* [https://www.howtogeek.com/792783/how-to-use-the-pmap-command-on-linux/ How to Use the pmap Command on Linux]
* [https://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/how-to-find-the-number-of-ram-slots-in-linux/ How to find the number of RAM Slots in Linux] 2021
* [https://www.binarytides.com/linux-command-check-memory-usage 5 commands to check memory usage on Linux]
* [https://www.binarytides.com/linux-command-check-memory-usage 5 commands to check memory usage on Linux]
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
{{Pre}}
sudo dmidecode -t memory
 
sudo dmidecode -t 17
sudo dmidecode -t 17
</syntaxhighlight>
</pre>
 
== Free up memory ==
* [https://www.makeuseof.com/improve-performance-free-up-ram-on-linux/ How to Free Up Memory and Improve RAM Performance on Linux]
* [https://linuxtldr.com/clear-buffer-cache-memory-linux/ How to Clear Buffer and Cache Memory in Linux]


== Monitor Memory Utilization And Send an Email ==
== Monitor Memory Utilization And Send an Email ==
[https://www.2daygeek.com/linux-bash-script-to-monitor-memory-utilization-usage-and-send-email/ Bash Script to Monitor Memory Usage on Linux]
* [https://www.2daygeek.com/linux-bash-script-to-monitor-memory-utilization-usage-and-send-email/ Bash Script to Monitor Memory Usage on Linux]
* [https://www.tecmint.com/shell-script-to-send-email-alert-when-memory-low/ A Shell Script to Send Email Alert When Memory Gets Low]. This uses '''$(free -mt | grep Total | awk '{print $4}')''' to get the available memory.
* [https://www.cloudsavvyit.com/1230/getting-started-with-monit-for-server-monitoring/ Getting Started with Monit for Server Monitoring]
 
== zram ==
[https://opensource.com/article/22/11/zram-swap-linux rop swap for zram on Linux]


= [https://www.ghacks.net/2017/11/04/5-things-to-do-after-a-fresh-install-of-gnulinux/ Things to do after a fresh install of GNU/Linux] =
= [https://www.ghacks.net/2017/11/04/5-things-to-do-after-a-fresh-install-of-gnulinux/ Things to do after a fresh install of GNU/Linux] =
Line 249: Line 291:
= Making a new temporary directory =
= Making a new temporary directory =
https://www.howtoforge.com/linux-mktemp-command/  
https://www.howtoforge.com/linux-mktemp-command/  
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
{{Pre}}
mktemp  # temp directory is under /tmp
mktemp  # temp directory is under /tmp
mktemp -d tempdirXXX # temp directory is under the current directory
mktemp -d tempdirXXX # temp directory is under the current directory
mktemp tempfileXXX # temp file under the current directory
mktemp tempfileXXX # temp file under the current directory
</syntaxhighlight>
</pre>


= Special permissions =
= Shell =
* [https://www.linux.com/learn/understanding-linux-file-permissions Understanding Linux File Permissions]
== Login shell and non-login shell ==
* [https://linuxconfig.org/how-to-use-special-permissions-the-setuid-setgid-and-sticky-bits How to use special permissions: the setuid, setgid and sticky bits]
Login Shell
# /etc/profile
# /etc/profile.d/*.sh
# ~/.bash_profile or ~/.profile (for example, environment variable like PATH)
# ~/.bashrc
# /etc/bashrc
# ~/.bashrc


'''s''' bit - setuid, getuid
Non-Login shell
# ~/.bashrc
# /etc/bash.bashrc or /etc/bashrc
# ~/.bashrc (bash-related settings, for example, prompt string, aliases)


= Shell =
Note: Bash only reads the first of the files in ~/ that it finds (and ignore the rest). '''rc''' means ''run commands'' for example, ''.nanorc''.
== Change to root shell ==
 
The following command will switch to an environment similar to what the user would expect had the user logged in directly.  
=== Aliases and Functions for Individual Users ===
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
# /etc/profile (systemwide environment and shell variables)
sudo su -
# /etc/profile.d/*.sh (systemwide environment and shell variables)
# OR
# ~/.bash_profile (user '''environment and shell variables''')
sudo su
# ~/.bashrc (executes /etc/bashrc)
# OR
# /etc/bashrc (systemwide aliases and shell functions)
sudo -s
# ~/.bashrc (user '''aliases''' and shell functions)
</syntaxhighlight>
 
This can be useful when running 'su' or 'su -' failed because of an authentication failure error (note Ubuntu locked the root account).  
=== Why does it take tens of seconds to get a shell prompt? ===
https://serverfault.com/a/722496 If your profile or bashrc have expensive things, consider trimming them back.
 
On raspbian commenting out some lines does help. Interestingly, the same lines does not make any difference on x86 server.
 
== the source command ==
The . is a shorthand for the '''source''' command in bash. <syntaxhighlight lang="sh" inline>source ~/.bashrc</syntaxhighlight> and <syntaxhighlight lang="sh" inline>. ~/.bashrc</syntaxhighlight> are equivalent.
 
== login shell (.bash_profile) vs interactive shell (.bashrc) ==
* http://stackoverflow.com/questions/18186929/differences-between-login-shell-and-interactive-shell
* [https://linuxtldr.com/interactive-login-and-non-login-shell/ What is Interactive Login and Non-Login Shell]
* http://serverfault.com/questions/8882/what-is-the-difference-between-a-login-and-an-interactive-bash-shell
 
# '''login shell''' - non desktop environment. ~/''.bash_profile'' is sourced for the bash shell. It is the shell you get when logging in or opening a new terminal session.
#* [https://askubuntu.com/a/969923 You do not usually have .bash_profile on Ubuntu, nor should you usually create that file.]
#* On new Ubuntu, there is no .bash_profile. It has '''.profile'''.
#* you should not put aliases in '''.profile''' at all, nor is ''.bash_profile'' a good place for them because you will want your aliases to work in interactive shells whether or not they are login shells.
#* Login shells are interactive shells.
# '''interactive shell''' - Ctrl+Alt+t to open a terminal from a graphical mode (desktop environment) and also the [https://unix.stackexchange.com/a/46856 ssh connection].  ~/'''.bashrc''' is source. We usually edit ~/.bashrc to set up the environment to include fancy prompt, set aliases, set history options, or define custom shell functions. [https://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/linux-unix-bash-check-interactive-shell/ Bash Check If Shell Is Interactive or Not Under Linux / Unix Oses]
# '''Non-interactive shell''' - instances of the shell you can't use interactively. Shells that are started to run a command or script.
 
To determine the shell type: '''echo $-'''
 
export environment variables
# Both a '''login shell and an interactive one'''. SSH (Putty) to connect to a remote machine.
# When a shell runs a script or a command passed on its command line, it's a '''non-interactive, non-login shell'''.
 
=== /root/.bashrc ===
If we use "sudo SOME_COMMAND", ''~/.bashrc'' won't work. In this case, we have to
# run "sudo su"
# Edit '''/root/.bashrc'''
 
== Login banner ==
[https://kerneltalks.com/tips-tricks/how-to-configure-login-banners-in-linux/ How to configure login banners in Linux (RedHat, Ubuntu, CentOS, Fedora)]. '''/etc/motd''' and '''/etc/login.warn'''
 
== Change to root shell ==
The following command will switch to an environment similar to what the user would expect had the user logged in directly.  
{{Pre}}
sudo su -
# OR
sudo su
# OR
sudo -s
</pre>
This can be useful when running 'su' or 'su -' failed because of an authentication failure error (note Ubuntu locked the root account).  


See also  
See also  
Line 278: Line 373:


For sudo to work, my account ('debian' in this case) has to be included in the config file '''/etc/sudoers'''.
For sudo to work, my account ('debian' in this case) has to be included in the config file '''/etc/sudoers'''.
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
{{Pre}}
debian  ALL=NOPASSWD: ALL
debian  ALL=NOPASSWD: ALL
</syntaxhighlight>
</pre>
When sudo is invoked, it asks for the password of the user who started it.
When sudo is invoked, it asks for the password of the user who started it.


Line 286: Line 381:
[https://www.howtogeek.com/427004/how-to-use-the-pinky-command-on-linux/ How to Use the pinky Command on Linux]
[https://www.howtogeek.com/427004/how-to-use-the-pinky-command-on-linux/ How to Use the pinky Command on Linux]


== Switch user in command line ==
== su: Switch to another user and run a command ==
use <pre>su newusername</pre> to switch to another user.
<ul>
 
<li>su means 'substitute user'.
== Switch to another user and run a command ==
<li>Use <pre>su newusername</pre> to switch to another user.
* [https://www.cyberciti.biz/open-source/command-line-hacks/linux-run-command-as-different-user/ Linux Run Command As Another User]
<li>[https://www.cyberciti.biz/open-source/command-line-hacks/linux-run-command-as-different-user/ Linux Run Command As Another User]
'''runuser -l''' command
'''runuser -l''' command
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
{{Pre}}
runuser -l  userNameHere -c 'command'
runuser -l  userNameHere -c 'command'
</syntaxhighlight>
</pre>


'''su -''' command (keep the dash sign after su)
<li>'''su -''' command (keep the dash sign after su)
* su means 'substitute user'.
<li>http://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/156343/pass-arguments-to-a-command-run-by-another-user
* http://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/156343/pass-arguments-to-a-command-run-by-another-user
<li>http://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/87860/how-does-this-su-c-command-seem-to-pass-two-commands-instead-of-one
* http://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/87860/how-does-this-su-c-command-seem-to-pass-two-commands-instead-of-one
{{Pre}}
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
su - username -c 'command'
su - username -c 'command'


Line 313: Line 407:


man su
man su
</syntaxhighlight>
</pre>
</ul>


== What’s the Difference Between Bash, Zsh, and Other Linux Shells ==
== Keyboard shortcut to move cursor in the terminal ==
https://www.howtogeek.com/68563/htg-explains-what-are-the-differences-between-linux-shells/
* Alt + b: go left (back) one word
* Alt + f: go forward on word


== Bash shell programming ==
Example: cd ~/bitbucket/gbmpdx/annovar_biowulf  (Now press Alt+b to see the cursor moves)
http://bash.cyberciti.biz/guide/Main_Page


== [https://fishshell.com/ Fish shell] ==
== Record terminal session to a text file ==
[https://www.ostechnix.com/oh-fish-make-shell-beautiful/ Oh My Fish! Make Your Shell Beautiful]
<pre>
script history_log.txt
# recording begins
exit # stop recording
</pre>
This will include everything showing on your screen.


== Tools To Record Your Terminal And Generate Animated Gif or SVG Images ==
== Tools To Record Your Terminal And Generate Animated Gif or SVG Images ==
* [https://www.2daygeek.com/terminalizer-a-tool-to-record-your-terminal-and-generate-animated-gif-images/ Terminalizer A Tool To Record Your Terminal And Generate Animated Gif Images]
=== Asciinema & agg ===
* [https://www.2daygeek.com/termtosvg-record-your-terminal-sessions-as-svg-animations-in-linux/# Termtosvg – Record Your Terminal Sessions As SVG Animations In Linux]
* It works on Ubuntu 23.04
* [https://github.com/asciinema/asciinema Asciinema]
** [https://www.2daygeek.com/linux-asciinema-record-your-terminal-sessions-share-them-on-web/ Asciinema – Record and Share your terminal sessions on the fly]
* [https://www.omgubuntu.co.uk/2023/04/pip-install-error-externally-managed-environment-fix 3 Ways to Solve Pip Install Error on Ubuntu 23.04]
* https://github.com/asciinema/agg
<pre>
$ # sudo pip3 install asciinema  # Error
$ # sudo apt install python3-asciinema # Error
$ sudo apt install pipx
$ pipx ensurepath
Success! Added /home/brb/.local/bin to the PATH environment variable.
 
Consider adding shell completions for pipx. Run 'pipx completions' for
instructions.


= Redirect standard error =
You will need to open a new terminal or re-login for the PATH changes to take
http://bash.cyberciti.biz/guide/Standard_error. Use '''2>''' operator.
effect.
 
Otherwise pipx is ready to go!
</pre>
Open another tab
<pre>
pipx install asciinema
asciinema rec 2g-test
asciinema play 2g-test
chmod +x Downloads/agg-x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu
Downloads/agg-x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu 2g-test 2g-test.gif
open 2g-test.gif
</pre>
 
=== terminalizer ===
* https://github.com/faressoft/terminalizer
** [https://www.2daygeek.com/terminalizer-a-tool-to-record-your-terminal-and-generate-animated-gif-images/ Terminalizer – A Tool To Record Your Terminal And Generate Animated Gif Images]
** [https://itslinuxfoss.com/install-npm-ubuntu-22-04/ How to Install NPM in Ubuntu 22.04?]
** Ubuntu
::<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
sudo apt update
sudo apt install nodejs npm
sudo npm install -g npm
sudo npm install -g terminalizer
terminalizer record demo
terminalizer play demo
terminalizer render demo
# https://github.com/faressoft/terminalizer/issues/29
# https://github.com/faressoft/terminalizer/issues/211
</syntaxhighlight>
 
=== Termtosvg ===
(archived) [https://www.2daygeek.com/termtosvg-record-your-terminal-sessions-as-svg-animations-in-linux/# Termtosvg – Record Your Terminal Sessions As SVG Animations In Linux]
 
== Record and Replay Linux Terminal Sessions Activity: script ==
[https://www.linuxtechi.com/record-replay-linux-terminal-sessions-activity/ Learn how to Record and Replay Linux Terminal Sessions Activity]
 
== Recording your terminal: asciinema ==
https://asciinema.org/
 
== Clear screen ==
ctrl + l
 
== Clear text ==
ctrl + u: "deletes" all the entered text to the left of the cursor. Does not work in macOS shell but R console from RStudio in macOS still works.
 
= Redirect standard error =
http://bash.cyberciti.biz/guide/Standard_error. Use '''2>''' operator.
<pre>
<pre>
command 2> errors.txt
command 2> errors.txt
</pre>
== Redirect standard output ==
This can be used in the cron job or displaying a clock on the desktop.
<pre>
$ cat ~/bin/clock
dclock -date "Today is %A %B %Y" -led_off black -bg black -fg yellow -geometry 577x194+119+139  &>/dev/null &
</pre>
</pre>


= Quotes and asterisk =
= Quotes and asterisk =
Combining these two will not work. For example
Combining these two will not work. For example
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
{{Pre}}
brb@T3600 ~ $ ls -l ~/GSE48215/*.fastq
brb@T3600 ~ $ ls -l ~/GSE48215/*.fastq
-rw-r--r-- 1 brb brb 16226673016 Jun 14 14:13 /home/brb/GSE48215/SRR925751_1.fastq
-rw-r--r-- 1 brb brb 16226673016 Jun 14 14:13 /home/brb/GSE48215/SRR925751_1.fastq
Line 344: Line 511:
brb@T3600 ~ $ ls -l "~/GSE48215/*.fastq"
brb@T3600 ~ $ ls -l "~/GSE48215/*.fastq"
ls: cannot access ~/GSE48215/*.fastq: No such file or directory
ls: cannot access ~/GSE48215/*.fastq: No such file or directory
</syntaxhighlight>
</pre>
 
= cat command alternatives =
* [https://github.com/sharkdp/bat/releases bat]
* [https://computingforgeeks.com/bat-cat-command-with-syntax-highlighting-and-git-integration/ Bat – Linux cat command with syntax highlighting and Git integration]
* Direct installing bat using 'apt install' does not work:( Grab the binary from github works.
{{Pre}}
$ curl -s  https://api.github.com/repos/sharkdp/bat/releases/latest |grep browser_download_url |  cut -d '"' -f 4 | grep 'amd64.deb' | grep -v musl | wget -i -
$ sudo dpkg -i bat_*_amd64.deb
</pre>


= ls command =
= ls command =
List Files With Detailed Information from [https://www.makeuseof.com/ls-command-linux/ How to Use the ls Command in Linux]
To use UID/GID instead of the user name and group name in '''ls -l''', use the '''-n''' option.
To use UID/GID instead of the user name and group name in '''ls -l''', use the '''-n''' option.
<pre>
<pre>
Line 362: Line 540:
== Follow the symbolic link ==
== Follow the symbolic link ==
Use '''-H''' option
Use '''-H''' option
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
{{Pre}}
ls -lH myDir
ls -lH myDir
</syntaxhighlight>
</pre>


== ls | more without lose color ==
== List only directories ==
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
<pre>
$ ls --color=auto
ls -d */              # current directory
$ ls --color | more
ls -ld ~/Downloads/*/  # ~/Downloads
</syntaxhighlight>
ls -l -d */
Most likely your ls is aliased to ls --color=auto. If you do ls --color (which is morally equivalent to ls --color=always), that will force it to turn on colors.
</pre>


== ls output with color background ==
== List only files ==
[http://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/94498/what-causes-this-green-background-in-ls-output stackexchange] or [http://askubuntu.com/questions/17299/what-do-the-different-colors-mean-in-the-terminal askubuntu].
<pre>
ls -l | egrep -v '^d'
</pre>


In my case, after I apply '''chmod 755 -R XXXX''', the weird green background color goes away.
== Find and Delete Broken Symbolic Links ==
<pre>
find /path/to/directory -xtype l -delete
</pre>


== ls on BSD/macOS ==
== Special characters, escape ==
Use the '''-G''' option to get a color output
[https://stackoverflow.com/a/19177228 List of characters which needs to be escaped in a linux shell command]
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
$ ls -G
</syntaxhighlight>


= tree command =
<pre>
'''tree -d''': show directories only
|  &  ;  <  >  (  )  $  `  \  "  ' <space>  <tab>  <newline>
</pre>


= cp command =
Opened MS-Office documents' filenames start with "~$". <u>The dollar sign character has to be escaped</u>; eg ''' ls -l ~\$* ''' to list these kind of files or '''rm ~\$*''' to delete these files.
[https://www.howtoforge.com/linux-cp-command/ Linux cp command tutorial for beginners (8 examples)]


== copy a directory ==
== Check non-English characters ==
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
[https://www.baeldung.com/linux/find-non-ascii-chars How to Find Non-ASCII Characters in Text Files in Linux]
cp -avr Dir1 Dir2
<pre>
</syntaxhighlight>
perl -ne 'print if /[^[:ascii:]]/' sample.txt
where -a will preserve the attributes of files/directories, -v means verbally and -r means copy the directory recursively.
</pre>


= Copy a file with progress bar with '''pv''' (plus how to eject the USB drive) =
== ls | more without lose color ==
http://www.tecmint.com/monitor-copy-backup-tar-progress-in-linux-using-pv-command/
{{Pre}}
$ ls --color=auto
$ ls --color | more
</pre>
Most likely your ls is aliased to ls --color=auto. If you do ls --color (which is morally equivalent to ls --color=always), that will force it to turn on colors.


<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
== ls directories color ==
sudo apt-get install pv
[https://www.howtogeek.com/307899/how-to-change-the-colors-of-directories-and-files-in-the-ls-command/ How to Change the Colors of Directories and Files in the ls Command]. No need to use the export command when we want to add it to .bashrc file.
pv file1 > file2    # don't forget the ">" operator and the destination is a file, not a directory
<pre>
</syntaxhighlight>
# orange color
export LS_COLORS=$LS_COLORS:'di=0;33:'
# OR yellow color if your terminal supports 256 colors
export LS_COLORS=$LS_COLORS:'di=38;5;226:'
</pre>


After that, instead of clicking the reject icon from the file manager to eject it, it is better to use a [http://stackoverflow.com/questions/13224509/linux-ubuntu-safely-remove-usb-flash-disk-via-command-line command line] to do that because there is no expect time for users to know when it will take for finish writing the data to a USB drive.
== ls output with color background ==
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
[http://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/94498/what-causes-this-green-background-in-ls-output stackexchange] or [http://askubuntu.com/questions/17299/what-do-the-different-colors-mean-in-the-terminal askubuntu].
sudo apt-get install udisks


sudo udisks --unmount /dev/sdb1  # /dev/sdb1 is the partition
In my case, after I apply '''chmod 755 -R XXXX''', the weird green background color goes away.
sudo udisks --detach /dev/sdb    # /dev/sdb is the device
</syntaxhighlight>


My testing shows this procedure works (tested by running '''md5sum''' after eject/plug-in) when I need to copy a 9GB file.
== ls output without user/group columns ==
https://unix.stackexchange.com/a/205165
<pre>
ls -lhog
</pre>
To further skip the first 2 columns (the permissions and link count) we can use
<pre>
ls -lhog | sed 's/^[^ ][^ ]*  *[^ ][^ ]* //'
# total 95G
#  51G May  7 11:37 SRR10156301_3.fastq  --> file
#  23G May  7 11:35 SRR10156301_2.fastq  --> file
#  18G May  7 11:35 SRR10156301_1.fastq  --> file
# 4.0K May  7 11:24 SRR10156301          --> directory
</pre>


== Reliable way: Split the large file and copy smaller chunks ==
== ls output selected columns ==
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
The following example will sort the output by file size and output only the file size and file name columns.
# Use 'sudo iotop -o' to monitor the I/O
{{Pre}}
split -b 4G inputFile # create xaa, xab, ... files
ls -lS . | awk '{print $5 "\t" $9}'
cat x* > outputFile    # merge them. md5sum check succeeds


type x* > outputFile  # Windows OS. http://stackoverflow.com/questions/60244/is-there-replacement-for-cat-on-windows
ls -lhS . | awk '{print $5 "\t" $9}'
</syntaxhighlight>
It is interesting copying smaller files (eg 4GB) to USB drives is quite stable (just use the '''cp''' command). Even for a not-too large file (6.7GB), pv step looks OK but the unmount/detach step failed.


For a 6.7GB file, it will split it into a 4GB and 2.7GB files. Merge takes longer time if it is done on the USB drive. That is, it is best to do merge in the final destination (internal disk/storage).
# Mac
* split in the internal hdd: 1min 38sec
ls -lS  *.Rmd |head | awk '{print $6 "\t" $10}'
* merge in the internal hdd: 37sec
# a range of columns:
* merge in the USB 3.0 drive: 2min 17sec
ls -lS  *.Rmd |head | awk -v f=6 -v t=10 \
    '{for(i=f;i<=t;i++) printf("%s%s",$i,(i==t)?"\n":OFS)}'
</pre>


Remember: Use a reliable USB drives.
== ls suddenly wrapping items with spaces in single quotes ==
Use '''ls -N''' to remove single quotes for files containing spaces. See [https://unix.stackexchange.com/a/258687 Why is 'ls' suddenly wrapping items with spaces in single quotes?]


== The operation could not be completed because the volume is dirty ==
Better to add '''export QUOTING_STYLE=literal ''' to .bashrc
On a USB 2.0 drive, I can copy files to there but the drive cannot be rejected (Ubuntu has a pop-up showing it is still writing data to it).


When I forcibly rejects the drive and plug it in a Windows PC, Windows shows the message ''The operation could not be completed because the volume is dirty''. [http://www.infolet.org/2012/10/how-to-solve-error-0x80071AC3-operation-could-not-be-completed-volume-is-dirty.html This] gives a way to run '''chkdsk''' (check and repair a file system).
== ls on BSD/macOS ==
# Open a Windows File Manager
Use the '''-G''' option to get a color output
# Right click the USB drive
{{Pre}}
# Properties
$ ls -G
# Tools -> Check now... Start
</pre>


Done. Now I can use the drive again.
== realpath ==
'''realpath FILENAME''' to get the full path of a file.


The Linux equivalent to '''chkdsk''' is '''fsck'''. fsck is a front end that calls the appropriate tool (fsck.ex2, fsck.ex3, e2fsck, ...) for the filesystem in question.
= tree command =
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
'''tree -d''': show directories only
umount /dev/sdb1        # thumb drive
sudo fsck /dev/sdb1


sudo fsck -a /dev/sdb1  # auto repair
== tre command ==
</syntaxhighlight>
* [https://github.com/dduan/tre github]. Binary files for x86 and arm linux are available. To use it, run "tre DIRECTORYNAME" or "tre" to list files recursively from the current directory.


For the root disk, you have to use a [https://askubuntu.com/questions/58601/fsck-gets-mad-when-the-file-system-is-mounted live CD]. Otherwise, you will see a message like
= cp command =
<pre>
[https://www.howtoforge.com/linux-cp-command/ Linux cp command tutorial for beginners (8 examples)]
$ fsck /dev/sdb1
 
fsck from util-linux 2.20.1
== copy a directory ==
e2fsck 1.42.9 (4-Feb-2014)
{{Pre}}
/dev/sdb1 is mounted.
cp -avr Dir1 Dir2
</pre>
where -a will preserve the attributes of files/directories, -v means verbally and -r means copy the directory recursively.


WARNING!!!  The filesystem is mounted.   If you continue you ***WILL***
= Copy a file with progress bar with '''pv''' (plus how to eject the USB drive) =
cause ***SEVERE*** filesystem damage.
http://www.tecmint.com/monitor-copy-backup-tar-progress-in-linux-using-pv-command/


Do you really want to continue<n>? no
{{Pre}}
sudo apt-get install pv
pv file1 > file2    # don't forget the ">" operator and the destination is a file, not a directory
</pre>
</pre>


= Files =
After that, instead of clicking the reject icon from the file manager to eject it, it is better to use a [http://stackoverflow.com/questions/13224509/linux-ubuntu-safely-remove-usb-flash-disk-via-command-line command line] to do that because there is no expect time for users to know when it will take for finish writing the data to a USB drive.
== List files by sorting according to the file size ==
{{Pre}}
Use the '''-S''' option in ls.
sudo apt-get install udisks


== List files using wildcard without showing files under subdirectories ==
sudo udisks --unmount /dev/sdb1  # /dev/sdb1 is the partition
Use the '''-d''' option in ls. For example, the following command will not showing files under R-3.4.4 and R-3.5.3
sudo udisks --detach /dev/sdb     # /dev/sdb is the device
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
</pre>
$ ls -d R*
drwxr-xr-x 15 brb brb     4096 Mar 14 09:48 R-3.4.4
-rw-rw-r--  1 brb brb 30474612 Mar 15  2018 R-3.4.4.tar.gz
drwxr-xr-x 15 brb brb    4096 Mar 14 09:31 R-3.5.3
-rw-rw-r--  1 brb brb 30205979 Mar 11 04:04 R-3.5.3.tar.gz
</syntaxhighlight>


== Delete multiple files ==
My testing shows this procedure works (tested by running '''md5sum''' after eject/plug-in) when I need to copy a 9GB file.
[http://www.howtogeek.com/276516/how-to-remove-multiple-subdirectories-with-one-linux-command/ How to Remove Multiple Subdirectories with One Linux Command]
 
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
== Reliable way: Split the large file and copy smaller chunks ==
rm -r ~/Documents/htg/{done,ideas,notes}
{{Pre}}
</syntaxhighlight>
# Use 'sudo iotop -o' to monitor the I/O
split -b 4G inputFile  # create xaa, xab, ... files
cat x* > outputFile    # merge them. md5sum check succeeds


== Delete a certain type of files recursively under a directory ==
type x* > outputFile  # Windows OS. # https://stackoverflow.com/a/60254
For example to delete *.o files under the current directory,
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
find . -type f -name '*.o' -delete
</syntaxhighlight>


== Create a new directory and cd to it ==
# Use Prefix, and use numeric suffixes starting from 0
[http://www.howtogeek.com/273304/how-to-make-a-new-directory-and-change-to-it-with-a-single-command-in-linux/ How to Make a New Directory and Change to It with a Single Command in Linux]
split -b 4M -d inputFile inputFile.part
<pre>
md5sum inputFile
mkdircd MyNewDirectory
cat inputFile.part* > inputFile2
ech "LONG_MD5_SUM_From_inputFile inputFile2" | md5sum -c
</pre>
</pre>
It is interesting copying smaller files (eg 4GB) to USB drives is quite stable (just use the '''cp''' command). Even for a not-too large file (6.7GB), pv step looks OK but the unmount/detach step failed.


== chown and chmod recursively (-R) ==
For a 6.7GB file, it will split it into a 4GB and 2.7GB files. Merge takes longer time if it is done on the USB drive. That is, it is best to do merge in the final destination (internal disk/storage).
Use '''-R''' (capital R).
* split in the internal hdd: 1min 38sec
* merge in the internal hdd: 37sec
* merge in the USB 3.0 drive: 2min 17sec


== Files under a directory have question mark attribute  ==
Remember: Use a reliable USB drives.
Use '''sudo chmod -R a+x /some/directory''' to fix. This happened when I unzip a zip file compressed in a Windows OS.


== Display files sorted by modified date in a directory recursively ==
== The operation could not be completed because the volume is dirty ==
* [http://stackoverflow.com/questions/5566310/how-to-recursively-find-and-list-the-latest-modified-files-in-a-directory-with-s stackoverflow.com]
On a USB 2.0 drive, I can copy files to there but the drive cannot be rejected (Ubuntu has a pop-up showing it is still writing data to it).
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
stat --printf="%y %n\n" $(ls -tr $(find DIRNAME -type f))
</syntaxhighlight>
* [http://superuser.com/questions/416308/list-files-recursively-and-sort-by-modification-time superuser.com]
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
find -type f -printf '%T+\t%p\n' | sort -n
</syntaxhighlight>
Both of methods give the same output. Note the latest changed file is shown at the bottom of the output.


== Sort files by their size ==
When I forcibly rejects the drive and plug it in a Windows PC, Windows shows the message ''The operation could not be completed because the volume is dirty''. [http://www.infolet.org/2012/10/how-to-solve-error-0x80071AC3-operation-could-not-be-completed-volume-is-dirty.html This] gives a way to run '''chkdsk''' (check and repair a file system).
use the '-S' option.
# Open a Windows File Manager
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
# Right click the USB drive
ls -lS
# Properties
</syntaxhighlight>
# Tools -> Check now... Start


== Files starting with a dash (meta-characters) ==
Done. Now I can use the drive again.
[https://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/linuxunix-move-file-starting-with-a-dash/ Move File Starting With A Dash]
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
$ > '-foo.txt'
$ rm "-foo.txt"
rm: invalid option -- 'o'
Try 'rm ./-foo.txt' to remove the file '-foo.txt'.
Try 'rm --help' for more information.
$ rm -- -foo.txt
</syntaxhighlight>


= alias =
The Linux equivalent to '''chkdsk''' is '''fsck'''. fsck is a front end that calls the appropriate tool (fsck.ex2, fsck.ex3, e2fsck, ...) for the filesystem in question.
https://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/how-to-turn-on-or-off-colors-in-bash/
{{Pre}}
umount /dev/sdb1        # thumb drive
sudo fsck /dev/sdb1


<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
sudo fsck -a /dev/sdb1  # auto repair
$ alias # list all aliases
</pre>
$ alias | grep ls
$ unalias ls
$ alias ls='ls --color=auto' # save it in ~/.bash_profile or ~/.bashrc
$ alias server_name="ssh -v -l john 192.168.1.11" # or modify /etc/hosts
$ alias open='xdg-open'
$ alias sshnokey='ssh -o UserKnownHostsFile=/dev/null -o StrictHostKeyChecking=no'
$ alias sshserver='ssh [email protected]'
</syntaxhighlight>


To avoid using the alias, use one of the following ways (eg use the command's full path)
For the root disk, you have to use a [https://askubuntu.com/questions/58601/fsck-gets-mad-when-the-file-system-is-mounted live CD]. Otherwise, you will see a message like
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
<pre>
$ \ls
$ fsck /dev/sdb1
$ /bin/ls
fsck from util-linux 2.20.1
$ command ls
e2fsck 1.42.9 (4-Feb-2014)
$ 'ls'
/dev/sdb1 is mounted.
</syntaxhighlight>
 
WARNING!!!  The filesystem is mounted.  If you continue you ***WILL***
cause ***SEVERE*** filesystem damage.


Useful aliases (Added to ~/.bashrc)
Do you really want to continue<n>? no
<pre>
alias nano="nano -c --softwrap"
</pre>
</pre>


= lolcat - bring color to text =
= Files =
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
== List files by sorting according to the file size ==
sudo apt-get install ruby
Use the '''-S''' option in ls.
sudo gem install lolcat
lolcat -h
lolcat --version
fortune | lolcat


ps | lolcat
== List files using wildcard without showing files under subdirectories ==
man ls | lolcat
Use the '''-d''' option in ls. For example, the following command will not showing files under R-3.4.4 and R-3.5.3
{{Pre}}
$ ls -d R*
drwxr-xr-x 15 brb brb    4096 Mar 14 09:48 R-3.4.4
-rw-rw-r--  1 brb brb 30474612 Mar 15  2018 R-3.4.4.tar.gz
drwxr-xr-x 15 brb brb    4096 Mar 14 09:31 R-3.5.3
-rw-rw-r--  1 brb brb 30205979 Mar 11 04:04 R-3.5.3.tar.gz
</pre>


lolcat test.R
== Delete multiple files ==
 
[http://www.howtogeek.com/276516/how-to-remove-multiple-subdirectories-with-one-linux-command/ How to Remove Multiple Subdirectories with One Linux Command]
sudo apt install figlet
{{Pre}}
figlet Merry Christmas | lolcat
rm -r ~/Documents/htg/{done,ideas,notes}
</pre>


alias lolls="ls -l | lolcat"
== Delete a certain type of files recursively under a directory ==
lolls
For example to delete *.o files under the current directory,
</syntaxhighlight>
{{Pre}}
find . -type f -name '*.o' -delete
</pre>


= File manager =
== Remove all files/directories except for one file/some file type ==
== Cloud commander ==
https://unix.stackexchange.com/a/153863
* https://cloudcmd.io/
<pre>
* https://www.ostechnix.com/cloud-commander-a-web-file-manager-with-console-and-editor/. You can upload files from the Cloud services like Google drive, Dropbox, Amazon cloud drive, Facebook, Twitter, Gmail, GtiHub, Picasa, Instagram and many.
# recursively, including hidden ones
find . ! -name 'file.txt' -type f -exec rm -f {} +


= [http://meldmerge.org/ Meld] and [http://diffuse.sourceforge.net/about.html Diffuse] =
# Non-recursively
find . -maxdepth 1 ! -name 'file.txt' -type f -exec rm -f {} +
</pre>
find: warning: you have specified the -maxdepth option after a non-option argument !, but options are not positional (-maxdepth affects tests specified before it as well as those specified after it). Please specify options before other arguments.


To make meld to be in the right click menu, follow
== Remove all hidden files/directories ==
* http://askubuntu.com/questions/112164/how-can-i-diff-two-files-with-nautilus
[https://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/bash-linux-unix-delete-hidden-files-directories-command/ Bash Find And Delete All Hidden Files Directories]
* http://superuser.com/questions/307927/right-click-files-to-meld
<pre>
rm -rf .??* # tested, http://labtestproject.com/linuxcmd/rm.html


Another method of comparing two files without using the 'browse' button will be to use the command line.
# list all hidden files/directories
find . -name ".*" -print


The 'nautilus-compare' program does not work from my testing on Ubuntu 14.04.
# delete all hidden files
find . -name ".*" -type f -delete


== Refresh does not work ==
find . -name ".DS_Store" -delete
On Ubuntu 14, Meld version is 1.8.4. The current version is 1.16.2 (Jul 30 2016). The current version requires GTK+ 3.14 or higher.
</pre>
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
brb@brb-P45T-A:$ ~/binary/meld-3.16.2/bin/meld
Meld requires GTK+ 3.14 or higher.
</syntaxhighlight>
* http://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/149377/how-to-install-meld-3-11-in-ubuntu-14-04
* http://askubuntu.com/questions/638443/how-to-upgrade-gtk-3-10-to-gtk-3-14-on-ubuntu-14-04


== Final though ==
== Create a new directory and cd to it ==
* I install kdiff3 (<2 MB to download) and the 'File' -> 'Reload' (F5) function there works though it shows an extra space on the place I modified.
[http://www.howtogeek.com/273304/how-to-make-a-new-directory-and-change-to-it-with-a-single-command-in-linux/ How to Make a New Directory and Change to It with a Single Command in Linux]
* [http://www.scootersoftware.com/download.php Beyond Compare] (commercial $60, trial version can be downloaded)
* '''[http://diffuse.sourceforge.net/download.html diffuse]'''. When I modified a file, diffuse can detect a change and ask me to reload the file. I am using the apt-get to install the software and the version number is 0.4.7 (2014). To copy lines from left panel to right panel, use 'Ctrl + Shift + >' or the '''Copy Selection Right''' icon. One drawback is it cannot save the history from the GUI though we can use the command line to include the file names in the arguments.
* Alternatively we can use WinMerge on Linux. To do that, [https://wiki.winehq.org/Ubuntu install Wine] on Ubuntu. [http://winmerge.org/?lang=en Download Winmerge] (I am using 2.14.0). Then on a terminal, run the following command. At the end, WinMerge will be launched. WinMerge can also be launched from Mint Menu -> Wine -> WinMerge. One problem is I cannot increase the font size (though acceptable) from View -> Select Font.
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
wine WinMerge-2.14.0-Setup.exe
</syntaxhighlight>


= diff =
== Set permissions for new files or directories ==
== Run diff with large files ==
* umask: user file-creation mode mask
Meld freezes When I tested it with two large files (800k & 936k lines coming from human gtf files). Actually the whole linux system became unresponsive.
* With '''umask 007''', ''newly created files and directories will have all permissions (read, write, and execute) for the user and the group, but no permissions for others''. This is a good practice when you want to share data with other users in the same group but want to completely exclude users who are not group members.
* Set up default umask on Linux: adding the command ''umask 007'' to the '''.bashrc''' file sets the default umask value for your shell. This means that every time you start a new shell session, the umask will be set to 007.
* How it works:
** The default permissions for files are 666 (read and write for owner, group, and others) and for directories are 777 (read, write, and execute for owner, group, and others).
** The default permissions for files are 666 and for directories are 777. In binary, these are 110 110 110 and 111 111 111 respectively. The umask value 007 is 000 000 111 in binary.
** The AND operation is performed between the binary representations of the default permissions and the bitwise '''NOT of the umask value'''. That is, the mask is '''negated''' (its bitwise compliment is taken) and this value is then applied to the default permissions using a logical AND operation.
** The result of the AND operation is 110 110 000 for files and 111 111 000 for directories. In decimal, these are 660 and 770 respectively.
* See [https://www.cyberciti.biz/tips/understanding-linux-unix-umask-value-usage.html What is Umask and How To Setup Default umask Under Linux?], [https://www.computerhope.com/unix/uumask.htm Linux umask command].


Actually Meld is sluggish when it is used in small files in Odroid XU4 running Ubuntu 16.04 MATE. I have used Meld 3.14.2 and the latest 3.16.2.
== chown and chmod recursively (-R) ==
Use '''-R''' (capital R).
<pre>
chmod -R u=rwx,go=rx /var/www/html
</pre>
Note it is better not to remove 'x' on folders. Otherwise we will lose the permission to change file attributes for any file under the folder.


== Directory ==
Note "chmod -R ugo+rwx XXX" is the same as "chmod -R 777 XXX" b/c "u" stands for user, "g" stands for group and "o" stands for others.
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
diff -qr dir1 dir2
</syntaxhighlight>
where '''-q''' means to report only when files differ and '''-r''' is to recursively compare any subdirectories found.


== diff & colordiff-color in terminal ==
== Get the chmod numerical value for a file/directory ==  
PS. For a GUI version of diff, [http://meldmerge.org/ Meld] works fine.
https://unix.stackexchange.com/a/46921
Need to install first. apt-get install colordiff. http://www.cyberciti.biz/programming/color-terminal-highlighter-for-diff-files/
<pre>
<pre>
sudo apt-get install colordiff
# BSD/OS X:
diff -y file1 file2 | colordiff
stat -f "%OLp" <file>
# Ignore same rows (two ways):
 
# diff -C0 file1 file2 | colordiff
# Linux:  
# diff -U0 file1 file2 | colordiff
stat --format '%a' <file>
stat -c %a <file>
</pre>
After that we can use '''ls -lhog''' to verify.


# On systems that I have no root right, I need to install it from the source (just need to run the 'make')
== Files under a directory have question mark attribute  ==
$ diff file1 file2 | ~/bin/colordiff-1.0.18/colordiff.pl
Use '''sudo chmod -R a+x /some/directory''' to fix. This happened when I unzip a zip file compressed in a Windows OS.
</pre>
where -y option means to show the output in two columns.


[[File:Colordiff.png|150px]]
== Files have an integer owner in attributes ==
[https://unix.stackexchange.com/a/13110 What does the “number” in the owner field of files signify in linux?]


Interpretation of the '''diff''' output:
You probably did a copy that preserved the original group and owner of these files. Within linux internally the owner and group is basically just an id.


The first line of the '''diff''' output will contain:
You can change the ower and group to an existing owner and group with the commands chown and chgrp respectively.
* line numbers corresponding to the first file,
* a letter ('''a''' for add, '''c''' for change, or '''d''' for delete), and
* line numbers corresponding to the second file.


In our output above, '''2,4c2,4''' means: "Lines 2 through 4 in the first file need to be changed in order to match lines 2 through 4 in the second file." It then tells us what those lines are in each file:
== Uppercase S in permissions of a folder and setGID ==
* [https://www.linux.com/learn/understanding-linux-file-permissions Understanding Linux File Permissions]
* [https://linuxconfig.org/how-to-use-special-permissions-the-setuid-setgid-and-sticky-bits How to use special permissions: the setuid, setgid and sticky bits]
* [https://unix.stackexchange.com/a/27254 Uppercase S in permissions of a folder]
* [https://www.tecmint.com/create-a-shared-directory-in-linux/ How to Create a Shared Directory for All Users in Linux]
* [https://www.geeksforgeeks.org/setuid-setgid-and-sticky-bits-in-linux-file-permissions/ SetUID, SetGID, and Sticky Bits in Linux File Permissions], [https://www.makeuseof.com/what-are-set-uid-get-uid-and-sticky-bits-in-linux-file-permissions/ What are Set UID, Get UID, and Sticky Bits in Linux File Permissions?]


* Lines preceded by a < are lines from the first file;
I happen to create this case by '''chmod -R 760 ShareFolder'''. To make 'S' to become 's', I just need to use '''chmod -R 2770 ShareFolder'''.
* lines preceded by > are lines from the second file.
* The three dashes ("---") merely separate the lines of file 1 and file 2.
<pre>
2,4c2,4
< I need to run the laundry.
< I need to wash the dog.
< I need to get the car detailed.
---
> I need to do the laundry.
> I need to wash the car.
> I need to get the dog detailed.
</pre>


<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
== immutable files ==
colordiff -ur path1 path2
[https://www.linuxtechi.com/file-directory-attributes-in-linux-using-chattr-lsattr-command/ Manage file and directory attributes using chattr and lsattr command]
# If you change -ur to -urN then that will also show the contents of files that are only present in one of the paths.
</syntaxhighlight>
[[File:Colordiff2.png|150px]]


The meaning of colors can be found in '''/etc/colordiffrc''' (''man colordiff'')
== Display files sorted by modified date in a directory recursively ==
* plain=off
* [http://stackoverflow.com/questions/5566310/how-to-recursively-find-and-list-the-latest-modified-files-in-a-directory-with-s stackoverflow.com]
* newtext=darkgreen
{{Pre}}
* oldtext=darkred
stat --printf="%y %n\n" $(ls -tr $(find DIRNAME -type f))
* diffstuff=darkcyan
</pre>
* cvsstuff=cyan
* [http://superuser.com/questions/416308/list-files-recursively-and-sort-by-modification-time superuser.com]
{{Pre}}
find -type f -printf '%T+\t%p\n' | sort -n
</pre>
Both of methods give the same output. Note the latest changed file is shown at the bottom of the output.


= gnome-terminal =
== Sort files by their size ==
use the '-S' option.
{{Pre}}
ls -lS
</pre>


== Remember the session ==
== Files starting with a dash (meta-characters) ==
* [http://manpages.ubuntu.com/manpages/xenial/man1/gnome-terminal.1.html gnome-terminal --help-all] '''--tab-with-profile'''
[https://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/linuxunix-move-file-starting-with-a-dash/ Move File Starting With A Dash]
** https://stackoverflow.com/questions/17422810/opening-terminal-with-multiple-tabs-using-shell-script
{{Pre}}
** https://stackoverflow.com/questions/1700995/start-gnome-terminal-with-multiple-virtualenv-tabs-and-services-pre-titled
$ > '-foo.txt'
* [https://askubuntu.com/questions/777833/can-no-longer-set-terminal-title-in-ubuntu-16-gnome-terminal Can no longer set terminal title in Ubuntu 16 (gnome-terminal)]
$ rm "-foo.txt"
* [https://askubuntu.com/questions/277543/opening-multiple-tabs-with-gnome-terminal Opening multiple tabs with gnome-terminal]: use '''--tab''' and profile options
rm: invalid option -- 'o'
* [https://superuser.com/questions/72130/save-multiple-gnome-terminal-layout Save multiple gnome-terminal layout?]: '''--load-config''' and '''--save-config''' options. NOTE gnome 3.18 option "--save-config" is no longer supported. But strangely enough, "--load-config" is still there.
Try 'rm ./-foo.txt' to remove the file '-foo.txt'.
* [https://stackoverflow.com/questions/6048474/how-to-remember-multiple-tabs-session-in-terminal-alike-ff-session-manager How to remember multiple tabs' session in terminal? (Alike FireFox session manager)]: '''--profile=''' and '''--save-config''' options. '''--working-directory''' and '''--tab''' options.
Try 'rm --help' for more information.
$ rm -- -foo.txt
</pre>


The following is proved working on Ubuntu 18.04
== Inodes ==
<pre>
* https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inode
gnome-terminal --tab --working-directory=$HOME/Downloads --tab --working-directory=$HOME/Documents
* [https://www.stackscale.com/blog/inodes-linux/ Inodes in Linux: limit, usage and helpful commands]
</pre>
* [https://linuxhandbook.com/inode-linux/ Everything You Need to Know About inodes in Linux]


== Fun: piano ==
== Recover Deleted Files ==
[https://www.ostechnix.com/let-us-play-piano-terminal-using-pc-keyboard/ Let Us Play Piano In Terminal Using Our PC Keyboard]
[https://www.makeuseof.com/tag/recover-deleted-files-from-your-linux-system/ How to Recover Deleted Files on Linux]


= Terminals in grids =
= alias =
== Tilix ==
https://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/how-to-turn-on-or-off-colors-in-bash/
A tiling terminal emulator for Linux using GTK+ 3


* https://gnunn1.github.io/tilix-web/ and Ubuntu [https://launchpad.net/~webupd8team/+archive/ubuntu/terminix PPA] for the latest version.
{{Pre}}
* Zoom in by Ctrl + Shift + Plus sign.
$ alias # list all aliases
* Change color them by using 'profile.
$ alias | grep ls
* [https://www.linuxuprising.com/2018/03/tilix-almost-perfect-tiling-gtk-3.html?m=1 Tilix: The Almost Perfect Tiling GTK+ 3 Terminal Emulator].  You can save and load terminal groups, so you can easily pick up from where you left off, using the exact same terminal layout. My testing is it only saves the layout but not the directories in each pane.
$ unalias ls
* Not quite understand the advantage of it compared to terminator
$ alias ls='ls --color=auto' # save it in ~/.bash_profile or ~/.bashrc
$ alias server_name="ssh -v -l john 192.168.1.11" # or modify /etc/hosts
$ alias open='xdg-open'
$ alias sshnocheck='ssh -o UserKnownHostsFile=/dev/null -o StrictHostKeyChecking=no'
$ alias scpnocheck='scp -o UserKnownHostsFile=/dev/null -o StrictHostKeyChecking=no'
$ alias sshserver='ssh user@a-long-domain-name.com'
$ alias checkport='sudo lsof -i -P -n | grep LISTEN'
</pre>
'''NOTE''' the last column of the output from "checkport" will show '''who can connection to the port'''. For example, if it shows "127.0.0.1:10999 (LISTEN)", it means only the server can connect to port 10999. If it shows "*:22 (LISTEN)", it means any machines can connect to the server through port 22.


== [https://gnometerminator.blogspot.com/p/introduction.html Terminator] ==
To avoid using the alias, use one of the following ways (eg use the command's full path)
* [https://www.tecmint.com/linux-terminal-emulators/ 20 Useful Terminal Emulators for Linux]
{{Pre}}
* https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Terminator (include some keyboard shortcuts)
$ \ls
** Ctrl + Shift+ O Split terminals horizontally
$ /bin/ls
** Ctrl + Shift+ E Split terminals vertically
$ command ls
** mouse can be used to resize split screens and switch to each screen
$ 'ls'
* [https://askubuntu.com/questions/283830/how-to-change-the-font-of-various-terminal-emulators Change the font size]. I pick 'Ubuntu Mono Regular' 14.
</pre>
* [https://dmaricic.wordpress.com/2011/01/28/terminator-keyboard-shortcuts/ Keyboard shortcuts]
** Shift + Ctrl + p/n: switch to the previous/next view
** Ctrl -: decrease font
** Shift Ctrl +: increase font
* You can take a screenshot to record the directories for all split screens.
* Right click to open the Preferences. We can change the number of scroll back there to infinity.


== GNU screen ==
Useful aliases (Added to ~/.bashrc)
* https://www.rackaid.com/blog/linux-screen-tutorial-and-how-to/
<pre>
* http://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/7453/how-to-split-the-terminal-into-more-than-one-view
alias nano="nano -c --softwrap"
</pre>


How to do it...
We can use the [https://stackoverflow.com/a/20111180 backslash to escape the double quote (or others like dollar sign)].
* Run '''screen''' command first (run '''sudo apt-get install screen''' if necessary). You are now inside of a window within screen. This functions just like a normal shell except for a few special characters.
* Create screen windows: Ctrl + a, then c. To close a screen window: exit. Once you close all screen windows, you shall see a message ''[screen is terminating]'' on the terminal.
* View a list of open windows: Ctrl + a, then ".
* Switch between windows: Ctrl + a and n for the next window and Ctrl +a and p for the previous window.
* Attaching to and detaching screens: To detach (save) from the current screen session, Ctrl +a, and d (these keyboard shortcuts won't affect current execution). This will drop you into your shell. This is useful when you need to run a time-consuming job or your connection is dropped. To attach to an existing screen, use:
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
screen -r -d
</syntaxhighlight>
* Split screen:
** To split the screen horizontally, Ctrl +a and S (capital).
** To unsplit the screen, Ctrl +a and Q (capital).
** To switch from one to the other: Ctrl +a and TAB.
** Note: After splitting, you need to go into the new region and start a new session via Ctrl + a then c before you can use that area.


== tmux* ==
If a command needs the sudo right, include the command inside alias. In the following example, if we skip "sudo" then running the command "sudo lsof2" will result in an error: ''sudo: lsof2: command not found''.
* https://github.com/tmux/tmux/wiki
<pre>
* For the prefix key, '''ctrl+a''' is easier than "ctrl+b" to type. '''F1...F4''' works too but F1 will have a conflict with Gnome Terminal.
alias lsof2="sudo lsof -i -P | egrep \"PID|LISTEN\""
* [https://www.2daygeek.com/tmux-a-powerful-terminal-multiplexer-emulator-for-linux/ tmux – A Powerful Terminal Multiplexer For Heavy Command-Line Linux User]
</pre>
* [https://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/549/tmux-vs-gnu-screen tmux vs. GNU Screen]
* [https://superuser.com/questions/423310/byobu-vs-gnu-screen-vs-tmux-usefulness-and-transferability-of-skills/423390 Byobu vs. GNU Screen vs. tmux — usefulness and transferability of skills]
* [https://jozefhajnala.gitlab.io/r/r905-rstudio-terminal/ 4 ways to be more productive, using RStudio's terminal]
* If byobu is installed, then tmux command will start byobu (a modified tmux).
* Byobu changed the text color of '''ls''' output while tmux does not (Ubuntu 18.04).
* [https://github.com/tmux/tmux/wiki/FAQ Change the default prefix] key ("ctrl+b"). Note after a change on '''~/.tmux.conf''', we need to
** run '''tmux source-file ~/.tmux.conf'''
** exit the session and enter again for the change to take effect.
* [https://github.com/tmux-plugins/tpm Plugin manager]
** [https://github.com/tmux-plugins/tmux-prefix-highlight Prefix highlight] in the status bar.
* tmux is available in biowulf/helix
* In macOS/iTerm2, we need to open Prefs > General and check the option "Application in Terminal may access clipboard" for copy/paste to work using mouse/touchpad.
 
Features:
* Split screens
* Don't worry about connection broken (if used remotely) or computer shutdown unexpectedly (it used locally)
* Remember the session including split screens even computer shutdown for any reason. Useful for running a long job (wget, rsync, et al).


Most important keyboard shortcuts:
Use '''unalias [alias name]''' to remove an alias.
{| class="wikitable"
! Keyboard
! Action
|-
| (ctrl+b), "
| split the pane horizontally
|-
| (ctrl+b), up/down arrow key
| move around panes
|-
| (ctrl+b), d
exit
| detach
quit a session
|-
| $ tmux ls
| list sessions
|-
| $ tmux attach -t 0
| re-attach session 0
|-
| (ctrl+b), :
resize-pane -U 10


resize-pane -D 10
== Find file defining an alias ==
| resize pane
[https://unix.stackexchange.com/a/176301 how to find file defining an alias]. It works on macOS. Many of them are defined in ''~/.oh-my-zsh/lib/directories.zsh''. Another way (without saving) is [https://stackoverflow.com/a/58224674 How to find out where alias (in the bash sense) is defined when running Terminal in Mac OS X].
increase pane height by 10


decrease pane height by 10
= lolcat - bring color to text =
|-
{{Pre}}
| (ctrl+b), [
sudo apt-get install ruby
'q' to quit
sudo gem install lolcat
| [https://superuser.com/questions/209437/how-do-i-scroll-in-tmux scrollback] (Enter copy model)
lolcat -h
|-
lolcat --version
| (ctrl+b), [
fortune | lolcat
Space


Enter
ps | lolcat
man ls | lolcat


(ctrl+b), ]
lolcat test.R


$ tmux save-buffer foo.txt
sudo apt install figlet
| [https://awhan.wordpress.com/2010/06/20/copy-paste-in-tmux/ copy mode] in vi style keybindings
figlet Merry Christmas | lolcat
Use the arrow key to go to the top first. Select the top of the text


Use the arrow key to go to the bottom. Select the Bottom of the text and copy
alias lolls="ls -l | lolcat"
lolls
</pre>


Paste (works in tmux window only. To get the tmux buffer in system clipboard, see [http://www.rushiagr.com/blog/2016/06/16/everything-you-need-to-know-about-tmux-copy-pasting/ here])
= File manager =
== Cloud commander ==
* https://cloudcmd.io/
* https://www.ostechnix.com/cloud-commander-a-web-file-manager-with-console-and-editor/. You can upload files from the Cloud services like Google drive, Dropbox, Amazon cloud drive, Facebook, Twitter, Gmail, GtiHub, Picasa, Instagram and many.


Save the buffer to a file
= diff =
|}
== Run diff with large files ==
diff (or even better the cmp command) works fine with 8G fastq files. Note cmp compare files byte by byte so it probably won't run out of memory. [https://superuser.com/a/690732 How to diff large files on Linux].


My ~/.tmux.conf file
Another strategy is to split a large file into small pieces. For example,
<pre>
<pre>
set -g prefix C-a  # change prefix from (C-b) to (C-a)
split -b 500MB FILEname # into 500MB files each
unbind C-b
split -l 200 FILEname  # into smaller files with 200 lines each
bind C-a send-prefix
set -g mouse on                  # use mouse to scroll and switch panes
set-window-option -g mode-keys vi # for copy-paste
</pre>
</pre>


== [http://byobu.co/ Byobu] ==
'''Meld''' freezes When I tested it with two large files (800k & 936k lines coming from human gtf files). Actually the whole linux system became unresponsive.
Byobu is a GPLv3 open source text-based window manager and [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Terminal_multiplexer terminal multiplexer]. It appeared at [http://dirk.eddelbuettel.com/blog/2018/01/26/#prrd_0.0.2 Think inside the box].


Resources:
Actually Meld is sluggish when it is used in small files in Odroid XU4 running Ubuntu 16.04 MATE. I have used Meld 3.14.2 and the latest 3.16.2.
* [https://www.digitalocean.com/community/tutorials/how-to-install-and-use-byobu-for-terminal-management-on-ubuntu-16-04 How To Install and Use Byobu for Terminal Management on Ubuntu 16.04]
* https://help.ubuntu.com/community/Byobu
* Cheat sheet: [https://www.cheatography.com/mikemikk/cheat-sheets/byobu-keybindings/pdf/ PDF], [https://openclipart.org/image/2400px/svg_to_png/250251/Byobu-Keybindings.png Png] format
 
Most important keyboard shortcuts:
{| class="wikitable"
! Keyboard
! Action
|-
| Shift + F2
| split the pane horizontally
|-
| Shift + up/down arrow key
| move around panes
|-
| Shift + Alt + up/down key
| resize panes
|-
| F6
| detach
|}


Summary:
== Kompare ==
* Mouse is useless
https://apps.kde.org/en/kompare
* When used with iTerm on Mac, some keys may have a different behaviors.
* If we want to use the 'byobu' command remotely, we first run a ssh connection to a remote computer. Then we type 'byobu' to start a new '''session'''. After some operations, we can type 'exit' to quit the session or use "F6" to detach the session and return to a normal ssh connection.
* Kill a frozen session by '''byobu kill-session -t 1''' where "1" is the session number obtained by '''byobu list-session'''
* Cf '''Session''' (a complete new terminal), '''Windows''' (count from 0, see the status bar), '''Split''' (also called ''pane'')
* Some all keyboard shotcuts rely on the Fx keys. It is not easy or may fail to do that on Mac (needs to hold the 'fn' key) keyboard on a ssh connection.
* F1 to go to help, e.g. key bindings. ESC to go back.
** Shift-F1 will open a new '''window''' (check the status bar for a new number). 'q' to quit the Help Window.
** Use Alt + Left/Right to move focus among windows
* F2 - create a new window. F3/F4 (or Alt-Left/Alt-Right) - move to previous/next '''window'''
** Ctrl-Shift-F2 - create a new '''session''' (not work on Mac keyboard?)
** Alt-Up/Down to move between sessions
* Split screen
** Horizontal (up and down): Shift + F2.
** Vertical: Ctrl + F2.
** Again you cannot use mouse to move the focus:(
** Shift + Left/Right/Up/Down to move focus among splits
** 'exit' to close a split
** Shift-F6 to kill a split
** Shift + Alt + arrow keys: resize split screen
* F5 reload profile, refresh status
** Shift-F5 to toggle some presets in the status lines
** F9 - change configuration (will run 'exit' on macOS)
** [https://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/25209/is-there-a-legend-some-place-that-describes-all-of-these-color-coded-values-at-t Legend of color-coded values at the bottom of byobu]
** https://linux.die.net/man/1/byobu. Yellow background is load average. Light purple ''background'' is related to disk (no work on mac).
** http://manpages.ubuntu.com/manpages/cosmic/en/man1/tmux.1.html#options
** '''$HOME/.byobu/status''' file most related to status
* F6 Detach session and then log out (type 'byobu' to connect again). That is, even you closed a byobu window, it is still in the background. We can test it by using 'htop' or 'ping' commands.
** Type '' 'ps -ef | grep byobu' '' in the ssh connection to find out detached byobu sessions
* F7 Enter scrollback mode
** Move the cursor to the start of the text you want to copy, hit "Space"
** Move the cursor to the end of the text you want to copy and hit "Enter"
** To paste text, open a text editor and hit Alt + Insert or ctrl-a-]. The first time to use ctrl-a, we need to choose either Screen or Emacs mode (I choose Screen). Use '''byobu-ctrl-a''' to reconfigure change this selection. See [https://help.ubuntu.com/community/Byobu Ubuntu] page.
** Alt-PageUp/PageDown - enter and move through scrollback (fn+Alt+Up/Down on Mac keyboard)
* F8 Rename the current window
** Shift-F8 Rename the current session (not work on Mac keyboard)
* F11
** Shift-F11 Zoom in/out a split
** Alt-F11  Break a split to a full window
* F12
** Shift-F12 Toggle on/off Byobu's keybindings (say, Byobu's keybindings conflict with some other program)
** Alt-F12 Toggle on/off Byobu's mouse support (move around splits and resize split size). It becomes more complex when we want to select text.


: [[File:Byobu.png|200px]]
Meld cannot change theme. So if my desktop has a dark theme, meld is hard to read.


== Guake ==
Kompare still has a light them.
* https://github.com/Guake/guake
* [https://www.linuxuprising.com/2019/05/new-guake-drop-down-terminal-ppa-ubuntu.html New Guake Drop-Down Terminal PPA (Ubuntu And Linux Mint Installation)]


= [https://github.com/Guake/guake Guake] / Yakuake / Tilda =  
== Directory ==
Drop down terminals for the GNOME / KDE / GTK Environments. Great for quick access to a terminal!
{{Pre}}
diff -qr dir1 dir2
</pre>
where '''-q''' means to report only when files differ and '''-r''' is to recursively compare any subdirectories found.


= System date/time, ntpd =
== diff & colordiff-color on terminal: compare side by side ==
* [http://www.ubuntugeek.com/install-and-configure-network-time-protocol-ntp-serverclients-on-ubuntu-16-10-server.html Install and configure Network Time Protocol (NTP) Server,Clients on Ubuntu 16.10 Server]
PS. For a GUI version of diff, [http://meldmerge.org/ Meld] works fine.
* [https://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/how-to-bind-ntpd-to-specific-ip-addresses-on-linuxunix/ How to bind ntpd to specific IP addresses on Linux/Unix]
Need to install first. apt-get install colordiff. http://www.cyberciti.biz/programming/color-terminal-highlighter-for-diff-files/
* [https://www.2daygeek.com/check-verify-ntp-sync-is-working-or-not-in-linux-using-ntpq-ntpstat-timedatectl/ How To Verify NTP Setup (Sync) is Working or Not In Linux?]
<pre>
: <syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
sudo apt-get install colordiff
$ timedatectl
diff -y file1 file2 | colordiff
      Local time: Mon 2019-06-10 08:37:09 EDT
# Ignore same rows (two ways):
  Universal time: Mon 2019-06-10 12:37:09 UTC
# diff -C0 file1 file2 | colordiff
        RTC time: Mon 2019-06-10 12:37:09
# diff -U0 file1 file2 | colordiff
      Time zone: America/New_York (EDT, -0400)
 
Network time on: yes
# On systems that I have no root right, I need to install it from the source
NTP synchronized: yes
# (just need to run 'make')
RTC in local TZ: no
$ diff file1 file2 | ~/bin/colordiff-1.0.18/colordiff.pl
</syntaxhighlight>
</pre>
where -y option means to show the output in two columns.


= Change the date/timestamp of a file - touch =
[[File:Colordiff.png|150px]]
Modify the file relative to its existing modification time
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
filename=MyFileName
touch -d "$(date -R -r $filename) - 2 hours" $filename # 2 hours before
touch -d "$(date -R -r $filename) + 2 hours" $filename # 2 hours later
</syntaxhighlight>


See [http://askubuntu.com/questions/62492/how-can-i-change-the-date-modified-created-of-a-file How can I change the date modified/created of a file?]
Interpretation of the '''diff''' output:


= Find binary file location =
The first line of the '''diff''' output will contain:
* '''which''' - Display the full path of shell commands. See examples from [http://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/unix-linux-which-command-examples-syntax-to-locate-programs/ cyberciti.biz].
* line numbers corresponding to the first file,
: <syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
* a letter ('''a''' for add, '''c''' for change, or '''d''' for delete), and
$ which ls
* line numbers corresponding to the second file.
/bin/ls
 
</syntaxhighlight>
In our output above, '''2,4c2,4''' means: "Lines 2 through 4 in the first file need to be changed in order to match lines 2 through 4 in the second file." It then tells us what those lines are in each file:
* '''whereis''' - locate the binary, source, and manual page files for a command. See examples from [http://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/unix-linux-whereis-command-examples-to-locate-binary/ cyberciti.biz]. 
: <syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
$ whereis ls
ls: /bin/ls /usr/share/man/man1p/ls.1p.gz /usr/share/man/man1/ls.1.gz
</syntaxhighlight>
* '''type -a'''
: <syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
$ type -a ls
ls is aliased to `ls --color=tty'
ls is /bin/ls
</syntaxhighlight>


* '''locate'''. Use '''locate''' command mindfully. It is used to find the location of files and directories. Note that locate does not search the files on disk rather it searches for file paths in a database. For example, the following command will search .png files over the system (not only the personal directory).
* Lines preceded by a < are lines from the first file (color in red);
: <syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
* lines preceded by > are lines from the second file (color in green).
locate "*.png"
* The three dashes ("---") merely separate the lines of file 1 and file 2.
</syntaxhighlight>
<pre>
: See [https://superuser.com/a/705854 How to use updatedb command as an ordinary user?], [https://hpc.nih.gov/training/handouts/Data_Management_for_Groups.pdf#page=53 Use updatedb and locate to index files].
2,4c2,4
< I need to run the laundry.
< I need to wash the dog.
< I need to get the car detailed.
---
> I need to do the laundry.
> I need to wash the car.
> I need to get the dog detailed.
</pre>


= find: Find a file =
{{Pre}}
== -iname ==
colordiff -ur path1 path2
Search by a file name
</pre>
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
If you change -ur to -urN then that will also show the contents of files that are only present in one of the paths.
$ find . -iname '*.txt'  # -iname or -name is necessary
[[File:Colordiff2.png|150px]]
</syntaxhighlight>


It also works for searching files on subdirectories.
The meaning of colors can be found in '''/etc/colordiffrc''' (''man colordiff'' or [https://www.colordiff.org/colordiff.html colordiff web site])
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
* plain=off
$ find . -name transcripts.gtf
* newtext=darkgreen
./RH_bio/transcripts.gtf
* oldtext=darkred
./dT_ori/transcripts.gtf
* diffstuff=darkcyan
./dT_tech/transcripts.gtf
* cvsstuff=cyan
./dT_bio/transcripts.gtf
./RH_ori/transcripts.gtf
./RH_tech/transcripts.gtf
</syntaxhighlight>


== -mtime, -ctime, -atime argument ==
== git diff --no-index -- file.a file.b ==
Find files modified in 10 days.
[https://stackoverflow.com/a/15110387 Any visual diff in Linux console?]
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
$ find . -ctime -10 # include subdirectories
.
./mediawiki-1.32.0.tar.gz
./d
./d/deepSurv.pdf
</syntaxhighlight>


Find files modified in one day and contain string 'est'
= gnome-terminal =
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
$ find . -mtime -1 -exec grep --with-filename est {} \;
</syntaxhighlight>


If the search directory is not the current directory, we need to add a forward slash to the directory name.
== Remember the session ==
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
* [http://manpages.ubuntu.com/manpages/xenial/man1/gnome-terminal.1.html gnome-terminal --help-all] '''--tab-with-profile'''
$ find ~/Desktop -iname '*.txt'  # Not working
** https://stackoverflow.com/questions/17422810/opening-terminal-with-multiple-tabs-using-shell-script
$ find ~/Desktop/ -iname '*.txt' # Working
** https://stackoverflow.com/questions/1700995/start-gnome-terminal-with-multiple-virtualenv-tabs-and-services-pre-titled
</syntaxhighlight>
* [https://askubuntu.com/questions/777833/can-no-longer-set-terminal-title-in-ubuntu-16-gnome-terminal Can no longer set terminal title in Ubuntu 16 (gnome-terminal)]
* [https://askubuntu.com/questions/277543/opening-multiple-tabs-with-gnome-terminal Opening multiple tabs with gnome-terminal]: use '''--tab''' and profile options
* [https://superuser.com/questions/72130/save-multiple-gnome-terminal-layout Save multiple gnome-terminal layout?]: '''--load-config''' and '''--save-config''' options. NOTE gnome 3.18 option "--save-config" is no longer supported. But strangely enough, "--load-config" is still there.
* [https://stackoverflow.com/questions/6048474/how-to-remember-multiple-tabs-session-in-terminal-alike-ff-session-manager How to remember multiple tabs' session in terminal? (Alike FireFox session manager)]: '''--profile=''' and '''--save-config''' options. '''--working-directory''' and '''--tab''' options.


The [http://content.hccfl.edu/pollock/unix/findcmd.htm following example] shows we can list multiple search criteria. The “‑r” option in tar appends files to an archive. '''xargs''' is a handy utility that converts a stream of input (in this case the output of find) into command line arguments for the supplied command (in this case tar, used to create a backup archive).
The following is proved working on Ubuntu 18.04
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
<pre>
find / -type f -mtime -7 | xargs tar -rf weekly_incremental.tar
gnome-terminal --tab --working-directory=$HOME/Downloads \
gzip weekly_incremental.tar
              --tab --working-directory=$HOME/Documents
</syntaxhighlight>
</pre>
 
== Fun: piano ==
[https://www.ostechnix.com/let-us-play-piano-terminal-using-pc-keyboard/ Let Us Play Piano In Terminal Using Our PC Keyboard]


[https://www.quora.com/What-is-the-difference-between-mtime-atime-and-ctime What is the difference between mtime, atime and ctime?]
= Terminals in grids =
* mtime (modification time) indicates the time the contents of the file has been changed. Mind you, only the contents. Not the attributes.  
See [[Terminal_multiplexer|Terminal_multiplexer]].
* ctime (change time) is the timestamp of a file that indicates the time that it was changed. Now, the modification can be in terms of its content or in terms of its attributes.
== Tilix ==
* atime (access time) is the timestamp that indicates the time that a file has been accessed.


== xargs ==
== Terminator ==
See [[Linux_Programming#xargs|Linux Programming]]


== -exec COMMAND {} + ==
== GNU screen ==
* [https://unix.stackexchange.com/a/12904 How to run find -exec?], [https://stackoverflow.com/a/6085237 Using semicolon (;) vs plus (+) with exec in find]
: <syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
find . -exec grep chrome {} \;
# or
find . -exec grep chrome {} +
</syntaxhighlight> find will execute grep and will substitute {} with the filename(s) found. The difference between ; and + is that '''with ; a single grep command for each file is executed''' whereas with + as many files as possible are given as parameters to grep at once. The backslash before ; is to escape ; so linux won't interpret it directly.
* Find files and execute something (google: find --exec)
: <syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
$ find ./ -name "*.tar.gz" -exec tar zxvf {} \;
</syntaxhighlight>
* Find and move files to a new directory <syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>find OLDDIR -type f -exec mv -t NEWDIR {} + </syntaxhighlight>
* [http://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/41550/find-the-total-size-of-certain-files-within-a-directory-branch Find the total file size of a list of files].
* [https://unix.stackexchange.com/a/196917 What is meaning of {} + in find's -exec command?]
* [http://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/179346/why-does-find-exec-cmd-need-to-end-in?rq=1 Why does 'find -exec cmd {} +' need to end in '{} +'?]
* [http://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/12902/how-to-run-find-exec How to run find -exec?]


The following will find out the total file size of the 'accepted_hits.bam' file under all sub-directories.
== tmux* ==
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
find ./ -iname "accepted_hits*" -exec du -ch {} + | grep total$
</syntaxhighlight>
where '-c' produces a grand total, and will substitute {} with the filename(s) found in '''-exec'''.


== Application to backup ==
== [http://byobu.co/ Byobu] ==
[[#Delete_files_or_directories_older_than_XXX_days|Delete files/directories older than XXX days]]


== Avoid Permission Denied Messages ==
== [https://github.com/Guake/guake Guake] / Yakuake / Tilda ==  
[https://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/bash-find-exclude-all-permission-denied-messages/ How to fix find command permission denied messages]  
Drop down terminals for the GNOME / KDE / GTK Environments. Great for quick access to a terminal!
* Redirecting ALL standard error (not only permission denied error): '''2>/dev/null'''.
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
find . -iname "data*.txt" -print 2>/dev/null
</syntaxhighlight>
* Focus on the 'permission denied' message: '''grep -v "Permission denied" '''
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
find / -name foo 2>&1 | grep -v "Permission denied"
</syntaxhighlight>


= '''grep''': Find a file by searching contents =
= System date/time, ntpd =
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
* [http://www.ubuntugeek.com/install-and-configure-network-time-protocol-ntp-serverclients-on-ubuntu-16-10-server.html Install and configure Network Time Protocol (NTP) Server,Clients on Ubuntu 16.10 Server]
grep -r -i "Entering" ~/Downloads/R-3.0.0/
* [https://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/how-to-bind-ntpd-to-specific-ip-addresses-on-linuxunix/ How to bind ntpd to specific IP addresses on Linux/Unix]
</syntaxhighlight>
* [https://www.2daygeek.com/check-verify-ntp-sync-is-working-or-not-in-linux-using-ntpq-ntpstat-timedatectl/ How To Verify NTP Setup (Sync) is Working or Not In Linux?]
where '''-r''' means recursively searching the directory and '''-i''' means case insensitive.
{{Pre}}
$ timedatectl
      Local time: Mon 2019-06-10 08:37:09 EDT
  Universal time: Mon 2019-06-10 12:37:09 UTC
        RTC time: Mon 2019-06-10 12:37:09
      Time zone: America/New_York (EDT, -0400)
Network time on: yes
NTP synchronized: yes
RTC in local TZ: no
</pre>


Sometimes using '''-R''' is more effective because of the symbolic links issue.
= Linux file timestamps =
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
[https://www.howtogeek.com/517098/linux-file-timestamps-explained-atime-mtime-and-ctime/ Linux File Timestamps Explained: atime, mtime, and ctime]
$ grep -r -i phpmyadmin /etc/apache2/ # nothing returned
$ grep -R -i phpmyadmin /etc/apache2/
/etc/apache2/conf-enabled/phpmyadmin.conf:# phpMyAdmin default Apache configuration
...
/etc/apache2/conf-available/phpmyadmin.conf:# phpMyAdmin default Apache configuration
...
</syntaxhighlight>


We can also display the row numbers for matches by using the '''-n''' parameter in grep.
== Change the date/timestamp of a file - touch ==
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
Modify the file relative to its existing modification time
# What variants appear in dbsnp
{{Pre}}
grep -n 'rs[0-9]' XXX.vcf
filename=MyFileName
</syntaxhighlight>
touch -d "$(date -R -r $filename) - 2 hours" $filename # 2 hours before
touch -d "$(date -R -r $filename) + 2 hours" $filename # 2 hours later
</pre>


To exclude lines with a pattern, using the '''-v''' parameter.
See [http://askubuntu.com/questions/62492/how-can-i-change-the-date-modified-created-of-a-file How can I change the date modified/created of a file?]
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
# How many variant were called
grep -v "^#" XXX.vcf | head
</syntaxhighlight>


To exclude binary files, use '''-I''' parameter.
= Find binary file location, '''type''' =
* '''which''' - Display the full path of shell commands. See examples from [http://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/unix-linux-which-command-examples-syntax-to-locate-programs/ cyberciti.biz].
{{Pre}}
$ which ls
/bin/ls
</pre>
* '''whereis''' - locate the binary, source, and manual page files for a command. See examples from [http://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/unix-linux-whereis-command-examples-to-locate-binary/ cyberciti.biz]. 
{{Pre}}
$ whereis ls
ls: /bin/ls /usr/share/man/man1p/ls.1p.gz /usr/share/man/man1/ls.1.gz
</pre>
* '''type''', [https://www.cyberciti.biz/howto/finding-a-path-of-a-linux-command-like-a-pro/ How to find a path of a Linux command like a pro]
{{Pre}}
$ type ls
ls is aliased to `ls --color=tty'
ls is /bin/ls
</pre>


To show only matched filenames, using the '''-l''' parameter.
* '''locate'''. Use '''locate''' command mindfully. It is used to find the location of files and directories. Note that locate does not search the files on disk rather it searches for file paths in a database. For example, the following command will search .png files over the system (not only the personal directory).
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
{{Pre}}
grep -l "iterator" *.cpp
locate "*.png"
# if we add '-n', the '-n' option won't work.
</pre>
</syntaxhighlight>
: See [https://superuser.com/a/705854 How to use updatedb command as an ordinary user?], [https://hpc.nih.gov/training/handouts/Data_Management_for_Groups.pdf#page=53 Use updatedb and locate to index files].


To search with certain file extensions, use '''--include''' argument; see [https://stackoverflow.com/questions/12516937/grep-but-only-certain-file-extensions this post].
= find: Find a file =
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
find operates ''recursively'' into sub folders.
grep -r -i --include \*.h --include \*.cpp KEYWORD ~/path[12345] 
# escape with \ just in case you have a directory with asterisks in the filenames
</syntaxhighlight>


If the pattern is saved in a file, use the '''-f''' parameter
== -iname ==
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
Search by a file name
grep -f PATTERNFILE INPUTFILE
{{Pre}}
</syntaxhighlight>
$ find . -type f -name "abc*" # find a file starting with abc
$ find . -iname '*.txt' # -iname or -name is necessary
</pre>


If there are two keywords, use the following
It also works for searching files on subdirectories.
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
{{Pre}}
$ grep "begin\|completed" --color swarm_58606147_0.o  # needs an escape
$ find . -name transcripts.gtf
begin 2018-01-12 14:46:05
./RH_bio/transcripts.gtf
alignment is completed 2018-01-12 16:45:24
./dT_ori/transcripts.gtf
marking duplication is completed 2018-01-12 17:52:01
./dT_tech/transcripts.gtf
assign read group is completed 2018-01-12 18:22:49
./dT_bio/transcripts.gtf
indel re-alignment is completed 2018-01-12 19:29:32
./RH_ori/transcripts.gtf
BQSR is completed 2018-01-12 22:26:22
./RH_tech/transcripts.gtf
GATK is completed 2018-01-12 23:43:3
</pre>
$ egrep "begin|completed" --color swarm_58606147_0.o # no need an escape if we use extended regular expressions
</syntaxhighlight>
We can use R to compute the time spent in each step; see [[R#Dealing_with_date|Dealing with dates]].


Check https://www.howtoforge.com/tutorial/linux-grep-command/ for more examples
== -mtime, -ctime, -atime argument ==
* Using grep to search only for words  ("-w" option)
Find files modified in 10 days.
* Using grep to search two different words  (egrep -w 'word1|word2' /path/to/file)
{{Pre}}
* Count line for matched words  ("-c" option)
$ find . -ctime -10 # include subdirectories
* Grep invert match ("-v" option)
.
* How to list only the names of matching files ("-l" option)
./mediawiki-1.32.0.tar.gz
./d
./d/deepSurv.pdf
</pre>


== GUI ==
Find files modified in one day and contain string 'est'
A GUI version of a tool to search files is [http://searchmonkey.embeddediq.com/ '''searchmonkey'''] (open source, Linux, Windows). On Ubuntu, we install it by
{{Pre}}
<pre>
$ find . -mtime -1 -exec grep --with-filename est {} \;
sudo apt-get install searchmonkey
</pre>
</pre>
It is also useful to change the settings so we can click a filename and open it in the desired text editor. To do that, go to Settings -> Preferences -> System Call -> Text Editor. I enter 'geany' since I want to use geany to open my C programs. '''Note'''. the v2.0 source code needs to be built using i386 gcc library and Qt 4.8.x. Still, I cannot get rid of some errors coming from the source code.


== Summary of '''find''' and '''grep''' commands ==
<span style="color: red">If the search directory is not the current directory, we need to add a forward slash to the directory name.</span>
{| class="wikitable"
{{Pre}}
! Command
$ find ~/Desktop -iname '*.txt' # Not working
! Examples
$ find ~/Desktop/ -iname '*.txt' # Working
|-
</pre>
| find
 
| find [DIRECTORY]  -iname '*.txt'
The [http://content.hccfl.edu/pollock/unix/findcmd.htm following example] shows we can list multiple search criteria. The “‑r” option in tar appends files to an archive. '''xargs''' is a handy utility that converts a stream of input (in this case the output of find) into command line arguments for the supplied command (in this case tar, used to create a backup archive).
find [DIRECTORY] -maxdepth 2 -iname *.php
{{Pre}}
find / -type f -mtime -7 | xargs tar -rf weekly_incremental.tar
gzip weekly_incremental.tar
</pre>


find -name '*.php' -o -name '*.txt'  # OR operator
[https://www.quora.com/What-is-the-difference-between-mtime-atime-and-ctime What is the difference between mtime, atime and ctime?]
|-
* mtime (modification time) indicates the time the contents of the file has been changed. Mind you, only the contents. Not the attributes.
| grep
* ctime (change time) is the timestamp of a file that indicates the time that it was changed. Now, the modification can be in terms of its content or in terms of its attributes.
| grep -r -i "check_samtools" DIRECTORY/
* atime (access time) is the timestamp that indicates the time that a file has been accessed.
dpkg -l libgtk* | grep  '^i'
|}


= Count number of columns: awk =
== xargs ==
The following command shows the number of columns for the first few rows of a text file.
See [[Linux_Programming#xargs|Linux Programming]]
<syntaxhighlight lang="bash">
head MYFILE | awk '{ print NF}'


head MYFILE | awk -F '\t' '{ print NF}'
== -exec COMMAND {} \; ==
<ul>
<li>Search and list files with details
<syntaxhighlight lang='sh'>
find . -type f -name "*street*" -exec ls -lh {} \;
</syntaxhighlight>
</syntaxhighlight>
'''-exec ls -lh {} \;''' executes the '''ls -lh''' command on each found file. The '''{}''' is a placeholder for the current file, and '''\;''' indicates the end of the -exec command.


= Count number of rows in a file: wc =
<li>[https://unix.stackexchange.com/a/12904 How to run find -exec?], [https://stackoverflow.com/a/6085237 Using semicolon (;) vs plus (+) with exec in find]
<syntaxhighlight lang="bash">
{{Pre}}
wc -l MYFILE
# This command will run grep chrome on each file individually.
</syntaxhighlight>
find . -exec grep chrome {} \;


The source code of wc (or any Linux command) can be found by using [http://ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=241328 this method]
# This command will run grep chrome on batches of files, reducing the number of times the command is executed.
<syntaxhighlight lang="bash">
# Using + can significantly improve performance
brb@brb-T3500:~/Downloads$ which wc
find . -exec grep chrome {} +
/usr/bin/wc
</pre>  
brb@brb-T3500:~/Downloads$ dpkg -S /usr/bin/wc
Note:
coreutils: /usr/bin/wc
* The backslash before ; is to '''escape''' ; so linux won't interpret it directly.
brb@brb-T3500:~/Downloads$ sudo apt-get source coreutils
* Command Compatibility: Not all commands support being executed with multiple arguments at once. For example, grep can handle multiple files, but some other commands might not. In other words, while '''-exec COMMAND {} +''' can be more efficient, it’s important to ensure the command you’re using supports this usage and behaves as expected.
[sudo] password for brb:
 
Reading package lists... Done
<li>Find files and execute something (google: find --exec)
Building dependency tree     
{{Pre}}
Reading state information... Done
$ find ./ -name "*.tar.gz" -exec tar zxvf {} \;
Need to get 12.3 MB of source archives.
</pre>
Get:1 http://us.archive.ubuntu.com/ubuntu/ trusty-updates/main coreutils 8.21-1ubuntu5.1 (dsc) [1,635 B]
 
Get:2 http://us.archive.ubuntu.com/ubuntu/ trusty-updates/main coreutils 8.21-1ubuntu5.1 (tar) [12.3 MB]
<li>Find and move files to a new directory
Get:3 http://us.archive.ubuntu.com/ubuntu/ trusty-updates/main coreutils 8.21-1ubuntu5.1 (diff) [31.6 kB]
{{Pre}}
Fetched 12.3 MB in 22s (559 kB/s)                                             
find OLDDIR -type f -exec mv -t NEWDIR {} +
gpgv: Signature made Tue 13 Jan 2015 10:33:04 PM EST using RSA key ID 9D8D2E97
</pre>
gpgv: Cannot check signature: public key not found
 
dpkg-source: warning: failed to verify signature on ./coreutils_8.21-1ubuntu5.1.dsc
<li>[http://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/41550/find-the-total-size-of-certain-files-within-a-directory-branch Find the total file size of a list of files].
dpkg-source: info: extracting coreutils in coreutils-8.21
 
dpkg-source: info: unpacking coreutils_8.21.orig.tar.gz
<li>[https://unix.stackexchange.com/a/196917 What is meaning of {} + in find's -exec command?]
dpkg-source: info: applying coreutils_8.21-1ubuntu5.1.diff.gz
</syntaxhighlight>


As we can see from the ''coreutils-8.21/src'' directory, there are over 100 C programs including <cat.c>, <chmod.c>, <cp.c>, ...<wc.c>.
<li>[http://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/179346/why-does-find-exec-cmd-need-to-end-in?rq=1 Why does 'find -exec cmd {} +' need to end in '{} +'?]


= Print certain rows/lines of a text file =
<li>[http://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/12902/how-to-run-find-exec How to run find -exec?]
The following example will print out lines 10 to 60 of FILENAME.
The following will find out the total file size of the 'accepted_hits.bam' file under all sub-directories.
<pre>
{{Pre}}
sed -n '10,60p' FILENAME
find ./ -iname "accepted_hits*" -exec du -ch {} + | grep total$
</pre>
</pre>
Or to print out line 60,
where '-c' produces a grand total, and will substitute {} with the filename(s) found in '''-exec'''.
</ul>
 
== How to find and delete directory recursively ==
[https://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/how-to-find-and-delete-directory-recursively-on-linux-or-unix-like-system/ How to find and delete directory recursively on Linux or Unix-like system]. Application: recursively remove backups older than 30 days.
 
== Find all soft link files ==
<pre>
<pre>
sed -n '60p' FILENAME
find /tmp -type l
</pre>
</pre>
It seems this method is not as fast as I expected. For example, the '''tail''' command will immediately print out the result without waiting!


= output colored console to html =
== Recursive statistics on file types in directory? ==
Use [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/pixelb/scripts/master/scripts/ansi2html.sh ansi2html.sh]. It only requires gawk.
[https://unix.stackexchange.com/a/18508 You could use '''find''' and '''uniq''' for this]. This is fast!
# Use wget to download it
# sudo apt-get install gawk
# chmod +x ansi2html.sh
# colordiff file1 file2 | ./ansi2html.sh > diff.html


= using a the result of a diff in a if statement =
<pre>
<pre>
ls -lR $dir > a
$ find . -type f | sed 's/.*\.//' | sort | uniq -c
ls -lR $dir > b
</pre>
 
== Exclude or Ignore Files ==
[https://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/find-command-exclude-ignore-files/ Find command Exclude or Ignore Files (e.g. Ignore All Hidden .dot Files )]


DIFF=$(diff a b)
== Avoid Permission Denied Messages ==
if [ "$DIFF" != "" ]  
[https://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/bash-find-exclude-all-permission-denied-messages/ How to fix find command permission denied messages]  
then
* Redirecting ALL standard error (not only permission denied error): '''2>/dev/null'''.
    echo "The directory was modified"
{{Pre}}
fi
find . -iname "data*.txt" -print 2>/dev/null
</pre>
</pre>
Another example
* Focus on the 'permission denied' message: '''grep -v "Permission denied" '''
<pre>
{{Pre}}
if [ "$(diff file1.html file2.html)" == "" ]; then echo Same; else echo Different; fi
find / -name foo 2>&1 | grep -v "Permission denied"
</pre>
</pre>


= Prompt =
== Find Files That Have Been Modified Recently in Linux ==
== Colored prompt ==
[https://www.baeldung.com/linux/recently-changed-files Find Files That Have Been Modified Recently in Linux]
* http://www.tldp.org/HOWTO/Bash-Prompt-HOWTO/x329.html
* https://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/bash-shell-change-the-color-of-my-shell-prompt-under-linux-or-unix/


For example, the following code will change the prompt to a light blue color. NOTE that we need <span class="Unicode">&#8726;[ </span> and <span class="Unicode">&#8726;] </span> in order to avoid a problem of miscalculating the cursor's starting position.
== fd: The Find Command Alternative ==
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
[https://ostechnix.com/fd-find-command-alternative/ Fd: The Find Command Alternative For Mastering File Search In Linux]
# blue 
export PS1='\[\e[1;34m\]\u@\h:\w\$ \[\e[0m\]'    # bright blue (good)
export PS1='\[\e[0;34m\]\u@\h:\w\$ \[\e[0m\]'    # darker blue


# yellow
= '''grep''': Find a file by searching contents =
export PS1='\[\e[1;33m\]\u@\h:\w\$ \[\e[0m\]'     # bright yellow
{{Pre}}
export PS1='\[\e[0;33m\]\u@\h:\w\$ \[\e[0m\]'     # dark yellow (good)
grep -r -i "Entering" ~/Downloads/R-3.0.0/
</pre>
where '''-r''' means recursively searching the directory and '''-i''' means case insensitive.


# red
Sometimes using '''-R''' is more effective because of the symbolic links issue.
export PS1='\[\e[1;31m\]\u@\h:\w\$ \[\e[0m\]'    # bright red
{{Pre}}
export PS1='\[\e[0;31m\]\u@\h:\w\$ \[\e[0m\]'    # dark red (good)
$ grep -r -i phpmyadmin /etc/apache2/  # nothing returned
$ grep -R -i phpmyadmin /etc/apache2/
</pre>


# green
We can also display the row numbers for matches by using the '''-n''' parameter in grep.
export PS1='\[\e[1;32m\]\u@\h:\w\$ \[\e[0m\]'     # bright green
{{Pre}}
export PS1='\[\e[0;32m\]\u@\h:\w\$ \[\e[0m\]'     # dark green
# What variants appear in dbsnp
grep -n 'rs[0-9]' XXX.vcf
</pre>


# cyan
To exclude lines with a pattern, using the '''-v''' parameter.
export PS1='\[\e[1;36m\]\u@\h:\w\$ \[\e[0m\]'     # bright cyan
{{Pre}}
export PS1='\[\e[0;36m\]\u@\h:\w\$ \[\e[0m\]'    # dark cyan (good)
# How many variant were called
grep -v "^#" XXX.vcf | head
</pre>


# purple
To exclude binary files, use '''-I''' parameter.
export PS1='\[\e[1;35m\]\u@\h:\w\$ \[\e[0m\]'     # bright purple (good)
export PS1='\[\e[0;35m\]\u@\h:\w\$ \[\e[0m\]'     # dark purple
</syntaxhighlight>


[[File:Ps1tweak.png|200px]]
To show only matched filenames, using the '''-l''' parameter.
{{Pre}}
grep -l "iterator" *.cpp
# if we add '-n', the '-n' option won't work.
</pre>


To make a permanent change, we can add the line to '''~/.bashrc''' file and (is it necessary) un-comment the following line
To search with certain file extensions, use '''--include''' argument; see [https://stackoverflow.com/questions/12516937/grep-but-only-certain-file-extensions this post].
<pre>
{{Pre}}
force_color_prompt=yes
grep -r -i --include \*.h --include \*.cpp KEYWORD ~/path[12345] 
# escape with \ just in case you have a directory with asterisks in the filenames
</pre>
</pre>


[https://www.linuxuprising.com/2021/11/how-to-find-all-files-containing.html How To Find All Files Containing Specific Text On Linux From The Command Line]
{{Pre}}
grep -Rni --exclude-dir={Private,Personal} --include={*.txt,*.js} 'text' ~/Documents
# Exclude hidden directories
grep -R --exclude-dir=".*" 'text' ~/Documents
</pre>


Some of my settings in .bashrc file
The only issue with using the -f argument is that grep is going to attempt to interpret the keywords as if they are patterns, which can slow it down when parsing against an extremely large file. So you can also specify the -F parameter, which tells grep to only do exact matches against the strings.
<pre>
<pre>
# Office Linux Mint, bright blue, display current time
grep -f searchstringsFile filetosearch > output.txt
# Example: 12:45PM ~/Downloads$
 
PS1="\[\033[1;34m\]\$(date +%H:%M%p) \w$\[\033[0m\] "
# -F, --fixed-strings
grep -F searchstring filetosearch > output.txt
</pre>


# Biowulf and Helix, dark yellow
If the pattern is saved in a file, use the '''-f''' parameter
# Example: biowulf:~/R$
{{Pre}}
PS1='\[\e[0;33m\]\h:\w\$ \[\e[0m\]'
grep -f PATTERNFILE INPUTFILE
alias nano="nano -c --softwrap"
</pre>


# Mac, light green
If there are two keywords, use the following
export PS1="\[\e[0;32m\]mac$\[\e[0m\] "
{{Pre}}
$ grep "begin\|completed" --color swarm_58606147_0.o  # needs an escape
begin 2018-01-12 14:46:05
alignment is completed 2018-01-12 16:45:24
marking duplication is completed 2018-01-12 17:52:01
assign read group is completed 2018-01-12 18:22:49
indel re-alignment is completed 2018-01-12 19:29:32
BQSR is completed 2018-01-12 22:26:22
GATK is completed 2018-01-12 23:43:3
$ egrep "begin|completed" --color swarm_58606147_0.o
# no need an escape if we use extended regular expressions
</pre>
</pre>
We can use R to compute the time spent in each step; see [[R#Dealing_with_date|Dealing with dates]].


== Add a timestamp to your Bash prompt ==
Check https://www.howtoforge.com/tutorial/linux-grep-command/ for more examples
* See '''man 3 strftime''' for the date, time format. In Linux Mint, the date applets uses the '''%A %B %e, %H:%M''' which gives a format like 'Friday July 15, 10:23'.
* Using grep to search only for words / exact match ("-w" option)
* [http://www.foragoodstrftime.com For a Good Strftime] - Online date/time formatting tool
* Using grep to search two different words  (egrep -w 'word1|word2' /path/to/file)
* http://bneijt.nl/blog/post/add-a-timestamp-to-your-bash-prompt/. Set
* Count line for matched words  ("-c" option)
: {| class="wikitable"
* Grep invert match ("-v" option)
|-
* How to list only the names of matching files ("-l" option)
! PS1 !! Prompt
 
|-
== Preserve colouring after piping grep to grep ==
| default || brb@p45t:~/Downloads$
https://stackoverflow.com/a/2327216
|-
 
| PS1='[\D{%F %T}] \u@\h \W\$ ' || [2016-07-08 16:56:48] brb@brb-P45T-A ~/Downloads$
Use grep '''--color=always''' .For example, grep --color=always KEYWORD Myfile | more.
 
== Compressed files ==
'''zgrep''' or '''zipgrep''' command
 
== GUI ==
A GUI version of a tool to search files is [http://searchmonkey.embeddediq.com/ '''searchmonkey'''] (open source, Linux, Windows). On Ubuntu, we install it by
<pre>
sudo apt-get install searchmonkey
</pre>
It is also useful to change the settings so we can click a filename and open it in the desired text editor. To do that, go to Settings -> Preferences -> System Call -> Text Editor. I enter 'geany' since I want to use geany to open my C programs. '''Note'''. the v2.0 source code needs to be built using i386 gcc library and Qt 4.8.x. Still, I cannot get rid of some errors coming from the source code.
 
== -- option ==
[https://www.linuxuprising.com/2021/02/how-to-use-grep-search-help-output-to.html How To Use grep To Search The --help Output To Find Out What CLI Arguments That Begin With A Dash Do]
<pre>
rm --help | grep -w -- -r
 
rm --help | grep -w -- '-[rf]'  # multiple one letter
</pre>
 
== Summary of '''find''' and '''grep''' commands ==
{| class="wikitable"
! Command
! Examples
|-
|-
| PS1="\[\033[1;34m\]\$(date +%H:%M%p) \w$\[\033[0m\] " || 10:54AM ~/Downloads$
| find
|} From here, we can skip '''%F''' (not showing the date), '''\W''' (not showing the current directory) and change '''%T''' to '''%H:%M''' (not showing seconds).
| find [DIRECTORY] -iname '*.txt'
* Another solution: using '''PROMPT_COMMAND''' variable. http://askubuntu.com/questions/193416/adding-timestamps-to-terminal-prompts. Add this line to the '''~/.bashrc''' file: <syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
find [DIRECTORY] -maxdepth 2 -iname *.php
export PROMPT_COMMAND="echo -n \[\$(date +%H:%M%p)\]\ "
</syntaxhighlight> and the output will be something like: <syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
[07:03AM] user@hostname:~$
</syntaxhighlight>


== To the right hand side/Aligned to right and '''zsh''' ==
find -name '*.php' -o -name '*.txt' # OR operator
* See an example from [[Ubuntu#BioLinux|Biolinux]]. '''echo $SHELL''' shows Bio-Linux is using zsh.
|-
* http://zsh.sourceforge.net/Intro/intro_14.html
| grep
* https://www.howtoforge.com/tutorial/how-to-setup-zsh-and-oh-my-zsh-on-linux/. Note that there is a green arrow for zsh. This is quite special. I need to reboot to see a switch to zsh.
| grep -r -i "check_samtools" DIRECTORY/
* https://superuser.com/questions/362372/how-to-change-the-login-shell-on-mac-os-x-from-bash-to-zsh '''chsh -s /bin/zsh'''
dpkg -l libgtk* | grep  '^i'
* https://superuser.com/questions/776759/switch-from-zsh-to-default-os-x. '''chsh -s /bin/bash'''
|}
* [https://linuxhint.com/install_zsh_shell_ubuntu_1804/ How to Install ZSH Shell on Ubuntu 18.04 LTS]
** Installing ZSH Shell
** Making ZSH the Default Shell
** Installing Powerline and Powerline Fonts for ZSH
** Installing ZSH Powerlevel9k Theme
** Enable Syntax Highlighting on ZSH Shell
** ZSH and Git Integration with Oh-My-ZSH
** Changing Oh-My-ZSH Theme
** Enabling Oh-My-ZSH Plugins
* [https://askubuntu.com/a/385687 How to change from zsh to bash?] Changing your shell, via '''sudo chsh --shell=/bin/bash $USER''' will change the shell field in '''/etc/passwd'''. This value is only consulted at login time, when the system has no idea of which shell to use for you. Running processes, whether started by zsh, bash apache or evil_overlord's_program won't be affected.
** When I try to change the shell to zsh to bash, I use sudo usemod but choose the wrong location '/usr/bin/bash' (it should be /bin/bash). The result is when I try to reconnect to Pi, it always said the password is not correct. Fortunately I can shutdown Pi, move the SD card to chromebox and run ''sudo nano /var/host/media/removable/rootfs/etc/passwd'' to fix the bash path.


= Proxy =
= Format the output: column =
[https://www.makeuseof.com/tag/best-web-proxies/ The 15 Best Web Proxies for Geo-Blocked Content and Online Privacy]
This command will make the output of some command easy to read; see [https://youtu.be/AVXYq8aL47Q?t=1732 18 Commands That Will Change The Way You Use Linux Forever].


== Listen to pandora in Europe: install squid proxy ==
For example: ''mount | column -t''
http://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/access-pandora-radio-using-proxy-server-outside-usa/


Interestingly, the firefox connection settings should choose '''HTTP Proxy''' instead of 'SOCKS host'.
* [https://www.geeksforgeeks.org/column-command-in-linux-with-examples/ column command in Linux with examples]
* [https://www.tecmint.com/linux-column-command/ Different Ways to Use Column Command in Linux]
* [https://www.baeldung.com/linux/display-columns-from-file Display Specific Columns From a File in Linux]


= SSH, scp =
= Count number of columns: awk =
See [[Ssh|ssh]].
The following command shows the number of columns for the first few rows of a text file.
{{Pre}}
head MYFILE | awk '{ print NF}'


= Graphical way to display disk usage =
head MYFILE | awk -F '\t' '{ print NF}'
* http://www.makeuseof.com/tag/how-to-analyze-your-disk-usage-pattern-in-linux/
</pre>
For example, to use xdiskusage, we run '''apt-get install xdiskusage''' and launch it by '''xdiskusage ~/'''.
* Ubuntu has a built-in program called "Disk Usage Analyzer". Just search it from Dash. Looks useful!


= df : Display disk space =
= Count number of rows in a file: wc =
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
<pre>
df -h
wc -l MYFILE
df -h -T  # show the 't'ype of the file system
</pre>
df -h -t ext4 # show file systems of given type (ext4 in this example)
df -a    # show all file system (include ones that have a size of zero blocks)


df -h | grep -v snap # ignore snap partitions
The source code of wc (or any Linux command) can be found by using [http://ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=241328 this method]
df -h | grep -v loop
<pre>
</syntaxhighlight>
brb@brb-T3500:~/Downloads$ which wc
/usr/bin/wc
brb@brb-T3500:~/Downloads$ dpkg -S /usr/bin/wc
coreutils: /usr/bin/wc
brb@brb-T3500:~/Downloads$ sudo apt-get source coreutils
</pre>


Note for the NTFS type, it will be reported as '''fuseblk''' by mount or df command.
As we can see from the ''coreutils-8.21/src'' directory, there are over 100 C programs including <cat.c>, <chmod.c>, <cp.c>, ...<wc.c>.


= Disk encryption =
= Print certain rows/lines of a text file =
[https://guardianproject.info/code/luks/ LUKS]
The following example will print out lines 10 to 60 of FILENAME.
 
<pre>
= rm command and trash can =
sed -n '10,60p' FILENAME
[https://www.2daygeek.com/rm-command-to-move-files-to-trash-can-rm-alias/ Make “rm” Command To Move The Files To “Trash Can” Instead Of Removing Them Completely]
</pre>
Or to print out line 60,
<pre>
sed -n '60p' FILENAME
</pre>
It seems this method is not as fast as I expected. For example, the '''tail''' command will immediately print out the result without waiting!


= du and ncdu : Display directory size with sorting and human readable =
= Print a text file with line number: less =
Use [http://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/unix-disk-usage-command-examples/ ncdu] program (more interactive). Although it is a command line program, we can use the mouse to move through each directory to see its sub-directories.
[https://www.howtogeek.com/444233/how-to-use-the-less-command-on-linux/ How to Use the less Command on Linux]
<pre>
less -N myfile
</pre>


'''ncdu''' can show the hidden directory size. This is useful. For example, '''~/.local/share/Trash''' and '''~/.singularity/docker''' can take a lot of space.
= output colored console to html =
Use [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/pixelb/scripts/master/scripts/ansi2html.sh ansi2html.sh]. It only requires gawk.
# Use wget to download it
# sudo apt-get install gawk
# chmod +x ansi2html.sh
# colordiff file1 file2 | ./ansi2html.sh > diff.html


<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
= using a the result of a diff in a if statement =
sudo apt-get install ncdu
<pre>
ncdu
ls -lR $dir > a
</syntaxhighlight>
ls -lR $dir > b


* http://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/linux-check-disk-space-command/
DIFF=$(diff a b)
And the ''du'' method.
if [ "$DIFF" != "" ]
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
then
du -sh ~/*              # won't include hidden directories, Fast
    echo "The directory was modified"
du -h ~/ --max-depth=1  # include hidden directories, SLOW
fi
du -h ~/ --max-depth=1 --exclude ".*" | sort -nr | cut -f2 | xargs -d '\n' du -sh
</pre>
du -a -h ~/  # kilobytes will be used, '-a' is to see all files, not just directories.
Another example
du -a ~/ | sort -nr | head -n 10  # sort from the largest file size first
<pre>
</syntaxhighlight>
if [ "$(diff file1.html file2.html)" == "" ]; then echo Same; else echo Different; fi
The --exclude is to hide hidden directories, '-n' is to compare according to string numerical value, and '-r' is to reverse the result.
</pre>


Note that the 'du' commands may be cheating. See the following screenshot.
= Prompt =
== Colored prompt ==
* http://www.tldp.org/HOWTO/Bash-Prompt-HOWTO/x329.html
* https://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/bash-shell-change-the-color-of-my-shell-prompt-under-linux-or-unix/


[[File:DiskUsage.png|100px]]
For example, the following code will change the prompt to a light blue color. NOTE that we need <span class="Unicode">&#8726;[ </span> and <span class="Unicode">&#8726;] </span> in order to avoid a problem of miscalculating the cursor's starting position.
{{Pre}}
# blue 
export PS1='\[\e[1;34m\]\u@\h:\w\$ \[\e[0m\]'    # bright blue (good)
export PS1='\[\e[0;34m\]\u@\h:\w\$ \[\e[0m\]'    # darker blue


The discrepancy is explained by 'sector'. See http://askubuntu.com/questions/122091/difference-between-filesize-and-size-on-disk.
# yellow
export PS1='\[\e[1;33m\]\u@\h:\w\$ \[\e[0m\]'     # bright yellow
export PS1='\[\e[0;33m\]\u@\h:\w\$ \[\e[0m\]'    # dark yellow (good)


<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
# red
$ sudo dumpe2fs /dev/sda1 | grep -i "block size"
export PS1='\[\e[1;31m\]\u@\h:\w\$ \[\e[0m\]'     # bright red
dumpe2fs 1.41.14 (22-Dec-2010)
export PS1='\[\e[0;31m\]\u@\h:\w\$ \[\e[0m\]'    # dark red (good)
Block size:              4096
</syntaxhighlight>


To show a file size in terms of blocks, we can use
# green
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
export PS1='\[\e[1;32m\]\u@\h:\w\$ \[\e[0m\]'     # bright green
ls -s
export PS1='\[\e[0;32m\]\u@\h:\w\$ \[\e[0m\]'    # dark green
</syntaxhighlight>
So for example, if a file takes 150 blocks, and if a block takes 4096 bytes, then the file takes 150*4096/1024 KB on disk.


= Apache benchmark (ab) testing =
# cyan
<pre>
export PS1='\[\e[1;36m\]\u@\h:\w\$ \[\e[0m\]'    # bright cyan
ab -n 100 -c 10 http://taichimd.us/
export PS1='\[\e[0;36m\]\u@\h:\w\$ \[\e[0m\]'    # dark cyan (good)
 
# purple
export PS1='\[\e[1;35m\]\u@\h:\w\$ \[\e[0m\]'    # bright purple (good)
export PS1='\[\e[0;35m\]\u@\h:\w\$ \[\e[0m\]'    # dark purple
</pre>
</pre>
* http://www.petefreitag.com/item/689.cfm
* http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ApacheBench


= Monitor progress of copying/transferring files: pv =
[[File:Ps1tweak.png|200px]]
[https://www.howtoforge.com/tutorial/how-to-monitor-progress-of-linux-commands-using-pv-and-progress-utilities/ How to monitor progress of Linux commands using PV and Progress utilities]


<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
To make a permanent change, we can add the line to '''~/.bashrc''' file and (is it necessary) un-comment the following line
# Method 1: rsync
<pre>
rsync --progress -a sourceDirectory destinationDirectory
force_color_prompt=yes
rsync --info=progress2 source dest
</pre>


# Method 2: pv
sudo apt-get install pv
## copy a single file
pv inputfile > outputfile


## multiple files or directories
Some of my settings in .bashrc file
tar c sourceDirectory | pv | tar x -C destinationDirectory
<pre>
# Office Linux Mint, bright blue, display current time
# Example: 12:45PM ~/Downloads$
PS1="\[\033[1;34m\]\$(date +%H:%M%p) \w$\[\033[0m\] "


## https://stackoverflow.com/a/26226261
# Biowulf and Helix, dark yellow
docker save <image> | bzip2 | pv | \
# Example: biowulf:~/R$
    ssh user@host 'bunzip2 | docker load'
PS1='\[\e[0;33m\]\h:\w\$ \[\e[0m\]'
</syntaxhighlight>
alias nano="nano -c --softwrap"


= rsync =
# Mac, light green
See [[Backup|Backup]].
export PS1="\[\e[0;32m\]mac$\[\e[0m\] "
</pre>


= sudo =
== Shorten prompt ==
== How to Keep ‘sudo’ Password Timeout Session Longer in Linux ==
[https://askubuntu.com/a/145626 How can I shorten my command line (bash) prompt?] It is useful especially in VM.
http://www.tecmint.com/set-sudo-password-timeout-session-longer-linux/


== How to run multiple commands in sudo ==
== Add a timestamp to your Bash prompt ==
https://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/how-to-run-multiple-commands-in-sudo-under-linux-or-unix/
* See '''man 3 strftime''' for the date, time format. In Linux Mint, the date applets uses the '''%A %B %e, %H:%M''' which gives a format like 'Friday July 15, 10:23'.
* [http://www.foragoodstrftime.com For a Good Strftime] - Online date/time formatting tool
* http://bneijt.nl/blog/post/add-a-timestamp-to-your-bash-prompt/. Set
: {| class="wikitable"
|-
! PS1 !! Prompt
|-
| default || brb@p45t:~/Downloads$
|-
| PS1='[\D{%F %T}] \u@\h \W\$ ' || [2016-07-08 16:56:48] brb@brb-P45T-A ~/Downloads$
|-
| PS1="\[\033[1;34m\]\$(date +%H:%M%p) \w$\[\033[0m\] " || 10:54AM ~/Downloads$
|} From here, we can skip '''%F''' (not showing the date), '''\W''' (not showing the current directory) and change '''%T''' to '''%H:%M''' (not showing seconds).
* Another solution: using '''PROMPT_COMMAND''' variable. http://askubuntu.com/questions/193416/adding-timestamps-to-terminal-prompts. Add this line to the '''~/.bashrc''' file:
{{Pre}}
export PROMPT_COMMAND="echo -n \[\$(date +%H:%M%p)\]\ "
</pre>
and the output will be something like:
{{Pre}}
[07:03AM] user@hostname:~$
</pre>


== How do I run specific sudo commands without a password? ==
== '''zsh''': display time to the right hand side ==
https://askubuntu.com/questions/159007/how-do-i-run-specific-sudo-commands-without-a-password
add a line RPROMPT='%*' to ~/.zshrc


= Text browser =
= Proxy =
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Text-based_web_browser
[https://www.makeuseof.com/tag/best-web-proxies/ The 15 Best Web Proxies for Geo-Blocked Content and Online Privacy]


== w3m ==
== Listen to pandora in Europe: install squid proxy ==
It is available in NIH/Biowulf. Works well.
http://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/access-pandora-radio-using-proxy-server-outside-usa/


== Links ==
Interestingly, the firefox connection settings should choose '''HTTP Proxy''' instead of 'SOCKS host'.
* http://pcworld.com/article/3196428/linux/why-installing-a-text-mode-web-browser-is-a-good-idea.html
* http://links.twibright.com/user_en.html
* https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Links_%28web_browser%29


= Alternative browsers =
= SSH, scp =
See [[Browser|Browser]].
See [[Ssh|ssh]].


= Filezilla =
= Graphical way to display disk usage =
[https://wiki.filezilla-project.org/Keyboard_shortcuts Keyboard shortcut]. Especially, Alt+Down=Transfers the currently selected item to an item of the same name in the other pane.
* http://www.makeuseof.com/tag/how-to-analyze-your-disk-usage-pattern-in-linux/
For example, to use xdiskusage, we run '''apt-get install xdiskusage''' and launch it by '''xdiskusage ~/'''.
* Ubuntu has a built-in program called "Disk Usage Analyzer". Just search it from Dash. Looks useful!
 
= df : Display disk space =
{{Pre}}
df -h
df -h -T  # show the 't'ype of the file system like tmpfs, ext4, squashfs (snap), vfat
df -h -t ext4 # show file systems of given type (ext4 in this example)
df -a    # show all file system (include ones that have a size of zero blocks)


= The device is busy =
df -h | grep -v snap # ignore snap partitions
* http://oletange.blogspot.com/2012/04/umount-device-is-busy-why.html
df -h | grep -v loop
<pre>
brb@brb-P45T-A:~$ sudo umount /media/brb/TOSHIBA
[sudo] password for brb:
umount: /media/brb/TOSHIBA: device is busy.
        (In some cases useful info about processes that use
        the device is found by lsof(8) or fuser(1))
brb@brb-P45T-A:~$ sudo umount /dev/sdc1
umount: /media/brb/TOSHIBA: device is busy.
        (In some cases useful info about processes that use
        the device is found by lsof(8) or fuser(1))
brb@brb-P45T-A:~$ lsof /media/brb/TOSHIBA/
COMMAND  PID USER  FD  TYPE DEVICE  SIZE/OFF NODE NAME
VBoxSVC 5600  brb  18w  REG  8,33 4294967295    3 /media/brb/TOSHIBA/Windows 10.ova (deleted)
brb@brb-P45T-A:~$ kill -9 5600
brb@brb-P45T-A:~$ lsof /media/brb/TOSHIBA/
brb@brb-P45T-A:~$ sudo umount /dev/sdc1
brb@brb-P45T-A:~$
</pre>
</pre>


* See http://ocaoimh.ie/2008/02/13/how-to-umount-when-the-device-is-busy/
Note for the NTFS type, it will be reported as '''fuseblk''' by mount or df command.
<pre>
 
# fuser -m /dev/sdc1
== duf ==
/dev/sdc1: 538
[https://www.omgubuntu.co.uk/2022/06/duf-alternative-to-df-command Terminal Tip ‘duf’ is Prettier Alternative to the ‘df’]
# ps auxw|grep 538
 
donncha 538 0.4 2.7 219212 56792 ? SLl Feb11 11:25 rhythmbox
= Disk encryption =
</pre>
[https://guardianproject.info/code/luks/ LUKS]
Another handy one is:
<pre>
umount -l /dev/sdwhatever
</pre>


= Format a USB drive =
== Encrypt files ==
[https://www.linuxuprising.com/2018/09/easily-format-usb-flash-drive-on-ubuntu.html Easily Format A USB Flash Drive On Ubuntu 18.04 Using USB Stick Formatter] (mintStick [http://packages.linuxmint.com/pool/main/m/mintstick/ deb] & [https://github.com/linuxmint/mintstick source])
[https://www.linuxuprising.com/2021/03/croc-is-tool-for-resumable-encrypted.html croc Is A Tool For Resumable, Encrypted File And Folder Transfers Between Computers (Command Line)]


This is a GUI application. After the installation, search "USB Stick Formatter".
= rm command and trash can =
[https://www.2daygeek.com/rm-command-to-move-files-to-trash-can-rm-alias/ Make “rm” Command To Move The Files To “Trash Can” Instead Of Removing Them Completely]


For some reason, it doesn't have the 'exFAT' option. My system has installed exFAT drivers. This [https://askubuntu.com/questions/370398/how-to-get-a-drive-formatted-with-exfat-working post] said installing exFAT related drivers only helps reading/writing but not formatting.
= du/ncdu and block size: Display directory size with sorting and human readable =
Use [http://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/unix-disk-usage-command-examples/ ncdu] program (more interactive). Although it is a command line program, we can use the mouse to move through each directory to see its sub-directories.


If I want exFAT format, I need to use the USB Stick Formatter to format the drive first (for example fat32), plug it and then using the following command to format it to exFAT.
'''ncdu''' can show the hidden directory size. This is useful. For example, '''~/.local/share/Trash''' and '''~/.singularity/docker''' can take a lot of space.
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
sudo mkfs.exfat -n Staples /dev/sdc1
</syntaxhighlight>


Note that '''fdisk''' or '''sfdisk''' cannot differentiate NTFS/exFAT. But [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cfdisk cfdisk] or '''GParted''' can.
{{Pre}}
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
sudo apt-get install ncdu
sudo cfdisk /dev/sdX
ncdu
</syntaxhighlight>
 
= Create an ext3 file system on a USB flash drive =
<pre>
umount /dev/sdb1  (depending on the device of course)
sudo mkfs.ext3 /dev/sdb1
sudo e2label /dev/sdb1 usbdrive  (change the label)
</pre>
We can create MS-DOS file system by
<pre>
sudo mkfs.vfat /dev/sdb1
</pre>
</pre>


= Add a new user with home directory =
* http://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/linux-check-disk-space-command/
<pre>
And the ''du'' method.
adduser xxx
{{Pre}}
du -csh *.jpg          # total is at the bottom
du -sh ~/*              # won't include hidden directories, Fast
du -h ~/ --max-depth=1  # include hidden directories, SLOW
du -h ~/ --max-depth=1 --exclude ".*" | sort -nr | cut -f2 | xargs -d '\n' du -sh
du -a -h ~/  # kilobytes will be used, '-a' is to see all files, not just directories.
du -a ~/ | sort -nr | head -n 10  # sort from the largest file size first (in bytes)
                                  # this includes directories and any files under any directories
du -sh * | sort -hr | head -n 10  # this does not go to subdir; only show files and top directories
</pre>
</pre>
The --exclude is to hide hidden directories, '-n' is to compare according to string numerical value, and '-r' is to reverse the result.


'''adduser''' is better than '''useradd''' since useradd does not create home directory and it does not even ask the password for new user. '''adduser''' will interactively ask user information.
Note that the 'du' commands may be cheating. See the following screenshot.


To delete the user and home directory, use
[[File:DiskUsage.png|100px]]
<pre>
deluser --remove-home xxx
</pre>


To view the user information, type '' '''id USERNAME''' '' or ''cat /etc/passwd''.
The discrepancy is explained by 'sector'. See http://askubuntu.com/questions/122091/difference-between-filesize-and-size-on-disk. Note: it seems 4096 is what I see from all devices.


= gzip with multi cores =
{{Pre}}
Use '''[http://zlib.net/pigz/ pigz]''' utility. It makes a lot of difference. For example for a 21GB file, gzip can't finish the job after 30 minutes. But pigz only took 7 minutes on a 12-core machine.
$ sudo dumpe2fs /dev/sda1 | grep -i "block size"
<syntaxhighlight lang="bash">
dumpe2fs 1.41.14 (22-Dec-2010)
sudo apt-get install pigz
Block size:              4096
pigz -9 FILENAME  # compress & convert the file to FILENAME.gz


tar cf - paths-to-archive | pigz -9 -p 12 > archive.tar.gz
$ sudo tune2fs -l /dev/sda1 | grep -i "block size"
</syntaxhighlight>
There is no need to use '''pigz''' to un-compress the file. '''gunzip''' is fast enough and only takes 4 minutes to decompress.


The '-9' (best compression) option does not make difference (6.6G vs 6.5G).
$ sudo fdisk -l | tail
$ sudo tune2fs -l /dev/mmcblk0p2 | grep -i "block size"
</pre>


= Compress a folder without full path name =
To show a file size in terms of blocks, we can use
Suppose we want to compress the folder ~/Documents and its subfolders. We want to include Documents folder name but not /home/brb/Documents name.
{{Pre}}
<syntaxhighlight lang="bash">
ls -s
# Method 1. Include 'Documents' as the top folder name
</pre>
cd ~/
So for example, if a file takes 150 blocks, and if a block takes 4096 bytes, then the file takes 150*4096/1024 KB on disk.
tar -czvf tmp.tar.gz Documents
# Method 2. Mind the last dot. Not include 'Documents' as the top folder.
tar -czvf tmp.tar.gz -C /home/brb/Documents .


# Double check the tarball
== gdu ==
tar -tzvf tmp.tar.gz 
[https://www.linuxuprising.com/2021/01/gdu-is-fast-console-disk-usage-analyzer.html gdu Is A Fast Console Disk Usage Analyzer (Alternative To ncdu, du, Etc.)]
</syntaxhighlight>


If we want to strip the upper directories when we uncompress a tar file, use '''--strip-components'''. For example, we can use '''--strip-components=1''' to remove the Documents folder.
== Find the total size of certain files within a directory ==
[https://unix.stackexchange.com/a/41552 Find the total size of certain files within a directory branch]
<pre>
du -ch ./photos/*.jpg | grep total
find ./photos -type f -name '*.jpg' -exec du -ch {} + | grep total$
</pre>


= squashfs =
= Apache benchmark (ab) testing =
'''squashfs''' is a heavy-compression based read-only filesystem that is capable of compressing 2 to 3 GB of data onto a 700MB. Linux liveCD are built using squashfs. These CDs make use of a read-only compressed filesystem which keeps the root filesystem on a compressed file. It can be loopback mounted and loads a complete Linux env. Thus when some file are required by processes, they are decompressed and loaded onto the RAM and used.
<pre>
ab -n 100 -c 10 http://taichimd.us/
</pre>
* http://www.petefreitag.com/item/689.cfm
* http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ApacheBench


* https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SquashFS
= Monitor progress of copying/transferring files: pv =
* http://squashfs.sourceforge.net/
[https://www.howtoforge.com/tutorial/how-to-monitor-progress-of-linux-commands-using-pv-and-progress-utilities/ How to monitor progress of Linux commands using PV and Progress utilities]
* http://elinux.org/Squash_FS_Howto


<syntaxhighlight lang="bash">
{{Pre}}
# create a squashfs file
# Method 1: rsync
sudo mksquashfs /etc test.squashfs
rsync --progress -a sourceDirectory destinationDirectory
rsync --info=progress2 source dest


# mount the squashfs file
# Method 2: pv
mkdir /mnt/squash
sudo apt-get install pv
mount -o loop compressedfs.squashfs /mnt/squash
## copy a single file
# you can acess the contents at /mnt/squashfs
pv inputfile > outputfile


# exclude files  
## multiple files or directories
sudo mksquashfs /etc test.squashfs -e /etc/passwd /etc/shadow
tar c sourceDirectory | pv | tar x -C destinationDirectory
# or specify a list of exclude files given in a file
cat excludelist  # /etc/passwd
sudo mksquashfs /etc test.squashfs -ef excludelist
</syntaxhighlight>


= List contents of tar.gz or tar.bz2 =
## https://stackoverflow.com/a/26226261
<pre>
docker save <image> | bzip2 | pv | \
tar -tzvf myfile.tar.gz
    ssh user@host 'bunzip2 | docker load'
 
tar -tjvf myfile.tar.bz2  # replace z with j
</pre>
</pre>


= Extract files =
= rsync =
== Extract tar.gz or zip to a specified directory ==
See [[Backup|Backup]].
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
tar xzvf XXXX.tar.gz -C DIRECTORY
# single or double quotes will give an error
#
# tar xzvf ~/Downloads/inSilicoDb_2.7.0.tar.gz -C "~/Downloads"
# tar: ~/Downloads: Cannot open: No such file or directory
# tar: Error is not recoverable: exiting now
# $ tar xzvf ~/Downloads/inSilicoDb_2.7.0.tar.gz -C '~/Downloads'
# tar: ~/Downloads: Cannot open: No such file or directory
# tar: Error is not recoverable: exiting now


unzip XXX.zip -d DIRECTORY
== Wireless File Transfer Apps on Linux ==
</syntaxhighlight>
[https://www.makeuseof.com/wireless-file-transfer-apps-linux/ The 7 Best Wireless File Transfer Apps on Linux]


== Extract gz file but keep the original gz file ==
= sudo =
<syntaxhighlight lang="bash">
== How to Control sudo Access on Linux ==
gunzip -c x.txt.gz > x.txt
https://www.howtogeek.com/447906/how-to-control-sudo-access-on-linux/
</syntaxhighlight>
<pre>
'''gunzip -c''' which simply writes the output stream to stdout
sudo adduser NEWUSER
sudo usermod -a -G sudo NEWUSER
</pre>


== Extract .xz file ==
== sudo vs su ==
<syntaxhighlight lang="bash">
[https://phoenixnap.com/kb/sudo-vs-su-differences The Difference Between sudo and su Explained]: password and shell.
xz -d archive.xz
</syntaxhighlight>


== Extract tar.xz file ==
== How to Keep ‘sudo’ Password Timeout Session Longer in Linux ==
The bottomline is we don't need the 'z' parameter (used for [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gzip gz] ONLY but does not work for [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Xz xz file])  in the tar command for tar.xz files. And the method also works for tar.gz files. The argument '-f' means the archive file. Recall that the '''tar''' command can be used to store and extract files, so no default parameters.
http://www.tecmint.com/set-sudo-password-timeout-session-longer-linux/


<syntaxhighlight lang="bash">
== How to run multiple commands in sudo ==
tar xf archive.tar.xz
https://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/how-to-run-multiple-commands-in-sudo-under-linux-or-unix/
tar xf archive.tar.gz
</syntaxhighlight>


== Extract tar.bz2 file ==
== Run sudo commands without a password? ==
<syntaxhighlight lang="bash">
* [https://www.makeuseof.com/using-sudo-without-password/ How to Use sudo Commands Without Password in Linux]
tar -xjvf archive.tar.bz2  # replace z with j as we compare it to tar.gz file
* [https://askubuntu.com/questions/159007/how-do-i-run-specific-sudo-commands-without-a-password How do I run specific sudo commands without a password?]
</syntaxhighlight>


== How To Extract and Decompress a .bz2/.tbz2 File ==
= Alternative browsers, text browsers =
See [http://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/linuxunix-how-to-extract-and-decompress-a-bz2-tbz2-file/ this article] from cyberciti.biz.
See [[Browser|Browser]].
<syntaxhighlight lang="bash">
bzip2 -d your-filename-here.bz2
# OR
bzip2 -d -v your-filename-here.bz2
# OR
bzip2 -d -k your-filename-here.bz2
# OR
bunzip2 filename.bz2
</syntaxhighlight>


== 10 Basic Encryption Terms Everyone Should Know and Understand ==
= Filezilla =
https://www.makeuseof.com/tag/encryption-terms/
[https://wiki.filezilla-project.org/Keyboard_shortcuts Keyboard shortcut]. Especially, Alt+Down=Transfers the currently selected item to an item of the same name in the other pane.


== How to Encrypt and Decrypt Files and Directories Using Tar and OpenSSL ==
= The device is busy =
http://www.tecmint.com/encrypt-decrypt-files-tar-openssl-linux/
* http://oletange.blogspot.com/2012/04/umount-device-is-busy-why.html
<pre>
brb@brb-P45T-A:~$ sudo umount /media/brb/TOSHIBA
[sudo] password for brb:
umount: /media/brb/TOSHIBA: device is busy.
        (In some cases useful info about processes that use
        the device is found by lsof(8) or fuser(1))
brb@brb-P45T-A:~$ sudo umount /dev/sdc1
umount: /media/brb/TOSHIBA: device is busy.
        (In some cases useful info about processes that use
        the device is found by lsof(8) or fuser(1))
brb@brb-P45T-A:~$ lsof /media/brb/TOSHIBA/
COMMAND  PID USER  FD  TYPE DEVICE  SIZE/OFF NODE NAME
VBoxSVC 5600  brb  18w  REG  8,33 4294967295    3 /media/brb/TOSHIBA/Windows 10.ova (deleted)
brb@brb-P45T-A:~$ kill -9 5600
brb@brb-P45T-A:~$ lsof /media/brb/TOSHIBA/
brb@brb-P45T-A:~$ sudo umount /dev/sdc1
brb@brb-P45T-A:~$
</pre>


== How to install and use 7zip file archiver ==
* See http://ocaoimh.ie/2008/02/13/how-to-umount-when-the-device-is-busy/
https://www.howtoforge.com/tutorial/how-to-install-and-use-7zip-file-archiver-on-ubuntu-linux/
<pre>
 
# fuser -m /dev/sdc1
== Compare zip, tar.xz, tar.gz, 7z ==
/dev/sdc1: 538
The compression rate comparison is (from best to worst) 7z > tar.xz > tar.gz > zip.
# ps auxw|grep 538
 
donncha 538 0.4 2.7 219212 56792 ? SLl Feb11 11:25 rhythmbox
For example, consider qt-everywhere-opensource-src-5.5.0 from http://download.qt.io/official_releases/qt/5.5/5.5.0/single/
</pre>
* zip 540M
Another handy one is:
* tar.xz 305M
<pre>
* tar.gz 436M
umount -l /dev/sdwhatever
* 7z 297M
</pre>


== Extract one files from tar.gz ==
= mkfs command =
Extract a file called etc/default/sysstat from config.tar.gz tarball:
== dd and mkfs ==
<syntaxhighlight lang="bash">
[https://www.howtogeek.com/443342/how-to-use-the-mkfs-command-on-linux/ How to Use the mkfs Command on Linux], [https://www.makeuseof.com/how-to-format-storage-drive-linux-terminal/ How to Format Storage Drives Using the Linux Terminal]
$ tar -zxvf config.tar.gz etc/default/sysstat
<pre>
</syntaxhighlight>
dd if=/dev/zero of=~/howtogeek.img bs=1M count=250
Noe that a new directory etc/default will be created under the current directory if it does not exist.
mkfs.ext2 ~/howtogeek.img
sudo mkdir /mnt/geek
sudo mount ~/howtogeek.img /mnt/geek
sudo chown dave:users /mnt/geek/


[http://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/linux-unix-extracting-specific-files/ Wildcard based extracting]
cd /mnt/geek
cp ~/Documents/Code/*.? .


You can also extract those files that match a specific globbing pattern (wildcards). For example, to extract from cbz.tar all files that begin with pic, no matter their directory prefix, you could type:
sudo umount /mnt/geek
<syntaxhighlight lang="bash">
cd /mnt
$ tar -xf cbz.tar --wildcards --no-anchored 'pic*'
sudo rmdir geek
</syntaxhighlight>
</pre>
To extract all php files, enter:
<syntaxhighlight lang="bash">
$ tar -xf cbz.tar --wildcards --no-anchored '*.php'
</syntaxhighlight>


== remove leading directory components on extraction with tar ==
== Format a USB drive: exfat ==
* [https://serverfault.com/questions/330127/tar-remove-leading-directory-components-on-extraction --strip-components] option
[https://www.linuxuprising.com/2018/09/easily-format-usb-flash-drive-on-ubuntu.html Easily Format A USB Flash Drive On Ubuntu 18.04 Using USB Stick Formatter] (mintStick [http://packages.linuxmint.com/pool/main/m/mintstick/ deb] & [https://github.com/linuxmint/mintstick source])
* Real examples
** [https://github.com/wikimedia/mediawiki-docker/blob/2dea40647eb85d6e0fc607904e0779644cf869c9/stable/Dockerfile Strip the top directory after extracting mediawiki tar ball]. "tar -xz --strip-components=1 -f mediawiki.tar.gz"


== [https://github.com/lb1a/avfs AVFS] and [https://github.com/bramp/archivemount Archivemount] ==
This is a GUI application. After the installation, search "USB Stick Formatter".
If we want to extract certain files from a tarballj/archive, it is more efficient to use a virtual filesystem like AVFS. PS. for a large archive file, even extracting only a single file at the top directory it is terribly slow if we use the '''tar''' command directly.


Before we install the utility, let's look at the package dependecies of AVFS and Archivemount.
For some reason, it doesn't have the 'exFAT' option. My system has installed exFAT drivers. This [https://askubuntu.com/questions/370398/how-to-get-a-drive-formatted-with-exfat-working post] said installing exFAT related drivers only helps reading/writing but not formatting.
<syntaxhighlight lang="bash">
$ apt-cache showpkg archivemount
Package: archivemount
Versions:  
0.8.1-1 (/var/lib/apt/lists/archive.ubuntu.com_ubuntu_dists_trusty_universe_binary-amd64_Packages)
Description Language:
                File: /var/lib/apt/lists/archive.ubuntu.com_ubuntu_dists_trusty_universe_binary-amd64_Packages
                  MD5: d6302be9f06a91afa32326ab175e2086
Description Language: en
                File: /var/lib/apt/lists/archive.ubuntu.com_ubuntu_dists_trusty_universe_i18n_Translation-en
                  MD5: d6302be9f06a91afa32326ab175e2086


If I want exFAT format, I need to use the USB Stick Formatter to format the drive first (for example fat32), plug it and then using the following command to format it to exFAT.
{{Pre}}
sudo apt install exfat-fuse exfat-utils # ubuntu 20.04 and lower
sudo apt install exfat-fuse exfatprogs # ubuntu 22.04 and higher


Reverse Depends:
sudo fdisk /dev/sdc # g,p,n,p,1,ENTER,ENTER,w
  archivemount:i386,archivemount
sudo fdisk -l /dev/sdc # the new partition has Id 83 and Type Linux.  
Dependencies:
0.8.1-1 - libarchive13 (0 (null)) libc6 (2 2.4) libfuse2 (2 2.8.1) fuse (2 2.8.5-2) archivemount:i386 (0 (null))
Provides:
0.8.1-1 -
Reverse Provides:
brb@T3600 ~ $ apt-cache showpkg avfs
Package: avfs
Versions:
1.0.1-2 (/var/lib/apt/lists/archive.ubuntu.com_ubuntu_dists_trusty_universe_binary-amd64_Packages) (/var/lib/dpkg/status)
  Description Language:
                File: /var/lib/apt/lists/archive.ubuntu.com_ubuntu_dists_trusty_universe_binary-amd64_Packages
                  MD5: bce08fbc36fd7b8e3c454f36f0daf699
Description Language: en
                File: /var/lib/apt/lists/archive.ubuntu.com_ubuntu_dists_trusty_universe_i18n_Translation-en
                  MD5: bce08fbc36fd7b8e3c454f36f0daf699


sudo mkfs.exfat -n Staples /dev/sdc1
sudo fdisk -l /dev/sdc # still Linux? but Gparted shows exfat


Reverse Depends:
sudo mount /dev/sdc1 /mnt # to use
  avfs:i386,avfs
</pre>
  worker,avfs
Dependencies:
1.0.1-2 - libc6 (2 2.14) libfuse2 (2 2.8.1) fuse (0 (null)) unzip (0 (null)) zip (0 (null)) arj (0 (null)) lha (0 (null))
zoo (0 (null)) rpm (0 (null)) p7zip (16 (null)) p7zip-full (0 (null)) cdparanoia (0 (null))
wget (0 (null)) avfs:i386 (0 (null))
Provides:
1.0.1-2 -
Reverse Provides:
</syntaxhighlight>


Install it now.
Note that '''fdisk''' or '''sfdisk''' cannot differentiate NTFS/exFAT. But [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cfdisk cfdisk] or '''GParted''' can.
<syntaxhighlight lang="bash">
{{Pre}}
sudo apt-get install avfs
sudo cfdisk /dev/sdX
mountavfs
</pre>
# Assume MyFile.tar.gz exists in the current directory
ls ~/.avfs/$PWD/MyFile.tar.gz#     
# Alternatively, browse the content in Nautilus, but you need to add a trailing # character by hand to the path
# (Ctrl-L to access the address bar).
...
cat ~/.avfs/$PWD/MyFile.tar.gz#/README
# another tarball
ls ~/.avfs/$PWD/MyFile2.tar.gz#     
umountavfs
</syntaxhighlight>


* [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Filesystem_in_Userspace Filesystem in Userspace (FUSE)]
== Create an ext3/ext4 file system on a USB flash drive ==
* [http://www.ibm.com/developerworks/linux/library/l-fuse/ Develop your own filesystem with FUSE]
* https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Smartmontools. My ubuntu 20.04 has smartctl 7.1 while the latest version is 7.3 (Fedora has it)
* [https://www.google.com/webhp?sourceid=chrome-instant&ion=1&espv=2&ie=UTF-8#q=ubuntu%20mount%20tar.gz%20file Google: ubuntu mount tar.gz file] which gives many choices like '''[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Archivemount archivemount]'''.
* [https://phoenixnap.com/kb/linux-format-disk How to Format Disk Partitions in Linux]
* [http://buechse.de/HOWTO/avfs_fuse_and_apache/ HOWTO: setup avfs / fuse on debian]
* GUI: using Ubuntu's '''Disks''' utility.


For some reason, avfs sometimes does not work:( In this case, Ubuntu's Archive Manager does work. Maybe the file is too large.
<pre>
<pre style="white-space: pre-wrap; /* CSS 3 */ white-space: -moz-pre-wrap; /* Mozilla, since 1999 */ white-space: -pre-wrap; /* Opera 4-6 */ white-space: -o-pre-wrap; /* Opera 7 */ word-wrap: break-word; /* IE 5.5+ */ " >
umount /dev/sdb1  (depending on the device of course)
brb@T3600 ~/Downloads $ time ls ~/.avfs/$PWD/Homo_sapiens_UCSC_hg19.tar.gz#/
lsblk    # check the drive's partition name
ls: cannot access /home/brb/.avfs//home/brb/Downloads/Homo_sapiens_UCSC_hg19.tar.gz#/nown exact 1 SingleClassTriAllelic,InconsistentAlleles 2 1000GENOMES,SSMP, 2 A,T, 22.000000,2274.000: Input/output error
sudo mkfs -t ext4 /dev/sdb1
ls: cannot access /home/brb/.avfs//home/brb/Downloads/Homo_sapiens_UCSC_hg19.tar.gz#/chr12 25482890 rs544684287 G A 0 . molType=genomic;class=single
lsblk -f  # Verify
chr12 25482914 rs558575390 T G 0 . m: Input/output error
000,?0.999500,0.000500,??797?chr3?27877637?27877638?rs1478557?0?+?G?G?A
4?rs555100828?0?+?T?T?C
76?chr2?103777623?103777624?rs181283085?0?+?A?A?A
chr12?25482890?rs544684287?G?A?0?.?molType=genomic;class=single?chr12?25482914?rs558575390?T?G?0?.?m
G?A
Homo_sapiens
nown?exact?1?SingleClassTriAllelic,InconsistentAlleles?2?1000GENOMES,SSMP,?2?A,T,?22.000000,2274.000
README.txt
T?C


real 25m51.340s
sudo mkfs.ext3 /dev/sdb1
user 0m0.000s
sudo e2label /dev/sdb1 usbdrive  (change the label)
sys 0m0.003s
brb@T3600 ~/Downloads $ ls ~/.avfs/$PWD/annovar.latest.tar.gz#/
annovar
</pre>


For archivemount, see [http://www.linux-mag.com/id/7825/ Cool User File Systems: ArchiveMount]
sudo mkfs.vfat /dev/sdb1  # MS-DOS
<syntaxhighlight lang="bash">
archivemount files.tgz mntDir
umount mntDir
</syntaxhighlight>
 
= Show folder size for one level only =
<pre>
du --max-depth=1 -h
</pre>
</pre>
The graphical tool is called '''Disk Usage Analyze''' which is already available on Ubuntu.


= Soft link and hard link =
== exFat - cross platform partition format ==
== Soft link ==
*[[Mac#ExFat:_Best_drive.2Fpartition_format_to_share_data_between_Mac.2C_Linux_and_OS_X|Mac]]
* Gparted cannot create exFAT partition (it is greyed out)
* [http://www.makeuseof.com/tag/exfat-better-different-fat32/ This Trick Makes a USB Drive Work Perfectly With Windows, Mac, Linux, and Anything Else]
* [http://www.howtogeek.com/235655/how-to-mount-and-use-an-exfat-drive-on-linux/ How to Mount and Use an exFAT Drive on Linux] or [http://askubuntu.com/questions/370398/how-to-get-a-drive-formatted-with-exfat-working How to get a drive formatted with exfat working?]
* [https://www.addictivetips.com/ubuntu-linux-tips/format-sd-card-exfat-in-ubuntu/ How to format an SD Card to ExFat in Ubuntu]
{{Pre}}
sudo apt-get install exfat-utils exfat-fuse
# Still need to create a partition (ex. FAT32) first using gparted in order to get it mounted
sudo fdisk -l
sudo mkfs.exfat -n LABEL /dev/sd**  #  LABEL with whatever you want to label your drive
 
lsblk -f  # verify the partitions, no sudo is needed
</pre>
This should delivery a working exfat file system (read and write support, but not formatting the drives with exfat via Gnome Disks and GParted).
 
= Add a new user with home directory; list all users =
<pre>
<pre>
ln -s /full/path/of/original/file /full/path/of/soft/link/file
adduser xxx
</pre>
</pre>
Understanding Linux Links [https://www.linux.com/blog/intro-to-linux/2018/10/linux-links-part-1 Part 1] & [https://www.linux.com/blog/2018/10/understanding-linux-links-part-2 Part 2]


== Hard link ==
'''adduser''' is better than '''useradd''' since useradd does not create home directory and it does not even ask the password for new user. '''adduser''' will interactively ask user information.
[https://unix.stackexchange.com/a/65003 What's the difference between a hard links and copied files?]


* Hard linked file looks the same as the source file when viewed by "ls"
To delete the user and home directory, use
* Change in either of hard linked file and the source file will affect the other
<pre>
* Hard linked file and source file can be deleted separately without affecting the other
deluser --remove-home xxx
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
</pre>
echo "abcd" > foo
ln foo foo2
ls -l foo*
echo "efgh" >> foo2
cat foo
rm foo
cat foo2
</syntaxhighlight>


= Self-hosted servers =
To view the user information, type '' '''id USERNAME''' '' or ''cat /etc/passwd''.
* https://github.com/Kickball/awesome-selfhosted This is a list of Free Software network services and web applications which can be hosted locally. Selfhosting is the process of locally hosting and managing applications instead of renting from SaaS providers.
* [https://github.com/sovereign/sovereign Sovereign]: A set of Ansible playbooks to build and maintain your own private cloud: email, calendar, contacts, file sync, IRC bouncer, VPN, and more.  


= DNSCrypt =
[https://www.howtogeek.com/803907/linux-list-users/ How to List Users in Linux] '''cat /etc/passwd | wc -l'''
* https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DNSCrypt
* [https://github.com/jedisct1/dnscrypt-proxy dnscrypt-proxy 2 - A flexible DNS proxy, with support for encrypted DNS protocols]
* [https://www.linuxuprising.com/2018/10/install-and-enable-dnscrypt-proxy-2-in.html Install and Enable DNSCrypt Proxy 2 in Ubuntu 18.04 Or 18.10 / Debian Unstable Or Testing]


= DNS server =
= gzip with multi cores: pigz =
* [https://opensource.com/article/17/4/introduction-domain-name-system-dns Introduction to the Domain Name System (DNS)]
Use '''[http://zlib.net/pigz/ pigz]''' utility. It makes a lot of difference. For example for a 21GB file, gzip can't finish the job after 30 minutes. But pigz only took 7 minutes on a 12-core machine.
* [https://opensource.com/article/17/4/build-your-own-name-server Build your own DNS name server on Linux]


== setup ==
According to 'pigz --help', the default threads is the number of online processors, or 8 if unknown.
* https://support.rackspace.com/how-to/changing-dns-settings-on-linux/
* https://helix.nih.gov/user_guides/kerb5_config.html


= DNSmasq (DNS + DHCP server) =
{{Pre}}
* [http://www.thekelleys.org.uk/dnsmasq/docs/dnsmasq-man.html Man page] and [http://www.thekelleys.org.uk/dnsmasq/docs/setup.html Setup]
sudo apt-get install pigz
* [https://www.linux.com/learn/dnsmasq-easy-lan-name-services Dnsmasq For Easy LAN Name Services]
pigz -9 FILENAME  # best compression method & convert the file to FILENAME.gz
* https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/dnsmasq
* https://wiki.debian.org/HowTo/dnsmasq
* http://www.linuxjournal.com/content/dnsmasq-pint-sized-super-d%C3%A6mon
* https://blogging.dragon.org.uk/howto-setup-dnsmasq-as-dns-dhcp/


== Local forwarding server ==
tar cf - paths-to-archive | pigz -9 -p 12 > archive.tar.gz
dnsmasq program is running on my Ubuntu and Linux/Mint machines.  
</pre>
There is no need to use '''pigz''' to un-compress the file. '''gunzip''' is fast enough and only takes 4 minutes to decompress.


See [https://askubuntu.com/questions/627899/nameserver-127-0-1-1-in-resolv-conf-wont-go-away nameserver 127.0.1.1 in resolv.conf won't go away!]
The '-9' (best compression) option does not make difference (6.6G vs 6.5G).
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
$ ps -ef | grep -i dnsmasq


$ sudo netstat -anp | grep -i dnsmasq
Note that we have to be careful when we use md5sum to compare compressed files.
</syntaxhighlight>


= Change DNS setting =
= Compress a folder without full path name =
* [https://www.makeuseof.com/tag/change-dns-increase-internet-speed/ Why Changing DNS Settings Increases Your Internet Speed], [https://www.makeuseof.com/tag/best-dns-providers-security/ 5 DNS Servers Guaranteed to Improve Your Online Safety]
Suppose we want to compress the folder ~/Documents and its subfolders. We want to include Documents folder name but not /home/brb/Documents name.
** https://1.1.1.1/, [https://www.ithome.com.tw/news/122215 隱私優先、速度最快,公共DNS服務1.1.1.1上線了]
{{Pre}}
** Google: 8.8.8.8 and 8.8.4.4
# Method 1. Include 'Documents' as the top folder name
** OpenDNS: 208.67.220.220 and 208.67.222.222
cd ~/
** DNS Watch:  84.200.69.80 and 84.200.70.40
tar -czvf tmp.tar.gz Documents
** OpenNIC: 206.125.173.29 and 45.32.230.225
# Method 2. Mind the last dot. Not include 'Documents' as the top folder.
** UncensoredDNS: 91.239.100.100 and 89.233.43.71
tar -czvf tmp.tar.gz -C /home/brb/Documents .
* [https://www.safervpn.com/support/articles/115000327609-Change-DNS-Settings-on-Windows-Mac-Android-IOS-Linux Change DNS Settings on Windows / Mac / Android / IOS / Linux]
* [https://websiteforstudents.com/setup-cloudflare-dns-on-ubuntu-16-04-17-10-18-04-desktop/ Setup CloudFlare DNS On Ubuntu 16.04 / 17.10 / 18.04 Desktop]
*# Open Ubuntu Network Manager (System settings > Network > Settings > Wired or Wireless or both)
*# Select both IPv4 and IPv6 and turn off automatic DNS IP settings… then type the custom Cloudflare DNS IP addresses you want to use…
* [https://www.makeuseof.com/tag/cloudflare-1111-dns-mobile/ You Can Now Use Cloudflare’s 1.1.1.1 DNS on Mobile]


== Flush DNS cache ==
# Double check the tarball
[https://support.opendns.com/hc/en-us/articles/227988627-How-to-clear-the-DNS-Cache- How to clear the DNS Cache?]
tar -tzvf tmp.tar.gz 
</pre>


== Test if you are using OpenDNS ==
If we want to strip the upper directories when we uncompress a tar file, use '''--strip-components'''. For example, we can use '''--strip-components=1''' to remove the Documents folder.
https://welcome.opendns.com/


== Query DNS server ==
= Fix mess created by accidentally untarred files in the current dir =
To [https://askubuntu.com/questions/152593/command-line-to-list-dns-servers-used-by-my-system list the current DNS servers used by my system],
Suppose I accidentally untar a tarball in /var/www/html/ directory instead of /home/projects/www/current. It created mess in /var/www/html/. [https://www.cyberciti.biz/open-source/command-line-hacks/20-unix-command-line-tricks-part-i/ The easiest way to fix this mess]:
<pre>
cd /var/www/html/
/bin/rm -f "$(tar ztf /path/to/file.tar.gz)"
## or better ##
tar ztf /path/to/file.tar.gz | xargs -d'\n' rm -v
</pre>


Method 1:
= lzma =
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
* https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lempel–Ziv–Markov_chain_algorithm
# Ubuntu >= 15
* [https://nomadbsd.org/download.html nomadBSD]. Since NomadBSD is designed to be a persistent system, we do not provide ISO files, as ISO-9660 is a read-only filesystem.
$ nmcli dev show | grep 'IP4.DNS'
$ nmcli device show <interfacename> | grep IP4.DNS
# Ubuntu <= 14
$ nmcli dev list iface <interfacename> | grep IP4
</syntaxhighlight>


Method 2:
= squashfs =
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
[[Filesystem|squashfs]]
$ cat /etc/resolv.conf
</syntaxhighlight>


Another way is to use the R packages: [https://cran.r-project.org/web/packages/gdns/index.html gdns] and [https://github.com/hrbrmstr/dnsflare dnsflare]. [https://rud.is/b/2018/04/01/more-options-for-querying-dns-from-r-with-1-1-1-1/ More Options For Querying DNS From R with 1.1.1.1].
= List contents of tar.gz or tar.bz2 =
<pre>
tar -tzvf myfile.tar.gz


== 3 Ways to Check DNS Propagation Status ==
tar -tjvf myfile.tar.bz2  # replace z with j
https://www.makeuseof.com/tag/check-dns-propagation-status/
</pre>


= Email server =
== gzip: stdin: not in gzip format ==
See [[Mail_server|Mail_server]].
I got the following message when I try to run tar -xzvf or tar -tzvf command.
<pre>
$ tar -tzvf filename.tar.gz
gzip: stdin: not in gzip format
tar: Child returned status 1
tar: Error is not recoverable: exiting now
$ file filename.tar.gz
filename.tar.gz: POSIX tar archive
</pre>
The answer is [https://itsfoss.com/how-solve-stdin-gzip-format/ How to solve: stdin: not in gzip format].


= Backup =
Solution: Since it was not a gzipped file, a simple tar is able to extract the file: ''tar xvf MyFile.tar.gz ''
See [[Backup|Backup]].


= Running a cron job as a user =
= Extract files, AVFS =
== Some examples ==
See [[Extract_files|Extract files]].
* http://www.thegeekstuff.com/2009/06/15-practical-crontab-examples/
 
* https://crontab.guru/examples.html and [https://crontab.guru/tips.html tips]
= Show folder size for one level only =
* A specific time
<pre>
<pre>
MIN HOUR DOM MON DOW CMD
du --max-depth=1 -h
30 08 10 06 * /home/ramesh/full-backup
#  30 – 30th Minute
#  08 – 08 AM
#  10 – 10th Day
#  06 – 6th Month (June)
#  * – Every day of the week
</pre>
</pre>
* Twice a day
The graphical tool is called '''Disk Usage Analyze''' which is already available on Ubuntu.
 
= Soft link and hard link =
== Soft link ==
<pre>
<pre>
00 11,16 * * * /home/ramesh/bin/incremental-backup
ln -s /full/path/of/original/file /full/path/of/soft/link/file
#    00 – 0th Minute (Top of the hour)
#    11,16 – 11 AM and 4 PM
#    * – Every day
#    * – Every month
#    * – Every day of the week
</pre>
</pre>
* Every 10 minutes
Understanding Linux Links [https://www.linux.com/blog/intro-to-linux/2018/10/linux-links-part-1 Part 1] & [https://www.linux.com/blog/2018/10/understanding-linux-links-part-2 Part 2]
<pre>
 
*/10 * * * * /home/ramesh/check-disk-space
The order of original and linked above in '''ln -s''' is similar to the '''mount''' command where we put the original volume first and the system's directory second. See an example [[Linux#USB_drive|here]].
</pre>
* [https://unix.stackexchange.com/a/16094 Every odd day or even day]
<pre>
# Will only run on odd days:
0 0 1-31/2 * * command


# Will only run on even days:
But when we issue "ls -l" we see it list the the original file at the end; e.g.  /full/path/of/soft/link/file -> /full/path/of/original/file.
0 0 2-30/2 * * command
 
== Hard link ==
[https://unix.stackexchange.com/a/65003 What's the difference between a hard links and copied files?]
 
* [https://askubuntu.com/a/525129 Why are hard links not allowed for directories?]
* Hard linked file looks the same as the source file when viewed by "ls"
* Change in either of hard linked file and the source file will affect the other
* Hard linked file and source file can be deleted separately without affecting the other
{{Pre}}
echo "abcd" > foo
ln foo foo2
ls -l foo*
echo "efgh" >> foo2
cat foo
rm foo
cat foo2
</pre>
</pre>


== crontab ==
= Self-hosted servers =
* crontab SOME-CRON-FILE; crontab -l
* https://github.com/Kickball/awesome-selfhosted This is a list of Free Software network services and web applications which can be hosted locally. Selfhosting is the process of locally hosting and managing applications instead of renting from SaaS providers.
* [https://github.com/sovereign/sovereign Sovereign]: A set of Ansible playbooks to build and maintain your own private cloud: email, calendar, contacts, file sync, IRC bouncer, VPN, and more.
 
== Cockpit: manage and monitor my servers using just a web browser ==
* https://cockpit-project.org/
* https://localhost:9090 is the default interface
* [https://fedoramagazine.org/cockpit-overview/ Cockpit: an overview]
* [https://fedoramagazine.org/cockpit-and-the-evolution-of-the-web-user-interface/ Cockpit and the evolution of the Web User Interface]
* [https://opensource.com/article/20/11/cockpit-server-management How I use Cockpit for my home's Linux server management]
* [https://www.techrepublic.com/article/how-to-add-public-ssh-keys-for-users-in-cockpit/ How to add public SSH keys for users in Cockpit]
* [https://www.howtogeek.com/702841/how-to-manage-linux-servers-with-the-cockpit-web-interface/ How to Manage Linux Servers with the Cockpit Web Interface] including Monitoring Multiple Computers.
 
= DNS =
[[DNS|DNS]]
 
Port number is 53. An example is [[Raspberry#Pi-hole|Pi-hole]].
 
= Email server =
See [[Mail_server|Mail_server]].
 
= Backup =
See [[Backup|Backup]].


Make sure the .sh file gives a complete path. For example,
= at command: Schedule a task =
* [https://opensource.com/article/21/8/linux-at-command Schedule a task with the Linux at command]
* [https://linuxhandbook.com/at-command/ Schedule Jobs in Linux With 'at' Command]
* [https://opensource.com/article/21/7/alternatives-cron-linux?utm_source=pocket_mylist 4 alternatives to cron in Linux]
* On Debian, I need to run '''sudo apt install at'''.
* [https://www.networkworld.com/article/972036/using-the-at-command-to-schedule-tasks-on-linux.html Using the at command to schedule tasks on Linux]
<pre>
<pre>
#!/bin/sh
$ echo "rsync -av /home/tux/ me@myserver:/home/tux/" | at 1:30 AM
R --vanilla < arraytoolsip.R
 
$ echo "command_to_be_run" | at 09:00
 
$ atq # list of jobs
 
$ atrm 6  # delete the 6th job
</pre>
</pre>
does not work in cron job although it works perfect when we manually run it from the right path. The sh file should be
 
= Cron job by root =
Note that there is a "user" field for cron jobs defined in /etc/crontab or /etc/cron.d.
<ul>
<li>Place one: '''/etc/crontab''' and '''/etc/cron.daily, /etc/cron.hourly, /etc/cron.monthly, /etc/cron.weekly'''.
<pre>
<pre>
#!/bin/sh
cat /etc/crontab
R --vanilla  < $HOME/Dropbox/scripts/arraytoolsip.R
# How to List Daily Cron Jobs
ls -la /etc/cron.daily
</pre>
</pre>


To disable everything on ''crontab -l'', run ''crontab -e'' then comment out each line you don't want to run with #. OR run ''crontab -r'' to empty the current crontab.
<li>Place two: '''/etc/cron.d'''. It contains "anacron" and "e2scrub_all" on my Debian 11. See [https://superuser.com/a/170870 How to run a cron job as a specific user?]
</ul>


== PATH and Shell ==
= Running a cron job as a user =
Cron knows nothing about your shell; it is started by the system, so it has a minimal environment. If you want anything, you need to have that brought in yourself. For example, to use 'ifconfig' command, I need to give it a complete path in my script file.  
== Some examples ==
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
* http://www.thegeekstuff.com/2009/06/15-practical-crontab-examples/
$ cat syncIP
* https://crontab.guru/examples.html and [https://crontab.guru/tips.html tips]
/sbin/ifconfig eth0 | grep 'inet addr:' | cut -d: -f2 | awk '{ print $1}'
* Can I break a line cron command into multiple lines? No. Creating another script file in this case.
</syntaxhighlight>
* A specific time
and the cron job
{{Pre}}
MIN HOUR DOM MON DOW CMD
30 08 10 06 * $HOME/full-backup >> $HOME/myscript.log 2>&1; echo "Executed at $(date)\n----------" >> $HOME
/myscript.log
#  30 – 30th Minute
#  08 – 08 AM
#  10 – 10th Day
#  06 – 6th Month (June)
#  * – Every day of the week
</pre>
* Twice a day
<pre>
<pre>
06 15 * * * /home/MYUSERNAME/Ubuntu\ One/syncIP > $HOME/Ubuntu\ One/ip.txt 2>&1
00 11,16 * * * /home/ramesh/bin/incremental-backup
#    00 – 0th Minute (Top of the hour)
#    11,16 – 11 AM and 4 PM
#    * – Every day
#    * – Every month
#    * – Every day of the week
</pre>
</pre>
See [http://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/27289/how-can-i-run-a-cron-command-with-existing-environmental-variables here] on how to add environment variable into cron environment.
* Every 10 minutes
 
== Disable mail alert ==
If something went wrong with executing a cron job, cron will output a message "You have new mail in /var/mail/$USER". You can open this file using a text editor. To disable this alert, run ''''crontab -e''' (see [http://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/disable-the-mail-alert-by-crontab-command/ this post]
<pre>
<pre>
0 1 5 10 * /path/to/script.sh >/dev/null 2>&1
*/10 * * * * /home/ramesh/check-disk-space
# OR
0 1 5 10 * /path/to/script.sh > /dev/null
</pre>
</pre>
* [https://unix.stackexchange.com/a/16094 Every odd day or even day]
<pre>
# Will only run on odd days:
0 0 1-31/2 * * command


= Running crontab as root =
# Will only run on even days:
Use '''sudo crontab -e''' to edit. After saving it, no need to initialize it. Use '''sudo crontab -l''' to list the cron job.
0 0 2-30/2 * * command
 
</pre>
= GUI cron =
* [https://www.ostechnix.com/how-to-easily-and-safely-manage-cron-jobs-in-linux/ How To Easily And Safely Manage Cron Jobs In Linux]
* [https://github.com/alseambusher/crontab-ui Crontab UI]
* http://corntab.com/#!


= md5sum =
== crontab ==
[https://www.howtoforge.com/linux-md5sum-command/ Linux md5sum Command Explained For Beginners (5 Examples)]
* [https://www.makeuseof.com/how-to-use-crontab-linux/ How to Use Crontab to Automate Repetitive Tasks in Linux]. Some examples: play sound, backup files, check if sites are online.
* [https://www.ubuntupit.com/amazing-linux-crontab-commands-for-the-sysadmins/ 50 Amazing Linux Crontab Commands For The SysAdmins]
<pre>
crontab SOME-CRON-FILE; crontab -l
</pre>


How to verify files?
Make sure the .sh file gives a complete path. For example,
<pre>
#!/bin/sh
R --vanilla  < arraytoolsip.R
</pre>
does not work in cron job although it works perfect when we manually run it from the right path. The sh file should be
<pre>
<pre>
md5sum file1.txt file2.txt file3.txt > hashes
#!/bin/sh
md5sum --check hashes
R --vanilla  < $HOME/Dropbox/scripts/arraytoolsip.R
</pre>
</pre>


= fsck =
To disable everything on ''crontab -l'', use one of the following methods:
* [https://www.cyberciti.biz/tips/repairing-linux-ext2-or-ext3-file-system.html Repairing Linux ext2 or ext3 or ext4 File System (fsck)]
* run ''crontab -e'' then comment out each line you don't want to run with #. OR
* [https://www.thegeekstuff.com/2012/08/fsck-command-examples 10 Linux Fsck Command Examples to Check and Repair Filesystem]
* run ''crontab -r'' to empty the current crontab. OR
* [https://www.tecmint.com/fsck-repair-file-system-errors-in-linux/ How to Use ‘fsck’ to Repair File System Errors in Linux]
* run ''crontab'' with no arguments, and then type Ctrl+D. It will create an empty crontab, overwriting your previous crontab.
* [https://www.maketecheasier.com/repair-mac-hard-disk-with-fsck/ How to Repair Hard Disks with fsck on macOS]


== Force fsck on the Next Reboot or Boot Sequence ==
== GUI ==
https://www.linuxuprising.com/2019/05/how-to-force-fsck-filesystem.html
[https://www.linuxuprising.com/2020/10/schedule-commands-and-scripts-in-linux.html Schedule Commands And Scripts In Linux With Zeit (GUI For Cron And At)]


https://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/linux-force-fsck-on-the-next-reboot-or-boot-sequence/ Create a blank file ''/forcefsck'' and '''fsck''' will check your drive next time your reboot.
== PATH and Shell ==
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
Cron knows nothing about your shell; it is started by the system, so it has a minimal environment. If you want anything, you need to have that brought in yourself. For example, to use 'ifconfig' command, I need to give it a complete path in my script file.  
sudo touch /forcefsck
{{Pre}}
</syntaxhighlight>
$ cat syncIP
/sbin/ifconfig eth0 | grep 'inet addr:' | cut -d: -f2 | awk '{ print $1}'
</pre>
and the cron job
<pre>
06 15 * * * /home/MYUSERNAME/Ubuntu\ One/syncIP > $HOME/Ubuntu\ One/ip.txt 2>&1
</pre>
See [http://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/27289/how-can-i-run-a-cron-command-with-existing-environmental-variables here] on how to add environment variable into cron environment.


The fsck was used to fix a [https://ext4.wiki.kernel.org/index.php/Ext4_Metadata_Checksums#Journal journal checksum] error on a USB drive which has been formatted as Ext4 was used on a security camera application; see [[Raspberry#Security_Camera:_motion_and_motionEyeOS|motionEyeOS]].
== Disable mail alert ==
If something went wrong with executing a cron job, cron will output a message "You have new mail in /var/mail/$USER". You can open this file using a text editor. To disable this alert, run ''''crontab -e''' (see [http://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/disable-the-mail-alert-by-crontab-command/ this post])
<pre>
0 1 5 10 * /path/to/script.sh >/dev/null 2>&1
# OR
0 1 5 10 * /path/to/script.sh > /dev/null
</pre>
Another way is to add '''MAILTO=""''' at the top of the crontab file.


== Can I run fsck or e2fsck when Linux file system is mounted? ==
== Run a command at boot ==
https://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/can-i-run-fsck-or-e2fsck-when-linux-file-system-is-mounted/
* [https://www.2daygeek.com/execute-run-linux-scripts-command-at-reboot-startup/ How to Execute a Command or Script at Reboot or Startup]
*# Run Script or Command at Reboot or Startup Using /etc/rc.d/rc.local File
*# Execute a Command or Script at Reboot or Startup Using the crontab
*# Run a Command or Script at Reboot or Startup Using the systemd service unit
<ul><li>[[Raspberry#Sending_an_email_on_boot|Sending an email on boot]]
<pre>
@reboot sleep 300 && python /home/pi/startup_mailer.py
</pre>
</li>
<li>[https://github.com/martinwoodward/PumpkinPi pausing for 10 seconds before running the python script]
<pre>
@reboot /bin/sleep 10 ; /usr/bin/python /home/pi/PumpkinPi/src/pumpkinpi.py &
</pre>
</li>
</ul>


== What is the difference between fsck and e2fsck? ==
=== rc.local ===
https://superuser.com/a/19984
[https://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/how-to-enable-rc-local-shell-script-on-systemd-while-booting-linux-system/ How to enable rc.local shell script on systemd while booting Linux system]


= Swap partition =
= Running crontab as root =
* [https://www.tecmint.com/disable-swap-partition-in-centos-ubuntu/ How to Permanently Disable Swap in Linux]
Use '''sudo crontab -e''' to edit. After saving it, no need to initialize it. Use '''sudo crontab -l''' to list the cron job.


= Mount drive, add a new hard drive =
== Display and back up cron jobs ==
[https://kerneltalks.com/hardware-config/how-to-add-new-disk-in-linux/ How to add new disk in Linux]
[https://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/linux-show-what-cron-jobs-are-setup/ Linux List / Display and view all cron jobs]


== /etc/fstab and blkid ==
== Check log ==
* https://help.ubuntu.com/community/Fstab
'''sudo grep CRON /var/log/syslog --color'''
** Format: [Device] [Mount Point] [File System Type] [Options] [Dump] [Pass]
** <dump> Enable or disable backing up of the device/partition (the command dump). This field is usually set to 0, which disables it.
** <pass> Controls the order in which fsck checks the device/partition for errors at boot time. The root device should be 1. Other partitions should be 2, or 0 to disable checking.
** '''man mount'''
* https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Fstab
** Devices that are listed and not present will result in an error unless the '''nofail''' option is used. (good for external devices)
* https://help.ubuntu.com/community/UsingUUID
* [http://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/linux-add-nodev-nosuid-noexec-options-to-temporary-storage-partitions/ Mount /tmp securely]
* http://www.thegeekstuff.com/2013/01/mount-umount-examples/
* [https://askubuntu.com/questions/122783/how-do-i-hide-remove-a-partition-from-the-nautilus-left-panel Graphical method using Disks]
* http://www.instructables.com/id/Using-a-USB-external-hard-drive-with-your-Raspberr/?ALLSTEPS <span style="color: red">Use UUID instead of /dev/sdXY to specify the partition in /etc/fstab to avoid any changes with /dev/sdXY</span>. The UUID can be obtained using
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
$ sudo blkid  #  list devices even not mounted yet
</syntaxhighlight>
and the result should be compared with
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
$ sudo fdisk -l
</syntaxhighlight>
* Run '''sudo mount -a''' to remount /etc/fstab without reboot, except the partitions with noauto option.


The following example shows a problem (as found from the output of '''df''' command) with </etc/fstab> where we use /dev/sdXY instead of UUID for specifying hard disks.
== Anacron ==
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
Anacron keeps track of the last time a task was run, and if it was missed, it runs it.
$ sudo blkid
/dev/sda1: LABEL="WD640" UUID="d3a0a512-bf96-4199-9674-f410f22f0a92" TYPE="ext4"
/dev/sdb1: UUID="afaa4bde-1172-4c54-8b0a-a324ad855355" TYPE="ext4"
/dev/sdb5: UUID="fb2a4ada-d80a-4e23-b4a2-67376b8b7e72" TYPE="swap"


$ sudo fdisk -l
Anacron typically runs daily, while cron runs every minute.
Disk /dev/sda: 640.1 GB, 640135028736 bytes
<pre>
...
cat /etc/anacrontab
  Device Boot      Start        End      Blocks  Id  System
</pre>
/dev/sda1            2048  1250263039  625130496  83  Linux


Disk /dev/sdb: 640.1 GB, 640135028736 bytes
= GUI cron =
...
* [https://www.ostechnix.com/how-to-easily-and-safely-manage-cron-jobs-in-linux/ How To Easily And Safely Manage Cron Jobs In Linux]
  Device Boot      Start        End      Blocks  Id  System
* [https://github.com/alseambusher/crontab-ui Crontab UI]
/dev/sdb1  *        2048  1217761279  608879616  83  Linux
* http://corntab.com/#!
/dev/sdb2      1217763326  1250263039    16249857    5  Extended
/dev/sdb5      1217763328  1250263039    16249856  82  Linux swap / Solaris


$ cat /etc/fstab
= md5sum =
proc            /proc                                proc    nodev,noexec,nosuid 0 0
[https://www.howtoforge.com/linux-md5sum-command/ Linux md5sum Command Explained For Beginners (5 Examples)]
UUID=afaa4bde-1172-4c54-8b0a-a324ad855355 /          ext4    errors=remount-ro  0 1
UUID=fb2a4ada-d80a-4e23-b4a2-67376b8b7e72 none        swap    sw                  0 0
/dev/sdb1      /mnt/WD640                            ext4    rw,nosuid,nodev    0 2
UUID=fb2a4ada-d80a-4e23-b4a2-67376b8b7e70 /mnt/extUSB auto nosuid,nodev,nofail 0 2


$ df -h
How to verify files?
Filesystem      Size  Used Avail Use% Mounted on
<pre>
/dev/sdb1      572G  413G  130G  77% /
md5sum file1.txt file2.txt file3.txt > hashes
...
md5sum --check hashes
/dev/sdb1      572G  413G  130G  77% /mnt/WD640
</pre>
</syntaxhighlight>
 
To fix the error here, modify the line starting /dev/sdb1 in /etc/fstab and replace it with the UUID. Then run '''sudo umount /mnt/WD640''' and sudo mount -a. Done!
= fsck =
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
* [https://www.cyberciti.biz/tips/repairing-linux-ext2-or-ext3-file-system.html Repairing Linux ext2 or ext3 or ext4 File System (fsck)]
$ df -h
* [https://www.thegeekstuff.com/2012/08/fsck-command-examples 10 Linux Fsck Command Examples to Check and Repair Filesystem]
Filesystem     Size  Used Avail Use% Mounted on
* [https://www.tecmint.com/fsck-repair-file-system-errors-in-linux/ How to Use ‘fsck’ to Repair File System Errors in Linux]
/dev/sdb1      572G  413G  130G  77% /
* [https://www.maketecheasier.com/repair-mac-hard-disk-with-fsck/ How to Repair Hard Disks with fsck on macOS]
...
* [https://ostechnix.com/fsck-command-examples/ How To Use Fsck Command To Check And Repair Linux File Systems] (2024 Update)
/dev/sda1      587G  283G  275G  51% /mnt/WD640
</syntaxhighlight>


== autofs, /etc/auto.master ==
== Fsck error on boot ==
[https://opensource.com/article/18/7/network-attached-storage-Raspberry-Pi Building a network attached storage device with a Raspberry Pi]
[https://askubuntu.com/questions/697190/fsck-error-on-boot-dev-sda6-unexpected-inconsistency-run-fsck-manually fsck error on boot: /dev/sda6: UNEXPECTED INCONSISTENCY; RUN fsck MANUALLY]


== Fix a malfunctioning USB device or port ==
This happened when I resize an Ubuntu partition.  
[https://www.makeuseof.com/tag/fix-usb-device-port-linux/ 5 Ways to Fix a Malfunctioning USB Device or Port on Linux]


== USB drive ==
fsck -fy /dev/sda1
* [https://help.ubuntu.com/community/RenameUSBDrive Rename USB drive]


Run the following to confirm the USB device is detected.
== Force fsck on the Next Reboot or Boot Sequence ==
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
https://www.linuxuprising.com/2019/05/how-to-force-fsck-filesystem.html
sudo fdisk -l
# OR
dmesg | grep -i "SCSI"
</syntaxhighlight>


Now suppose the usb device is found in '''dev/sdb1'''.  
https://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/linux-force-fsck-on-the-next-reboot-or-boot-sequence/ Create a blank file ''/forcefsck'' and '''fsck''' will check your drive next time your reboot.
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
{{Pre}}
sudo mkdir /mnt/usb
sudo touch /forcefsck
sudo mount -t vfat -o rw,users /dev/sdb1 /mnt/usb
</pre>
</syntaxhighlight>
The above mount command assumes the usb drive has Windows vfat partition and ''users'' give non-root users the ability to unmount the drive.
If the USB drive is partitioned linux ext2/3, we can merely run mount command as
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
sudo mount /dev/sdb1 /mnt/usb
</syntaxhighlight>


At the end, run umount command like
The fsck was used to fix a [https://ext4.wiki.kernel.org/index.php/Ext4_Metadata_Checksums#Journal journal checksum] error on a USB drive which has been formatted as Ext4 was used on a security camera application; see [[Raspberry#Security_Camera:_motion_and_motionEyeOS|motionEyeOS]].
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
sudo umount /mnt/usb
</syntaxhighlight>


To make the mounting automatically, edit the file '''/etc/fstab'''.
== Can I run fsck or e2fsck when Linux file system is mounted? ==
<pre>
https://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/can-i-run-fsck-or-e2fsck-when-linux-file-system-is-mounted/
/dev/sdb1      /mnt/usb          vfat    defaults        0      0
/dev/sdb1      /mnt/usb          ext3    defaults        0      0
</pre>
and run  
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
sudo mount -a
</syntaxhighlight>


== Mount an iso file ==
== What is the difference between fsck and e2fsck? ==
* http://www.shellhacks.com/en/Mounting-an-ISO-Image-in-Linux
https://superuser.com/a/19984
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
sudo mkdir -p /mnt/mount_point # create a mount point
sudo mount -o loop /home/user/disk.iso /mnt/mount_point
mount  # verify
</syntaxhighlight>


== Mount remote Windows share ==
= Swap partition =
* http://www.shellhacks.com/en/HowTo-Mount-Remote-Windows-Partition-Share-under-Linux
* [https://www.howtogeek.com/455981/how-to-create-a-swap-file-on-linux/ How to Create a Swap File on Linux]
* [https://www.tecmint.com/disable-swap-partition-in-centos-ubuntu/ How to Permanently Disable Swap in Linux]


== Sharing files with Windows by using NitroShare ==
== Swap file vs swap partition ==
[http://www.ubuntugeek.com/simple-way-of-sharing-files-between-ubuntu-16-04-and-windows-10.html Simple way of Sharing files between Ubuntu 16.04 and Windows 10] by using open-source [https://nitroshare.net/ NitroShare] which is based on Qt framework.
[https://www.jetsonhacks.com/2019/04/25/jetson-nano-run-on-usb-drive/ Jetson Nano – Run on USB Drive]


== exFat - cross platform partition format ==
= Mount drive, add a new hard drive =
*[[Mac#ExFat:_Best_drive.2Fpartition_format_to_share_data_between_Mac.2C_Linux_and_OS_X|Mac]]
* [https://www.cloudsavvyit.com/3349/how-to-add-a-new-drive-to-your-existing-linux-server/ How To Add a New Drive to Your Existing Linux Server]
* Gparted cannot create exFAT partition (it is greyed out)
* Videos
* [http://www.makeuseof.com/tag/exfat-better-different-fat32/ This Trick Makes a USB Drive Work Perfectly With Windows, Mac, Linux, and Anything Else]
** [https://youtu.be/2Z6ouBYfZr8 Linux Crash Course - Formatting & Mounting Storage Volumes]
* [http://www.howtogeek.com/235655/how-to-mount-and-use-an-exfat-drive-on-linux/ How to Mount and Use an exFAT Drive on Linux] or [http://askubuntu.com/questions/370398/how-to-get-a-drive-formatted-with-exfat-working How to get a drive formatted with exfat working?]
** [https://youtu.be/A7xH74o6kY0 Linux Crash Course - The /etc/fstab file]
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
sudo apt-get install exfat-utils exfat-fuse
# Still need to create a partition (ex. FAT32) first using gparted in order to get it mounted
sudo fdisk -l
sudo mkfs.exfat -n LABEL /dev/sd**  #  LABEL with whatever you want to label your drive
</syntaxhighlight>
This should delivery a working exfat file system (read and write support, but not formatting the drives with exfat via Gnome Disks and GParted).


== NTFS usb drive in xubuntu ==
== /etc/fstab and blkid ==
http://xflinux.blogspot.com/2011/01/mount-ntfs-volumes-automatically-in.html
See [[Fstab]].
<pre>
sudo apt-get install ntfs-config
</pre>
Now go to Applications>> System>> Ntfs Configuration Tool


Expand the "Advanced Configuration" and select all those partitions you want to be auto mounted and writable( The tool will detect all partitions at its startup).
== autofs, /etc/auto.master ==
[https://opensource.com/article/18/7/network-attached-storage-Raspberry-Pi Building a network attached storage device with a Raspberry Pi]


Make sure the " Enable write support for internal devices" option is selected. Now click Close.
== Fix a malfunctioning USB device or port ==
[https://www.makeuseof.com/tag/fix-usb-device-port-linux/ 5 Ways to Fix a Malfunctioning USB Device or Port on Linux]


== Many drives, one folder ==
== Check the physical health of a USB stick ==
* [http://www.linuxjournal.com/content/many-drives-one-folder mhddfs] program.
[https://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/linux-check-the-physical-health-of-a-usb-stick-flash-drive/ Linux check the physical health of a USB stick]


== Partition tables ==
== USB drive ==
[http://www.makeuseof.com/tag/partition-table-edit-error/ Partition Tables and the Dangers of Editing Them]
* [https://help.ubuntu.com/community/RenameUSBDrive Rename USB drive partition '''label''']. It seems if a device does not have a label, Ubuntu will use its 32-digit UUID as the mount point (eg. '''/media/$USER/$Long_UUID'''). This is very cumbersome. To fix that, we can open the '''Disks''' utility and select the partition of the device. Click the two-gear icon and pick '''Edit Filesystem...''' where we can change the filesystem '''label'''. After that, we can reject the USB and re-plug it to see the new mount directory based on the new label we specified ('''/media/$USER/$Label'''). We can also use the command '''lsblk''' (no sudo needed) to check.
* If I use "GParted" utility to check the "partition '''name''' ", it is not the same as the name I just specified through the "Disks" utility. But the "Information" window give a complete data. It is a little confusing that the partition label becomes the filsystem label and the Partition name shown on GParted was different & seems not to be used.
[[File:GpartedinfoSanDisk.png|250px]]
* [https://askubuntu.com/a/113746 How do I correctly mount a NTFS partition in /etc/fstab?]


== parted command ==
Run the following to confirm the USB device is detected.
[https://opensource.com/article/18/6/how-partition-disk-linux How to partition a disk in Linux]
{{Pre}}
sudo fdisk -l
# OR
dmesg | grep -i "SCSI"
</pre>


== Recommended partition schemes ==
Now suppose the usb device is found in '''dev/sdb1'''.  
* [https://access.redhat.com/documentation/en-US/Red_Hat_Enterprise_Linux/6/html/Installation_Guide/s2-diskpartrecommend-x86.html Redhat]
{{Pre}}
* [https://www.debian.org/releases/stable/i386/apcs03.html.en Debian]
sudo mkdir /mnt/usb
* [https://help.ubuntu.com/community/PartitioningSchemes Ubuntu]
sudo mount -t vfat -o rw,users /dev/sdb1 /mnt/usb
* [https://www.centos.org/docs/5/html/5.2/Installation_Guide/s2-diskpartrecommend-s390.html CentOS]
</pre>
* [https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/partitioning#Discrete_partitions Arch] Linux
The above mount command assumes the usb drive has Windows vfat partition and ''users'' give non-root users the ability to unmount the drive.
If the USB drive is partitioned linux ext2/3, we can merely run mount command as
{{Pre}}
sudo mount /dev/sdb1 /mnt/usb
</pre>


== Why put things other than /home to a separate partition? ==
At the end, run umount command like
[https://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/685/why-put-things-other-than-home-to-a-separate-partition Why put things other than /home to a separate partition?]
{{Pre}}
sudo umount /mnt/usb
</pre>


The /var partition is used by Docker and Apache.
To make the mounting automatically, edit the file '''/etc/fstab'''.
<pre>
/dev/sdb1      /mnt/usb          vfat    defaults        0      0
/dev/sdb2      /mnt/usb2          ext3    defaults        0      0
UUID=XXXXXXXXXX /mnt/usb3      ntfs-3g    rw              0      0
</pre>
and run
{{Pre}}
sudo mount -a
</pre>


[https://unix.stackexchange.com/a/84764 /home, /boot and /var partitions] can be separated.
== Mount an iso file ==
* http://www.shellhacks.com/en/Mounting-an-ISO-Image-in-Linux
{{Pre}}
sudo mkdir -p /mnt/mount_point # create a mount point
sudo mount -o loop /home/user/disk.iso /mnt/mount_point
mount  # verify
</pre>


= Process/job =
== Mount remote Windows share ==
* http://www.shellhacks.com/en/HowTo-Mount-Remote-Windows-Partition-Share-under-Linux


== Kill a process and the '''pstree''' command ==
== Sharing files with Windows by using NitroShare ==
* https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pstree
[http://www.ubuntugeek.com/simple-way-of-sharing-files-between-ubuntu-16-04-and-windows-10.html Simple way of Sharing files between Ubuntu 16.04 and Windows 10] by using open-source [https://nitroshare.net/ NitroShare] which is based on Qt framework.
* On Ubuntu docker container, we can need to run ''apt install psmisc'' to get the pstree command.
 
* [http://morningcoffee.io/killing-a-process-and-all-of-its-descendants.html Killing a process and all of its descendants]. This covers a '''PPID''', '''PID''' and more importantly '''PGID''', '''SID'''. Also '''ps j -A''' command can show these IDs for the running processes.
== NTFS usb drive in xubuntu ==
:<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
http://xflinux.blogspot.com/2011/01/mount-ntfs-volumes-automatically-in.html
$ tail -f /var/log/syslog | grep "CRON" &
<pre>
$ ps j
sudo apt-get install ntfs-config
$ kill -SIGTERM -- -($Some_PGID)
</pre>
</syntaxhighlight>
Now go to Applications>> System>> Ntfs Configuration Tool
* pgrep & kill
: <syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
# find the PID
pgrep ProgramName
# Kill the ProgramName process
kill -9 PID
</syntaxhighlight>
* '''killall'''. For example, if Firefox is acting up (as Firefox will do from time to time) simply type '''killall firefox''' and it should kill the application completely.
: In the rare circumstances that this doesn’t work you can always type '''xkill''' and then click on the window that won’t close; this will completely close a given window immediately. See [http://www.makeuseof.com/tag/5-easier-command-line-linux/ this].
* [http://www.2daygeek.com/kill-inactive-idle-ssh-sessions/  How To kill An Inactive OR Idle SSH Sessions]. The '''pstree -p''' command can show a tree diagram of all the processes.
* [https://www.howtoforge.com/linux-pkill-command/ pkill] command. For example, ''pkill gedit''.


== ps, pgrep and pidof: How much resource is used by a process ==
Expand the "Advanced Configuration" and select all those partitions you want to be auto mounted and writable( The tool will detect all partitions at its startup).
Find the process ID first by '''ps -ef | grep APPLICATIONAME''' where "-e" is to show the running processes and "-f" is for a full listing. Then
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
ps -p <pid> -o %cpu,%mem,cmd
</syntaxhighlight>
For example,
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
$ ps -ef | grep akregator
brb      15013  1942  1 10:41 ?        00:00:05 akregator --icon akregator -caption Akregator
brb      15186 24045  0 10:50 pts/11  00:00:00 grep --color=auto akregator
$ ps -p 15013 -o %cpu,%mem,cmd
%CPU %MEM CMD
1.0  0.8 akregator --icon akregator -caption Akregator
</syntaxhighlight>


'''pgrep'''
Make sure the " Enable write support for internal devices" option is selected. Now click Close.
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
08:49AM ~$ ps -ef | grep firefox
brb      7798  7778  0 08:49 pts/2    00:00:00 grep --color=auto firefox
brb      25486 24869  0 Sep10 ?        00:42:48 /usr/lib/firefox/firefox
brb      25612 25486  0 Sep10 ?        00:19:49 /usr/lib/firefox/firefox .....
08:49AM ~$ pgrep firefox
25486
</syntaxhighlight>


'''pidof'''
== Many drives, one folder ==
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
* [http://www.linuxjournal.com/content/many-drives-one-folder mhddfs] program.
08:49AM ~$ pidof firefox
27951 25961 25612 25486
08:51AM ~$ pidof /usr/lib/firefox/firefox
27951 25961 25612 25486
</syntaxhighlight>


== All You Need To Know About Processes in Linux ==
== Partition tables ==
http://www.tecmint.com/linux-process-management/
[http://www.makeuseof.com/tag/partition-table-edit-error/ Partition Tables and the Dangers of Editing Them]


== How do I send an already-running process into the background ==
== parted command ==
* http://stackoverflow.com/questions/625409/how-do-i-put-an-already-running-process-under-nohup
[https://opensource.com/article/18/6/how-partition-disk-linux How to partition a disk in Linux]
* [https://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/unix-linux-bg-command-examples-usage-syntax/ bg Command Examples]


Steps:
== Recommended partition schemes ==
# 'Ctrl+Z' to stop (pause) the program and get back to the shell.
* [https://access.redhat.com/documentation/en-US/Red_Hat_Enterprise_Linux/6/html/Installation_Guide/s2-diskpartrecommend-x86.html Redhat]
# '''bg''' to run it in the background.
* [https://www.debian.org/releases/stable/i386/apcs03.html.en Debian]
# '''jobs -l''' to get the jobID and process ID
* [https://help.ubuntu.com/community/PartitioningSchemes Ubuntu]
# '''disown -h [job-spec]''' where [job-spec] is the job number (like '''%1''' for the first running job; find about your number with the '''jobs''' command) so that the job isn't killed when the terminal closes.
* [https://www.centos.org/docs/5/html/5.2/Installation_Guide/s2-diskpartrecommend-s390.html CentOS]
* [https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/partitioning#Discrete_partitions Arch] Linux


== Stopped job ==
== HOME /home directory ==
A [https://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/116959/there-are-stopped-jobs-on-bash-exit stopped job] is one that has been temporarily put into the background and is no longer running, but is still using resources (i.e. system memory). Because that job is not attached to the current terminal, it cannot produce output and is not receiving input from the user.
[https://www.howtogeek.com/442101/how-to-move-your-linux-home-directory-to-another-hard-drive/ How to Move Your Linux home Directory to Another Drive]


* '''jobs -s''' showing stopped jobs
== /var directory filled up ==
* '''jobs -l''' showing the job PID
[https://linuxconfig.org/how-to-move-var-directory-to-another-partition How to move /var directory to another partition]
{{Pre}}
blkid | grep sdc1  # get UUID
mkdir /mnt/newvar
mount /dev/sdc1 /mnt/newvar
df -h /mnt/newvar
rsync -aqxP /var/* /mnt/newvar  # q=quiet,x=one-file-system, P=partial,progress
umount /mnt/newvar/  /mnt/var/
nano /etc/fstab
# UUID=XXXX  /var    ext4  defaults  0  2
</pre>
Reboot
 
== Why put things other than /home to a separate partition? ==
[https://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/685/why-put-things-other-than-home-to-a-separate-partition Why put things other than /home to a separate partition?]
 
The /var partition is used by Docker and Apache.
 
[https://unix.stackexchange.com/a/84764 /home, /boot and /var partitions] can be separated.


[https://serverfault.com/questions/240155/how-can-i-kill-all-stopped-jobs Send kill to a stopped job, it will do nothing but queue than bring it in in foreground, it will terminate]. So don't repeatly sending a 'kill' command.
= Process/job =
* '''fg %1''' move the stopped job ID #1 to the foreground (works)
* '''kill %1''' # kill job ID #1
* '''kill 12345''' # kill job PID 12345
* '''kill -9 `jobs -ps`''' may not work
* '''kill -9 $(jobs -p)'''


== nice ==
== ps and top commands ==
[https://www.howtogeek.com/411979/how-to-set-process-priorities-with-the-nice-and-renice-commands-in-linux/ How to Set Process Priorities With nice and renice on Linux]
[https://www.howtogeek.com/448271/how-to-use-the-ps-command-to-monitor-linux-processes/ How to Use the ps Command to Monitor Linux Processes],
[https://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/how-to-check-how-long-a-process-has-been-running/ Linux how long a process has been running?]
<pre>
ps -C shutter # Listing only a Process by Command
              # Adding the 'watch' command to show the process in real-time
ps -C dd --format pid,cmd,%cpu # Show PID, CMD and %CPU


= run commands in a background and allow log off =
sudo ps -p {PID} -o pid,cmd,lstart,etimes,etime
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
nohup /path/to/script >output 2>&1 &
</syntaxhighlight>


Or to [http://stackoverflow.com/questions/10408816/how-do-i-use-the-nohup-command-without-getting-nohup-out disable output and be more safe]. It also explains the concept of '''file descriptor/fd''' in Unix.
ps -e | less # Listing Process for All Users
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
nohup command </dev/null >/dev/null 2>&1 &
</syntaxhighlight>


See also [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Process_substitution#Anonymous_named_pipe Anonymous named pipe].
ps -eH --forest | less # hierarchy


= Notepadqq - Notepad++-like editor =
ps -e | grep firefox # Listing Processes by Name
[http://www.ubuntugeek.com/notepadqq-the-linux-source-editor.html Notepadqq]. It is written using Qt. It does not have printing function:(


= Note apps that can sync =
ps -p 3403 # Listing Processes by Process ID
[http://www.makeuseof.com/tag/top-notepad-apps-linux-can-sync/ Top 8 Notepad Apps for Linux That You Can Sync]. Some are compatible with Evernote.


= Evernote =
ps -u mary  # Listing Processes Owned by a User
== Evernote alternative ==
[https://www.howtoforge.com/tutorial/how-to-install-turtl-server-evernote-alternative-on-ubuntu-1604/ How to Install Turtl Server - Evernote Alternative - on Ubuntu 16.04]


== Backup/restore Evernote ==
sudo pkill top # Killing Processes by Name
https://www.makeuseof.com/tag/backup-restore-evernote/


= Markdown =
sudo killall top # Killing Multiple Processes by Name
== Preview markdown/view markdown offline ==
</pre>
* [https://atom.io/ Atom] text editor has a built-in function to preview HTML or markdown files. Menu -> Packages -> Markdown Preview -> Toggle Preview.
 
* http://stackoverflow.com/questions/9843609/view-markdown-files-offline. [https://github.com/joeyespo/grip Grip] works fine. 
== Kill a process and the '''pstree''' command ==
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
* https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pstree
sudo pip install grip
* On Ubuntu docker container, we can need to run ''apt install psmisc'' to get the pstree command.
grip readme.md
<ul>
</syntaxhighlight>
<li>[http://morningcoffee.io/killing-a-process-and-all-of-its-descendants.html Killing a process and all of its descendants]. This covers a '''PPID''', '''PID''' and more importantly '''PGID''', '''SID'''. Also '''ps j -A''' command can show these IDs for the running processes.
* For image, see http://stackoverflow.com/questions/13051428/how-to-display-images-in-markdown-files-of-github. The trick is adding '''?raw=true''' after the image name.
{{Pre}}
$ tail -f /var/log/syslog | grep "CRON" &
$ ps j
$ kill -SIGTERM -- -($Some_PGID)
</pre></li>
<li>pgrep & kill
{{Pre}}
# find the PID
pgrep ProgramName
# Kill the ProgramName process
kill -9 PID
</pre>
</li>
<li>'''killall'''. For example, if Firefox is acting up (as Firefox will do from time to time) simply type '''killall firefox''' and it should kill the application completely.
In the rare circumstances that this doesn’t work you can always type '''xkill''' and then click on the window that won’t close; this will completely close a given window immediately. See [http://www.makeuseof.com/tag/5-easier-command-line-linux/ this]. To kill a privileges process, use for example '''sudo killall crond'''.
<pre>
<pre>
# title 1
sudo killall -u USERNAME
![screenshot](myfile.png?raw=true)
</pre>
</pre>
* Chrome ''markdown preview plus'' extension does not show images from github.
</li>
</ul>
* [http://www.2daygeek.com/kill-inactive-idle-ssh-sessions/  How To kill An Inactive OR Idle SSH Sessions]. The '''pstree -p''' command can show a tree diagram of all the processes.
* [https://www.howtoforge.com/linux-pkill-command/ pkill] command. For example, ''pkill gedit''.


== Markdown editor ==
== Kill a process running on a specific port ==
* [http://pad.haroopress.com/ Harropad]
[https://linuxtldr.com/kill-a-process-running-on-a-specific-port-in-linux/ Kill a Process Running on a Specific Port in Linux (via 4 Methods)]
* http://linuxbsdos.com/2014/10/05/the-best-markdown-editors-for-linux/


= Text editor with navigation =
== How to Kill Zombie Processes on Linux ==
[[Text_editor#Text_editor_with_navigation|Text editor with navigation]]
[https://www.howtogeek.com/701971/how-to-kill-zombie-processes-on-linux/ How to Kill Zombie Processes on Linux]


= nano/pico editor =
== Simulate/produce high cpu load ==
The nano editor is also called pico in R. See ?edit in R.
[https://superuser.com/a/443409 How can I produce high CPU load on a Linux server?]
<pre>
# method 1:
sudo apt install stress
stress --cpu 3


[[Text_editor#nano_editor|nano editor]]
# method 2:
for i in 1 2 3 ; do while : ; do : ; done & done
jobs  # list background jobs
for i in 1 2 3 4; do kill %$i; done  # kill "job" (not "PID") 1,2,3,4
</pre>


= vi editor =
== ps, pgrep and pidof: How much resource is used by a process ==
[[Text_editor#vi_editor|vi editor]]
Find the process ID first by '''ps -ef | grep APPLICATIONAME''' where "-e" is to show the running processes and "-f" is for a full listing. Then
{{Pre}}
ps -p <pid> -o %cpu,%mem,cmd
</pre>
For example,
{{Pre}}
$ ps -ef | grep akregator
brb      15013  1942  1 10:41 ?        00:00:05 akregator --icon akregator -caption Akregator
brb      15186 24045  0 10:50 pts/11  00:00:00 grep --color=auto akregator
$ ps -p 15013 -o %cpu,%mem,cmd
%CPU %MEM CMD
1.0  0.8 akregator --icon akregator -caption Akregator
</pre>


= Cloud =
'''pgrep'''
{{Pre}}
08:49AM ~$ ps -ef | grep firefox
brb      7798  7778  0 08:49 pts/2    00:00:00 grep --color=auto firefox
brb      25486 24869  0 Sep10 ?        00:42:48 /usr/lib/firefox/firefox
brb      25612 25486  0 Sep10 ?        00:19:49 /usr/lib/firefox/firefox .....
08:49AM ~$ pgrep firefox
25486
</pre>


http://slidedecks.wilmoore.com/2012-confoo/diy-private-cloud-using-virtualBox-and-chef/#66
'''pidof'''
{{Pre}}
08:49AM ~$ pidof firefox
27951 25961 25612 25486
08:51AM ~$ pidof /usr/lib/firefox/firefox
27951 25961 25612 25486


http://www.datacentermap.com/blog/cloud-software-389.html
$ kill $(pidof firefox)
</pre>


* [http://www.openstack.org/ OpenStack]:Open source software for building private and public clouds. Great for large infrastructures. Cf: Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud (EC2).
== Avoid concurrency ==
** http://www.tikalk.com/alm/blog/expreimenting-openstack-essex-ubuntu-1204-lts-under-virtualbox
[https://www.howtogeek.com/limit-bash-scripts-to-run-once-at-a-time/ Avoid These Problems By Limiting Bash Scripts to Run Once At A Time]. '''pgrep, lsof''' and '''flock''' commands.
** http://www.ibm.com/developerworks/cloud/library/cl-openstack-cloud/
* [http://incubator.apache.org/cloudstack/ CloudStack]
* [http://www.eucalyptus.com/ Eucalyptus] API compatible with Amazon EC2
* [http://owncloud.org/ ownCloud]. Cf: Dropbox. [https://www.howtoforge.com/tutorial/owncloud-install-debian-8-jessie/ Install owncloud on Debian 8], [https://www.howtoforge.com/tutorial/install-owncloud-client-on-ubuntu-14-04/ install owncloud client on Ubuntu 14.04].


Commercial cloud services
== All You Need To Know About Processes in Linux ==
* [https://www.digitalocean.com/ DigitalOcean] - simple pricing. One droplet = one server.
http://www.tecmint.com/linux-process-management/
* Amazon EC2
* Google cloud
* Microsoft Azure


== Manage all your cloud storage ==
== wait command and background jobs ==
http://www.makeuseof.com/tag/chrome-extensions-you-need-manage-cloud-storage/
The '''wait''' command in Linux is a shell built-in command that pauses the execution of a shell script until all background jobs or specified JobID/PIDs terminate and return their exit status.
<pre>
# Example 1: Wait for all background processes to finish
command1 &
command2 &
wait
echo "All background processes have finished."


== Dropbox ==
# Example 2: Wait for a specific process to finish
[https://www.ostechnix.com/dbxfs-mount-dropbox-folder-locally-as-virtual-file-system-in-linux/ Dbxfs – Mount Dropbox Folder Locally As Virtual File System In Linux]. It is a command line dropbox client and requires no disk space for access.
command1 &
PID=$!
command2 &
wait $PID
echo "Command1 has finished."
</pre>


== Comparison of Linux VPS providers ==
== run commands in a background and allow log off ==
https://www.ghacks.net/2017/06/15/a-comparison-of-linux-vps-providers-for-beginner-hosting/
{{Pre}}
nohup /path/to/script >output 2>&1 &
</pre>


= Boot =
Or to [http://stackoverflow.com/questions/10408816/how-do-i-use-the-nohup-command-without-getting-nohup-out disable output and be more safe]. It also explains the concept of '''file descriptor/fd''' in Unix.
* [https://opensource.com/article/18/1/analyzing-linux-boot-process Analyzing the Linux boot process]
{{Pre}}
* [https://utcc.utoronto.ca/~cks/space/blog/linux/LinuxBootOverview? A broad overview of how modern Linux systems boot]
nohup command </dev/null >/dev/null 2>&1 &
</pre>


== U-boot ==
See also [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Process_substitution#Anonymous_named_pipe Anonymous named pipe].
http://www.denx.de/wiki/U-Boot


= Pandora linux client =
See also [https://hide.me/en/vpnsetup/fedora/openvpn/ How to Setup OpenVPN on Fedora 24+] where we use '''nohup openvpn ... & ''' to start the connection in the background and also make it not terminate on exiting the terminal.
* [http://kevinmehall.net/p/pithos/ Pithos] (GUI)
* [http://6xq.net/projects/pianobar/ Pianobar] (Command line)


= COW (copy on write) file system =
== job: How do I send an already-running process into the background ==
The cow filesystem was found on xubuntu live CD. See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Copy-on-write
* [https://www.makeuseof.com/run-linux-commands-in-background/ How to Run Linux Commands in the Background]
* http://stackoverflow.com/questions/625409/how-do-i-put-an-already-running-process-under-nohup
* [https://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/unix-linux-bg-command-examples-usage-syntax/ bg Command Examples]
* [https://www.howtogeek.com/440848/how-to-run-and-control-background-processes-on-linux/ How to Run and Control Background Processes on Linux]
* [https://linuxhandbook.com/run-process-background/ Running Linux Commands in Background and Foreground]


[https://www.digitalocean.com/community/tutorials/how-to-protect-your-server-against-the-dirty-cow-linux-vulnerability How To Protect Your Server Against the Dirty COW Linux Vulnerability] (10/21/2016)
Steps:
# 'Ctrl+Z' to stop (pause) the program and get back to the shell. It [https://askubuntu.com/a/510816 sends SIGTSTP to a foreground application].
# '''bg''' to run it in the background.
# '''jobs -l''' to get the jobID and process ID
# '''disown -h [job-spec]''' where [job-spec] is the job number (like '''%1''' for the first running job; find about your number with the '''jobs''' command) so that the job isn't killed when the terminal closes.


= Apache redirection =
== Stopped job ==
http://cran.r-project.org/mirror-howto.html
A [https://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/116959/there-are-stopped-jobs-on-bash-exit stopped job] is one that has been temporarily put into the background and is no longer running, but is still using resources (i.e. system memory). Because that job is not attached to the current terminal, it cannot produce output and is not receiving input from the user.


[http://www.tecmint.com/redirect-website-url-from-one-server-to-different-server/ Redirect a Website URL from One Server to Different Server in Apache]
* '''jobs -s''' showing stopped jobs
* '''jobs -l''' showing the job PID


= Important linux directories =
[https://serverfault.com/questions/240155/how-can-i-kill-all-stopped-jobs Send kill to a stopped job, it will do nothing but queue than bring it in in foreground, it will terminate]. So don't repeatly sending a 'kill' command.
* /bin - executables used by the base system
* '''fg %1''' move the stopped job ID #1 to the foreground (works)
* /boot
* '''kill %1''' # kill job ID #1
* /dev
* '''kill 12345''' # kill job PID 12345
* /etc - configuration files
* '''kill -9 `jobs -ps`''' may not work
* /media
* '''kill -9 $(jobs -p)'''
* /mnt
* /opt - optional application packages
* /proc - process information only
* /sbin - critical executables for running the system, but should be used by superuser
* /usr - non-critical files. Inside is /usr/bin, which contains most of the libraries used by apps.
* /var - variable data such as databases, mails spools and system logs.


= Difference of /bin, /sbin, /usr/local/bin, ... =
== nice ==
* /bin : For essential binaries; e.g. bash, cat, ls.
[https://www.howtogeek.com/411979/how-to-set-process-priorities-with-the-nice-and-renice-commands-in-linux/ How to Set Process Priorities With nice and renice on Linux]
* /sbin : is similar to /bin but for scripts with superuser (root) privileges required; e.g. shutdown command is located here. Local users have to use sudo to run binaries here.
* /usr/bin : Same as first, but for general system-wide & non-essential binaries; e.g. grep, zip, docker, etc.
* /usr/sbin : Same as above, but for scripts with superuser (root) privileges required.
* /usr/local/bin or /usr/local/sbin for system-wide available (personal) scripts.


If you want to create your own scripts and make them available to all users, you’re pretty safe adding them to /usr/local/bin. Or to add my scripts to my local bin (~/bin) and then I create a symbolic link in /usr/local/bin to the commands I want to make public. As a result, I can manage all my scripts from the same directory but still make some of them publicly available since /usr/local/bin is added to $PATH. See [http://blog.taylormcgann.com/2014/04/11/difference-bin-sbin/ this post].
== watch command ==
[https://www.networkworld.com/article/3529891/watching-activity-on-linux-with-watch-and-tail-commands.html Watching activity on Linux with ''watch'' and ''tail'' commands]. Both the '''watch -n''' and '''tail -f''' commands can provide auto-updating views of information/


= DHCP lease time =
We can use the '''watch''' command to monitor a specific process such as the progress of the ''dd'' command.


On Windows, it is 8 days.
Terminal 1
<pre>
watch -n 10 who
watch ps -C dd --format pid,cmd,%cpu
</pre>


== Get a New IP Address ==
Terminal 2
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
<pre>
dhclient -r  #  release your IP Address
dd if=/dev/zero of=/dev/null
</pre>


dhclient  #  get your DHCP to issue you a new IP Address based on how it’s been configured.
Use '''--color''' for [https://stackoverflow.com/a/3794222 color output].
</syntaxhighlight>


= Open a file/URL using the default application from the command line =
== while + sleep ==
* '''gnome-open''' (works on Mint)
[https://www.linuxuprising.com/2020/12/how-to-repeat-command-every-x-seconds.html How To Repeat A Command Every X Seconds On Linux]: watch, while + sleep,
* '''kde-open''' (KDE users)
* '''xdg-open''' (window-manager independent). XDG stands for X Desktop Group; see https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Freedesktop.org


See also
== ulimit ==
* [https://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/149033/how-does-linux-choose-which-application-to-open-a-file How does Linux choose which application to open a file?]
* [https://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/how-to-find-ulimit-for-user-on-linux/ How to find ulimit for user on Linux]
* [https://www.howtogeek.com/117709/how-to-change-your-default-applications-on-ubuntu-4-ways/ How to Change Your Default Applications on Ubuntu: 4 Ways]
* [https://www.cloudsavvyit.com/10159/setup-a-completely-unlimited-limits-conf-configuration-for-testing-servers/ Setup a Completely Unlimited limits.conf Configuration for Testing Servers]


= Check a file's encoding =
= Notepadqq - Notepad++-like editor =
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
[http://www.ubuntugeek.com/notepadqq-the-linux-source-editor.html Notepadqq]. It is written using Qt. It does not have printing function:(
file -bi myfile
</syntaxhighlight>
For example,
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
file -bi Downloads/hmv_.rc
# text/x-c++; charset=utf-16le
</syntaxhighlight>


= Know you system using the command line =
= Note apps that can sync =
* https://www.howtoforge.com/tutorial/get-to-know-your-system/
[http://www.makeuseof.com/tag/top-notepad-apps-linux-can-sync/ Top 8 Notepad Apps for Linux That You Can Sync]. Some are compatible with Evernote.


= Alerting and visualization tools =
= Evernote =
[https://opensource.com/article/18/10/alerting-and-visualization-tools-sysadmins 5 alerting and visualization tools for sysadmins]
== Evernote alternative ==
[https://www.howtoforge.com/tutorial/how-to-install-turtl-server-evernote-alternative-on-ubuntu-1604/ How to Install Turtl Server - Evernote Alternative - on Ubuntu 16.04]


= System monitor tools (TUI) =
== Backup/restore Evernote ==
== [https://github.com/brndnmtthws/conky conky] ==
https://www.makeuseof.com/tag/backup-restore-evernote/
* [[Ubuntu#Conky|Ubuntu > Conky]] (internal link)
* [[Raspberry#Conky_approach|Raspberry Pi]] case (internal link)


== '''top''' and '''htop''' command ==
= Markdown =
* [https://www.binarytides.com/linux-top-command/ 15 simple TOP command examples on Linux to monitor processes]
== Preview markdown/view markdown offline ==
** M (capital): sorted by memory
* [https://atom.io/ Atom] text editor has a built-in function to preview HTML or markdown files. Menu -> Packages -> Markdown Preview -> Toggle Preview.  
** P: sorted by CPU
* http://stackoverflow.com/questions/9843609/view-markdown-files-offline. [https://github.com/joeyespo/grip Grip] works fine. 
** T: sorted by running time
{{Pre}}
** c: full command path
sudo pip install grip
** u: filter by user
grip readme.md
** V: forest/tree mode; parent child hierarchy. This will disable 'M', 'P' or 'T'.
</pre>
** f: show/hide columns
* For image, see http://stackoverflow.com/questions/13051428/how-to-display-images-in-markdown-files-of-github. The trick is adding '''?raw=true''' after the image name.
* [https://askubuntu.com/a/613645 Why are some processes highlighted in top?]
<pre>
* Htop command has a screen help. [https://www.softprayog.in/tutorials/htop-command-in-linux htop command in Linux]
# title 1
** Tree view
![screenshot](myfile.png?raw=true)
* [http://blog.scoutapp.com/articles/2009/07/31/understanding-load-averages Understand Linux CPU Load]. The maximum number should be the number of cores.
</pre>
* Chrome ''markdown preview plus'' extension does not show images from github.


== glances command ==
== Markdown editor ==
* https://nicolargo.github.io/glances/ and its [http://glances.readthedocs.io/en/latest/ Documentation]
* [http://pad.haroopress.com/ Harropad]
* [http://www.ubuntugeek.com/install-glances-on-ubuntu-16-04.html Glances] includes disk i/o, network too. Its official website at http://glances.readthedocs.io/en/latest/.
* http://linuxbsdos.com/2014/10/05/the-best-markdown-editors-for-linux/
* https://www.tecmint.com/glances-an-advanced-real-time-system-monitoring-tool-for-linux/


Glances is similar to htop but it provides network stats too. Install it by '''sudo apt-get install glances'''.
= Text editor with navigation =
[[Text_editor#Text_editor_with_navigation|Text editor with navigation]]


== [https://scoutapp.github.io/scout_realtime/ scout_realtimep] ==
= nano/pico editor =
This is used by [https://docs.dataplicity.com/docs/remotely-monitor-your-pi Dataplicity]
The nano editor is also called pico in R. See ?edit in R.


== [https://github.com/aksakalli/gtop gtop] command (100% Javascript) ==
[[Text_editor#nano_editor|nano editor]]
https://www.cyberciti.biz/howto/gtop-awesome-system-monitoring-dashboard-for-terminal/.
 
= vi editor =
[[Text_editor#vi_editor|vi editor]]


Pros:
= Cloud =
* CPU history graph in time
[[Cloud|Cloud]]
* Memory history graph in time (not useful)
* Network bandwidth usage is real-time. It is accurate as what [[#nload|nload]] gives.
* Percentage usage of memory, swap, disk usage
* Top processes


<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
= Boot =
$ sudo apt install npm nodejs
* [https://opensource.com/article/18/1/analyzing-linux-boot-process Analyzing the Linux boot process]
$ npm install gtop -g
* [https://utcc.utoronto.ca/~cks/space/blog/linux/LinuxBootOverview? A broad overview of how modern Linux systems boot]
$ gtop
</syntaxhighlight>


* Press p to sort by process ID (PID).
== U-boot ==
* Press c to sort by CPU usage.
http://www.denx.de/wiki/U-Boot
* Press m to sort by memory usage.


It can be installed on Linux Mint 18.2 but not in Ubuntu 14.04 or raspbian (9 stretch).
= Pandora linux client =
<pre>
* [http://kevinmehall.net/p/pithos/ Pithos] (GUI)
$ npm install gtop -g
* [http://6xq.net/projects/pianobar/ Pianobar] (Command line)
npm http GET https://registry.npmjs.org/gtop
npm http GET https://registry.npmjs.org/gtop


npm http GET https://registry.npmjs.org/gtop
= COW (copy on write) file system =
npm ERR! Error: CERT_UNTRUSTED
[[Filesystem|filesystem]]
npm ERR!    at SecurePair.<anonymous> (tls.js:1370:32)
npm ERR!    at SecurePair.EventEmitter.emit (events.js:92:17)
npm ERR!    at SecurePair.maybeInitFinished (tls.js:982:10)
npm ERR!    at CleartextStream.read [as _read] (tls.js:469:13)
npm ERR!    at CleartextStream.Readable.read (_stream_readable.js:320:10)
npm ERR!    at EncryptedStream.write [as _write] (tls.js:366:25)
npm ERR!    at doWrite (_stream_writable.js:223:10)
npm ERR!    at writeOrBuffer (_stream_writable.js:213:5)
npm ERR!    at EncryptedStream.Writable.write (_stream_writable.js:180:11)
npm ERR!    at write (_stream_readable.js:583:24)
npm ERR! If you need help, you may report this log at:
npm ERR!    <http://github.com/isaacs/npm/issues>
npm ERR! or email it to:
npm ERR!    <[email protected]>


npm ERR! System Linux 4.4.0-119-generic
= tmpfs and /dev/shm =
npm ERR! command "/usr/bin/nodejs" "/usr/bin/npm" "install" "gtop" "-g"
* [https://www.howtoforge.com/storing-files-directories-in-memory-with-tmpfs Storing Files/Directories In Memory With tmpfs]
npm ERR! node -v v0.10.25
* [https://www.cyberciti.biz/tips/what-is-devshm-and-its-practical-usage.html What Is /dev/shm And Its Practical Usage]
npm ERR! npm -v 1.3.10
* [https://lonesysadmin.net/2013/12/14/use-ram-disk-improve-disk-access-times/ Use a RAM Disk to Improve Disk Access Times]
</pre>
* [https://kerneltalks.com/linux/how-to-create-ram-disk-in-linux/ How to create RAM disk in Linux]
* [https://www.cloudsavvyit.com/10362/how-to-enlarge-tmpfs-space-in-linux/ How to Enlarge tmpfs Space in Linux], [https://www.cloudsavvyit.com/10254/how-to-create-a-ram-drive-in-linux/ RAM Drive vs tmpfs instance]


== [https://github.com/cjbassi/gotop gotop] ==
= Apache redirection =
A terminal based graphical activity monitor inspired by gtop and vtop. It is quite beautiful.
http://cran.r-project.org/mirror-howto.html


[https://www.ostechnix.com/gotop-yet-another-tui-graphical-activity-monitor-written-in-go/ Gotop – Yet Another TUI Graphical Activity Monitor, Written In Go]
[http://www.tecmint.com/redirect-website-url-from-one-server-to-different-server/ Redirect a Website URL from One Server to Different Server in Apache]


Compared to gtop, it has a temperature monitor. However, it can only show the average CPU usage (one line) on my Xeon computer.
= Important linux directories =
[https://refspecs.linuxfoundation.org/FHS_3.0/fhs/index.html Filesystem Hierarchy Standard], [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Filesystem_Hierarchy_Standard Wikipedia]


<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
* /bin - executables used by the base system
git clone --depth 1 https://github.com/cjbassi/gotop /tmp/gotop
* /boot
/tmp/gotop/scripts/download.sh
* /dev
sudo cp gotop /usr/local/bin; rm gotop
* /etc - configuration files
gotop
* /media
</syntaxhighlight>
* /mnt
Note the temperatures do not show up in Raspbian (raspberry pi 3 b+).
* /opt - optional application packages
* /proc - process information only. [https://levelup.gitconnected.com/access-kubernetes-objects-data-from-proc-directory-8d2ec6a0faba Access Kubernetes Objects Data From /Proc Directory]
* /sbin - critical executables for running the system, but should be used by superuser
* /usr - non-critical files. For example /usr/bin contains most of the libraries used by apps. [https://refspecs.linuxfoundation.org/FHS_3.0/fhs/ch04s11.html /usr/share/] contains Architecture-independent data (eg some pretty images are located in /usr/share/backgrounds)
* /var - variable data such as databases, mails spools and system logs.


=== termui: Golang terminal dashboard ===
= Difference of /bin, /sbin, /usr/local/bin, ... =
https://github.com/gizak/termui
* '''/bin''' : For essential binaries; e.g. bash, cat, ls.
* '''/sbin''' : is similar to /bin but for scripts with superuser (root) privileges required; e.g. shutdown command is located here. Local users have to use sudo to run binaries here.
* '''/usr/bin''' : Same as first, but for general system-wide & non-essential binaries; e.g. grep, zip, docker, etc.
* '''/usr/sbin''' : Same as above, but for scripts with superuser (root) privileges required.
* '''/usr/local/bin''' or '''/usr/local/sbin''' for system-wide available (personal) scripts. For example, install [https://docs.docker.com/compose/install/ docker-compose] is merely to download the binary and place it under /usr/local/bin/ directory.


== S-tui command ==
If you want to create your own scripts and make them available to all users, you’re pretty safe adding them to '''/usr/local/bin'''. Or to add my scripts to my local bin (~/bin) and then I create a symbolic link in /usr/local/bin to the commands I want to make public. As a result, I can manage all my scripts from the same directory but still make some of them publicly available since /usr/local/bin is added to $PATH. See [http://blog.taylormcgann.com/2014/04/11/difference-bin-sbin/ this post].
[https://www.cyberciti.biz/python-tutorials/monitor-linux-cpu-temperature-frequency-power-in-a-graphical-way/ Monitor Linux CPU temperature, frequency, power in a graphical way]


= System monitor tools (GUI) =
= DHCP =
Comparisons:
* https://www.tecmint.com/linux-performance-monitoring-tools/
* https://linoxide.com/monitoring-2/linux-performance-monitoring-tools/
* http://www.linuxscrew.com/2012/03/22/linux-monitoring-tools/
* https://www.infoworld.com/article/2683857/network-monitoring/article.html#slide2
* http://www.thegeekstuff.com/2011/12/linux-performance-monitoring-tools


Some lists:
== DHCP server IP ==
* [http://www.nagios.org Nagios], [http://www.ubuntugeek.com/install-nagios-core-4-1-1-on-ubuntu-16-04-xenial-xerus-server.html Install Nagios core 4.1.1 on Ubuntu 16.04 (Xenial Xerus) Server]
[https://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/linux-find-out-dhcp-server-ip-address/ Linux find DHCP server IP address using CLI]
* [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Icinga Icinga] (Nagios fork)
** [http://www.ubuntugeek.com/how-to-install-icinga-nagios-fork-in-ubuntu-12-10-server.html icinga]
** [https://www.howtoforge.com/tutorial/how-to-install-icinga2-on-debian-9/ How to Install Icinga 2 Monitoring Tool on Debian 9.2]
** [https://www.howtoforge.com/tutorial/add-a-new-host-and-service-to-be-monitored-by-icinga2/ Add a new Host and Services to be Monitored by Icinga 2]
* [https://www.howtoforge.com/tutorial/server-monitoring-with-munin-and-monit-on-ubuntu-16-04-lts/ Server Monitoring with Munin and Monit] on Ubuntu 16.04 LTS
* [https://www.cacti.net/ Cacti]
** http://terraltech.com/monitoring-with-cacti/
** https://www.howtoforge.com/tutorial/install-cacti-on-debian-9/
* [http://www.ubuntugeek.com/install-ganglia-on-ubuntu-16-04-server-xenial-xerus.html Install Ganglia on Ubuntu 16.04 Server (Xenial Xerus)]
* [http://www.ubuntugeek.com/install-linux-dash-web-based-monitoring-tool-on-ubntu-15-04-server.html Linux Dash] Web based monitoring tool. Source code is on [https://github.com/afaqurk/linux-dash github].
* [http://www.monitorix.org/ Monitorix] and on [https://www.howtoforge.com/tutorial/performance-monitoring-with-monitorix-on-ubuntu-16-04/ Ubuntu16.04]
* [https://github.com/sysstat/sysstat sysstat] & the '''sar''' command <syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
# CPU
sar 2 10 # every two seconds, 10 times
# Memory
sar -r  # look at the kbcommit and commit columns


sar -r -f /var/log/sysstat/sa02
== Get a New IP Address ==
</syntaxhighlight>
{{Pre}}
** https://www.maketecheasier.com/monitor-linux-performance-with-sysstat/
dhclient -release your IP Address
** https://www.tecmint.com/install-sysstat-in-linux/
** http://www.thegeekstuff.com/2011/03/sar-examples/
** https://www.blackmoreops.com/2014/06/18/sysstat-sar-examples-usage/
** [https://www.linux.com/news/visualize-sar-data-ksar Visualize sar data with kSar].
**# '''export LC_ALL=C'''. This will convert date/time. For example, 12:00:01 AM will become 00:00:01 and 12/09/2017 will become 12/09/17.
**# '''sar -A -f /var/log/sysstat/saXX > ~/Downloads/sardata.txt'''.
**# Click on Data -> Load from text file. Select ~/Downloads/sardata.txt file. ''Note that nothing will happen in the kSar GUI''.
**# Click 'kSar' to show the tree.
** [https://www.cyberciti.biz/tips/identifying-linux-bottlenecks-sar-graphs-with-ksar.html kSar] (depends on JDK) for graphics (instead of usinsg the '''sadf''' command).
**# Download and unzip it to ~/bin.
**# Execute '''bash ~/bin/kSar-5.0.6/run.sh'''.
**# On the GUI, click Data -> Run local command.. -> '''sar 2 10''', for example. This will start to record the cpu usage 10 times with a 2 seconds interval.
**# You can view the real-time plot (shown on the right panel) by clicking kSar -> CPU -> CPU all (left panel).


== Stacer ==
dhclient  #  get your DHCP to issue you a new IP Address based on how it’s been configured.
[[Ubuntu#Stacer_-_Linux_System_Optimizer_and_Monitoring|Linux System Optimizer and Monitoring]]
</pre>


= [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Curses_%28programming_library%29 Curses] and [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ncurses ncurses]: TUI library =
= Open a file/URL using the default application from the command line =
== Calcurse ==
* '''gnome-open''' (works on Mint)
[https://opensource.com/article/18/10/calcurse Keep up with your calendar and to-do list with Calcurse]
* '''kde-open''' (KDE users)
* '''xdg-open''' (window-manager independent). XDG stands for X Desktop Group; see https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Freedesktop.org


= Bitbucket (free for 5 users) =
See also
[https://confluence.atlassian.com/display/BITBUCKET/Bitbucket+101  Bitbucket 101]
* [https://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/149033/how-does-linux-choose-which-application-to-open-a-file How does Linux choose which application to open a file?]
* [https://www.howtogeek.com/117709/how-to-change-your-default-applications-on-ubuntu-4-ways/ How to Change Your Default Applications on Ubuntu: 4 Ways]


* Unlimited private repos
= Check a file's encoding =
* Code reviews
{{Pre}}
* JIRA integration
file -bi myfile
* REST API
</pre>
* Custom domains
For example,
{{Pre}}
file -bi Downloads/hmv_.rc
# text/x-c++; charset=utf-16le
</pre>


See this [https://answers.atlassian.com/questions/148713/sourcetree-commit-author-change-update post] to know how to fix the problem of unknown author. In short, when I uncheck "Use global user setting" from Repository-> Repository Settings -> Advanced does the commit author change as expected.
= Know you system using the command line =
* https://www.howtoforge.com/tutorial/get-to-know-your-system/


See [http://blog.bitbucket.org/2011/12/21/mobile-apps-for-bitbucket/ here] for a list of Android apps related to bitbucket.
= Alerting and visualization tools =
[https://opensource.com/article/18/10/alerting-and-visualization-tools-sysadmins 5 alerting and visualization tools for sysadmins]


= Image =
= System monitor tools (TUI) =
[https://opensource.com/article/17/8/imagemagick English original], [https://linux.cn/article-8851-1.html ImageMagick 入门:使用命令行来编辑图片]


== Convert a color image to black and white ==
== glances command: more than htop ==
* https://linux.cn/article-8851-1.html
* https://nicolargo.github.io/glances/ and its [http://glances.readthedocs.io/en/latest/ Documentation]. It seems to be more stable to install via apt command instead of the bash script. There is no need to use 'sudo' to run the command.
* https://www.imagemagick.org/script/command-line-options.php#canny
* [http://www.ubuntugeek.com/install-glances-on-ubuntu-16-04.html Glances] includes Disk I/O, Network I/O, internal and '''external''' IPs, current time, et al. Its official website at http://glances.readthedocs.io/en/latest/.
** Glances uses online services to grab the external IP address. https://github.com/nicolargo/glances/issues/961
** To hide the internal and external IPs, type "I" (capital).
** To disable the IP, type "--disable-ip" (not available in v3.x.x ?)
** It shows a warning or critical alert (e.g. memory high usage) at the bottom of the screen.
** My command: '''glances -t 5'''  # update every 5 seconds
* https://www.tecmint.com/glances-an-advanced-real-time-system-monitoring-tool-for-linux/
* [https://youtu.be/E3Ioopzt8ko Monitoring & Troubleshooting Basics with Glances] (video)


<pre>
Glances is similar to htop but it provides network stats and disk usage too. It also supports web UI. Install it by '''sudo apt-get install glances'''.
$ convert filename.jpg -canny 0x1 -negate canny.jpg
convert.im6: unrecognized option `-canny' @ error/convert.c/ConvertImageCommand/1107.


$ convert --version
== [https://github.com/brndnmtthws/conky conky] and autostart ==
Version: ImageMagick 6.7.7-10 2017-07-31 Q16 http://www.imagemagick.org
* [[Ubuntu#Conky|Ubuntu > Conky]] (internal link)
Copyright: Copyright (C) 1999-2012 ImageMagick Studio LLC
* [[Raspberry#Conky_approach|Raspberry Pi]] case (internal link)
Features: OpenMP 
</pre>


[https://www.imagemagick.org/script/download.php The current imagemagick version] is 7.0.7-15.
For auto start on Lubuntu, see [https://askubuntu.com/a/1148628 How can I add new autostart programs in Lubuntu?]


== Install/build the latest imagemagick ==
On Lubuntu 18.04, add the path to the application to ~/.config/lxsession/Lubuntu/autostart
* https://www.imagemagick.org/script/install-source.php
* https://gist.github.com/makenova/78bb63aaa1050e2ad8019ee1e7e7b433
* https://www.tutorialspoint.com/articles/how-to-install-imagemagick-on-ubuntu


<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
== '''top''' and '''htop''' command ==
# remove version installed with apt-get
* [https://www.binarytides.com/linux-top-command/ 15 simple TOP command examples on Linux to monitor processes]
sudo apt-get remove imagemagick && sudo apt-get autoremove
** M (capital): sorted by memory
** P: sorted by CPU
** T: sorted by running time
** c: full command path
** u: filter by user
** V: forest/tree mode; parent child hierarchy. This will disable 'M', 'P' or 'T'.
** f: show/hide columns
** '''top -d 5''' change the refresh interval from 3 seconds to 5 seconds
* [https://askubuntu.com/a/613645 Why are some processes highlighted in top?]
* Htop command has a screen help. [https://www.softprayog.in/tutorials/htop-command-in-linux htop command in Linux]
** Tree view. Press 't'. Press '+' or '-' to expand or collapse.
** ">" to change to sort view.
* [https://www.thegeekstuff.com/2011/09/linux-htop-examples/ Shortcut character keys and function keys]
* [http://blog.scoutapp.com/articles/2009/07/31/understanding-load-averages Understand Linux CPU Load]. The maximum number should be the number of cores.
* In Armbian, htop shows CPU temperature and frequencies; see a [https://forum.armbian.com/topic/10295-updated-htop/?tab=comments screenshot].


# install dependencies
== nmon ==
sudo apt-get install build-essential
* https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nmon. The stats are saved to a comma-separated values (CSV) data file for later graphing and analysis
sudo apt-get build-dep imagemagick -y
* [https://www.admin-magazine.com/HPC/Articles/Nmon-All-Purpose-Admin-Tool Monitoring with Nmon]
* [https://javamana.com/2021/11/20211117161849527S.html Linux系统性能监控工具nmon]


# download ImageMagick source
== CPU frequency ==
wget http://www.imagemagick.org/download/ImageMagick.tar.gz
[https://ostechnix.com/optimize-performance-and-battery-life-with-auto-cpufreq/ How To Optimize Performance And Battery Life With Auto-cpufreq In Linux]
tar xzvf ImageMagick.tar.gz


# build source
[https://unix.stackexchange.com/a/265611 What is the correct way to view your CPU speed on Linux?] (x86)
cd ImageMagick-*
<pre>
./configure
watch -n.1 "cat /proc/cpuinfo | grep \"^[c]pu MHz\""
make
</pre>


# install and verify
[https://unix.stackexchange.com/a/590531 How can I get the current CPU frequency of an ARM processor on Ubuntu?]
sudo make install
<pre>
ls /sys/devices/system/cpu/cpu0/cpufreq/
</pre>


sudo checkinstall
== [https://scoutapp.github.io/scout_realtime/ scout_realtimep] ==
This is used by [https://docs.dataplicity.com/docs/remotely-monitor-your-pi Dataplicity]


**********************************************************************
== [https://github.com/aksakalli/gtop gtop] command (100% Javascript) ==
https://www.cyberciti.biz/howto/gtop-awesome-system-monitoring-dashboard-for-terminal/.


Done. The new package has been installed and saved to
Pros:
* CPU history graph in time
* Memory history graph in time (not useful)
* Network bandwidth usage is real-time. It is accurate as what [[#nload|nload]] gives.
* Percentage usage of memory, swap, disk usage
* Top processes


/home/XXX/Downloads/ImageMagick-7.0.7-15/imagemagick-7.0.7_15-1_amd64.deb
{{Pre}}
$ docker run --rm -it \
    --name gtop \
    --net="host" \
    --pid="host" \
    aksakalli/gtop


You can remove it from your system anytime using:
$ sudo apt install npm nodejs
$ npm install gtop -g
$ gtop
</pre>


      dpkg -r imagemagick-7.0.7
* Press p to sort by process ID (PID).
* Press c to sort by CPU usage.
* Press m to sort by memory usage.


**********************************************************************
It can be installed on Linux Mint 18.2 but not in Ubuntu 14.04 or raspbian (9 stretch).
 
<pre>
$ convert --version
$ npm install gtop -g
# bash: /usr/bin/convert: No such file or directory
npm http GET https://registry.npmjs.org/gtop
 
npm http GET https://registry.npmjs.org/gtop
$ which convert
/usr/local/bin/convert
$ whereis convert
convert: /usr/local/bin/convert
$ /usr/local/bin/convert -version
Version: ImageMagick 7.0.7-15 Q16 x86_64 2017-12-20 http://www.imagemagick.org
Copyright: © 1999-2018 ImageMagick Studio LLC
License: http://www.imagemagick.org/script/license.php
Features: Cipher DPC HDRI OpenMP
Delegates (built-in): bzlib fontconfig freetype jbig jng jpeg lzma pangocairo png tiff x xml zlib
</syntaxhighlight>


== Convert an image to sketch (online tool) ==
npm http GET https://registry.npmjs.org/gtop
http://www.snapstouch.com/sketch.aspx
npm ERR! Error: CERT_UNTRUSTED
npm ERR!    at SecurePair.<anonymous> (tls.js:1370:32)
npm ERR!    at SecurePair.EventEmitter.emit (events.js:92:17)
npm ERR!    at SecurePair.maybeInitFinished (tls.js:982:10)
npm ERR!    at CleartextStream.read [as _read] (tls.js:469:13)
npm ERR!    at CleartextStream.Readable.read (_stream_readable.js:320:10)
npm ERR!    at EncryptedStream.write [as _write] (tls.js:366:25)
npm ERR!    at doWrite (_stream_writable.js:223:10)
npm ERR!    at writeOrBuffer (_stream_writable.js:213:5)
npm ERR!    at EncryptedStream.Writable.write (_stream_writable.js:180:11)
npm ERR!    at write (_stream_readable.js:583:24)
npm ERR! If you need help, you may report this log at:
npm ERR!    <http://github.com/isaacs/npm/issues>
npm ERR! or email it to:
npm ERR!    <npm-@googlegroups.com>


== Convert an image file to a different format (eg icon) ==
npm ERR! System Linux 4.4.0-119-generic
Using the [http://www.imagemagick.org/script/index.php imagemagic] program.
npm ERR! command "/usr/bin/nodejs" "/usr/bin/npm" "install" "gtop" "-g"
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
npm ERR! node -v v0.10.25
convert winamp-ncrow.png -resize 32x32 winamp-ncrow.ico
npm ERR! npm -v 1.3.10
</syntaxhighlight>
</pre>


[http://www.tecmint.com/linux-image-conversion-tools/ 4 Ways to Batch Convert Your PNG to JPG and Vice-Versa]
== [https://github.com/cjbassi/gotop gotop] ==
A terminal based graphical activity monitor inspired by gtop and vtop. It is quite beautiful.


== Rotate an image ==
[https://www.ostechnix.com/gotop-yet-another-tui-graphical-activity-monitor-written-in-go/ Gotop – Yet Another TUI Graphical Activity Monitor, Written In Go]
http://www.imagemagick.org/script/command-line-options.php#rotate
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
convert winamp-ncrow.png -rotate 45 winamp-ncrow2.png  # 45 degrees
</syntaxhighlight>


One problem with this simple approach is the picture size (not image file) changed (become smaller) if the degree is not one of 90,180 or 270.
Compared to gtop, it has a temperature monitor. However, it can only show the average CPU usage (one line) on my Xeon computer.
== Create an animated gif file ==
Use the script [http://www.imagemagick.org/Usage/warping/animate_distort_rot here]. See the last example on [http://www.imagemagick.org/Usage/warping/#animations here]. The rotation speed looks good too! Just change the source image file in the script.
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
#!/bin/sh
#
# Create a rotating figure using Distort SRT transformations
#
command='convert -delay 10 koala.gif -virtual-pixel white'


for i in `seq 5 5 360`; do
{{Pre}}
  command="$command \\( -clone 0 -distort SRT $i \\)"
git clone --depth 1 https://github.com/cjbassi/gotop /tmp/gotop
done
/tmp/gotop/scripts/download.sh
 
sudo cp gotop /usr/local/bin; rm gotop
command="$command -delete 0 -loop 0 animate_distort_rot.gif"
gotop
 
</pre>
eval $command
Note the temperatures do not show up in Raspbian (raspberry pi 3 b+).


chmod 644 animate_distort_rot.gif
=== termui: Golang terminal dashboard ===
</syntaxhighlight>
https://github.com/gizak/termui


[http://askubuntu.com/questions/43763/tool-to-convert-a-sequence-of-numbered-png-files-to-an-animated-gif?noredirect=1&lq=1 Tool to convert a sequence of numbered PNG files to an animated GIF?]. [https://www.imagemagick.org/script/convert.php Convert command line option]. The option '-loop 0' means repeats infinitely and '-delay 200' means 2 seconds delay between each frame.
=== Bashtop and btop ===
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
* [https://www.linuxuprising.com/2020/04/bashtop-is-cool-linux-resource-monitor.html Bashtop Is A Cool Linux Resource Monitor Written In Bash]
convert -delay 200 -loop 0 file_1.png file_2.png file_3.png animated.gif
* [https://github.com/aristocratos/btop *btop]. C++ version and continuation of bashtop and bpytop. This is very similar to bashtop but it also shows the IP. Mac, Linux x86, armv7, aarch64, arm64, armv5. [https://lindevs.com/install-btop-on-raspberry-pi/ Install btop++ on Raspberry Pi], [https://lindevs.com/install-btop-on-ubuntu/ Ubuntu 22.04].
</syntaxhighlight>


== Convert Video to GIF ==
== S-tui command ==
[https://www.makeuseof.com/tag/convert-video-to-gif/ The Best Ways to Convert Video to GIF]
[https://www.cyberciti.biz/python-tutorials/monitor-linux-cpu-temperature-frequency-power-in-a-graphical-way/ Monitor Linux CPU temperature, frequency, power in a graphical way]


== Edit gif file ==
== below ==
[https://www.maketecheasier.com/create-gifs-command-tool-ubuntu/ gifsicle] package
[https://fedoramagazine.org/below-a-time-traveling-resource-monitor/ below: a time traveling resource monitor]


== Replace transparency in PNG images with white background ==
= System monitor tools (GUI) =
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/2322750/replace-transparency-in-png-images-with-white-background
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
convert image.png -background white -alpha remove white.png
</syntaxhighlight>


== Remove GPS metadata from jpg files - [http://www.sno.phy.queensu.ca/~phil/exiftool/ exiftool]==
Comparisons:
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
* https://www.tecmint.com/category/monitoring-tools/
sudo apt-get install libimage-exiftool-perl
* https://www.tecmint.com/linux-performance-monitoring-tools/
exiftool -gps:all= -xmp:geotag= image.jpg
* https://linoxide.com/monitoring-2/linux-performance-monitoring-tools/
</syntaxhighlight>
* http://www.linuxscrew.com/2012/03/22/linux-monitoring-tools/
The image file will be updated. To check the current metadata, use
* https://www.infoworld.com/article/2683857/network-monitoring/article.html#slide2
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
* http://www.thegeekstuff.com/2011/12/linux-performance-monitoring-tools
exiftool image.jpg
</syntaxhighlight>


Note that the above command only remove gps information. The other information like date/time of creation, camera model are not changed.
Some lists:
* [http://www.ubuntugeek.com/install-ganglia-on-ubuntu-16-04-server-xenial-xerus.html Install Ganglia on Ubuntu 16.04 Server (Xenial Xerus)]
* [http://www.ubuntugeek.com/install-linux-dash-web-based-monitoring-tool-on-ubntu-15-04-server.html Linux Dash] Web based monitoring tool. Source code is on [https://github.com/afaqurk/linux-dash github].
* [http://www.monitorix.org/ Monitorix] and on [https://www.howtoforge.com/tutorial/performance-monitoring-with-monitorix-on-ubuntu-16-04/ Ubuntu16.04]


Exitftool can also be used to edit the [https://askubuntu.com/questions/27381/how-to-edit-pdf-metadata-from-command-line metadata on PDF files].
== Linux-Dash ==
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
https://github.com/afaqurk/linux-dash. Not working when I tested on RPi and Ubuntu.
exiftool -Title="This is the Title" -Author="Happy Man" -Subject="PDF Metadata" drawing.pdf
</syntaxhighlight>


An R package [https://cran.r-project.org/web/packages/exifr/ exifr] also available on CRAN.
== Nagios ==
* [http://www.nagios.org Nagios], [http://www.ubuntugeek.com/install-nagios-core-4-1-1-on-ubuntu-16-04-xenial-xerus-server.html Install Nagios core 4.1.1 on Ubuntu 16.04 (Xenial Xerus) Server]
* [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Icinga Icinga] (Nagios fork)
** [http://www.ubuntugeek.com/how-to-install-icinga-nagios-fork-in-ubuntu-12-10-server.html icinga]
** [https://www.howtoforge.com/tutorial/how-to-install-icinga2-on-debian-9/ How to Install Icinga 2 Monitoring Tool on Debian 9.2]
** [https://www.howtoforge.com/tutorial/add-a-new-host-and-service-to-be-monitored-by-icinga2/ Add a new Host and Services to be Monitored by Icinga 2]


== Edit Svg image ==
== [https://www.zabbix.com/ Zabbix] ==
* [https://inkscape.org/en/ Inkscape]
* [https://www.tecmint.com/install-zabbix-on-debian-10/ How to Install Zabbix on Debian 10]
* Inkscape from [https://fedoramagazine.org/ Fedora magazine]
* [https://forum.proxmox.com/threads/smart-error-health-detected-on-host.109580/ SMART error (Health) detected on host]
** [https://fedoramagazine.org/getting-started-inkscape-fedora/ Getting started with Inkscape on Fedora]
* [https://www.zabbix.com/integrations/smart Zabbix + S.M.A.R.T.]
** [https://fedoramagazine.org/inkscape-adding-colour/ Inkscape: Adding some colour]
** [https://fedoramagazine.org/inkscape-design-imagination/ Create a simple wallpaper with Fedora and Inkscape]


== Animated gif ==
== Munin and Monit ==
* [https://www.howtoforge.com/tutorial/how-to-generate-a-animated-gif-or-movie-out-of-images-on-linux/#using-photofilmstrip How to generate a animated GIF or movie out of images on Linux] (GIMP or PhotoFilmStrip)
[https://www.howtoforge.com/tutorial/server-monitoring-with-munin-and-monit-on-ubuntu-16-04-lts/ Server Monitoring with Munin and Monit] on Ubuntu 16.04 LTS
* [http://superuser.com/questions/558790/how-do-i-convert-gif-to-png-this-image-to-get-the-original-view convert (.gif to .png) this image to get the original view?] (ImageMagick)


== Display images in the terminal ==
== [https://www.cacti.net/ Cacti] ==
[https://www.ostechnix.com/how-to-display-images-in-the-terminal/ Using FIM]
* http://terraltech.com/monitoring-with-cacti/
* https://www.howtoforge.com/tutorial/install-cacti-on-debian-9/


= [https://www.gimp.org/ GIMP] =
== [https://github.com/sysstat/sysstat sysstat], sar ==  
{{Pre}}
# CPU
sar 2 10 # every two seconds, 10 times
# Memory
sar -r  # look at the kbcommit and commit columns


= login shell (.bash_profile) vs interactive shell (.bashrc) =
sar -r -f /var/log/sysstat/sa02
* http://stackoverflow.com/questions/18186929/differences-between-login-shell-and-interactive-shell
</pre>
8 http://serverfault.com/questions/8882/what-is-the-difference-between-a-login-and-an-interactive-bash-shell
* https://www.maketecheasier.com/monitor-linux-performance-with-sysstat/
* https://www.tecmint.com/install-sysstat-in-linux/
* http://www.thegeekstuff.com/2011/03/sar-examples/
* https://www.blackmoreops.com/2014/06/18/sysstat-sar-examples-usage/
* [https://www.linux.com/news/visualize-sar-data-ksar Visualize sar data with kSar].
*# '''export LC_ALL=C'''.  This will convert date/time. For example, 12:00:01 AM will become 00:00:01 and 12/09/2017 will become 12/09/17.
*# '''sar -A -f /var/log/sysstat/saXX > ~/Downloads/sardata.txt'''.
*# Click on Data -> Load from text file. Select ~/Downloads/sardata.txt file. ''Note that nothing will happen in the kSar GUI''.
*# Click 'kSar' to show the tree.
* [https://www.cyberciti.biz/tips/identifying-linux-bottlenecks-sar-graphs-with-ksar.html kSar] (depends on JDK) for graphics (instead of usinsg the '''sadf''' command).
*# Download and unzip it to ~/bin.
*# Execute '''bash ~/bin/kSar-5.0.6/run.sh'''.
*# On the GUI, click Data -> Run local command.. -> '''sar 2 10''', for example. This will start to record the cpu usage 10 times with a 2 seconds interval.
*# You can view the real-time plot (shown on the right panel) by clicking kSar -> CPU -> CPU all (left panel).


# '''login shell''' - non desktop environment. ~/.bash_profile is sourced for the bash shell.
== Stacer ==
# '''interactive shell''' - Ctrl+Alt+t to open a terminal from a graphical mode (desktop environment).  ~/.bashrc is source. We usually edit ~/.bashrc to set up the environment to include fancy prompt, set aliases, set history options, or define custom shell functions.
[[Ubuntu#Stacer_-_Linux_System_Optimizer_and_Monitoring|Linux System Optimizer and Monitoring]]
export environment variables
 
# Both a '''login shell and an interactive one'''. SSH (Putty) to connect to a remote machine.
== Prometheus ==
# When a shell runs a script or a command passed on its command line, it's a '''non-interactive, non-login shell'''.
* https://prometheus.io/docs/introduction/overview/
* [https://www.howtoforge.com/how-to-install-prometheus-system-monitoring-tool-on-debian-11/ How to Install Prometheus System Monitoring Tool on Debian 11]
 
= [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Curses_%28programming_library%29 Curses] and [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ncurses ncurses]: TUI library =
 
[https://opensource.com/article/21/8/ncurses-linux Position text on your screen in Linux with ncurses]
 
== Calcurse ==
[https://opensource.com/article/18/10/calcurse Keep up with your calendar and to-do list with Calcurse]
 
= Bitbucket (free for 5 users) =
[https://confluence.atlassian.com/display/BITBUCKET/Bitbucket+101 Bitbucket 101]
 
* Unlimited private repos
* Code reviews
* JIRA integration
* REST API
* Custom domains
 
See this [https://answers.atlassian.com/questions/148713/sourcetree-commit-author-change-update post] to know how to fix the problem of unknown author. In short, when I uncheck "Use global user setting" from Repository-> Repository Settings -> Advanced does the commit author change as expected.
 
See [http://blog.bitbucket.org/2011/12/21/mobile-apps-for-bitbucket/ here] for a list of Android apps related to bitbucket.
 
= Image =
See [[Images|Images]].
 
= [https://www.gimp.org/ GIMP] =
 
= Reload/Refresh .profile file =
https://askubuntu.com/a/59127
<pre>
. ~/.profile
</pre>
<span style="border: 1px solid black">'''.'''</span> is a '''bash''' builtin and a synonym for source, see man bash.
 
[https://askubuntu.com/a/951009 After changing the .profile file, you have to logout from your account and login, then it will be sourced once automatically.]


= History of commands =
= History of commands =
* [http://www.thegeekstuff.com/2008/08/15-examples-to-master-linux-command-line-history/ 15 Examples To Master Linux Command Line History]
* [http://www.thegeekstuff.com/2008/08/15-examples-to-master-linux-command-line-history/ 15 Examples To Master Linux Command Line History]
* [https://www.networkworld.com/article/3537214/tweaking-history-on-linux.html Tweaking history on Linux]


== history command with date and time ==
== history command with date and time ==
Line 2,736: Line 2,851:
Running the following code once and history will give date and time the next time you issue the '''history''' command.
Running the following code once and history will give date and time the next time you issue the '''history''' command.
<pre>
<pre>
echo 'export HISTTIMEFORMAT="%d/%m/%y %T "' >> ~/.bashrc
echo 'export HISTTIMEFORMAT="%Y-%m-%d %T "' >> ~/.bashrc
</pre>
</pre>
Note that the original post asks to write the line to ~/.bash_profile but [http://askubuntu.com/questions/121073/why-bash-profile-is-not-getting-sourced-when-opening-a-terminal this is not working in the desktop environment].
Note that the original post asks to write the line to ~/.bash_profile but [http://askubuntu.com/questions/121073/why-bash-profile-is-not-getting-sourced-when-opening-a-terminal this is not working in the desktop environment].


== Bang bang - Run a command/Fetch parameters from previous history ==
Note that on zsh, the above method is not supported. We can use '''history -i''' instead. Type ''man zshoptions'' or ''man zshbuiltins'' for more information.
 
== Bang bang - Run a command/Fetch parameters from previous ''history'' ==
* http://unixhelp.ed.ac.uk/shell/tcsh_hist3.html
* http://unixhelp.ed.ac.uk/shell/tcsh_hist3.html
* http://codytaylor.org/2009/09/linux-bang-commands.html
* http://codytaylor.org/2009/09/linux-bang-commands.html
* http://craig-russell.co.uk/2011/09/28/bang-bang-command-recall-in-linux.html#.VHXnq3Wx3UY
* http://requiremind.com/linux-command-line-tips-become-a-master/


# ^P: Move up through the command history list one command at a time.
# ^P: Move up through the command history list one command at a time.
# ^N: Move down through the command history list one command at a time.
# ^N: Move down through the command history list one command at a time.
# !!: Run the previous command.              
# '''!!''': Run the previous command. For example, we can run '''sudo !!''' in order to run the previous command with sudo.
# !n: Run command number n                        
# '''!n''': Run command number n (useful)                       
# !string: Run most recent command starting with characters in string
# '''!string''': Run most recent command starting with characters in string (useful). For example, !ls
# !?string: Run most recent command containing characters that match string
# !?string: Run most recent command containing characters that match string
# !!*: Fetch parameters from last command
# '''!*''': Fetch parameters from last command (useful). For example, if we run "ls /var" first. Then when we run '''stat !*''', it would run ''stat /var''. Or we can run '''cd !*''' and it will cd to /var directory.
# '''!_''': Fetch the last parameter from last command. For example, if we run "ls /var/ /etc" first. Then when we run '''stat $_''', it would run ''stat /etc''. (zsh shell only)
# '''Ctrl + r''' and type a keyword (most useful). Press ctrl + r to scroll the match. This is called reverse i search.


For example,
For example,
Line 2,760: Line 2,877:
!tail
!tail
</pre>
</pre>
== Recall commands with reverse-i-search ==
Ctrl + r. See [https://www.redhat.com/sysadmin/bash-bang-commands Bash bang commands: A must-know trick for the Linux command line]
To continue with the search, just hit Ctrl + r keys again.
To run a forward search, hit Ctrl + s. [https://unix.stackexchange.com/a/73499 How to cycle through reverse-i-search in BASH?]


== Increase history limit ==
== Increase history limit ==
http://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/17574/is-there-a-maximum-size-to-the-bash-history-file
http://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/17574/is-there-a-maximum-size-to-the-bash-history-file
[https://stackoverflow.com/a/12234989 Unlimited Bash History]
<pre>
$ echo $HISTSIZE  # $HISTSIZE variable controls how much history is displayed
500
$ export HISTSIZE=1000
$ echo “HISTSIZE=1000” >> ~/.bashrc
# $HISTFILESIZE variable controls how many commands are retained in your .bash_history file.
$ echo $HISTFILESIZE
2000
$ wc -l .bash_history
2000 .bash_history
</pre>


== Not to add to bash history ==
== Not to add to bash history ==
[https://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/Manual:Running_MediaWiki_on_Debian_or_Ubuntu#Configure_MySQL Add a space after the command].
[https://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/Manual:Running_MediaWiki_on_Debian_or_Ubuntu#Configure_MySQL Add a space after the command].
It is useful if there is a password in the command.
For example,
<pre>
$ ls ~/            # this won't be recorded in history
$  ls ~/Downloads/  # this will be recorded in history
$ history
</pre>
== Delete a single command from history ==
* [https://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/delete-command-from-history-linux-unix-osx-bash-shell/ How to delete a single command from history on a Linux/Unix Bash shell]
* [https://opensource.com/article/20/6/bash-history-control Make Bash history more useful with these tips]
To stop adding history entries, you can place a space before the command, as long as you have '''ignorespace''' in your '''HISTCONTROL''' environment variable.
You can force Bash to exclude commands starting with empty space by placing this in your .bashrc file:
<pre>
export HISTCONTROL=$HISTCONTROL:ignorespace
</pre>


== [https://www.howtoforge.com/clear-bash-history/ How to Clear Bash History on Linux] ==
== [https://www.howtoforge.com/clear-bash-history/ How to Clear Bash History on Linux] ==
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
{{Pre}}
$ cat /dev/null > ~/.bash_history && history -c && exit
$ cat /dev/null > ~/.bash_history && history -c && exit
</syntaxhighlight>
</pre>
 
== multiple terminals ==
Use ‘’’history -a’’’ to write the history to the file if we do not plan to close the terminal. See [https://www.howtogeek.com/465243/how-to-use-the-history-command-on-linux/ How to use the history command on Linux].


= Listen to HiChannel internet radio =
= Listen to HiChannel internet radio =
Line 2,788: Line 2,948:
= Painting software =
= Painting software =
* [https://krita.org/en/ Krita] - professional painting program made by artists that want to see affordable art tools for everyone. [https://www.makeuseof.com/tag/krita-free-gimp-alternative/ Krita Is the Free GIMP Alternative You Should Be Using].  
* [https://krita.org/en/ Krita] - professional painting program made by artists that want to see affordable art tools for everyone. [https://www.makeuseof.com/tag/krita-free-gimp-alternative/ Krita Is the Free GIMP Alternative You Should Be Using].  
* [http://pinta-project.com/ Pinta]. It can be install by apt-get command. It works just line Window's paint. Ctr + v to paste an image and save to a file. To crop an image, click the selection tool (1st one) on the left hand side, then select a rectangle. Now click 'Image' > 'Crop to Selection' to finish.
<ul>
<li>[http://pinta-project.com/ Pinta]. It can be install by apt-get command. It works just line Window's paint. Ctr + v to paste an image and save to a file. To crop an image, click the selection tool on the most left hand side (it's a black color on v1.6 but a gray color on v1.7), then select a rectangle. Now click 'Image' > 'Crop to Selection' to finish. [https://itsfoss.com/pinta-new-release/ Pinta New Release After 5 Years. Here’s How to Get it!]
<pre>
sudo add-apt-repository ppa:pinta-maintainers/pinta-stable
sudo apt update
sudo apt install pinta
</pre>
</li>
</ul>
* [http://mtpaint.sourceforge.net/ mtPaint]. It is included in Odroid - xu4 - Lubuntu 14.04. To crop an image, just select an area and click Image > Crop. It can be used to [http://mtpaint.sourceforge.net/handbook/en_GB/chap_A.html take a screenshot] from the desktop by using either the application or through the command line ('''mtpaint -s'''). It will then display the screenshot in the application if you use the command line.  
* [http://mtpaint.sourceforge.net/ mtPaint]. It is included in Odroid - xu4 - Lubuntu 14.04. To crop an image, just select an area and click Image > Crop. It can be used to [http://mtpaint.sourceforge.net/handbook/en_GB/chap_A.html take a screenshot] from the desktop by using either the application or through the command line ('''mtpaint -s'''). It will then display the screenshot in the application if you use the command line.  
* [http://www.ubuntugeek.com/install-mypaint-on-ubuntu-15-10.html MyPaint]
* [http://www.ubuntugeek.com/install-mypaint-on-ubuntu-15-10.html MyPaint]
Line 2,811: Line 2,979:


Some examples:
Some examples:
* [https://hyliu.me/fluent-reader/ Fluent Reader]. Open source. Linux, Windows, macOS.
* [https://www.kde.org/applications/internet/akregator/ Akregator]. KDE based. This is preinstalled in CentOS-KDE under the Internet category. It is also called 'Feed Reader'.
* [https://www.kde.org/applications/internet/akregator/ Akregator]. KDE based. This is preinstalled in CentOS-KDE under the Internet category. It is also called 'Feed Reader'.
* [https://quiterss.org/ QuiteRSS]. It works on Linux, Windows and MacOS.
* [https://quiterss.org/ QuiteRSS]. It works on Linux, Windows and MacOS.
Line 2,816: Line 2,985:
* [https://jangernert.github.io/FeedReader/ FeedReader]. Looks nice. Works with several online feed managers.
* [https://jangernert.github.io/FeedReader/ FeedReader]. Looks nice. Works with several online feed managers.
* [https://newsbeuter.org/ Newsbeuter]: RSS feed in terminal
* [https://newsbeuter.org/ Newsbeuter]: RSS feed in terminal
* [https://github.com/newsboat/newsboat Newsboat]: terminal  
* [https://github.com/newsboat/newsboat Newsboat]: terminal. [https://www.makeuseof.com/newsboat-feed-reader-for-linux-terminal/ Newsboat: The Best Terminal-Based RSS Feed Reader for Linux]. Not for general use since it assumes the articles are all text-based.
* [http://www.rssowl.org/ RSSOwl]. Depends on Java. Cross platform.
* [http://www.rssowl.org/ RSSOwl]. Depends on Java. Cross platform.
* Firefox and Thunderbird have built-in support for RSS.
* Firefox and Thunderbird have built-in support for RSS.
= Clear gibberish all over the screen =
Just type “reset”. See [https://www.cyberciti.biz/tips/bash-fix-the-display.html BASH Fix Display and Console Garbage and Gibberish on a Linux / Unix / macOS]. It is useful, for example, accidentally I run cat command over binary file.


= Display/screen =
= Display/screen =
Line 2,824: Line 2,996:
* https://systembash.com/how-to-turn-off-your-monitor-via-command-line-in-ubuntu/
* https://systembash.com/how-to-turn-off-your-monitor-via-command-line-in-ubuntu/
* http://askubuntu.com/questions/62858/turn-off-monitor-using-command-line
* http://askubuntu.com/questions/62858/turn-off-monitor-using-command-line
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
{{Pre}}
xset dpms force off # Press any key to turn it on  
xset dpms force off # Press any key to turn it on  
xset dpms force on
xset dpms force on
xset -q # check the status of the X server settings
xset -q # check the status of the X server settings
</syntaxhighlight>
</pre>


If we want to turn off/on the screen via ssh, add
If we want to turn off/on the screen via ssh, add
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
{{Pre}}
export DISPLAY=:0.0
export DISPLAY=:0.0
</syntaxhighlight>
</pre>
first before calling the '''xset''' command, or use '-display' argument
first before calling the '''xset''' command, or use '-display' argument
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
{{Pre}}
xset -display :0.0 dpms force off  
xset -display :0.0 dpms force off  
xset -display :0.0 dpms force on  
xset -display :0.0 dpms force on  
</syntaxhighlight>
</pre>


== autoxrandr ==
== autoxrandr ==
Plug your laptop into different monitor setups. https://www.donarmstrong.com/posts/autorandr/
Plug your laptop into different monitor setups. https://www.donarmstrong.com/posts/autorandr/
== Move a window without clicking the titlebar ==
Hold down the '''Alt''' key and then click in the window anywhere, and move your mouse.


== Add new screen/display resolutions ==
== Add new screen/display resolutions ==
* http://ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=1112186 (tested on UDOObuntu 2 beta 2running Ubuntu 14.04 + SainSmart 9" LCD display. The commands (not persistent) are
* http://ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=1112186 (tested on UDOObuntu 2 beta 2running Ubuntu 14.04 + SainSmart 9" LCD display. The commands (not persistent) are
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
{{Pre}}
xrandr | grep maximum
xrandr | grep maximum
gtf 800 480 59.9  # give some output used in the following line
gtf 800 480 59.9  # give some output used in the following line
Line 2,851: Line 3,026:
xrandr --addmode "DISP3 BG" 800x480_59.90
xrandr --addmode "DISP3 BG" 800x480_59.90
xrandr --output "DISP3 BG" --mode 800x480_59.90
xrandr --output "DISP3 BG" --mode 800x480_59.90
</syntaxhighlight>
</pre>


I cannot find the file /etc/X11/xorg.conf in my UDOObuntu 2 beta 2. It seems this file does not exist anymore. See [http://askubuntu.com/questions/4662/where-is-the-x-org-config-file-how-do-i-configure-x-there this post] about how to re-create it.
I cannot find the file /etc/X11/xorg.conf in my UDOObuntu 2 beta 2. It seems this file does not exist anymore. See [http://askubuntu.com/questions/4662/where-is-the-x-org-config-file-how-do-i-configure-x-there this post] about how to re-create it.


== Wayland ==
== Wayland ==
* '''echo $XDG_SESSION_TYPE''' to check whether X11 or Wayland is in use
* To change from wayland to X11:
** Method 1: log out, click the username, choose Xorg and type the password
** Method 2:
:<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
sudo nano /etc/gdm3/custom.conf
</syntaxhighlight>Change the line ''' WaylandEnable=true''' to '''WaylandEnable=false''' And restart the system1.
* Ubuntu 22.04 LTS with GNOME 42 and Wayland as the default
* [https://liliputing.com/2018/08/linux-on-the-gpd-pocket-2-ubuntu-debian-and-fedora.html Linux on the GPD Pocket 2 (Ubuntu, Debian, and Fedora)]
* [https://liliputing.com/2018/08/linux-on-the-gpd-pocket-2-ubuntu-debian-and-fedora.html Linux on the GPD Pocket 2 (Ubuntu, Debian, and Fedora)]
** “xrandr -o right” command can be used to rotate the screen
** “xrandr -o right” command can be used to rotate the screen
** But it does not work in Fedora because Fedora uses the Wayland display server rather than xserver.
** But it does not work in Fedora because Fedora uses the Wayland display server rather than xserver.
* [https://www.linuxuprising.com/2019/11/how-to-automate-repetitive-typing-text.html How To Automate Repetitive Typing (Text Expansion) With AutoKey On Linux]. AutoKey is an X11 application, it won't work properly if you use Wayland (e.g. Fedora uses Wayland by default; if you want to use Xorg you must logout, and select "GNOME on Xorg" from the cog icon next to the Sign In button).
* [https://www.tecmint.com/configure-xorg-as-default-gnome-session/ How to Configure Xorg as Default GNOME Session in Fedora]
* [https://unix.stackexchange.com/a/325972 How to know whether Wayland or X11 is being used]
{{Pre}}
loginctl show-session $(awk '/tty/ {print $1}' <(loginctl)) -p Type | awk -F= '{print $2}'
</pre>


== export DISPLAY ==
== export DISPLAY ==
If we want to run a GUI app on a remote computer (such as Raspberry Pi/Beaglebone Black) and show the GUI app on the remote computer's screen using ssh, we can issue the following command before running the app.
<ul>
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
<li>[https://askubuntu.com/a/432257 What is the $DISPLAY environment variable?]
The value of the display environment variable is:
<pre>
hostname:displaynumber.screennumber
</pre>
<li>If we want to run a GUI app on a remote computer (such as Raspberry Pi/Beaglebone Black) and show the GUI app on the remote computer's screen using ssh, we can issue the following command before running the app.
{{Pre}}
export DISPLAY=:0.0
export DISPLAY=:0.0
</syntaxhighlight>
</pre>
 
</ul>
= LVM Demystified =
http://www.linuxjournal.com/content/lvm-demystified


= See which groups you belong to, id & group commands =
= See which groups you belong to, id & group commands =
* [https://www.2daygeek.com/how-to-check-which-groups-a-user-belongs-to-on-linux/ How To Check Which Groups A User Belongs To On Linux]
* [https://www.2daygeek.com/how-to-check-which-groups-a-user-belongs-to-on-linux/ How To Check Which Groups A User Belongs To On Linux]
* [https://www.2daygeek.com/find-check-user-name-and-other-information-in-linux/ 6 Simple ways to check Username and related information in Linux]
<pre>
<pre>
id <username>
groups  
groups  
groups <username>
groups <username>
</pre>
</pre>


= groupadd, chgrp, usermod, ACL (access control lists) =
== Main Types of User Accounts on Linux ==
[https://www.makeuseof.com/types-of-user-accounts-on-linux/ The 4 Main Types of User Accounts on Linux]
 
== finger: show user information ==
finger USERNAME
 
== List all user groups ==
[https://www.makeuseof.com/how-to-list-all-user-groups-on-linux/ How to List All User Groups on Linux]
 
= groupadd, chgrp, usermod, ACL (access control lists) =
* [https://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/howto-linux-add-user-to-group/ Linux Add User To Group Using Command-Line]: '''useradd'''
* [http://www.tecmint.com/create-a-shared-directory-in-linux/ Create a Shared Directory for All Users in Linux]
* [http://www.tecmint.com/create-a-shared-directory-in-linux/ Create a Shared Directory for All Users in Linux]
* [https://www.tecmint.com/give-read-write-access-to-directory-in-linux/ Assign Read/Write Access to a User on Specific Directory in Linux]
* [https://www.tecmint.com/give-read-write-access-to-directory-in-linux/ Assign Read/Write Access to a User on Specific Directory in Linux]
* [https://www.howtoforge.com/linux-chgrp-command/ Linux Chgrp Command for Beginners (5 Examples)]
* [https://www.howtoforge.com/linux-chgrp-command/ Linux Chgrp Command for Beginners (5 Examples)]


<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
{{Pre}}
sudo mkdir -p /var/www/reports/
sudo mkdir -p /var/www/reports/
sudo groupadd project  
sudo groupadd project  
Line 2,888: Line 3,093:
sudo chgrp -R project /var/www/reports/
sudo chgrp -R project /var/www/reports/
sudo chmod -R 2775 /var/www/reports/
sudo chmod -R 2775 /var/www/reports/
</syntaxhighlight>
</pre>


create more system users and add them to the directory group as follows:
create more system users and add them to the directory group as follows:
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
{{Pre}}
sudo useradd -m -c "Aaron" -s/bin/bash -G project aaron
sudo useradd -m -c "Aaron" -s/bin/bash -G project aaron
sudo useradd -m -c "John" -s/bin/bash -G project john
sudo useradd -m -c "John" -s/bin/bash -G project john
Line 2,899: Line 3,104:
sudo mkdir -p /var/www/reports/john_reports
sudo mkdir -p /var/www/reports/john_reports
sudo mkdir -p /var/www/reports/ravi_reports
sudo mkdir -p /var/www/reports/ravi_reports
</syntaxhighlight>
</pre>
 
== See who's in a group ==
<pre>
grep '^group_name_here:' /etc/group
 
finger USERNAME # See more detail about a user
</pre>


== Add a standard user to '''sudo''' group ==
== Add a standard user to '''sudo''' group ==
This is useful on Debian distribution where a new user does not have the sudo power. First log in as root,
This is useful on Debian distribution where a new user does not have the sudo power. First log in as root,
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
{{Pre}}
# usermod -aG sudo username
# usermod -aG sudo username
</syntaxhighlight>
</pre>


= Shared library management =
= Shared library management =
Line 2,916: Line 3,128:


= Log files =
= Log files =
[https://www.digitalocean.com/community/articles/how-to-view-and-configure-linux-logs-on-ubuntu-and-centos DigitalOcean]
* [https://www.digitalocean.com/community/articles/how-to-view-and-configure-linux-logs-on-ubuntu-and-centos DigitalOcean]
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
* [https://www.debugpoint.com/2021/08/monitor-log-files-real-time/ How to Monitor Log Files in Real Time in Linux [Desktop and Server]]
{{Pre}}
$ ls -lt /var/log
$ ls -lt /var/log
</syntaxhighlight>
</pre>


== ssh log files: '''/var/log/auth.log''' ==
== ssh log files: '''/var/log/auth.log''' ==
* /var/log/syslog
* /var/log/syslog: it is useful to use '''tail -f /var/log/syslog''' to show the log in real time
* /var/log/auth.log: it includes ssh log in information and lots of CRON sessions opened and closed ''every minutes''.
* /var/log/auth.log: it includes ssh log in information and lots of CRON sessions opened and closed ''every minutes''.


Line 2,929: Line 3,142:
* [https://ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=1256801 remove cron from /var/log/auth.log]
* [https://ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=1256801 remove cron from /var/log/auth.log]
* [https://www.linuxquestions.org/questions/linux-security-4/what-the-%24-%40-is-pam_unix-cron-session-doing-every-ten-minutes-var-log-auth-log-702381/ What the %$#@ is pam_unix (cron:session) doing every ten minutes? (/var/log/auth.log)]
* [https://www.linuxquestions.org/questions/linux-security-4/what-the-%24-%40-is-pam_unix-cron-session-doing-every-ten-minutes-var-log-auth-log-702381/ What the %$#@ is pam_unix (cron:session) doing every ten minutes? (/var/log/auth.log)]
== lnav (The Logfile Navigator) ==
[https://www.debugpoint.com/monitor-log-files-real-time/ How to Monitor Log Files in Real Time in Linux (Desktop and Server) ]. '''sudo apt install lnav; sudo lnav'''


== Apache log ==
== Apache log ==
Line 2,939: Line 3,155:
== mail ==
== mail ==
/var/log/maillog
/var/log/maillog
== Logrotate ==
[https://www.cloudsavvyit.com/176/how-to-setup-logrotate-on-linux-to-keep-your-server-from-running-out-of-space/ How to Setup Logrotate on Linux (to Keep Your Server from Running Out of Space)]
= uprecords command =
* [https://linuxtldr.com/uprecords-command/ Check the Linux Uptime History Using the Uprecords]
* [https://linuxhandbook.com/uptime-command/ How to Check Uptime of Your Linux Server]


= '''uptime''' command =
= '''uptime''' command =
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
{{Pre}}
uptime
uptime
watch -n 60 uptime
watch -n 60 uptime
</syntaxhighlight>
</pre>
 
Windows
* [https://www.windowscentral.com/how-check-your-computer-uptime-windows-10#check_pc_uptime_cmd How to check PC uptime using Command Prompt]
* [https://www.bettertechtips.com/windows/check-uptime-windows-10/ 4 Ways to Check the System Uptime in Windows 10]
* [https://mivilisnet.wordpress.com/2017/07/21/how-to-find-the-windows-system-uptime-using-the-command-line/ How to find the Windows system uptime using the command line]
 
== Find out from the logs what caused system shutdown? ==
[https://unix.stackexchange.com/a/10522 How to find out from the logs what caused system shutdown?]
 
== Get notified when a system is rebooted ==
[https://atinkerersblog.wordpress.com/2014/07/26/get-notified-when-your-raspberry-pi-is-booted-with-pushbullet/ Get Notified When Your Raspberry Pi is Booted with Pushbullet]. This makes use of '''/etc/rc.local''' file. If it does not work, we can use cron to run a command at startup; see [[Raspberry#Sending_an_email_on_boot|sending an email on boot]].


= '''timeout''' command =
= '''timeout''' command =
Line 2,951: Line 3,185:


= Linux command similar to ''top'' to show hard disk activity =
= Linux command similar to ''top'' to show hard disk activity =
Use '''iotop'''. On ubuntu, we can use sudo apt-get install to install it. Use '''sudo iotop''' to launch it.
Use '''iotop'''. On ubuntu, we can use sudo apt-get install to install it. Use '''sudo iotop''' to launch it. Use '''-o''' to show processes that are actually doing IO.
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
{{Pre}}
sudo apt-get install iotop
sudo apt-get install iotop


sudo iotop -o -u $USER
sudo iotop -o -u $USER
</syntaxhighlight>
</pre>


Another program is '''iostat''' and the '''-d''' (disk) option. The '''-x''' option will display extension I/O status.
Another program is '''iostat''' and the '''-d''' (disk) option. The '''-x''' option will display extension I/O status.
Line 2,975: Line 3,209:
[http://www.2daygeek.com/aria2-command-line-download-utility-tool/ aria2 command examples]
[http://www.2daygeek.com/aria2-command-line-download-utility-tool/ aria2 command examples]


The '''-x''' argument helps a little bit.
The '''-x''' argument helps a little bit. Download a file 112MB; see https://www.archlinux.org/download/
<pre>
<pre style="white-space: pre-wrap; /* CSS 3 */ white-space: -moz-pre-wrap; /* Mozilla, since 1999 */ white-space: -pre-wrap; /* Opera 4-6 */ white-space: -o-pre-wrap; /* Opera 7 */ word-wrap: break-word; /* IE 5.5+ */ " >
# Download a file 112MB; see https://www.archlinux.org/download/
$ time aria2c  http://mirror.jmu.edu/pub/archlinux/iso/2016.11.01/archlinux-bootstrap-2016.11.01-i686.tar.gz # 16 seconds
$ time aria2c  http://mirror.jmu.edu/pub/archlinux/iso/2016.11.01/archlinux-bootstrap-2016.11.01-i686.tar.gz # 16 seconds
$ time aria2c -x10 http://mirror.jmu.edu/pub/archlinux/iso/2016.11.01/archlinux-bootstrap-2016.11.01-i686.tar.gz # 11 seconds
$ time aria2c -x10 http://mirror.jmu.edu/pub/archlinux/iso/2016.11.01/archlinux-bootstrap-2016.11.01-i686.tar.gz # 11 seconds
Line 2,996: Line 3,229:


For example [https://groups.google.com/forum/#!topic/tuxedo-tools-users/BVNDDmInU0A Tophat 2.0.12 compatibility with Samtools 1.0],
For example [https://groups.google.com/forum/#!topic/tuxedo-tools-users/BVNDDmInU0A Tophat 2.0.12 compatibility with Samtools 1.0],
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
{{Pre}}
$ ls
$ ls
support_for_tophat_1.patch  tophat-2.0.12  tophat-2.0.12.tar.gz
support_for_tophat_1.patch  tophat-2.0.12  tophat-2.0.12.tar.gz
Line 3,010: Line 3,243:
Hunk #1 succeeded at 1540 (offset 3 lines).
Hunk #1 succeeded at 1540 (offset 3 lines).
Hunk #2 succeeded at 1563 (offset 3 lines).
Hunk #2 succeeded at 1563 (offset 3 lines).
</syntaxhighlight>
</pre>


= IP address fundamental =
= IP address fundamental =
Line 3,016: Line 3,249:


There are three classes for private IP ranges.
There are three classes for private IP ranges.
* 10.0.0.1 – 10.255.255.254 from Class A
* 1-126.0.0.0 from Class A
* 172.16.0.1 – 172.31.255.254 from Class B
* 128-191.0.0.0 from Class B
* 192.168.0.1 – 192.168.255.254 from Class C
* 192-223.0.0.0 from Class C


[[#Subnet|Subnet]]
[[#Subnet|Subnet]]
= Gateway IP address =
[https://ostechnix.com/find-default-gateway-linux/ How To Find Default Gateway IP Address In Linux And Unix From Commandline]


= Get internal IP address =
= Get internal IP address =
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
{{Pre}}
$ hostname -I
$ hostname -I
</syntaxhighlight>
 
$ ifconfig  # also works on Android through Termux
</pre>
* https://www.raspberrypi.org/documentation/remote-access/ip-address.md
* https://www.raspberrypi.org/documentation/remote-access/ip-address.md
== Private/internal/local IP/network ==
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IPv4#Private_networks
* 10.0.0.0 – 10.255.255.255
* 172.16.0.0 – 172.31.255.255
* 192.168.0.0 – 192.168.255.255


= Get external IP address =
= Get external IP address =
Using a browser: Google.com and type "my ip"
[https://opensource.com/article/18/5/how-find-ip-address-linux How to find your IP address in Linux]
[https://opensource.com/article/18/5/how-find-ip-address-linux How to find your IP address in Linux]


https://www.iplocation.net or https://www.ipify.org/
[https://askubuntu.com/a/145017 Command for determining my public IP?] '''wget -qO- https://ipecho.net/plain ; echo '''
 
[https://www.2daygeek.com/linux-command-find-check-domain-ip-address/ 5 Commands to Find the IP Address of a Domain in the Linux Terminal]


https://github.com/jakewmeyer/Geo (one shell script)
https://github.com/jakewmeyer/Geo (one shell script)
[https://www.makeuseof.com/get-public-ip-address-in-linux/ How to Find the Public IP Address on a Linux System]


It seems there is no way to get the external IP address without not using external services.  
It seems there is no way to get the external IP address without not using external services.  
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
{{Pre}}
# http://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/22615/how-can-i-get-my-external-ip-address-in-a-shell-script
host myip.opendns.com resolver1.opendns.com
# Look for the bottom line output  myip.opendns.com has address XXX.XX.XX.XXX
 
# https://unix.stackexchange.com/a/81699
sudo apt-get install dnsutils
sudo apt-get install dnsutils
dig +short myip.opendns.com @resolver1.opendns.com
dig +short myip.opendns.com @resolver1.opendns.com
# OR
# OR
curl ifconfig.me  # by google
                # also works on Android through Termux
#
curl http://ipecho.net/plain; echo
curl http://ipecho.net/plain; echo
# OR
# OR
curl ipv4.ipogre.com   
curl ipv4.ipogre.com   
</syntaxhighlight>
</pre>
To store my IP in a shell variable  
To store my IP in a shell variable  
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
{{Pre}}
myip="$(dig +short myip.opendns.com @resolver1.opendns.com)"
myip="$(dig +short myip.opendns.com @resolver1.opendns.com)"
echo "My WAN/Public IP address: ${myip}"
echo "My WAN/Public IP address: ${myip}"
</syntaxhighlight>
</pre>


The above only gives the IP. The following method gives geo information too.  
The above only gives the IP. The following method gives geo information too.  
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
{{Pre}}
curl ipinfo.io # ifconfig.me, icanhazip.com, ipecho.net/plain, ifconfig.co
curl ipinfo.io # ifconfig.me, icanhazip.com, ipecho.net/plain, ifconfig.co
# OR give a specific IP (domain name does not work)
# OR give a specific IP (domain name does not work)
Line 3,067: Line 3,324:
   "postal": "94043"
   "postal": "94043"
}
}
</syntaxhighlight>
</pre>


== IP geolocation ==
== IP geolocation ==
Test url: ubuntu.mirrors.pair.com
Test url: ubuntu.mirrors.pair.com
* https://iplocation.net
* command line - input is an IP address
:<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
curl https://ipapi.co/8.8.8.8/json/
curl https://ipinfo.io/8.8.8.8
</syntaxhighlight>
* command line - input is a web address
:<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
IP_ADDRESS=$(dig +short example.com)
curl https://ipapi.co/$IP_ADDRESS/json/
</syntaxhighlight>
* https://www.ipligence.com/geolocation
* https://www.ipligence.com/geolocation
* http://www.ipfingerprints.com/
* http://www.ipfingerprints.com/
* http://ip-api.com/ (it shows your IP, internal IP, OS, browser/user-agent, DNS server from outside?). The final query URL is simple; for example http://ip-api.com/#ubuntu.mirrors.pair.com
* http://ip-api.com/ (it shows your IP, internal IP, OS, browser/user-agent, DNS server from outside?). The final query URL is simple; for example http://ip-api.com/#ubuntu.mirrors.pair.com
* https://www.iplocation.net/ (not work)
* http://geobytes.com/iplocator/ (not work)
* [https://ipstack.com/ ipstack]. [https://www.makeuseof.com/tag/ip-geolocation-api-ipstack/ How to Use the IPStack API for IP Geolocation Lookups]. 10,000 searches per month for free.
* [https://ipstack.com/ ipstack]. [https://www.makeuseof.com/tag/ip-geolocation-api-ipstack/ How to Use the IPStack API for IP Geolocation Lookups]. 10,000 searches per month for free.
* [https://www.makeuseof.com/tag/ip-geolocation-api-tool/ The Free IP Geolocation API Is a Valuable Webmaster Tool]
* [https://www.makeuseof.com/tag/ip-geolocation-api-tool/ The Free IP Geolocation API Is a Valuable Webmaster Tool]


= Domain =
= Domain, WHOIS =
* [https://www.whois.net/ WHOIS LOOKUP]. For example, consider "r-pkg.org" domain,  
<ul>
** The 'Sponsoring Registrar' shows who is the sponsoring registrar (eg GoDaddy.com).
<li>[https://www.whois.net/ WHOIS LOOKUP]. For example, consider "r-pkg.org" domain,  
** The 'Registrant Name' shows who registered this domain.
<ul>
** Command Line Interface.  
<li>The 'Sponsoring Registrar' shows who is the sponsoring registrar (eg GoDaddy.com). </li>
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
<li>The 'Registrant Name' shows who registered this domain. </li>
<li>Command Line Interface.  
{{Pre}}
sudo apt-get install whois
sudo apt-get install whois
whois r-pkg.org  
whois r-pkg.org  
</syntaxhighlight>
</pre>
</li>
</ul>
</li>
</ul>
* [https://www.makeuseof.com/best-websites-free-whois-information/ The 9 Best Websites to Look Up WHOIS Information for Free]
* [http://ip-lookup.net/index.php IP-Lookup]. For example, consider "r-pkg.org" domain.  
* [http://ip-lookup.net/index.php IP-Lookup]. For example, consider "r-pkg.org" domain.  
** The linux command line tool 'ping' shows the ip address.  
** The linux command line tool 'ping' shows the ip address.  
Line 3,105: Line 3,379:
In the /16 subnet 192.168.0.0/255.255.0.0, which is equivalent to the address range 192.168.0.0–192.168.255.255
In the /16 subnet 192.168.0.0/255.255.0.0, which is equivalent to the address range 192.168.0.0–192.168.255.255


[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IPv6_subnetting_reference IPv6]
== IPv6 ==
 
* [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IPv6_subnetting_reference IPv6]
* [https://www.linux.com/learn/intro-to-linux/2017/11/testing-ipv6-networking-kvm-part-1 Testing IPv6 Networking in KVM: Part 1]
* [https://www.linux.com/learn/intro-to-linux/2017/11/testing-ipv6-networking-kvm-part-1 Testing IPv6 Networking in KVM: Part 1]
* [https://www.cloudsavvyit.com/3864/should-you-care-about-ipv6-connectivity-for-your-web-server/ Should You Care About IPv6 Connectivity For Your Web Server?]


= ping command =
= ping command =
ping uses the '''ICMP''' Echo Message to force a remote host to echo a packet back to the local host. If packets can travel to and from a remote host, it indicates that the two hosts can successfully communicate.
ping uses the '''ICMP''' Echo Message to force a remote host to echo a packet back to the local host. If packets can travel to and from a remote host, it indicates that the two hosts can successfully communicate.
== Check if a server is up/down if pining to that machine is not allowed ==
Hint: use nmap to scan open ports
<pre>
nmap -PS22 -p22 <hostname> # port 22 only
# OR
nc -z -v <hostname> 22
</pre>
[https://stackoverflow.com/a/34358304 Shell script to check whether a server is reachable?]. I found if a server is up and I am trying a closed port, it will take about 2 minutes before it returns.
<pre>
if nc -z $server 22 2>/dev/null; then
    echo "$server ✓"
else
    echo "$server ✗"
fi
</pre>
[https://www.2daygeek.com/linux-command-check-website-is-up-down-alive/ 6 Methods to Quickly Check if a '''Website''' is up or down from the Linux Terminal]
== Check if Sites are Online using a PHP script ==
[https://www.makeuseof.com/how-to-use-crontab-linux/ How to Use Crontab to Automate Repetitive Tasks in Linux]


= Build a home network =
= Build a home network =
Line 3,147: Line 3,444:
= Monitor network by command line =
= Monitor network by command line =
[https://www.linux.com/learn/intro-to-linux/2017/10/3-simple-excellent-linux-network-monitors 3 Simple, Excellent Linux Network Monitors]: iftop, nethogs and vnstat.
[https://www.linux.com/learn/intro-to-linux/2017/10/3-simple-excellent-linux-network-monitors 3 Simple, Excellent Linux Network Monitors]: iftop, nethogs and vnstat.
== bandwidth ==
[https://www.linuxuprising.com/2020/01/bandwhich-shows-whats-taking-up-your.html bandwhich] Shows What`s Taking Up Your Network Bandwidth On Linux And macOS


== iftop ==
== iftop ==
Line 3,169: Line 3,469:
$ sudo nethogs wlan0
$ sudo nethogs wlan0
</pre>
</pre>
[https://askubuntu.com/q/1131621 Why does the snapd service use so much data?]


== nload ==
== nload ==
Line 3,182: Line 3,483:
https://www.tecmint.com/bmon-network-bandwidth-monitoring-debugging-linux/
https://www.tecmint.com/bmon-network-bandwidth-monitoring-debugging-linux/


== [http://humdi.net/vnstat/ vnstat] ==
== [http://humdi.net/vnstat/ vnstat] for network traffic monitor ==
http://www.thegeekstuff.com/2011/11/vnstat-network-traffic-monitor/
* [https://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/ubuntu-install-vnstat-console-network-traffic-monitor/ Ubuntu install vnstat console network traffic monitor]
* [http://www.thegeekstuff.com/2011/11/vnstat-network-traffic-monitor/ How to Monitor and Log Network Traffic on Linux Using vnStat]
* [https://www.cloudsavvyit.com/5137/how-to-monitor-monthly-bandwidth-usage-in-linux/ How to Monitor Monthly Bandwidth Usage in Linux]


<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
{{Pre}}
# 1. Install vnStat
# 1. Install vnStat
sudo apt-get install vnstat
sudo apt-get install vnstat
Line 3,214: Line 3,517:
# 8. Display Top 10 Traffic Days
# 8. Display Top 10 Traffic Days
vnstat --top10
vnstat --top10
</syntaxhighlight>
</pre>


= Network related linux commands =
= Network related linux commands =
* [https://wiki.linuxfoundation.org/networking/net-tools package includes net-tools programs] arp, hostname, ifconfig, ipmaddr, iptunnel, mii-tool, nameif, netstat, plipconfig, rarp, route and slattach. Many of them are obsoleted by the '''ip''' program.
* [https://www.makeuseof.com/best-networking-tools-replace-old-net-tools-linux/ The 7 Best Networking Tools That Replace the Deprecated net-tools on Linux] 2022


== nmcli and nmtui (useful for getting DNS IPs) ==
== nmcli and nmtui (useful for getting DNS IPs) ==
Line 3,222: Line 3,527:
* [https://www.tecmint.com/configure-network-connections-using-nmcli-tool-in-linux/ How to Configure and Manage Network Connections Using ‘nmcli’ Tool]
* [https://www.tecmint.com/configure-network-connections-using-nmcli-tool-in-linux/ How to Configure and Manage Network Connections Using ‘nmcli’ Tool]
* [https://www.2daygeek.com/enable-disable-up-down-nic-network-interface-port-linux-using-ifconfig-ifdown-ifup-ip-nmcli-nmtui/ How To Enable (UP) And Disable (DOWN) A Network Interface Port (NIC) In Linux?]
* [https://www.2daygeek.com/enable-disable-up-down-nic-network-interface-port-linux-using-ifconfig-ifdown-ifup-ip-nmcli-nmtui/ How To Enable (UP) And Disable (DOWN) A Network Interface Port (NIC) In Linux?]
* [https://opensource.com/article/20/7/nmcli Manage network connections from the Linux command line with nmcli]
* Wifi
<ul>
<li> [https://kifarunix.com/connect-to-wifi-in-linux-using-nmcli-command/ Connect to WiFi in Linux Using NMCLI command]
<pre>
nmcli radio wifi on
nmcli dev status


<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
nmcli dev wifi list # Show signal/bar/rate
sudo nmcli dev wifi rescan
 
sudo nmcli --ask dev wifi connect MySSID
</pre>
<li>[https://www.tecmint.com/nmcli-connect-wi-fi-from-linux-terminal/ How to Connect Wi-Fi from Linux Terminal Using Nmcli Command]
{{Pre}}
# Find the up network adaptors
# Find the up network adaptors
$ nmcli dev status
$ nmcli dev status
Line 3,232: Line 3,550:
# Find the DNS  
# Find the DNS  
$ nmcli dev show | grep 'IP4.DNS'
$ nmcli dev show | grep 'IP4.DNS'
</syntaxhighlight>
</pre>
</ul>
 
== iwconfig ==
[https://www.cyberciti.biz/tips/linux-find-out-wireless-network-speed-signal-strength.html 8 Linux Commands: To Find Out Wireless Network Speed, Signal Strength And Other Information]


== ifconfig - spoof the hardware address at the software level ==
Getting information ('''Link Quality''', '''Signal level''') about the wireless.
<pre>
sudo iwconfig
</pre>
 
See link quality continuously on screen
<pre>
watch -n 1 cat /proc/net/wireless
</pre>
 
== (GUI) NetworkManager ==
ps -ef | grep NetworkManager
 
== ifconfig - spoof the hardware address at the software level ==
To change the MAC address temporarily on a '''NIC''' (network interface controller),
To change the MAC address temporarily on a '''NIC''' (network interface controller),
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
{{Pre}}
sudo ifconfig eth0 down
sudo ifconfig eth0 down
sudo ifconfig eth0 hw ether 00:11:22:33:44:55
sudo ifconfig eth0 hw ether 00:11:22:33:44:55
sudo ifconfig eth0 up
sudo ifconfig eth0 up
</syntaxhighlight>
</pre>
And it seems there is no need to modify /etc/network/interfaces.
And it seems there is no need to modify /etc/network/interfaces.


For wlan
For wlan
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
{{Pre}}
sudo ifconfig wlan0 down
sudo ifconfig wlan0 down
sudo ifconfig wlan0 hw ether 00:11:22:33:44:55
sudo ifconfig wlan0 hw ether 00:11:22:33:44:55
sudo ifconfig wlan0 up
sudo ifconfig wlan0 up
</syntaxhighlight>
</pre>


See
See
Line 3,257: Line 3,592:
== ip command ==
== ip command ==
It is said [http://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/linux-ip-command-examples-usage-syntax/ '''ip''' is replacing the old '''ifconfig''' command on modern Linux distributions].
It is said [http://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/linux-ip-command-examples-usage-syntax/ '''ip''' is replacing the old '''ifconfig''' command on modern Linux distributions].
[https://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/linux-ip-command-examples-usage-syntax/# Linux ip Command Examples]


http://www.makeuseof.com/tag/networking-commands-linux-terminal/
http://www.makeuseof.com/tag/networking-commands-linux-terminal/
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
{{Pre}}
ip a
ip a
ip addr
ip addr
Line 3,267: Line 3,604:


ip link set DEVICE up
ip link set DEVICE up
</syntaxhighlight>
</pre>


== iptables ==
== iptables ==
Line 3,285: Line 3,622:


On Ubuntu 16.04, it shows
On Ubuntu 16.04, it shows
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
{{Pre}}
$ route
$ route
Kernel IP routing table
Kernel IP routing table
Line 3,298: Line 3,635:
169.254.0.0    0.0.0.0        255.255.0.0    U    1000  0        0 wlp3s0
169.254.0.0    0.0.0.0        255.255.0.0    U    1000  0        0 wlp3s0
192.168.1.0    0.0.0.0        255.255.255.0  U    600    0        0 wlp3s0
192.168.1.0    0.0.0.0        255.255.255.0  U    600    0        0 wlp3s0
</syntaxhighlight>
</pre>
Flag value 'U' means ''up'' and 'G' means ''gateway'.
Flag value 'U' means ''up'' and 'G' means ''gateway'.


Line 3,313: Line 3,650:


The following command will solve the problem that PC1 cannot access PC2:
The following command will solve the problem that PC1 cannot access PC2:
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
{{Pre}}
# From PC1
# From PC1
$ sudo route add -net 192.168.2.0 netmask 255.255.255.0 gw 192.168.1.ASUS
$ sudo route add -net 192.168.2.0 netmask 255.255.255.0 gw 192.168.1.ASUS
Line 3,324: Line 3,661:
192.168.1.0    0.0.0.0        255.255.255.0  U        0 0          0 eth0
192.168.1.0    0.0.0.0        255.255.255.0  U        0 0          0 eth0
192.168.2.0    192.168.1.ASUS  255.255.255.0  UG        0 0          0 eth0
192.168.2.0    192.168.1.ASUS  255.255.255.0  UG        0 0          0 eth0
</syntaxhighlight>
</pre>


[https://www.linux.com/learn/intro-to-linux/2018/3/linux-lan-routing-beginners-part-2 One article] from linux.com using the '''ip''' command.
[https://www.linux.com/learn/intro-to-linux/2018/3/linux-lan-routing-beginners-part-2 One article] from linux.com using the '''ip''' command.


== traceroute ==
== traceroute ==
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
{{Pre}}
sudo apt-get install traceroute
sudo apt-get install traceroute
traceroute 8.8.8.8
traceroute 8.8.8.8
</syntaxhighlight>
</pre>


On Windows, we can use the '''tracert''' command. For example, '''tracert www.microsoft.com'''.
On Windows, we can use the '''tracert''' command. For example, '''tracert www.microsoft.com'''.


== netstat: get a list of all open port ==
== nslookup (convert between hostname and ip) and host ==
[https://www.ghacks.net/2018/03/21/how-to-use-netstat-in-gnu-linux/ How to use netstat in GNU/Linux]
* https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nslookup
* https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Host_(Unix)
* [https://stackoverflow.com/a/24196970 How to get hostname from IP (Linux)?]


*    -l or --listening shows only the sockets currently listening for incoming connection.
{{Pre}}
*    -a or --all shows all sockets currently in use.
$ host google.com
*    -e    --show extended/additional information
google.com has address 172.217.5.238
*    -t or --tcp shows the tcp sockets.
google.com has IPv6 address 2607:f8b0:4004:802::200e
*    -u or --udp shows the udp sockets.
google.com mail is handled by 30 alt2.aspmx.l.google.com.
*    -n or --numeric shows the hosts and ports as numbers, instead of resolving in dns and looking in /etc/services.
google.com mail is handled by 10 aspmx.l.google.com.
*    -s    --Print network stats
google.com mail is handled by 40 alt3.aspmx.l.google.com.
*    -r    --Print the network routing information
google.com mail is handled by 50 alt4.aspmx.l.google.com.
*    -p    --Print PID and name of the program to which each socket belongs
google.com mail is handled by 20 alt1.aspmx.l.google.com.
 
$ nslookup google.com
Server:        127.0.1.1
Address:        127.0.1.1#53


<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
Non-authoritative answer:
netstat -l            # only listening ports
Name:  google.com
netstat -rn            # displays the system's routing table
Address: 172.217.7.238
netstat -at
</pre>
netstat -ant          # For tcp
<pre>
sudo netstat -pant    # show ports and programs (pant = 喘氣). Best of the best!!!
mac$ nslookup cran.r-project.org
sudo netstat -peanut  # (output is too wide)
Server: 156.40.70.10
netstat -anp | grep 3306 | wc -l  # print the number of connections for the port mysql port i.e. 3306.
Address: 156.40.70.10#53
</syntaxhighlight>


Other commands
Non-authoritative answer:
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
cran.r-project.org canonical name = cran.wu-wien.ac.at.
sudo lsof -i -P -n | grep LISTEN
Name: cran.wu-wien.ac.at
sudo ss -tulpn
Address: 137.208.57.37
sudo netstat -tulpn
</syntaxhighlight>


== nmap - port scanning & IPs in local network ==
mac$ nslookup 137.208.57.37
nmap - Network exploration tool and security / port scanner
Server: 156.40.70.10
* https://nmap.org/book/nmap-os-db.html. Local OS database is located at '''/usr/share/nmap/nmap-os-db'''. The 2nd line will show the revision number.  
Address: 156.40.70.10#53
** Modifying the nmap-os-db Database Yourself
** Download the latest from https://svn.nmap.org/nmap/nmap-os-db. Note that the current revision number has to be found from the [https://svn.nmap.org/nmap/ website]. You can edit the file and insert the revision number on the 2nd line of your local copy.
** Even I update the database, it cannot detect my Ubuntu 14.04 OS (it only shows OS details: Linux 3.8 - 4.9). For the Raspberry Pi, it can show information from the network adapter; e.g. MAC Address: AA:BB:CC:DD:EE:FF (Raspberry Pi Foundation) but not the OS name (OS details: Linux 3.2 - 4.8).
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
sudo mv /usr/share/nmap/nmap-os-db /usr/share/nmap/nmap-os-db-old


cd /usr/share/nmap
Non-authoritative answer:
sudo wget https://svn.nmap.org/nmap/nmap-os-db
37.57.208.137.in-addr.arpa name = cran.wu-wien.ac.at.
</syntaxhighlight>
</pre>
* http://www.cyberciti.biz/networking/nmap-command-examples-tutorials/
* http://bencane.com/2013/02/25/10-nmap-commands-every-sysadmin-should-know/
* http://www.tecmint.com/nmap-command-examples/
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
sudo apt-get install nmap


nmap 192.168.1.100  # does not require root privileges
The first two lines show the IP address of my DNS. If we run the command inside a Docker container where DNS was specified manually, the IP address we specified will be shown here.
                    # used to check open ports


nmap 192.168.1.*    # show IPs and ports in LAN
== dig ==
[https://toolbox.googleapps.com/apps/dig/ Dig] provided by Google G Suite Toolbox. If the office internet is interrupted, we can use a cell phone to search for the IP address of a website for trouble shooting.  


sudo nmap -sP 192.168.1.1/24 # show connected IPs (no hostnames?) and MAC addresses
{{Pre}}
                            # If you don't use 'sudo' only partial devices can be found
$ sudo apt-get install dnsutils
                            # The output may contains the hostname. For example,
$ dig world.std.com
                            # Nmap scan report for brb-P45T-A.fios-router.home (192.168.1.xxx)
; <<>> DiG 9.9.5-3ubuntu0.16-Ubuntu <<>> google.com
nmap -sV 192.168.1.1 # show Daemon name (in VERSION column) together with port number
;; global options: +cmd
;; Got answer:
;; ->>HEADER<<- opcode: QUERY, status: NOERROR, id: 49227
;; flags: qr rd ra; QUERY: 1, ANSWER: 1, AUTHORITY: 0, ADDITIONAL: 1


nmap -T4 -F 192.168.1.99-255 # show connected IPs and open ports
;; OPT PSEUDOSECTION:
                            # -F means fast
; EDNS: version: 0, flags:; udp: 512
nmap -F taichimd.us  # Note that domain name != server
;; QUESTION SECTION:
nmap -v taichimd.us
;google.com.                   IN      A


nmap -A 192.168.1.1  # Aggressive scan (more output)
;; ANSWER SECTION:
google.com.            130    IN      A       172.217.5.238


nmap -p http,ssh,mysql taichimd.us  # scan ports/services
;; Query time: 11 msec
                                    # note that mysql will be shown as closed
;; SERVER: 127.0.1.1#53(127.0.1.1)
                                    # ssh port is not correct.
;; WHEN: Fri Dec 01 17:32:37 EST 2017
                                    # Not sure how to get the correct ssh port using nmap
;; MSG SIZE  rcvd: 55
nmap --open taichimd.us  # scan open ports
</pre>


sudo nmap -traceroute nih.gov
== arp (Address Resolution Protocol) ==
The '''arp ''' command can be used to show the MAC addresss of all hosts in LAN
{{Pre}}
arp -a
</pre>


sudo nmap -sS -O 192.168.1.99 # -O shows operating system
== Check connectivity ==
                              # eth0 MAC
[https://twitter.com/droy_eclipse/status/1456286541005852682?s=20 Using bash tcp built-ins to test connectivity] when nothing else is available:
<pre>
echo >/dev/tcp/google.com/80;
if [ $? -eq 0 ]; then echo "Connection Successful"; fi
</pre>


$ nmap localhost # showing the true ports from the server
= Find open ports =


Starting Nmap 7.01 ( https://nmap.org ) at 2017-10-09 15:01 EDT
{| class="wikitable"
Nmap scan report for localhost (127.0.0.1)
! command
Host is up (0.00016s latency).
! example
Not shown: 996 closed ports
! comment
PORT    STATE SERVICE
|-
22/tcp  open  ssh
| ss
25/tcp  open  smtp
| ss -lnt <br />
80/tcp  open  http
sudo ss -tulpn &#124; grep LISTEN
631/tcp open  ipp
| contain pid, <br />
</syntaxhighlight>
add "sudo" can show program/command names on the last column
|-
| lsof
| sudo lsof -i -P -n &#124; egrep "PID&#124;LISTEN"
| '''sudo''' is required. Contain pid. Using '''egrep''' to include header in output. It includes the command/program names on the first column.
|-
| '''nmap''' (network mapper)
| nmap localhost (OR IP)
| '''shortest output and input'''. Need to install. No 'sudo' needed. Works on non local.
|-
| netstat <br />
(old '' 'net-tools' '')
| netstat -tlpn &#124; grep LISTEN &#124; awk '{print $4 "\t" $7}'
| show pid and program name. Need to install netstat. '''Windows already has it'''.
|-
| nc
| nc -zvw3 <hostname> <port>
| need to specify a port number. More accurate than '''nmap'''. "-w3" means time out after 3 seconds.
|}


A gui version of nmap is called '''[https://nmap.org/zenmap/ Zenmap]'''.
== What are network interface ports ==
[https://www.howtoforge.com/understanding-network-interface-ports-in-linux Understanding Network Interface Ports in Linux]. In networking, the term "port" can refer to different concepts depending on the context:
* Hardware Ports:
* Software Ports: These are '''virtual endpoints''' in an operating system used by '''network protocols''' to manage '''connections'''. Software ports are identified by a number, ranging from 0 to 65535. For example, port 80 is used for HTTP, and port 443 is used for HTTPS.


[https://phoenixnap.com/kb/nmap-scan-open-ports A List of Common Ports]
== Socket ==
[https://www.cloudsavvyit.com/1263/what-are-unix-sockets-and-how-do-they-work/ What Are Unix Sockets and How Do They Work]


== nslookup and host ==
== nmap/network mapper - port scanning & IPs in local network ==
* https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nslookup
[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nmap nmap] - Network exploration tool and security / port scanner
* https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Host_(Unix)
<ul>
<li>[https://stackoverflow.com/a/30746873 nmap does not show all open ports] By default, Nmap scans [https://nmap.org/book/man-port-specification.html the most common 1,000 ports] for each protocol. </li>
<li>https://nmap.org/book/nmap-os-db.html. Local OS database is located at '''/usr/share/nmap/nmap-os-db'''. The 2nd line will show the revision number.
<ul>
<li>Modifying the nmap-os-db Database Yourself </li>
<li>Download the latest from https://svn.nmap.org/nmap/nmap-os-db. Note that the current revision number has to be found from the [https://svn.nmap.org/nmap/ website]. You can edit the file and insert the revision number on the 2nd line of your local copy. </li>
<li>Even I update the database, it cannot detect my Ubuntu 14.04 OS (it only shows OS details: Linux 3.8 - 4.9). For the Raspberry Pi, it can show information from the network adapter; e.g. MAC Address: AA:BB:CC:DD:EE:FF (Raspberry Pi Foundation) but not the OS name (OS details: Linux 3.2 - 4.8).
{{Pre}}
sudo mv /usr/share/nmap/nmap-os-db /usr/share/nmap/nmap-os-db-old


<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
cd /usr/share/nmap
$ host google.com
sudo wget https://svn.nmap.org/nmap/nmap-os-db
google.com has address 172.217.5.238
</pre>
google.com has IPv6 address 2607:f8b0:4004:802::200e
</li>
google.com mail is handled by 30 alt2.aspmx.l.google.com.
</ul>
google.com mail is handled by 10 aspmx.l.google.com.
</li>
google.com mail is handled by 40 alt3.aspmx.l.google.com.
<li>http://www.cyberciti.biz/networking/nmap-command-examples-tutorials/
google.com mail is handled by 50 alt4.aspmx.l.google.com.
</li>
google.com mail is handled by 20 alt1.aspmx.l.google.com.
<li>http://bencane.com/2013/02/25/10-nmap-commands-every-sysadmin-should-know/
</li>
<li>http://www.tecmint.com/nmap-command-examples/
{{Pre}}
sudo apt-get install nmap


$ nslookup google.com
nmap 192.168.1.100  # does not require root privileges
Server:        127.0.1.1
                    # used to check open ports
Address:        127.0.1.1#53


Non-authoritative answer:
nmap 192.168.1.*    # show IPs and ports in LAN
Name:  google.com
Address: 172.217.7.238
</syntaxhighlight>


The first two lines show the IP address of my DNS. If we run the command inside a Docker container where DNS was specified manually, the IP address we specified will be shown here.
sudo nmap -sP 192.168.1.1/24 # show connected IPs (no hostnames?) and MAC addresses
                            # If you don't use 'sudo' only partial devices can be found
                            # The output may contains the hostname. For example,
                            # Nmap scan report for brb-P45T-A.fios-router.home (192.168.1.xxx)
nmap -sV 192.168.1.1 # show Daemon name (in VERSION column) together with port number


== dig ==
nmap -T4 -F 192.168.1.99-255 # show connected IPs and open ports
[https://toolbox.googleapps.com/apps/dig/ Dig] provided by Google G Suite Toolbox. If the office internet is interrupted, we can use a cell phone to search for the IP address of a website for trouble shooting. Other providers include [http://www.kloth.net/services/dig.php kloth.net].
                            # -F means fast
nmap -F taichimd.us  # Note that domain name != server
nmap -v taichimd.us


<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
nmap -A 192.168.1.1 # Aggressive scan (more output)
$ dig world.std.com
; <<>> DiG 9.9.5-3ubuntu0.16-Ubuntu <<>> google.com
;; global options: +cmd
;; Got answer:
;; ->>HEADER<<- opcode: QUERY, status: NOERROR, id: 49227
;; flags: qr rd ra; QUERY: 1, ANSWER: 1, AUTHORITY: 0, ADDITIONAL: 1


;; OPT PSEUDOSECTION:
nmap -p http,ssh,mysql taichimd.us  # scan ports/services
; EDNS: version: 0, flags:; udp: 512
                                    # note that mysql will be shown as closed
;; QUESTION SECTION:
                                    # ssh port is not correct.  
;google.com.                   IN      A
                                    # Not sure how to get the correct ssh port using nmap
nmap --open taichimd.us  # scan open ports


;; ANSWER SECTION:
sudo nmap -traceroute nih.gov
google.com.            130    IN      A      172.217.5.238


;; Query time: 11 msec
sudo nmap -sS -O 192.168.1.99 # -O shows operating system
;; SERVER: 127.0.1.1#53(127.0.1.1)
                              # eth0 MAC
;; WHEN: Fri Dec 01 17:32:37 EST 2017
;; MSG SIZE  rcvd: 55
</syntaxhighlight>


== arp (Address Resolution Protocol) ==
$ nmap localhost # showing the true ports from the server
The '''arp ''' command can be used to show the MAC addresss of all hosts in LAN
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
arp -a
</syntaxhighlight>


= Copy text to a clipboard to be used in other apps =
Starting Nmap 7.01 ( https://nmap.org ) at 2017-10-09 15:01 EDT
Install the '''xclip''' program. See [http://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/xclip-linux-insert-files-command-output-intoclipboard/ here] or [http://stackoverflow.com/questions/5130968/how-can-i-copy-the-output-of-a-command-directly-into-my-clipboard here].  
Nmap scan report for localhost (127.0.0.1)
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
Host is up (0.00016s latency).
sudo apt-get install xclip
Not shown: 996 closed ports
# Examples
PORT    STATE SERVICE
sort -n -k 3, -k 2 file.txt | xclip -selection clipboard
22/tcp  open  ssh
25/tcp  open  smtp
80/tcp  open  http
631/tcp open  ipp


cat ~/.ssh/id_rsa.pub | xclip -sel clip
$ nmap localhost -p 3838-4000  # Shiny
</syntaxhighlight>
Works.
 
= Start Emacs without X =
Add '''-nw''' (no window) option.
<pre>
emacs -nw
</pre>
</pre>
</li>
<li>A gui version of nmap is called '''[https://nmap.org/zenmap/ Zenmap]'''. [https://www.how2shout.com/linux/install-zenmap-nmap-gui-on-ubuntu-20-04-lts-linux/ How to install Zenmap Nmap GUI on Ubuntu 20.04 LTS]</li>
</ul>


= Audio =
== netstat: get a list of all open ports ==
== Record audio from mic ==
[https://www.ghacks.net/2018/03/21/how-to-use-netstat-in-gnu-linux/ How to use netstat in GNU/Linux]
[https://lifehacker.com/how-to-save-important-voicemails-for-both-iphone-and-an-1833241417 How to Save Important Voicemails for Both iPhone and Android]. Hint: use Audacity.
 
*    -l or --listening shows only the sockets currently listening for incoming connection.
*    -a or --all shows all sockets currently in use.
*    -e    --show extended/additional information
*    -t or --tcp shows the tcp sockets.
*    -u or --udp shows the udp sockets.
*    -n or --numeric shows the hosts and ports as numbers, instead of resolving in dns and looking in /etc/services.
*    -s    --Print network stats
*    -r    --Print the network routing information
*    -p    --Print PID and name of the program to which each socket belongs


== mp3 codecs ==
{{Pre}}
https://help.ubuntu.com/community/RestrictedFormats
netstat -l            # only listening ports
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
netstat -rn            # displays the system's routing table
sudo apt-get install ubuntu-restricted-extras
netstat -at
</syntaxhighlight>
netstat -ant          # For tcp
sudo netstat -pant    # show ports and programs (pant = 喘氣). Best of the best!!!
sudo netstat -peanut  # (output is too wide)
netstat -anp | grep 3306 | wc -l  # print # of connections for the port mysql port
</pre>


== Concatenate mp3 files ==
Other commands
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
{{Pre}}
sudo apt-get install mp3wrap
sudo lsof -i -P -n | grep LISTEN
mp3wrap output.mp3 *.mp3
sudo ss -tulpn
</syntaxhighlight>
sudo netstat -tulpn | grep LISTEN
sudo netstat -tulpn  # include dhcpcd & avahi-daemon
</pre>


== Reduce the size of an mp3 file ==
== ss command ==
Specify a new lower bitrate using the -b option in '''lame'''. For example if your starting mp3 has a quality of 256kbs you can lower its bitrate to 128kbps (or even lower like 64kbps) by:
ss is one of [https://www.2daygeek.com/linux-scan-check-open-ports-using-netstat-ss-nmap/ 4 commands to check open ports for Linux]. The 4 commands are '''netstat''', '''nmap''', '''ss''' and '''lsof'''.  
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
lame --mp3input -b 128 input.mp3 output.mp3
</syntaxhighlight>


== Convert ogg to mp3 ==
[https://www.howtogeek.com/681468/how-to-use-the-ss-command-on-linux/ How to Use the ss Command on Linux]
'''ffmpeg''' is not included in Ubuntu repository. Use the '''avconv''' command. http://superuser.com/questions/15327/how-to-convert-ogg-to-mp3
 
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
== lsof command ==
sudo apt-get install libav-tools
[https://www.cloudsavvyit.com/13145/how-to-use-lsof-in-linux-with-a-practical-example/ How to Use lsof in Linux (With a Practical Example]. How to discover what files are currently open and in use on your system?
avconv -i input.ogg -c:a libmp3lame -q:a 2 output.mp3
</syntaxhighlight>


== Convert m4a/webm to mp3 ==
<pre>
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
# Basic lsof Output
avconv -i input.m4a output.mp3
sudo su
</syntaxhighlight>
lsof | head -n10


== Remove the vocals from any song using Audacity ==
lsof -i  # this gives a more list than nmap command
https://www.makeuseof.com/tag/remove-vocals-song-audacity/
</pre>


== Normalize the volume of an audio file ==
== Common ports ==
* [http://www.howtogeek.com/280739/can-you-losslessly-increase-the-volume-of-mp3-files/ Can You Losslessly Increase the Volume of MP3 Files?]
* [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_TCP_and_UDP_port_numbers List of TCP and UDP port numbers]
* Use [http://www.thebest3d.com/audacity/tutorials/make-louder/audacity-tutorial-make-louder-more-volume-increased-amplitude.html Audacity]. To raise (Amplify) volume:  
** Well-known ports: 0 to 1023
*# Edit > Select All.
** Registered ports: 1024 to 49151
*# Effect > Amplify. Increase db. Adjust the sound until the highest peaks and lowest valleys of the waveform reach the top and bottom of the window.
** Dynamic, private or ephemeral ports: 49152–65535
*# Check clip3. Export > MP3 or just start to listen.
* [https://phoenixnap.com/kb/nmap-scan-open-ports A List of Common Ports]
* Command line tool: [https://libav.org/avconv.html avconv] (replace '''ffmpeg''' program). See [http://gfxile.net/z/?p=1343 this post].
* Replace the default port (such as 22 for ssh) with anyone from 1024-65535 because ports numbers up to 1023 are “well known” ports & should be avoided
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
* Some services:
avconv -ss 00:00:10 -i OLD.mp3 -vol 2560 NEW.mp3
** 81: [https://nginxproxymanager.com/ Nginx Proxy Manager]
</syntaxhighlight>
** 1194: OpenVPN
The anconv/ffmpeg -vol parameter amplifies the sound. The default value is 256 (no amplification), and you can adjust the number accordingly. Here it’s 2560, as it’s 10 times louder. Note that these are not decibel values or anything that sophisticated, but just an integer value. 512 equals to twice the volume, 768 three times, 1024 four times, etc. The -ss parameter specifies the start time offset. Here it will skip the first 10 seconds.
** 3306: MYSQL
* Command line tool: [http://sox.sourceforge.net/ sox].
** 3838: Shiny
** http://askubuntu.com/questions/246242/how-to-normalize-sound-in-mp3-files
** 8000: [https://github.com/portainer/portainer-docs/issues/91 portainer]
** http://www.linuxandlife.com/2013/03/how-to-use-sox-audio-editing.html
** 9000: portainer (URL)
** http://digitalcardboard.com/blog/2009/08/25/the-sox-of-silence/ deal with several kinds of silence.
** 9090: cockpit
** http://www.thegeekstuff.com/2009/05/sound-exchange-sox-15-examples-to-manipulate-audio-files/
** 17500, 17600, 17603: [https://help.dropbox.com/installs-integrations/desktop/configuring-firewall Dropbox]
I found the converted file by sox has about one half file size compared to anconv/ffmpeg program (source file=47MB, anconv converted=135MB, sox converted file=54MB).
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
sudo apt-get install sox libsox-fmt-all
sox --norm OLD.mp3 NEW.mp3 trim 10
sox --norm OLD.mp3 NEW.mp3 silence 1 0.1 1%
sox -v 4.0 OLD.mp3 NEW.mp3            # increase volume
</syntaxhighlight>
where '--norm' will normalize the audio and the 'trim' option set to skip the first 10 seconds. The silence parameter allows to trim silence at the beginning without a need to specify the number of seconds.


== cut, delete or trim an audio ==
= Copy text to a clipboard to be used in other apps =
# Open the audio file in audacity.
Install the '''xclip''' program. See [http://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/xclip-linux-insert-files-command-output-intoclipboard/ here] or [http://stackoverflow.com/questions/5130968/how-can-i-copy-the-output-of-a-command-directly-into-my-clipboard here].  
# select a region in the '''waveform''' area. Do not select in the time interval area (above the waveform).  
{{Pre}}
## To precisely select a range from one position to the end. Click Zoom in several times. Click one position in the '''waveform''' and click Edit -> Select -> Cursor to the track end to select
sudo apt-get install xclip
## Similarly, if we want to precisely select a range from the start to some position, we can click one position in the '''waveform''' and then click Edit -> Select -> Track start to cursor.  
# Examples
## To move around the track, use the scrollbar (below the waveform and above the bottom toolbar, not quite clear in Ubuntu/Unity)
sort -n -k 3, -k 2 file.txt | xclip -selection clipboard
# Click Edit -> Remove Audio or labels -> Cut/Delete/Trim Audio
# play the new audio by clicking the green triangle.
# File -> Export -> mp3 format.


Helpful resource for Audacity.
cat ~/.ssh/id_rsa.pub | xclip -sel clip
# Different [http://manual.audacityteam.org/o/man/toolbars_overview.html Toolbars]
</pre>
# [http://manual.audacityteam.org/o/man/tutorial_editing_an_existing_file.html Tutorial - Editing an Existing Audio File]
Works.


== Fade out at the end of an audio ==
= Start Emacs without X =
# Select a region.
Add '''-nw''' (no window) option.
# Effect -> Fade out
 
= Wireshark =
* http://www.howtogeek.com/204458/why-you-shouldn%E2%80%99t-use-mac-address-filtering-on-your-wi-fi-router/
* http://www.howtogeek.com/191482/how-an-attacker-could-crack-your-wireless-network-security/
* http://www.howtogeek.com/104278/how-to-use-wireshark-to-capture-filter-and-inspect-packets/
<pre>
<pre>
sudo apt-get install wireshark
emacs -nw
sudo chmod 4711 `which dumpcap`
</pre>
</pre>


= Track the Time a Command Takes =
= Audio =
[https://www.ostechnix.com/how-to-find-the-execution-time-of-a-command-or-process-in-linux/ How To Find The Execution Time Of A Command Or Process In Linux]
== Record audio from mic ==
[https://lifehacker.com/how-to-save-important-voicemails-for-both-iphone-and-an-1833241417 How to Save Important Voicemails for Both iPhone and Android]. Hint: use Audacity.


== time command ==
== mp3 codecs ==
* [https://stackoverflow.com/a/556411 What do 'real', 'user' and 'sys' mean in the output of time(1)?]
https://help.ubuntu.com/community/RestrictedFormats
* [https://www.howtoforge.com/linux-time-command/ Linux time Command Tutorial for Beginners (with Examples)]
{{Pre}}
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
sudo apt-get install ubuntu-restricted-extras
time COMMAND
</pre>
time (COMMAND1; COMMAND2)
time (COMMAND1 && COMMAND2)


help time
== Concatenate mp3 files ==
</syntaxhighlight>
{{Pre}}
sudo apt-get install mp3wrap
mp3wrap output.mp3 *.mp3
</pre>


When I run a set of 7 jobs using parallel, time command gives an output
== Reduce the size of an mp3 file ==
<pre>
Specify a new lower bitrate using the -b option in '''lame'''. For example if your starting mp3 has a quality of 256kbs you can lower its bitrate to 128kbps (or even lower like 64kbps) by:
real  15m53.788s # the wall clock time the command took from execution till termination
{{Pre}}
user  95m20.238s # the time taken by the user space
lame --mp3input -b 128 input.mp3 output.mp3
sys  9m1.320s  # the time taken by kernel space
</pre>
</pre>
Here we see the real time is about 16m and the user time is about 6-7 times the real time. Indicating the parallel executing works.


== /usr/bin/time command ==
== Convert ogg to mp3 ==
'''[http://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man1/time.1.html /usr/bin/time]''' provides more information then ''time'' command.
'''ffmpeg''' is not included in Ubuntu repository. Use the '''avconv''' command. http://superuser.com/questions/15327/how-to-convert-ogg-to-mp3
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
{{Pre}}
man time
sudo apt-get install libav-tools
</syntaxhighlight>
avconv -i input.ogg -c:a libmp3lame -q:a 2 output.mp3
</pre>


= Magazines =
== Convert m4a/webm to mp3 ==
* [http://www.linuxuser.co.uk/ Linux User & Developer]
{{Pre}}
* [http://www.linuxformat.com/ Linux Format]
avconv -i input.m4a output.mp3
* [http://www.linux-magazine.com/ Linux Magazine]
</pre>
* [http://www.linuxjournal.com/ Linux Journal]


= Latex =
== Remove the vocals from any song using Audacity ==
https://www.makeuseof.com/tag/remove-vocals-song-audacity/


== Editors ==
== How to Remove Ambient Noise From Audio Files Using Audacity ==
* [https://itsfoss.com/Latex-editors-linux/ 10 Best LaTeX Editors For Linux].
[https://www.makeuseof.com/tag/remove-ambient-noise-audio-files-audacity/ How to Remove Ambient Noise From Audio Files Using Audacity]
* [http://www.xm1math.net/texmaker/ Texmaker]. R's installr package has a function to install Texmaker. Cross platforms.
* [https://www.tug.org/texworks/ TEXworks]. Cross platforms.
* [http://texstudio.sourceforge.net/ TexStudio]. See a dark theme [https://robjhyndman.com/hyndsight/dark-themes-for-writing/ example].


== Online editing ==
== Normalize the volume of an audio file ==
* [https://latexbase.com/ Latex Base]. You can start to try it without registration. Free accounts cannot publish but still can download.
* [http://www.howtogeek.com/280739/can-you-losslessly-increase-the-volume-of-mp3-files/ Can You Losslessly Increase the Volume of MP3 Files?]
* [https://www.overleaf.com/ Overleaf]. Free account for 1GB space.
* Use [http://www.thebest3d.com/audacity/tutorials/make-louder/audacity-tutorial-make-louder-more-volume-increased-amplitude.html Audacity]. To raise (Amplify) volume:
* [https://www.sharelatex.com/ ShareLatex]
*# Edit > Select All.
 
*# Effect > Amplify. Increase db. Adjust the sound until the highest peaks and lowest valleys of the waveform reach the top and bottom of the window.
== Missing cls ==
*# Check clip3. Export > MP3 or just start to listen.
* [http://packages.ubuntu.com/trusty/all/texlive-latex-extra/filelist texlive-latex-extra] packages and [http://packages.ubuntu.com/trusty/all/texlive-publishers/filelist texlive-publishers] packages.
* Command line tool: [https://libav.org/avconv.html avconv] (replace '''ffmpeg''' program). See [http://gfxile.net/z/?p=1343 this post].
* https://tex.stackexchange.com/questions/179214/elsarticle-cls-not-found-when-using-texmaker-but-texlive-latex-extra-is-install/179250
{{Pre}}
<syntaxhighlight lang='rsplus'>
avconv -ss 00:00:10 -i OLD.mp3 -vol 2560 NEW.mp3
$ apt-cache search IEEEtran
</pre>
texlive-publishers - TeX Live: Publisher styles, theses, etc.
The anconv/ffmpeg -vol parameter amplifies the sound. The default value is 256 (no amplification), and you can adjust the number accordingly. Here it’s 2560, as it’s 10 times louder. Note that these are not decibel values or anything that sophisticated, but just an integer value. 512 equals to twice the volume, 768 three times, 1024 four times, etc. The -ss parameter specifies the start time offset. Here it will skip the first 10 seconds.
</syntaxhighlight>
* Command line tool: [http://sox.sourceforge.net/ sox].  
<syntaxhighlight lang='rsplus'>
** http://askubuntu.com/questions/246242/how-to-normalize-sound-in-mp3-files
sudo apt-get install texlive-publishers
** http://www.linuxandlife.com/2013/03/how-to-use-sox-audio-editing.html
</syntaxhighlight>
** http://digitalcardboard.com/blog/2009/08/25/the-sox-of-silence/ deal with several kinds of silence.
** http://www.thegeekstuff.com/2009/05/sound-exchange-sox-15-examples-to-manipulate-audio-files/
I found the converted file by sox has about one half file size compared to anconv/ffmpeg program (source file=47MB, anconv converted=135MB, sox converted file=54MB).
{{Pre}}
sudo apt-get install sox libsox-fmt-all
sox --norm OLD.mp3 NEW.mp3 trim 10
sox --norm OLD.mp3 NEW.mp3 silence 1 0.1 1%
sox -v 4.0 OLD.mp3 NEW.mp3            # increase volume
</pre>
where '--norm' will normalize the audio and the 'trim' option set to skip the first 10 seconds. The silence parameter allows to trim silence at the beginning without a need to specify the number of seconds.


== Missing sty ==
== cut, delete or trim an audio ==
<syntaxhighlight lang='rsplus'>
# Open the audio file in audacity.
$ apt-cache search pseudocode
# select a region in the '''waveform''' area. Do not select in the time interval area (above the waveform).
gpt - G-Portugol is a portuguese structured programming language
## To precisely select a range from one position to the end. Click Zoom in several times. Click one position in the '''waveform''' and click Edit -> Select -> Cursor to the track end to select
libgportugol-dev - Development files for the G-Portugol library
## Similarly, if we want to precisely select a range from the start to some position, we can click one position in the '''waveform''' and then click Edit -> Select -> Track start to cursor.
libgportugol0 - G-Portugol library
## To move around the track, use the scrollbar (below the waveform and above the bottom toolbar, not quite clear in Ubuntu/Unity)
texlive-science - TeX Live: Natural and computer sciences
# Click Edit -> Remove Audio or labels -> Cut/Delete/Trim Audio
$ sudo apt-get install texlive-science
# play the new audio by clicking the green triangle.
</syntaxhighlight>
# File -> Export -> mp3 format.


= PDF =
Helpful resource for Audacity.
== Change the default viewer ==
# Different [http://manual.audacityteam.org/o/man/toolbars_overview.html Toolbars]
Right Click(pdf)-> Properties-> Open With-> Okular (or anything) -> Set as default.
# [http://manual.audacityteam.org/o/man/tutorial_editing_an_existing_file.html Tutorial - Editing an Existing Audio File]


== PDF reader ==
== Fade out at the end of an audio ==
The default one '''Evince''' seems slow when I try to view odroid magazine.  
# Select a region.
# Effect -> Fade out


MuPDF is good at speed. Okular is good at annotation.
= Wireshark =
 
* http://www.howtogeek.com/204458/why-you-shouldn%E2%80%99t-use-mac-address-filtering-on-your-wi-fi-router/
I installed and tried '''[http://www.mupdf.com/ MuPDF]''' ([https://github.com/muennich/mupdf github] source code). It seems faster and I don't see blank pages when I view one odroid magazine. In terms of speed, mupdf >> xpdf >> okular >> Evince.
* http://www.howtogeek.com/191482/how-an-attacker-could-crack-your-wireless-network-security/
 
* http://www.howtogeek.com/104278/how-to-use-wireshark-to-capture-filter-and-inspect-packets/
To change it to be the default program for opening PDF files, right click the file and select Property. Go to the ''Open With'' tab. Choose your file viewer.
 
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
sudo apt-get install mupdf
</syntaxhighlight>
 
Keyboard shortcuts for mupdf (man mupdf) or http://mupdf.com/docs/manual. Note these are case-sensitive.
<pre>
<pre>
W    - fit to width
sudo apt-get install wireshark
H    - fit to height
sudo chmod 4711 `which dumpcap`
L    - rotate page left (clockwise)
R    - rotate page right (counter-clockwise)
12g  - go to page 12
>,<  - go to the next or previous page
+,-  - zoom in or out
/    - search for text
n,N  - Find the next or previous search result.
h,j,k,l - Scroll page left, down, up, or right.
</pre>
</pre>
'''Tip''': to copy a text, use the right mouse button to select a text. Then use Ctrl+c to copy it. It seems it does not work all the time:(
* [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8PuUnQCS7DQ Wireshark & Rtmpdump - Sniffing RTMP Streams - Ubuntu 10.10]


Other pdf viewer choices are
= Track the Time a Command Takes =
* acroread
[https://www.ostechnix.com/how-to-find-the-execution-time-of-a-command-or-process-in-linux/ How To Find The Execution Time Of A Command Or Process In Linux]
** Allow to have custom colors for page background and document text.
** The custom colors works well on Macbook Pro (2880 x 1440). Background color #494949 and text color #494949.
* xpdf. old-fashioned. slow.
* evince. slow.
* '''[https://okular.kde.org/ okular]''' (KDE/Qt application)
** Annotation tool such as highlighter is under Tools > Review (F6).  
** Allow to change its [http://askubuntu.com/questions/472540/is-there-a-pdf-reader-allowing-me-to-change-background-color-of-arxiv-pdfs background color]. Though it works, the result using 'invert colors' option is not good on Dell U2312HM. We can try other option like 'dark & light colors' where we can change the individual colors for the background (say #494949) and text.
** Not as fast as mupdf. It can open a variety of ebook formats.
** MacOS should work but it needs to [https://community.kde.org/Mac install KDE].
** Able to show file properties eg Page Size (eg 50x36 in), Creator (eg PowerPoint), Producer (eg Mac OS X Quartz PDFContext), PDF version (eg 1.3)
* kpdf
* gv
* qpdfview. slow. Used by [https://www.raspberrypi.org/blog/raspbian-update-june-2018/ Raspbian] june 2018.
* Foxit or PDF-XChange Viewer(needs wine)


== PDF crop ==
== time command ==
'''pdfcrop''' (briss is better)
* [https://stackoverflow.com/a/556411 What do 'real', 'user' and 'sys' mean in the output of time(1)?]
* [https://www.howtoforge.com/linux-time-command/ Linux time Command Tutorial for Beginners (with Examples)]
{{Pre}}
time COMMAND
time (COMMAND1; COMMAND2)
time (COMMAND1 && COMMAND2)


https://askubuntu.com/questions/124692/command-line-tool-to-crop-pdf-files
help time
<pre>
sudo apt-get install texlive-extra-utils
 
pdfcrop input.pdf output.pdf  # no margins, works but seems too tight
 
pdfcrop --margins 5 input.pdf output.pdf  # crop pdf but keep 5 bp from each side of page
 
pdfcrop --margins '5 10 20 30' input.pdf output.pdf 
#  left, top, right and bottom margins of 5, 10, 20, and 30 pt
 
# To actually crop something away, use negative values in the argument for crop.
# For example, to crops 50 pts from the left, top, right, bottom (in this order).
pdfcrop --margins '-50 -50 -50 -50' input.pdf output.pdf
</pre>
</pre>
One problem I found is (for newer PDFs with meta data) ''--margins'' initially removes the entire margin before implementing the adjustment. This will cause some pages being chopped out.


'''[https://sourceforge.net/projects/briss/ briss]'''
When I run a set of 7 jobs using parallel, time command gives an output
 
This java program gives me a better control on cropping
# Download the file briss-0.9.tar.gz (8.7 MB) and extract it
# Run '''java -jar briss-0.9.jar'''
# Load the pdf file. It will ask what pages to be excluded from merging (This function does not work). Click 'Cancel' to continue.
# It will automatically create two rectangle areas; one for odd (left) pages and the other for even (right)pages
# Now we work on the left page first. Enlarge the selection to suit our need. Then right click & choose 'Select/Deselect rectangle' (a dash line will be added to the edges of the rectangle) and then 'Copy rectangles'.
# Work on the right page. Right click and choose 'Delete rectangle'. Then 'Paste rectangles'. 
# Now we can click 'Action -> Preview' to preview the result. If we are satisfied with the result, we can click 'Action -> Crop PDF'. Done.
 
== Remove certain pages ==
https://www.linux.com/learn/manipulating-pdfs-pdf-toolkit
<pre>
<pre>
sudo apt install pdftk
real  15m53.788s # the wall clock time the command took from execution till termination
user  95m20.238s # the time taken by the user space
sys  9m1.320s  # the time taken by kernel space
</pre>
Here we see the real time is about 16m and the user time is about 6-7 times the real time. Indicating the parallel executing works.


# remove pages 10 to 25 from a PDF file
== /usr/bin/time command ==
pdftk myDocument.pdf cat 1-9 26-end output removedPages.pdf
'''[http://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man1/time.1.html /usr/bin/time]''' provides more information then ''time'' command.
 
{{Pre}}
# remove the last page
man time
pdftk infile.pdf cat 1-r2 output outfile.pdf
 
# remove the last 2 pages
pdftk infile.pdf cat 1-r3 output outfile.pdf
</pre>
</pre>


== PDF highlight and annotation ==
= Magazines =
Install [https://docs.kde.org/stable/en/kdegraphics/okular/annotations.html Okular] by
* [http://www.linuxuser.co.uk/ Linux User & Developer]
<pre>sudo apt-get install okular</pre>
* [http://www.linuxformat.com/ Linux Format]
* [http://www.linux-magazine.com/ Linux Magazine]
* [http://www.linuxjournal.com/ Linux Journal]


To highlight a line, click F6 (Tools -> Review) to turn on the annotation tool bar (it will be shown on the left hand side of the documentation). You can then click
= Latex =
# the 4th icon to highlight a line (it may not be able to select the right texts we want. But when it works the result is nice)
# the last icon to draw an ellipse or a rectangle (to change from an ellipse to a rectange you can click Settings -> configure Okular... -> annotation)


Another method is to use a windows program and run it using Wine. See the discussion [http://askubuntu.com/questions/36696/foxit-reader-on-wine-runs-but-does-not-install here].
== Editors ==
* [https://itsfoss.com/Latex-editors-linux/ 10 Best LaTeX Editors For Linux].
* [http://www.xm1math.net/texmaker/ Texmaker]. R's installr package has a function to install Texmaker. Cross platforms.
* [https://www.tug.org/texworks/ TEXworks]. Cross platforms.
* [http://texstudio.sourceforge.net/ TexStudio]. See a dark theme [https://robjhyndman.com/hyndsight/dark-themes-for-writing/ example].


== Merge multiple pdf files into one pdf file ==
== Online editing ==
https://stackoverflow.com/questions/2507766/merge-convert-multiple-pdf-files-into-one-pdf
* [https://latexbase.com/ Latex Base]. You can start to try it without registration. Free accounts cannot publish but still can download.
<pre>
* [https://www.overleaf.com/ Overleaf]. Free account for 1GB space.
pdfunite in-1.pdf in-2.pdf in-n.pdf out.pdf
* [https://www.sharelatex.com/ ShareLatex]
 
== Missing cls ==
* [http://packages.ubuntu.com/trusty/all/texlive-latex-extra/filelist texlive-latex-extra] packages and [http://packages.ubuntu.com/trusty/all/texlive-publishers/filelist texlive-publishers] packages.
* https://tex.stackexchange.com/questions/179214/elsarticle-cls-not-found-when-using-texmaker-but-texlive-latex-extra-is-install/179250
{{Pre}}
$ apt-cache search IEEEtran
texlive-publishers - TeX Live: Publisher styles, theses, etc.
</pre>
{{Pre}}
sudo apt-get install texlive-publishers
</pre>
</pre>


== Arrange, merge, split, rotate, crop ==
== Missing sty ==
[https://www.linuxuprising.com/2018/12/pdfarranger-merge-split-rotate-crop-or.html PDFArranger: Merge, Split, Rotate, Crop Or Rearrange PDF Documents (PDF-Shuffler Fork) ]
{{Pre}}
 
$ apt-cache search pseudocode
== Editing ==
gpt - G-Portugol is a portuguese structured programming language
* [https://www.linuxuprising.com/2019/04/download-master-pdf-editor-4-for-linux.html Download Master PDF Editor 4 For Linux (Free To Use Version)]
libgportugol-dev - Development files for the G-Portugol library
* [http://xournal.sourceforge.net/ Xournal]
libgportugol0 - G-Portugol library
 
texlive-science - TeX Live: Natural and computer sciences
== Print multiple pages per sheet: [https://linux.die.net/man/1/pdfnup pdfnup] ==
$ sudo apt-get install texlive-science
The program is similar to psnup.
<pre>
sudo apt install texlive-extra-utils
</pre>
</pre>


== Extract tables from pdf ==
= PDF =
[[R#Extracting_tables_from_PDFs|Extracting tables from PDFs]]
See [[PDF|PDF]].


= Flow chart =
= Flow chart =
Line 3,795: Line 4,120:
= Clock =
= Clock =
== xclock (analog) ==
== xclock (analog) ==
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
{{Pre}}
oclock -geometry 500x500+100+0 &
oclock -geometry 500x500+100+0 &
</syntaxhighlight>
</pre>


== oclock (analog) ==
== oclock (analog) ==
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
{{Pre}}
oclock -bg blue -geometry 500x500+100+0 -bd purple -transparent &
oclock -bg blue -geometry 500x500+100+0 -bd purple -transparent &
oclock -bg blue -geometry 500x500+100+0 -bd purple -jewel green &
oclock -bg blue -geometry 500x500+100+0 -bd purple -jewel green &
</syntaxhighlight>
</pre>
See [http://manpages.ubuntu.com/manpages/hardy/man1/oclock.1.html oclock], [http://manpages.ubuntu.com/manpages/hardy/man7/X.7.html X - a portable, network-transparent window system] which includes an example of specifying the ''geometry'' parameter.
See [http://manpages.ubuntu.com/manpages/hardy/man1/oclock.1.html oclock], [http://manpages.ubuntu.com/manpages/hardy/man7/X.7.html X - a portable, network-transparent window system] which includes an example of specifying the ''geometry'' parameter.


Line 3,810: Line 4,135:
* http://manpages.org/dclock
* http://manpages.org/dclock
* Note that we can send the command to the background using Ctrl +z and run '''bg'''. See [[#How_do_I_send_an_already-running_process_into_the_background|run a command from the terminal without blocking it?]]
* Note that we can send the command to the background using Ctrl +z and run '''bg'''. See [[#How_do_I_send_an_already-running_process_into_the_background|run a command from the terminal without blocking it?]]
<pre>
<pre style="white-space: pre-wrap; /* CSS 3 */ white-space: -moz-pre-wrap; /* Mozilla, since 1999 */ white-space: -pre-wrap; /* Opera 4-6 */ white-space: -o-pre-wrap; /* Opera 7 */ word-wrap: break-word; /* IE 5.5+ */ " >
sudo apt-get install dclock
sudo apt-get install dclock
dclock -h
dclock -h
Line 3,818: Line 4,143:
</pre>
</pre>
In practice, I create a shell script file <bin/clock> with the following content. The first ampersand sign is to hide warnings messages and the 2nd ampersand sign is to put the process in the background.
In practice, I create a shell script file <bin/clock> with the following content. The first ampersand sign is to hide warnings messages and the 2nd ampersand sign is to put the process in the background.
<pre>
<pre style="white-space: pre-wrap; /* CSS 3 */ white-space: -moz-pre-wrap; /* Mozilla, since 1999 */ white-space: -pre-wrap; /* Opera 4-6 */ white-space: -o-pre-wrap; /* Opera 7 */ word-wrap: break-word; /* IE 5.5+ */ " >
dclock -date "Today is %A %B %Y" -led_off black -bg black -fg yellow -geometry 577x194+119+139 &>/dev/null &
dclock -date "Today is %A %B %Y" -led_off black -bg black -fg yellow -geometry 577x194+119+139 &>/dev/null &
</pre>
</pre>
Line 3,836: Line 4,161:


Scaling is not good. Colors is changing with time.
Scaling is not good. Colors is changing with time.
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
{{Pre}}
xdaliclock -noseconds -cycle  # 'q' to quit
xdaliclock -noseconds -cycle  # 'q' to quit
</syntaxhighlight>
</pre>
 
== date command ==
<pre>
sudo apt install toilet
sudo apt install figlet
watch -n 60 "date +'%m/%d/%y  %H:%M:%S' | toilet"
 
ls /usr/share/figlet # list of fonts
                    # looking for *.tlf
date +'%m/%d/%y%H:%M:%S' | toilet -f mono12
date +'%m/%d/%y%H:%M:%S' | toilet -f bigmono12  # good on 1024x600
date +'%m/%d/%y%H:%M:%S' | toilet -f bigascii12
date +'%m/%d/%y%H:%M:%S' | toilet -f ascii12
 
watch --color "date +'%m/%d/%y%H:%M:%S' | toilet -f bigmono12 -F metal"
 
while true; do echo "$(date '+%H:%M:%S' | toilet -f bigmono12 -F border --metal)"; sleep 1; done
</pre>


= Reminder take a break, relieve eye strain =
= Reminder take a break, relieve eye strain =
Line 3,847: Line 4,190:
[https://www.linuxuprising.com/2019/02/prevent-eye-strain-while-working-on.html?m=1 Prevent Eye Strain While Working On Your Linux Desktop With Safe Eyes], [https://slgobinath.github.io/SafeEyes/ Github] source code
[https://www.linuxuprising.com/2019/02/prevent-eye-strain-while-working-on.html?m=1 Prevent Eye Strain While Working On Your Linux Desktop With Safe Eyes], [https://slgobinath.github.io/SafeEyes/ Github] source code


= wine and winetricks =
= wine =
* https://www.howtoforge.com/tutorial/how-to-use-winetricks/
[[Wine|Wine]]


= Running Linux in the AWS/Amazon Web Services =
= Running Linux in the AWS/Amazon Web Services =
Line 3,882: Line 4,225:


Another way is to modify the BIOS to select the option like 'Power off and Reboot'. This won't automatically boot your computer when it is shutdown normally.
Another way is to modify the BIOS to select the option like 'Power off and Reboot'. This won't automatically boot your computer when it is shutdown normally.
= How to restart/shutdown server safely =
[https://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/restart-centos-rhel-safely-and-gracefully/ How to restart CentOS or RHEL server safely]


= Wake up and Shut Down Linux Automatically =
= Wake up and Shut Down Linux Automatically =
Line 3,894: Line 4,240:
** Send a wake up command: (from a second linux) '''/usr/bin/wakeonlan D0:50:99:82:E7:2B''' where D0:50:99:82:E7:2B is the IP on the machine you want to wake it up
** Send a wake up command: (from a second linux) '''/usr/bin/wakeonlan D0:50:99:82:E7:2B''' where D0:50:99:82:E7:2B is the IP on the machine you want to wake it up


= How to update Lenovo BIOS from Linux without using Windows =
= BIOS =
== Find out BIOS version ==
[https://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/check-bios-version-linux/ Linux Find Out BIOS Version Using a Command Line Option]
 
== How to update Lenovo BIOS from Linux without using Windows ==
https://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/update-lenovo-bios-from-linux-usb-stick-pen/
https://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/update-lenovo-bios-from-linux-usb-stick-pen/


Line 3,906: Line 4,256:
See [[Raspberry#Track_Internet_Dropouts|Track_Internet_Dropouts]].
See [[Raspberry#Track_Internet_Dropouts|Track_Internet_Dropouts]].


<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
{{Pre}}
sudo apt-get intall python-pip
sudo apt-get intall python-pip
sudo pip install speedtest-cli
sudo pip install speedtest-cli
Line 3,914: Line 4,264:


speedtest-cli-extras/bin/speedtest-csv
speedtest-cli-extras/bin/speedtest-csv
</syntaxhighlight>
</pre>
works. But if I want to put it in cron, cron will issue an error speedtest-cli cannot be found. So I need to modify line 52 of the code in <speedtest-cli-extras/bin/speedtest-csv> to explicitly specify the location of speedtest-cli.  
works. But if I want to put it in cron, cron will issue an error speedtest-cli cannot be found. So I need to modify line 52 of the code in <speedtest-cli-extras/bin/speedtest-csv> to explicitly specify the location of speedtest-cli.  
<pre>
<pre>
Line 3,921: Line 4,271:


NOTE: 1. the results differ from the network connection. For example, the speed is good when I test it on the machine directly connected to the router. 2. It is helpful to modify the last line of the bash script to output what I need. 3. The separator is ";" in the output.
NOTE: 1. the results differ from the network connection. For example, the speed is good when I test it on the machine directly connected to the router. 2. It is helpful to modify the last line of the bash script to output what I need. 3. The separator is ";" in the output.
== curl and wget ==
[https://osxdaily.com/2013/07/31/speed-test-command-line/ How to Run Speed Test from the Command Line to Check Internet Connection Speed]


= '''uname''' - Print system information =
= '''uname''' - Print system information =
https://www.lifewire.com/display-system-information-uname-command-3964321
* https://www.lifewire.com/display-system-information-uname-command-3964321
* [https://www.networkworld.com/article/3565432/how-to-decipher-linux-release-info.html How to decipher Linux release info]


'''uname -a''' will give you
'''uname -a''' will give you
Line 3,939: Line 4,293:


= Hardware information =
= Hardware information =
[https://www.2daygeek.com/how-to-check-system-hardware-manufacturer-model-and-serial-number-in-linux/ How To Check System Hardware Manufacturer, Model And Serial Number In Linux]
* [https://www.2daygeek.com/how-to-check-system-hardware-manufacturer-model-and-serial-number-in-linux/ How To Check System Hardware Manufacturer, Model And Serial Number In Linux]
* [https://www.howtogeek.com/426199/how-to-list-your-computers-devices-from-the-linux-terminal/ How to List Your Computer's Devices From the Linux Terminal]: mount, lsblk, df, fdisk, /proc, lspci, lsusb, lsdev, lshw, lsscsi, dmidecode, hwinfo.


== [https://github.com/rdobson/python-hwinfo python--hwinfo] ==
== Command Line ==
* [https://opensource.com/article/19/9/linux-commands-hardware-information Linux commands to display your hardware information]
* inxi: [https://opensource.com/article/22/9/linux-inxi-command 3 ways to use the Linux inxi command]
** '''inxi -b'''
** '''inxi -W taipei,taiwan'''  (check the weather)
* [https://ostechnix.com/how-to-find-your-system-details-using-inxi/ How To Find Linux System Details Using inxi]
 
== hwinfo ==
https://www.2daygeek.com/python-hwinfo-check-display-system-hardware-configuration-information-linux/
https://www.2daygeek.com/python-hwinfo-check-display-system-hardware-configuration-information-linux/
On Ubuntu, use '''sudo apt install -y hwinfo''' to install hwinfo. [https://lindevs.com/install-hwinfo-on-ubuntu/ Install hwinfo on Ubuntu 20.04]
== dmesg command ==
[https://www.howtogeek.com/449335/how-to-use-the-dmesg-command-on-linux/ How to Use the dmesg Command on Linux]
<pre>
sudo dmesg -L -T
sudo dmesg -L -T --follow  # Watching Live Events
sudo dmesg -L -T | grep -i usb    # Search for a specific term
sudo dmesg | grep -E "memory|tty|dma"  # Search for multiple terms
</pre>
where '''-L''' to is force color output and '''-T''' is to make timestamp human-readable.


= Linux Logo and the current system information =
= Linux Logo and the current system information =
Line 3,970: Line 4,344:
odroid@odroid:~$ screenfetch -h
odroid@odroid:~$ screenfetch -h
</pre>
</pre>
* [https://github.com/dylanaraps/neofetch Neofetch]
* [https://github.com/dylanaraps/neofetch Neofetch], [[:File:NeofetchMac.png]], [[:File:Neofetchpopos.png]]


[[File:Neofetch.png|200px]]
[[File:Neofetch.png|200px]]
Line 3,976: Line 4,350:
= Dictionary - [http://artha.sourceforge.net/wiki/index.php/Home Artha] =
= Dictionary - [http://artha.sourceforge.net/wiki/index.php/Home Artha] =
* [http://lifehacker.com/5916656/artha-is-a-feature-packed-offline-thesaurus-and-dictionary Lifehacker]. Once it is launched, it is sitting on the task bar. Press Ctrl+Alt+W after selecting a word to look it up in Artha (a balloon tip will pop up on the screen top-right). It also supports using regular expressions to search words.
* [http://lifehacker.com/5916656/artha-is-a-feature-packed-offline-thesaurus-and-dictionary Lifehacker]. Once it is launched, it is sitting on the task bar. Press Ctrl+Alt+W after selecting a word to look it up in Artha (a balloon tip will pop up on the screen top-right). It also supports using regular expressions to search words.
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
{{Pre}}
sudo apt-get install artha
sudo apt-get install artha
</syntaxhighlight>
</pre>


== Translation ==
== Translation ==
* [https://www.soimort.org/translate-shell/ Translate Shell]. No installation is needed. It is just a bash script (4990 lines) so it works on ODroid SOC. See also [https://www.2daygeek.com/translate-shell-a-tool-to-use-google-translate-from-command-line-in-linux/ A Tool To Use Google Translate From Command Line In Linux]
* [https://www.soimort.org/translate-shell/ Translate Shell]. No installation is needed. It is just a bash script (4990 lines) so it works on ODroid SOC. See also [https://www.2daygeek.com/translate-shell-a-tool-to-use-google-translate-from-command-line-in-linux/ A Tool To Use Google Translate From Command Line In Linux]
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
{{Pre}}
odroid@odroid:~/binary$ ./trans :zh-TW word
odroid@odroid:~/binary$ ./trans :zh-TW word
word
word
Line 4,020: Line 4,394:
user 0m2.670s
user 0m2.670s
sys 0m1.330s
sys 0m1.330s
</syntaxhighlight>
</pre>


= ASCII art/ word art =
= ASCII art/ word art =
* figlet. [https://www.tecmint.com/create-ascii-text-banners-in-linux-terminal/ How to Create ASCII Text Banners in Terminal], [https://www.tecmint.com/lolcat-command-to-output-rainbow-of-colors-in-linux-terminal/ lolcat]
* figlet. [https://www.tecmint.com/create-ascii-text-banners-in-linux-terminal/ How to Create ASCII Text Banners in Terminal], [https://www.tecmint.com/lolcat-command-to-output-rainbow-of-colors-in-linux-terminal/ lolcat]
* toilet command. '''date | toilet''' . [https://www.linuxbots.com/print-awesome-ascii-text-in-linux-terminal/#Changing_the_color_of_Output Color output]. '''man toilet'''. TOIlet  prints  text using large characters made of smaller characters. It is similar in many ways to FIGlet with additional features  such  as Unicode handling, colour fonts, filters and various export formats.
* http://patorjk.com/software/taag/#p=display&f=Ivrit&t=BRR-SeqTools
* http://patorjk.com/software/taag/#p=display&f=Ivrit&t=BRR-SeqTools
<pre>
<pre>
Line 4,052: Line 4,427:
                             |_|                   
                             |_|                   
</pre>
</pre>
= Install And Manage Software From Source =
[https://ostechnix.com/install-and-manage-software-from-source-using-gnu-stow/ How To Install And Manage Software From Source Using GNU Stow In Linux]


= Software that scan Malware and rootkits =
= Software that scan Malware and rootkits =
Line 4,062: Line 4,440:


= VPN =
= VPN =
* [http://lifehacker.com/the-biggest-misconceptions-about-vpns-1794038237 The Biggest Misconceptions About VPNs]
[[Ubuntu#VPN|Ubuntu -> VPN]]
* [http://lifehacker.com/why-is-everyone-talking-about-vpns-1793768312 Why Is Everyone Talking About VPNs?]
* [http://lifehacker.com/the-laziest-cheapest-way-to-circumvent-your-snooping-i-1793789594 The Laziest, Cheapest Way to Circumvent Your Snooping ISP]
* [http://gear.lifehacker.com/the-best-vpn-service-is-private-internet-access-1794083573 Your Pick For the Best VPN Service Is Private Internet Access]
* [http://lifehacker.com/how-to-set-up-your-own-completely-free-vpn-in-the-cloud-1794302432 How to Set Up Your Own Completely Free VPN In the Cloud]
* [http://www.techhive.com/article/3158192/privacy/howand-whyyou-should-use-a-vpn-any-time-you-hop-on-the-internet.html How—and why—you should use a VPN any time you hop on the internet]
* remoteaccessvpn.nih.gov for [https://isdp.nih.gov/isdp/version.action?prodid=140 NIH]. Download and unzip the profile and place the profile (.xml)in “/opt/cisco/anyconnect/profile/” directory
 
== OpenVPN ==
* [https://nordvpn.com/tutorials/linux/openvpn/ Tutorial from nordvpn] (free 3-day trial)
* [https://www.digitalocean.com/community/tutorials/how-to-set-up-an-openvpn-server-on-ubuntu-14-04 How To Set Up an OpenVPN Server on Ubuntu 14.04]
* [https://youtu.be/XDCv_xw4BW4 How to Build An OpenVPN Access Point] by Hak5 in Youtube.
* [https://www.howtoforge.com/tutorial/openvpn-secure-server-administration/ Secure you server administration with multiplatform VPN connection] by howtoforge.
 
== List of free and fast VPNs ==
* [https://www.ostechnix.com/7-best-opensource-vpn-services-for-2019/ 7 Best VPN Services For 2019]
* [https://www.makeuseof.com/tag/best-free-vpn-for-linux/ The 7 Best VPNs for Linux] Oct 2018
* [http://www.makeuseof.com/tag/5-great-free-vpn-services-compared-which-is-fastest/ 5 Great Free VPN Services Compared: Which Is Fastest?]
* [https://www.howtogeek.com/342330/how-to-choose-the-best-and-fastest-alternative-dns-server/ How to Choose the Best (and Fastest) Alternative DNS Server]
* [https://windscribe.com/ Windscribe], mentioned by [https://www.techhive.com/article/3105577/streaming-media/tired-of-nbcs-olympics-coverage-operas-free-unlimited-vpn-is-the-way-to-go.html Sick of NBC's vapid Olympics coverage? Use a VPN and you can watch the BBC's coverage instead]
* Some result from one slickdeals comment:
** my connection speed is 150 down, when i do a speed test i get 170 down.
** with nordvpn trial i get 165 down
** with windscribe free i get 95 down
** with vpnsecure trial i get 30 down
 
== How to Set Up a VPN on Your Router ==
https://www.makeuseof.com/tag/setup-vpn-router/


= [http://www.mono-project.com/ Mono Project] =
= [http://www.mono-project.com/ Mono Project] =
Line 4,097: Line 4,448:


= NAS server =
= NAS server =
== [http://www.openmediavault.org/ OpenMediaVault] ==
== OpenMediaVault ==
[http://www.pcworld.com/article/3150765/linux/4-easy-linux-projects-for-newbies-and-intermediate-users.html 4 easy Linux projects for newbies and intermediate users]. OpenMediaVault is a linux-based system.
[[NAS#OpenMediaVault|OpenMediaVault]]
 
[https://github.com/ikogan/docker-openmediavault Docker container for OpenMediaVault]. [http://www.songming.me/docker.html OpenMediaVault插件之Docker教程]


== [http://www.freenas.org/ FreeNAS] ==
== [http://www.freenas.org/ FreeNAS] ==
Line 4,109: Line 4,458:
* https://forums.freenas.org/index.php?threads/freenas-11-0-released.55327/
* https://forums.freenas.org/index.php?threads/freenas-11-0-released.55327/
* [http://www.freenas.org/blog/yes-you-can-virtualize-freenas/ Virtualize FreeNAS]
* [http://www.freenas.org/blog/yes-you-can-virtualize-freenas/ Virtualize FreeNAS]
* [https://wiki.freebsd.org/bhyve bhyve, the BSD Hypervisor]
* [https://wiki.freebsd.org/bhyve bhyve, the BSD Hypervisor]
* [https://forums.servethehome.com/index.php?threads/freenas-as-hypervisor-host.4888/ FreeNAS as hypervisor host]
* [https://forums.servethehome.com/index.php?threads/freenas-as-hypervisor-host.4888/ FreeNAS as hypervisor host]
 
= Change detection =
http://bhfsteve.blogspot.com/2013/03/monitoring-web-page-for-changes-using.html
 
= 3 command-line tools for feigning productivity =
https://opensource.com/article/18/2/command-line-tools-productivity: [https://github.com/yaronn/blessed-contrib Blessed-contrib] (javascript), Genact, Hollywood.
 
= Mind mapping =
* [https://www.freeplane.org/wiki/index.php/Home Freeplane]
 
= Diagram =
* [https://www.calligra.org/flow/ Calligra Flow]. Microsoft Visio alternative.
 
= Open source surveillance =
[https://www.zoneminder.com/downloads/ ZoneMinder]
 
= Systemctl, systemd =
* Linux 系统开机启动项清理 [https://linux.cn/article-8835-1.html 中文] & [https://www.linux.com/learn/cleaning-your-linux-startup-process English]
* [https://www.tecmint.com/chkservice-manage-systemd-units-in-terminal/ Chkservice – An Easy Way to Manage Systemd Units in Terminal]
* [[Raspberry#Use_a_systemd_unit.2Fservice_file_to_control_an_application_to_start_when_Raspberry_pi_boots_up|Control an application to run when Raspberry pi boots up]]
* [https://www.howtogeek.com/675569/why-linuxs-systemd-is-still-divisive-after-all-these-years/ Why Linux’s systemd Is Still Divisive After All These Years]
* [https://www.howtoforge.com/how-to-manage-systemd-services-with-systemctl/ How to Manage Systemd Services with Systemctl on Linux]
** Manage Services with Systemd
** Manage Systemd Unit Files
** Manage Sockets with Systemctl
** Systemctl Additional Commands
 
== Systemd vs SysVinit ==
* https://kernelmastery.com/systemd-vs-sysvinit/
* https://linoxide.com/linux-command/systemd-vs-sysvinit-cheatsheet/
* https://www.2daygeek.com/sysvinit-vs-systemd-cheatsheet-systemctl-command-usage/
 
== Systemctl vs service commands ==
[https://serverfault.com/a/867334 What is the difference between service and systemctl?] '''service''' is an "high-level" command used for starting and stopping services in different unixes and linuxes. Depending on the "lower-level" service manager, service redirects on different binaries. For example, on CentOS 7 it redirects to '''systemctl'''.
 
<pre>
$ service nginx start
# VS
$ systemctl start nginx
 
$ systemctl  # list all services
$ cat /lib/systemd/system/rsyslog.service
$ systemctl status rsyslog
$ cat /lib/systemd/system/ufw.service
</pre>
 
== How to Run a Linux Program at Startup with systemd ==
<ul>
<li>[https://www.howtogeek.com/687970/how-to-run-a-linux-program-at-startup-with-systemd/ How to Run a Linux Program at Startup with systemd]
* Creating the Service Program for systemd to Start '''sudo nano /usr/local/bin/htg.sh''',  '''sudo chmod +x /usr/local/bin/htg.sh'''
* Creating the Service Unit File '''sudo nano /etc/systemd/system/htg.service''', '''sudo chmod 640 /etc/systemd/system/htg.service'''
* Starting the Service Automatically with the systemd Command '''sudo systemctl daemon-reload''', '''sudo systemctl enable htg''', '''sudo systemctl start htg'''
* Verifying the Service '''sudo systemctl status htg.service'''
* Stopping and Disabling the Service - '''sudo systemctl stop htg.service'''
<li>[https://www.makeuseof.com/create-systemd-service-on-linux/ How to Create a New systemd Service on Linux]
</ul>
 
== How Long Does it Take To Boot Your Linux System ==
[https://itsfoss.com/check-boot-time-linux/ Find Out How Long Does it Take To Boot Your Linux System]
<pre>
$ systemd-analyze      # total boot time along with the time taken by
                        # firmware, boot loader, kernel and the userspace
$ systemd-analyze blame # breakdown the boot time into each unit
</pre>


= Change detection =
== Check if Your Linux System Uses systemd ==
http://bhfsteve.blogspot.com/2013/03/monitoring-web-page-for-changes-using.html
[https://itsfoss.com/check-if-systemd/ How to Check if Your Linux System Uses systemd]


= 3 command-line tools for feigning productivity =
== chkservice ==
https://opensource.com/article/18/2/command-line-tools-productivity: [https://github.com/yaronn/blessed-contrib Blessed-contrib] (javascript), Genact, Hollywood.
[https://www.linuxuprising.com/2019/11/chkservice-is-systemd-units-manager.html chkservice] Is A systemd Unit Manager With A Terminal User Interface


= Mind mapping =
= Kernel =
* [https://www.freeplane.org/wiki/index.php/Home Freeplane]
* [https://opensource.com/article/19/8/linux-kernel-21st-century How to compile a Linux kernel in the 21st century]
* [https://www.ostechnix.com/different-ways-to-update-linux-kernel-for-ubuntu/ Different Ways To Update Linux Kernel For Ubuntu]


= Diagram =
= Firmware update =
* [https://www.calligra.org/flow/ Calligra Flow]. Microsoft Visio alternative.
[https://9to5linux.com/fwupd-1-9-9-released-with-support-for-lenovo-x1-yoga-gen7-530e-2-in-1-laptops Fwupd 1.9.9 Released with Support for Lenovo X1 Yoga Gen7 530E 2-in-1 Laptops]
 
= Open source surveillance =
[https://www.zoneminder.com/downloads/ ZoneMinder]
 
= Systemctl, systemd =
* Linux 系统开机启动项清理 [https://linux.cn/article-8835-1.html 中文] & [https://www.linux.com/learn/cleaning-your-linux-startup-process English]
* [https://www.tecmint.com/chkservice-manage-systemd-units-in-terminal/ Chkservice – An Easy Way to Manage Systemd Units in Terminal]
* [[Raspberry#Use_a_systemd_unit.2Fservice_file_to_control_an_application_to_start_when_Raspberry_pi_boots_up|Control an application to run when Raspberry pi boots up]]
 
== Systemd vs SysVinit ==
* https://kernelmastery.com/systemd-vs-sysvinit/
* https://linoxide.com/linux-command/systemd-vs-sysvinit-cheatsheet/
* https://www.2daygeek.com/sysvinit-vs-systemd-cheatsheet-systemctl-command-usage/
 
== Systemctl vs service commands ==
[https://askubuntu.com/a/903405 Difference between systemctl and service commands]
 
== How Long Does it Take To Boot Your Linux System ==
[https://itsfoss.com/check-boot-time-linux/ Find Out How Long Does it Take To Boot Your Linux System]
<pre>
$ systemd-analyze      # total boot time along with the time taken by
                        # firmware, boot loader, kernel and the userspace
$ systemd-analyze blame # breakdown the boot time into each unit
</pre>
 
= Bitcoin =
* [https://www.makeuseof.com/tag/mine-bitcoin-linux/ Mine Bitcoin on Linux With These Best Free Apps]
* [https://www.howtogeek.com/347210/how-to-buy-bitcoin-the-easy-way/ How to Buy Bitcoin the Easy Way]


= Game =
= Game =
* [https://itsfoss.com/download-linux-games/ Fantastic Linux Games and Where to Find Them]
See [[Game|Game]].
* [https://www.makeuseof.com/tag/best-linux-games/ The 10 Best Linux Games You Can Play for Free] (2019)


= Best Linux Adobe Alternatives You Need to Know =
= Best Linux Adobe Alternatives You Need to Know =
Line 4,160: Line 4,545:


= Linux distributions =
= Linux distributions =
[https://www.fossmint.com/linux-distros-you-never-heard-about/ The Top 10 Open Source Distros You Haven’t Heard About]
[[Linux_Distribution|Linux Distribution]]
 
== Popular Linux distributions ==
[https://www.ithome.com.tw/news/121357 2017年度最佳Linux版本出爐], https://www.linuxquestions.org/questions/linux-news-59/2017-linuxquestions-org-members-choice-award-winners-4175623289/
 
== Small/lightweight Linux distributions ==
* [http://www.makeuseof.com/tag/linux-distro-space/ Install Linux to Save Space! These Tiny Linux Distros Are Super Small] 10/10/2017
* [https://www.makeuseof.com/tag/6-lightweight-linux-distributions-give-pc-lease-life/ 13 Lightweight Linux Distributions to Give Your Old PC a New Lease of Life] 5/5/2017. Some distributions that can be run in RAM: Macpup, Porteus.
 
== 10 Best And Most Secure Linux Distributions ==
https://fossbytes.com/secure-linux-distros-privacy-anonymity/


== Kids ==
= chroot =
[https://www.maketecheasier.com/configure-linux-for-children/ How to Configure Linux for Children]
[[Chroot|Chroot]]

Latest revision as of 12:54, 23 September 2024

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Change/increase console fonts

Desktops/Workspaces

Ctrl + Alt + -> or Ctrl + Alt + <- to switch workspaces.

Ctrl + Alt + down can list the open applications on the current workspace.

Ctrl + Alt + up can show all workspaces and the open applications. We can use mouse to move an app to any workspace.

SuperKey + left tile a window to left. SuperKey + right tile a window to right.

Complete List of Linux Mint 18 Keyboard Shortcuts for Cinnamon for more examples.

Mouse

How To Bind Mouse Buttons To Keyboard Keys Or Commands (Linux Using X11)

Virtual memory

vmstat

hcache

A tool fork from pcstat, with a feature that showing top X biggest cache files globally

Memory: free command

Three types of memory reported by the free command.

  • Used: RAM that is currently in use by an application.
  • Available: RAM that may be in use for disk caching but can be freed up for applications. What is 'available' vs 'free' memory in free command?. Available = Estimation of how much memory is available for starting new applications, without swapping.
  • Shared: Amount of memory used by the tmpfs file systems.
  • Free: RAM that is not in use by an application or disk caching.
  • Total = Used + Free + Buffers/Cache

How to Clear RAM Memory Cache and Buffer

# To clear pagecache, enter the following command:
echo 1 > /proc/sys/vm/drop_caches

# To clear dentries and inodes, change the number to 2:
echo 2 > /proc/sys/vm/drop_caches

# To clear pagecache, dentries, and inodes all together, change the number to 3:
echo 3 > /proc/sys/vm/drop_caches

How do I determine the number of RAM slots in use

sudo dmidecode -t memory

Logging memory

Shows Per-Program Memory Usage On Linux

$ pip install ps_mem
$ ps_mem -p $(pgrep -d, -u $USER)
 Private  +   Shared  =  RAM used	Program
...
249.9 MiB +  43.9 MiB = 293.9 MiB	firefox
549.7 MiB +  82.2 MiB = 631.9 MiB	Web Content (6)
  1.0 GiB + 149.6 MiB =   1.2 GiB	chrome (16)

3.2 GiB

Check RAM information

sudo dmidecode -t memory

sudo dmidecode -t 17

Free up memory

Monitor Memory Utilization And Send an Email

zram

rop swap for zram on Linux

Things to do after a fresh install of GNU/Linux

  1. Run upgrade such as apt-get update; apt-get upgrade. It helps to resolve the unmet dependencies issue too.
  2. Increase audio quality
  3. Make sure firewall is enabled.
  4. Disable any unnecessary services
  5. Install Timeshift
  6. Install ClamAV / Clamtk antivirus

Query whether the OS is 64-bit or 32-bit

SYSTEM_ARCH=getconf LONG_BIT
echo $SYSTEM_ARCH

Command line improved

https://remysharp.com/2018/08/23/cli-improved

Directory permission / attribute

See http://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/21251/how-do-directory-permissions-in-linux-work

When applying permissions to directories on Linux, the permission bits have different meanings than on regular files.

  • The write bit allows the affected user to create, rename, or delete files within the directory, and modify the directory's attributes
  • The read bit allows the affected user to list the files within the directory
  • The execute bit allows the affected user to enter the directory, and access files and directories inside

When we create a new directory, the attribute is 775. Some pre-created directories (Desktop, Documents, Music, Pictures, Public) have an attribute 755.

Making a new temporary directory

https://www.howtoforge.com/linux-mktemp-command/

mktemp  # temp directory is under /tmp
mktemp -d tempdirXXX # temp directory is under the current directory
mktemp tempfileXXX # temp file under the current directory

Shell

Login shell and non-login shell

Login Shell

  1. /etc/profile
  2. /etc/profile.d/*.sh
  3. ~/.bash_profile or ~/.profile (for example, environment variable like PATH)
  4. ~/.bashrc
  5. /etc/bashrc
  6. ~/.bashrc

Non-Login shell

  1. ~/.bashrc
  2. /etc/bash.bashrc or /etc/bashrc
  3. ~/.bashrc (bash-related settings, for example, prompt string, aliases)

Note: Bash only reads the first of the files in ~/ that it finds (and ignore the rest). rc means run commands for example, .nanorc.

Aliases and Functions for Individual Users

  1. /etc/profile (systemwide environment and shell variables)
  2. /etc/profile.d/*.sh (systemwide environment and shell variables)
  3. ~/.bash_profile (user environment and shell variables)
  4. ~/.bashrc (executes /etc/bashrc)
  5. /etc/bashrc (systemwide aliases and shell functions)
  6. ~/.bashrc (user aliases and shell functions)

Why does it take tens of seconds to get a shell prompt?

https://serverfault.com/a/722496 If your profile or bashrc have expensive things, consider trimming them back.

On raspbian commenting out some lines does help. Interestingly, the same lines does not make any difference on x86 server.

the source command

The . is a shorthand for the source command in bash. source ~/.bashrc and . ~/.bashrc are equivalent.

login shell (.bash_profile) vs interactive shell (.bashrc)

  1. login shell - non desktop environment. ~/.bash_profile is sourced for the bash shell. It is the shell you get when logging in or opening a new terminal session.
  2. interactive shell - Ctrl+Alt+t to open a terminal from a graphical mode (desktop environment) and also the ssh connection. ~/.bashrc is source. We usually edit ~/.bashrc to set up the environment to include fancy prompt, set aliases, set history options, or define custom shell functions. Bash Check If Shell Is Interactive or Not Under Linux / Unix Oses
  3. Non-interactive shell - instances of the shell you can't use interactively. Shells that are started to run a command or script.

To determine the shell type: echo $-

export environment variables

  1. Both a login shell and an interactive one. SSH (Putty) to connect to a remote machine.
  2. When a shell runs a script or a command passed on its command line, it's a non-interactive, non-login shell.

/root/.bashrc

If we use "sudo SOME_COMMAND", ~/.bashrc won't work. In this case, we have to

  1. run "sudo su"
  2. Edit /root/.bashrc

Login banner

How to configure login banners in Linux (RedHat, Ubuntu, CentOS, Fedora). /etc/motd and /etc/login.warn

Change to root shell

The following command will switch to an environment similar to what the user would expect had the user logged in directly.

sudo su -
# OR
sudo su
# OR
sudo -s

This can be useful when running 'su' or 'su -' failed because of an authentication failure error (note Ubuntu locked the root account).

See also

For sudo to work, my account ('debian' in this case) has to be included in the config file /etc/sudoers.

debian  ALL=NOPASSWD: ALL

When sudo is invoked, it asks for the password of the user who started it.

pinky: find out about the people logged on to your Linux computer

How to Use the pinky Command on Linux

su: Switch to another user and run a command

Keyboard shortcut to move cursor in the terminal

  • Alt + b: go left (back) one word
  • Alt + f: go forward on word

Example: cd ~/bitbucket/gbmpdx/annovar_biowulf (Now press Alt+b to see the cursor moves)

Record terminal session to a text file

script history_log.txt
# recording begins
exit # stop recording

This will include everything showing on your screen.

Tools To Record Your Terminal And Generate Animated Gif or SVG Images

Asciinema & agg

$ # sudo pip3 install asciinema  # Error
$ # sudo apt install python3-asciinema # Error
$ sudo apt install pipx
$ pipx ensurepath
Success! Added /home/brb/.local/bin to the PATH environment variable.

Consider adding shell completions for pipx. Run 'pipx completions' for
instructions.

You will need to open a new terminal or re-login for the PATH changes to take
effect.

Otherwise pipx is ready to go! 

Open another tab

pipx install asciinema
asciinema rec 2g-test
asciinema play 2g-test
chmod +x Downloads/agg-x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu 
Downloads/agg-x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu 2g-test 2g-test.gif
open 2g-test.gif

terminalizer

sudo apt update
sudo apt install nodejs npm
sudo npm install -g npm
sudo npm install -g terminalizer
terminalizer record demo
terminalizer play demo
terminalizer render demo 
# https://github.com/faressoft/terminalizer/issues/29
# https://github.com/faressoft/terminalizer/issues/211

Termtosvg

(archived) Termtosvg – Record Your Terminal Sessions As SVG Animations In Linux

Record and Replay Linux Terminal Sessions Activity: script

Learn how to Record and Replay Linux Terminal Sessions Activity

Recording your terminal: asciinema

https://asciinema.org/

Clear screen

ctrl + l

Clear text

ctrl + u: "deletes" all the entered text to the left of the cursor. Does not work in macOS shell but R console from RStudio in macOS still works.

Redirect standard error

http://bash.cyberciti.biz/guide/Standard_error. Use 2> operator.

command 2> errors.txt

Redirect standard output

This can be used in the cron job or displaying a clock on the desktop.

$ cat ~/bin/clock
dclock -date "Today is %A %B %Y" -led_off black -bg black -fg yellow -geometry 577x194+119+139   &>/dev/null &

Quotes and asterisk

Combining these two will not work. For example

brb@T3600 ~ $ ls -l ~/GSE48215/*.fastq
-rw-r--r-- 1 brb brb 16226673016 Jun 14 14:13 /home/brb/GSE48215/SRR925751_1.fastq
-rw-r--r-- 1 brb brb 16226673016 Jun 14 14:13 /home/brb/GSE48215/SRR925751_2.fastq
brb@T3600 ~ $ ls -l '~/GSE48215/*.fastq'
ls: cannot access ~/GSE48215/*.fastq: No such file or directory
brb@T3600 ~ $ ls -l "~/GSE48215/*.fastq"
ls: cannot access ~/GSE48215/*.fastq: No such file or directory

cat command alternatives

$ curl -s  https://api.github.com/repos/sharkdp/bat/releases/latest |grep browser_download_url |  cut -d '"' -f 4 | grep 'amd64.deb' | grep -v musl | wget -i -
$ sudo dpkg -i bat_*_amd64.deb

ls command

List Files With Detailed Information from How to Use the ls Command in Linux

To use UID/GID instead of the user name and group name in ls -l, use the -n option.

ls -n

To make a pretty output by showing selected columns (col 9 is the file name and col 5 is the file size)

$ ls -nt bad |  grep -v ^total | awk '{ printf  "%-20s %15i\n", $9, $5}'
recal.bai                    8069704
recal.bam                12275091222
recal_data.table             1012453
realigned_reads.bai          8065496

Follow the symbolic link

Use -H option

ls -lH myDir

List only directories

ls -d */               # current directory
ls -ld ~/Downloads/*/  # ~/Downloads
ls -l -d */

List only files

ls -l | egrep -v '^d'

Find and Delete Broken Symbolic Links

find /path/to/directory -xtype l -delete

Special characters, escape

List of characters which needs to be escaped in a linux shell command

|  &  ;  <  >  (  )  $  `  \  "  '  <space>  <tab>  <newline>

Opened MS-Office documents' filenames start with "~$". The dollar sign character has to be escaped; eg ls -l ~\$* to list these kind of files or rm ~\$* to delete these files.

Check non-English characters

How to Find Non-ASCII Characters in Text Files in Linux

perl -ne 'print if /[^[:ascii:]]/' sample.txt

ls | more without lose color

$ ls --color=auto
$ ls --color | more

Most likely your ls is aliased to ls --color=auto. If you do ls --color (which is morally equivalent to ls --color=always), that will force it to turn on colors.

ls directories color

How to Change the Colors of Directories and Files in the ls Command. No need to use the export command when we want to add it to .bashrc file.

# orange color
export LS_COLORS=$LS_COLORS:'di=0;33:'
# OR yellow color if your terminal supports 256 colors
export LS_COLORS=$LS_COLORS:'di=38;5;226:'

ls output with color background

stackexchange or askubuntu.

In my case, after I apply chmod 755 -R XXXX, the weird green background color goes away.

ls output without user/group columns

https://unix.stackexchange.com/a/205165

ls -lhog

To further skip the first 2 columns (the permissions and link count) we can use

ls -lhog | sed 's/^[^ ][^ ]*  *[^ ][^ ]* //'
# total 95G
#  51G May  7 11:37 SRR10156301_3.fastq  --> file
#  23G May  7 11:35 SRR10156301_2.fastq  --> file
#  18G May  7 11:35 SRR10156301_1.fastq  --> file
# 4.0K May  7 11:24 SRR10156301          --> directory

ls output selected columns

The following example will sort the output by file size and output only the file size and file name columns.

ls -lS  . | awk '{print $5 "\t" $9}'

ls -lhS  . | awk '{print $5 "\t" $9}'

# Mac
ls -lS  *.Rmd |head | awk '{print $6 "\t" $10}'
# a range of columns:
ls -lS  *.Rmd |head | awk -v f=6 -v t=10 \
    '{for(i=f;i<=t;i++) printf("%s%s",$i,(i==t)?"\n":OFS)}'

ls suddenly wrapping items with spaces in single quotes

Use ls -N to remove single quotes for files containing spaces. See Why is 'ls' suddenly wrapping items with spaces in single quotes?

Better to add export QUOTING_STYLE=literal to .bashrc

ls on BSD/macOS

Use the -G option to get a color output

$ ls -G

realpath

realpath FILENAME to get the full path of a file.

tree command

tree -d: show directories only

tre command

  • github. Binary files for x86 and arm linux are available. To use it, run "tre DIRECTORYNAME" or "tre" to list files recursively from the current directory.

cp command

Linux cp command tutorial for beginners (8 examples)

copy a directory

cp -avr Dir1 Dir2

where -a will preserve the attributes of files/directories, -v means verbally and -r means copy the directory recursively.

Copy a file with progress bar with pv (plus how to eject the USB drive)

http://www.tecmint.com/monitor-copy-backup-tar-progress-in-linux-using-pv-command/

sudo apt-get install pv
pv file1 > file2    # don't forget the ">" operator and the destination is a file, not a directory

After that, instead of clicking the reject icon from the file manager to eject it, it is better to use a command line to do that because there is no expect time for users to know when it will take for finish writing the data to a USB drive.

sudo apt-get install udisks

sudo udisks --unmount /dev/sdb1   # /dev/sdb1 is the partition
sudo udisks --detach /dev/sdb     # /dev/sdb is the device

My testing shows this procedure works (tested by running md5sum after eject/plug-in) when I need to copy a 9GB file.

Reliable way: Split the large file and copy smaller chunks

# Use 'sudo iotop -o' to monitor the I/O
split -b 4G inputFile  # create xaa, xab, ... files
cat x* > outputFile    # merge them. md5sum check succeeds

type  x* > outputFile  # Windows OS. # https://stackoverflow.com/a/60254

# Use Prefix, and use numeric suffixes starting from 0
split -b 4M -d inputFile inputFile.part
md5sum inputFile
cat inputFile.part* > inputFile2
ech "LONG_MD5_SUM_From_inputFile inputFile2" | md5sum -c

It is interesting copying smaller files (eg 4GB) to USB drives is quite stable (just use the cp command). Even for a not-too large file (6.7GB), pv step looks OK but the unmount/detach step failed.

For a 6.7GB file, it will split it into a 4GB and 2.7GB files. Merge takes longer time if it is done on the USB drive. That is, it is best to do merge in the final destination (internal disk/storage).

  • split in the internal hdd: 1min 38sec
  • merge in the internal hdd: 37sec
  • merge in the USB 3.0 drive: 2min 17sec

Remember: Use a reliable USB drives.

The operation could not be completed because the volume is dirty

On a USB 2.0 drive, I can copy files to there but the drive cannot be rejected (Ubuntu has a pop-up showing it is still writing data to it).

When I forcibly rejects the drive and plug it in a Windows PC, Windows shows the message The operation could not be completed because the volume is dirty. This gives a way to run chkdsk (check and repair a file system).

  1. Open a Windows File Manager
  2. Right click the USB drive
  3. Properties
  4. Tools -> Check now... Start

Done. Now I can use the drive again.

The Linux equivalent to chkdsk is fsck. fsck is a front end that calls the appropriate tool (fsck.ex2, fsck.ex3, e2fsck, ...) for the filesystem in question.

umount /dev/sdb1        # thumb drive
sudo fsck /dev/sdb1

sudo fsck -a /dev/sdb1  # auto repair

For the root disk, you have to use a live CD. Otherwise, you will see a message like

$ fsck /dev/sdb1
fsck from util-linux 2.20.1
e2fsck 1.42.9 (4-Feb-2014)
/dev/sdb1 is mounted.

WARNING!!!  The filesystem is mounted.   If you continue you ***WILL***
cause ***SEVERE*** filesystem damage.

Do you really want to continue<n>? no

Files

List files by sorting according to the file size

Use the -S option in ls.

List files using wildcard without showing files under subdirectories

Use the -d option in ls. For example, the following command will not showing files under R-3.4.4 and R-3.5.3

$ ls -d R*
drwxr-xr-x 15 brb brb     4096 Mar 14 09:48 R-3.4.4
-rw-rw-r--  1 brb brb 30474612 Mar 15  2018 R-3.4.4.tar.gz
drwxr-xr-x 15 brb brb     4096 Mar 14 09:31 R-3.5.3
-rw-rw-r--  1 brb brb 30205979 Mar 11 04:04 R-3.5.3.tar.gz

Delete multiple files

How to Remove Multiple Subdirectories with One Linux Command

rm -r ~/Documents/htg/{done,ideas,notes}

Delete a certain type of files recursively under a directory

For example to delete *.o files under the current directory,

find . -type f -name '*.o' -delete

Remove all files/directories except for one file/some file type

https://unix.stackexchange.com/a/153863

# recursively, including hidden ones
find . ! -name 'file.txt' -type f -exec rm -f {} +

# Non-recursively
find . -maxdepth 1 ! -name 'file.txt' -type f -exec rm -f {} +

find: warning: you have specified the -maxdepth option after a non-option argument !, but options are not positional (-maxdepth affects tests specified before it as well as those specified after it). Please specify options before other arguments.

Remove all hidden files/directories

Bash Find And Delete All Hidden Files Directories

rm -rf .??*  # tested, http://labtestproject.com/linuxcmd/rm.html

# list all hidden files/directories
find . -name ".*" -print

# delete all hidden files
find . -name ".*" -type f -delete

find . -name ".DS_Store" -delete

Create a new directory and cd to it

How to Make a New Directory and Change to It with a Single Command in Linux

Set permissions for new files or directories

  • umask: user file-creation mode mask
  • With umask 007, newly created files and directories will have all permissions (read, write, and execute) for the user and the group, but no permissions for others. This is a good practice when you want to share data with other users in the same group but want to completely exclude users who are not group members.
  • Set up default umask on Linux: adding the command umask 007 to the .bashrc file sets the default umask value for your shell. This means that every time you start a new shell session, the umask will be set to 007.
  • How it works:
    • The default permissions for files are 666 (read and write for owner, group, and others) and for directories are 777 (read, write, and execute for owner, group, and others).
    • The default permissions for files are 666 and for directories are 777. In binary, these are 110 110 110 and 111 111 111 respectively. The umask value 007 is 000 000 111 in binary.
    • The AND operation is performed between the binary representations of the default permissions and the bitwise NOT of the umask value. That is, the mask is negated (its bitwise compliment is taken) and this value is then applied to the default permissions using a logical AND operation.
    • The result of the AND operation is 110 110 000 for files and 111 111 000 for directories. In decimal, these are 660 and 770 respectively.
  • See What is Umask and How To Setup Default umask Under Linux?, Linux umask command.

chown and chmod recursively (-R)

Use -R (capital R).

chmod -R u=rwx,go=rx /var/www/html

Note it is better not to remove 'x' on folders. Otherwise we will lose the permission to change file attributes for any file under the folder.

Note "chmod -R ugo+rwx XXX" is the same as "chmod -R 777 XXX" b/c "u" stands for user, "g" stands for group and "o" stands for others.

Get the chmod numerical value for a file/directory

https://unix.stackexchange.com/a/46921

# BSD/OS X: 
stat -f "%OLp" <file>

# Linux: 
stat --format '%a' <file>
stat -c %a <file>

After that we can use ls -lhog to verify.

Files under a directory have question mark attribute

Use sudo chmod -R a+x /some/directory to fix. This happened when I unzip a zip file compressed in a Windows OS.

Files have an integer owner in attributes

What does the “number” in the owner field of files signify in linux?

You probably did a copy that preserved the original group and owner of these files. Within linux internally the owner and group is basically just an id.

You can change the ower and group to an existing owner and group with the commands chown and chgrp respectively.

Uppercase S in permissions of a folder and setGID

I happen to create this case by chmod -R 760 ShareFolder. To make 'S' to become 's', I just need to use chmod -R 2770 ShareFolder.

immutable files

Manage file and directory attributes using chattr and lsattr command

Display files sorted by modified date in a directory recursively

stat --printf="%y %n\n" $(ls -tr $(find DIRNAME -type f))
find -type f -printf '%T+\t%p\n' | sort -n

Both of methods give the same output. Note the latest changed file is shown at the bottom of the output.

Sort files by their size

use the '-S' option.

ls -lS

Files starting with a dash (meta-characters)

Move File Starting With A Dash

$ > '-foo.txt'
$ rm "-foo.txt"
rm: invalid option -- 'o'
Try 'rm ./-foo.txt' to remove the file '-foo.txt'.
Try 'rm --help' for more information.
$ rm -- -foo.txt

Inodes

Recover Deleted Files

How to Recover Deleted Files on Linux

alias

https://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/how-to-turn-on-or-off-colors-in-bash/

$ alias # list all aliases
$ alias | grep ls
$ unalias ls
$ alias ls='ls --color=auto' # save it in ~/.bash_profile or ~/.bashrc
$ alias server_name="ssh -v -l john 192.168.1.11" # or modify /etc/hosts
$ alias open='xdg-open'
$ alias sshnocheck='ssh -o UserKnownHostsFile=/dev/null -o StrictHostKeyChecking=no'
$ alias scpnocheck='scp -o UserKnownHostsFile=/dev/null -o StrictHostKeyChecking=no'
$ alias sshserver='ssh [email protected]'
$ alias checkport='sudo lsof -i -P -n | grep LISTEN'

NOTE the last column of the output from "checkport" will show who can connection to the port. For example, if it shows "127.0.0.1:10999 (LISTEN)", it means only the server can connect to port 10999. If it shows "*:22 (LISTEN)", it means any machines can connect to the server through port 22.

To avoid using the alias, use one of the following ways (eg use the command's full path)

$ \ls
$ /bin/ls
$ command ls
$ 'ls'

Useful aliases (Added to ~/.bashrc)

alias nano="nano -c --softwrap"

We can use the backslash to escape the double quote (or others like dollar sign).

If a command needs the sudo right, include the command inside alias. In the following example, if we skip "sudo" then running the command "sudo lsof2" will result in an error: sudo: lsof2: command not found.

alias lsof2="sudo lsof -i -P | egrep \"PID|LISTEN\""

Use unalias [alias name] to remove an alias.

Find file defining an alias

how to find file defining an alias. It works on macOS. Many of them are defined in ~/.oh-my-zsh/lib/directories.zsh. Another way (without saving) is How to find out where alias (in the bash sense) is defined when running Terminal in Mac OS X.

lolcat - bring color to text

sudo apt-get install ruby	
sudo gem install lolcat
lolcat -h
lolcat --version
fortune | lolcat

ps | lolcat
man ls | lolcat

lolcat test.R

sudo apt install figlet
figlet Merry Christmas | lolcat

alias lolls="ls -l | lolcat"
lolls

File manager

Cloud commander

diff

Run diff with large files

diff (or even better the cmp command) works fine with 8G fastq files. Note cmp compare files byte by byte so it probably won't run out of memory. How to diff large files on Linux.

Another strategy is to split a large file into small pieces. For example,

split -b 500MB FILEname # into 500MB files each
split -l 200 FILEname   # into smaller files with 200 lines each

Meld freezes When I tested it with two large files (800k & 936k lines coming from human gtf files). Actually the whole linux system became unresponsive.

Actually Meld is sluggish when it is used in small files in Odroid XU4 running Ubuntu 16.04 MATE. I have used Meld 3.14.2 and the latest 3.16.2.

Kompare

https://apps.kde.org/en/kompare

Meld cannot change theme. So if my desktop has a dark theme, meld is hard to read.

Kompare still has a light them.

Directory

diff -qr dir1 dir2

where -q means to report only when files differ and -r is to recursively compare any subdirectories found.

diff & colordiff-color on terminal: compare side by side

PS. For a GUI version of diff, Meld works fine. Need to install first. apt-get install colordiff. http://www.cyberciti.biz/programming/color-terminal-highlighter-for-diff-files/

sudo apt-get install colordiff
diff -y file1 file2 | colordiff
# Ignore same rows (two ways):
# diff -C0 file1 file2 | colordiff
# diff -U0 file1 file2 | colordiff

# On systems that I have no root right, I need to install it from the source 
# (just need to run 'make')
$ diff file1 file2 | ~/bin/colordiff-1.0.18/colordiff.pl

where -y option means to show the output in two columns.

Colordiff.png

Interpretation of the diff output:

The first line of the diff output will contain:

  • line numbers corresponding to the first file,
  • a letter (a for add, c for change, or d for delete), and
  • line numbers corresponding to the second file.

In our output above, 2,4c2,4 means: "Lines 2 through 4 in the first file need to be changed in order to match lines 2 through 4 in the second file." It then tells us what those lines are in each file:

  • Lines preceded by a < are lines from the first file (color in red);
  • lines preceded by > are lines from the second file (color in green).
  • The three dashes ("---") merely separate the lines of file 1 and file 2.
2,4c2,4
< I need to run the laundry.
< I need to wash the dog.
< I need to get the car detailed.
---
> I need to do the laundry.
> I need to wash the car.
> I need to get the dog detailed.
colordiff -ur path1 path2

If you change -ur to -urN then that will also show the contents of files that are only present in one of the paths. Colordiff2.png

The meaning of colors can be found in /etc/colordiffrc (man colordiff or colordiff web site)

  • plain=off
  • newtext=darkgreen
  • oldtext=darkred
  • diffstuff=darkcyan
  • cvsstuff=cyan

git diff --no-index -- file.a file.b

Any visual diff in Linux console?

gnome-terminal

Remember the session

The following is proved working on Ubuntu 18.04

gnome-terminal --tab --working-directory=$HOME/Downloads \
               --tab --working-directory=$HOME/Documents

Fun: piano

Let Us Play Piano In Terminal Using Our PC Keyboard

Terminals in grids

See Terminal_multiplexer.

Tilix

Terminator

GNU screen

tmux*

Byobu

Guake / Yakuake / Tilda

Drop down terminals for the GNOME / KDE / GTK Environments. Great for quick access to a terminal!

System date/time, ntpd

$ timedatectl
      Local time: Mon 2019-06-10 08:37:09 EDT
  Universal time: Mon 2019-06-10 12:37:09 UTC
        RTC time: Mon 2019-06-10 12:37:09
       Time zone: America/New_York (EDT, -0400)
 Network time on: yes
NTP synchronized: yes
 RTC in local TZ: no

Linux file timestamps

Linux File Timestamps Explained: atime, mtime, and ctime

Change the date/timestamp of a file - touch

Modify the file relative to its existing modification time

filename=MyFileName
touch -d "$(date -R -r $filename) - 2 hours" $filename # 2 hours before
touch -d "$(date -R -r $filename) + 2 hours" $filename # 2 hours later

See How can I change the date modified/created of a file?

Find binary file location, type

  • which - Display the full path of shell commands. See examples from cyberciti.biz.
$ which ls
/bin/ls
  • whereis - locate the binary, source, and manual page files for a command. See examples from cyberciti.biz.
$ whereis ls
ls: /bin/ls /usr/share/man/man1p/ls.1p.gz /usr/share/man/man1/ls.1.gz
$ type ls
ls is aliased to `ls --color=tty'
ls is /bin/ls
  • locate. Use locate command mindfully. It is used to find the location of files and directories. Note that locate does not search the files on disk rather it searches for file paths in a database. For example, the following command will search .png files over the system (not only the personal directory).
locate "*.png" 
See How to use updatedb command as an ordinary user?, Use updatedb and locate to index files.

find: Find a file

find operates recursively into sub folders.

-iname

Search by a file name

$ find . -type f -name "abc*" # find a file starting with abc
$ find . -iname '*.txt'  # -iname or -name is necessary

It also works for searching files on subdirectories.

$ find . -name transcripts.gtf
./RH_bio/transcripts.gtf
./dT_ori/transcripts.gtf
./dT_tech/transcripts.gtf
./dT_bio/transcripts.gtf
./RH_ori/transcripts.gtf
./RH_tech/transcripts.gtf

-mtime, -ctime, -atime argument

Find files modified in 10 days.

$ find . -ctime -10 # include subdirectories
.
./mediawiki-1.32.0.tar.gz
./d
./d/deepSurv.pdf

Find files modified in one day and contain string 'est'

$ find . -mtime -1 -exec grep --with-filename est {} \;

If the search directory is not the current directory, we need to add a forward slash to the directory name.

$ find ~/Desktop -iname '*.txt'  # Not working
$ find ~/Desktop/ -iname '*.txt' # Working 

The following example shows we can list multiple search criteria. The “‑r” option in tar appends files to an archive. xargs is a handy utility that converts a stream of input (in this case the output of find) into command line arguments for the supplied command (in this case tar, used to create a backup archive).

find / -type f -mtime -7 | xargs tar -rf weekly_incremental.tar
gzip weekly_incremental.tar

What is the difference between mtime, atime and ctime?

  • mtime (modification time) indicates the time the contents of the file has been changed. Mind you, only the contents. Not the attributes.
  • ctime (change time) is the timestamp of a file that indicates the time that it was changed. Now, the modification can be in terms of its content or in terms of its attributes.
  • atime (access time) is the timestamp that indicates the time that a file has been accessed.

xargs

See Linux Programming

-exec COMMAND {} \;

  • Search and list files with details
    find . -type f -name "*street*" -exec ls -lh {} \;

    -exec ls -lh {} \; executes the ls -lh command on each found file. The {} is a placeholder for the current file, and \; indicates the end of the -exec command.

  • How to run find -exec?, Using semicolon (;) vs plus (+) with exec in find
    # This command will run grep chrome on each file individually.
    find . -exec grep chrome {} \;
    
    # This command will run grep chrome on batches of files, reducing the number of times the command is executed.
    # Using + can significantly improve performance
    find . -exec grep chrome {} +
    

    Note:

    • The backslash before ; is to escape ; so linux won't interpret it directly.
    • Command Compatibility: Not all commands support being executed with multiple arguments at once. For example, grep can handle multiple files, but some other commands might not. In other words, while -exec COMMAND {} + can be more efficient, it’s important to ensure the command you’re using supports this usage and behaves as expected.
  • Find files and execute something (google: find --exec)
    $ find ./ -name "*.tar.gz" -exec tar zxvf {} \;
    
  • Find and move files to a new directory
    find OLDDIR -type f -exec mv -t NEWDIR {} + 
    
  • Find the total file size of a list of files.
  • What is meaning of {} + in find's -exec command?
  • Why does 'find -exec cmd {} +' need to end in '{} +'?
  • How to run find -exec? The following will find out the total file size of the 'accepted_hits.bam' file under all sub-directories.
    find ./ -iname "accepted_hits*" -exec du -ch {} + | grep total$
    

    where '-c' produces a grand total, and will substitute {} with the filename(s) found in -exec.

How to find and delete directory recursively

How to find and delete directory recursively on Linux or Unix-like system. Application: recursively remove backups older than 30 days.

Find all soft link files

find /tmp -type l

Recursive statistics on file types in directory?

You could use find and uniq for this. This is fast!

$ find . -type f | sed 's/.*\.//' | sort | uniq -c

Exclude or Ignore Files

Find command Exclude or Ignore Files (e.g. Ignore All Hidden .dot Files )

Avoid Permission Denied Messages

How to fix find command permission denied messages

  • Redirecting ALL standard error (not only permission denied error): 2>/dev/null.
find . -iname "data*.txt" -print 2>/dev/null
  • Focus on the 'permission denied' message: grep -v "Permission denied"
find / -name foo 2>&1 | grep -v "Permission denied"

Find Files That Have Been Modified Recently in Linux

Find Files That Have Been Modified Recently in Linux

fd: The Find Command Alternative

Fd: The Find Command Alternative For Mastering File Search In Linux

grep: Find a file by searching contents

grep -r -i "Entering" ~/Downloads/R-3.0.0/

where -r means recursively searching the directory and -i means case insensitive.

Sometimes using -R is more effective because of the symbolic links issue.

$ grep -r -i phpmyadmin /etc/apache2/  # nothing returned
$ grep -R -i phpmyadmin /etc/apache2/

We can also display the row numbers for matches by using the -n parameter in grep.

# What variants appear in dbsnp
grep -n 'rs[0-9]' XXX.vcf

To exclude lines with a pattern, using the -v parameter.

# How many variant were called
grep -v "^#" XXX.vcf | head

To exclude binary files, use -I parameter.

To show only matched filenames, using the -l parameter.

grep -l "iterator" *.cpp
# if we add '-n', the '-n' option won't work.

To search with certain file extensions, use --include argument; see this post.

grep -r -i --include \*.h --include \*.cpp KEYWORD ~/path[12345]  
# escape with \ just in case you have a directory with asterisks in the filenames

How To Find All Files Containing Specific Text On Linux From The Command Line

grep -Rni --exclude-dir={Private,Personal} --include={*.txt,*.js} 'text' ~/Documents
# Exclude hidden directories
grep -R --exclude-dir=".*" 'text' ~/Documents

The only issue with using the -f argument is that grep is going to attempt to interpret the keywords as if they are patterns, which can slow it down when parsing against an extremely large file. So you can also specify the -F parameter, which tells grep to only do exact matches against the strings.

grep -f searchstringsFile filetosearch > output.txt

# -F, --fixed-strings
grep -F searchstring filetosearch > output.txt

If the pattern is saved in a file, use the -f parameter

grep -f PATTERNFILE INPUTFILE

If there are two keywords, use the following

$ grep "begin\|completed" --color swarm_58606147_0.o  # needs an escape
begin 2018-01-12 14:46:05
alignment is completed 2018-01-12 16:45:24
marking duplication is completed 2018-01-12 17:52:01
assign read group is completed 2018-01-12 18:22:49
indel re-alignment is completed 2018-01-12 19:29:32
BQSR is completed 2018-01-12 22:26:22
GATK is completed 2018-01-12 23:43:3
$ egrep "begin|completed" --color swarm_58606147_0.o 
# no need an escape if we use extended regular expressions

We can use R to compute the time spent in each step; see Dealing with dates.

Check https://www.howtoforge.com/tutorial/linux-grep-command/ for more examples

  • Using grep to search only for words / exact match ("-w" option)
  • Using grep to search two different words (egrep -w 'word1|word2' /path/to/file)
  • Count line for matched words ("-c" option)
  • Grep invert match ("-v" option)
  • How to list only the names of matching files ("-l" option)

Preserve colouring after piping grep to grep

https://stackoverflow.com/a/2327216

Use grep --color=always .For example, grep --color=always KEYWORD Myfile | more.

Compressed files

zgrep or zipgrep command

GUI

A GUI version of a tool to search files is searchmonkey (open source, Linux, Windows). On Ubuntu, we install it by

sudo apt-get install searchmonkey

It is also useful to change the settings so we can click a filename and open it in the desired text editor. To do that, go to Settings -> Preferences -> System Call -> Text Editor. I enter 'geany' since I want to use geany to open my C programs. Note. the v2.0 source code needs to be built using i386 gcc library and Qt 4.8.x. Still, I cannot get rid of some errors coming from the source code.

-- option

How To Use grep To Search The --help Output To Find Out What CLI Arguments That Begin With A Dash Do

rm --help | grep -w -- -r

rm --help | grep -w -- '-[rf]'  # multiple one letter

Summary of find and grep commands

Command Examples
find find [DIRECTORY] -iname '*.txt'

find [DIRECTORY] -maxdepth 2 -iname *.php

find -name '*.php' -o -name '*.txt' # OR operator

grep grep -r -i "check_samtools" DIRECTORY/

dpkg -l libgtk* | grep '^i'

Format the output: column

This command will make the output of some command easy to read; see 18 Commands That Will Change The Way You Use Linux Forever.

For example: mount | column -t

Count number of columns: awk

The following command shows the number of columns for the first few rows of a text file.

head MYFILE | awk '{ print NF}'

head MYFILE | awk -F '\t'  '{ print NF}'

Count number of rows in a file: wc

wc -l MYFILE

The source code of wc (or any Linux command) can be found by using this method

brb@brb-T3500:~/Downloads$ which wc
/usr/bin/wc
brb@brb-T3500:~/Downloads$ dpkg -S /usr/bin/wc
coreutils: /usr/bin/wc
brb@brb-T3500:~/Downloads$ sudo apt-get source coreutils

As we can see from the coreutils-8.21/src directory, there are over 100 C programs including <cat.c>, <chmod.c>, <cp.c>, ...<wc.c>.

Print certain rows/lines of a text file

The following example will print out lines 10 to 60 of FILENAME.

sed -n '10,60p' FILENAME

Or to print out line 60,

sed -n '60p' FILENAME

It seems this method is not as fast as I expected. For example, the tail command will immediately print out the result without waiting!

Print a text file with line number: less

How to Use the less Command on Linux

less -N myfile

output colored console to html

Use ansi2html.sh. It only requires gawk.

  1. Use wget to download it
  2. sudo apt-get install gawk
  3. chmod +x ansi2html.sh
  4. colordiff file1 file2 | ./ansi2html.sh > diff.html

using a the result of a diff in a if statement

ls -lR $dir > a
ls -lR $dir > b

DIFF=$(diff a b) 
if [ "$DIFF" != "" ] 
then
    echo "The directory was modified"
fi

Another example

if [ "$(diff file1.html file2.html)" == "" ]; then echo Same; else echo Different; fi

Prompt

Colored prompt

For example, the following code will change the prompt to a light blue color. NOTE that we need ∖[ and ∖] in order to avoid a problem of miscalculating the cursor's starting position.

# blue   
export PS1='\[\e[1;34m\]\u@\h:\w\$ \[\e[0m\]'     # bright blue (good)
export PS1='\[\e[0;34m\]\u@\h:\w\$ \[\e[0m\]'     # darker blue

# yellow
export PS1='\[\e[1;33m\]\u@\h:\w\$ \[\e[0m\]'     # bright yellow
export PS1='\[\e[0;33m\]\u@\h:\w\$ \[\e[0m\]'     # dark yellow (good)

# red
export PS1='\[\e[1;31m\]\u@\h:\w\$ \[\e[0m\]'     # bright red
export PS1='\[\e[0;31m\]\u@\h:\w\$ \[\e[0m\]'     # dark red (good)

# green
export PS1='\[\e[1;32m\]\u@\h:\w\$ \[\e[0m\]'     # bright green
export PS1='\[\e[0;32m\]\u@\h:\w\$ \[\e[0m\]'     # dark green

# cyan
export PS1='\[\e[1;36m\]\u@\h:\w\$ \[\e[0m\]'     # bright cyan
export PS1='\[\e[0;36m\]\u@\h:\w\$ \[\e[0m\]'     # dark cyan (good)

# purple
export PS1='\[\e[1;35m\]\u@\h:\w\$ \[\e[0m\]'     # bright purple (good)
export PS1='\[\e[0;35m\]\u@\h:\w\$ \[\e[0m\]'     # dark purple

Ps1tweak.png

To make a permanent change, we can add the line to ~/.bashrc file and (is it necessary) un-comment the following line

force_color_prompt=yes


Some of my settings in .bashrc file

# Office Linux Mint, bright blue, display current time
# Example: 12:45PM ~/Downloads$
PS1="\[\033[1;34m\]\$(date +%H:%M%p) \w$\[\033[0m\] "

# Biowulf and Helix, dark yellow
# Example: biowulf:~/R$
PS1='\[\e[0;33m\]\h:\w\$ \[\e[0m\]'
alias nano="nano -c --softwrap"

# Mac, light green
export PS1="\[\e[0;32m\]mac$\[\e[0m\] "

Shorten prompt

How can I shorten my command line (bash) prompt? It is useful especially in VM.

Add a timestamp to your Bash prompt

PS1 Prompt
default brb@p45t:~/Downloads$
PS1='[\D{%F %T}] \u@\h \W\$ ' [2016-07-08 16:56:48] brb@brb-P45T-A ~/Downloads$
PS1="\[\033[1;34m\]\$(date +%H:%M%p) \w$\[\033[0m\] " 10:54AM ~/Downloads$
From here, we can skip %F (not showing the date), \W (not showing the current directory) and change %T to %H:%M (not showing seconds).
export PROMPT_COMMAND="echo -n \[\$(date +%H:%M%p)\]\ "

and the output will be something like:

[07:03AM] user@hostname:~$

zsh: display time to the right hand side

add a line RPROMPT='%*' to ~/.zshrc

Proxy

The 15 Best Web Proxies for Geo-Blocked Content and Online Privacy

Listen to pandora in Europe: install squid proxy

http://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/access-pandora-radio-using-proxy-server-outside-usa/

Interestingly, the firefox connection settings should choose HTTP Proxy instead of 'SOCKS host'.

SSH, scp

See ssh.

Graphical way to display disk usage

For example, to use xdiskusage, we run apt-get install xdiskusage and launch it by xdiskusage ~/.

  • Ubuntu has a built-in program called "Disk Usage Analyzer". Just search it from Dash. Looks useful!

df : Display disk space

df -h
df -h -T  # show the 't'ype of the file system like tmpfs, ext4, squashfs (snap), vfat
df -h -t ext4 # show file systems of given type (ext4 in this example)
df -a     # show all file system (include ones that have a size of zero blocks)

df -h | grep -v snap # ignore snap partitions
df -h | grep -v loop

Note for the NTFS type, it will be reported as fuseblk by mount or df command.

duf

Terminal Tip ‘duf’ is Prettier Alternative to the ‘df’

Disk encryption

LUKS

Encrypt files

croc Is A Tool For Resumable, Encrypted File And Folder Transfers Between Computers (Command Line)

rm command and trash can

Make “rm” Command To Move The Files To “Trash Can” Instead Of Removing Them Completely

du/ncdu and block size: Display directory size with sorting and human readable

Use ncdu program (more interactive). Although it is a command line program, we can use the mouse to move through each directory to see its sub-directories.

ncdu can show the hidden directory size. This is useful. For example, ~/.local/share/Trash and ~/.singularity/docker can take a lot of space.

sudo apt-get install ncdu
ncdu

And the du method.

du -csh *.jpg           # total is at the bottom
du -sh ~/*              # won't include hidden directories, Fast
du -h ~/ --max-depth=1  # include hidden directories, SLOW
du -h ~/ --max-depth=1 --exclude ".*" | sort -nr | cut -f2 | xargs -d '\n' du -sh
du -a -h ~/  # kilobytes will be used, '-a' is to see all files, not just directories.
du -a ~/ | sort -nr | head -n 10   # sort from the largest file size first (in bytes)
                                   # this includes directories and any files under any directories
du -sh * | sort -hr | head -n 10   # this does not go to subdir; only show files and top directories

The --exclude is to hide hidden directories, '-n' is to compare according to string numerical value, and '-r' is to reverse the result.

Note that the 'du' commands may be cheating. See the following screenshot.

DiskUsage.png

The discrepancy is explained by 'sector'. See http://askubuntu.com/questions/122091/difference-between-filesize-and-size-on-disk. Note: it seems 4096 is what I see from all devices.

$ sudo dumpe2fs /dev/sda1 | grep -i "block size"
dumpe2fs 1.41.14 (22-Dec-2010)
Block size:               4096

$ sudo tune2fs -l /dev/sda1 | grep -i "block size"

$ sudo fdisk -l | tail
$ sudo tune2fs -l /dev/mmcblk0p2 | grep -i "block size"

To show a file size in terms of blocks, we can use

ls -s

So for example, if a file takes 150 blocks, and if a block takes 4096 bytes, then the file takes 150*4096/1024 KB on disk.

gdu

gdu Is A Fast Console Disk Usage Analyzer (Alternative To ncdu, du, Etc.)

Find the total size of certain files within a directory

Find the total size of certain files within a directory branch

du -ch ./photos/*.jpg | grep total
find ./photos -type f -name '*.jpg' -exec du -ch {} + | grep total$

Apache benchmark (ab) testing

ab -n 100 -c 10 http://taichimd.us/

Monitor progress of copying/transferring files: pv

How to monitor progress of Linux commands using PV and Progress utilities

# Method 1: rsync
rsync --progress -a sourceDirectory destinationDirectory
rsync --info=progress2 source dest

# Method 2: pv
sudo apt-get install pv
## copy a single file
pv inputfile > outputfile

## multiple files or directories 
tar c sourceDirectory | pv | tar x -C destinationDirectory

## https://stackoverflow.com/a/26226261
docker save <image> | bzip2 | pv | \
     ssh user@host 'bunzip2 | docker load'

rsync

See Backup.

Wireless File Transfer Apps on Linux

The 7 Best Wireless File Transfer Apps on Linux

sudo

How to Control sudo Access on Linux

https://www.howtogeek.com/447906/how-to-control-sudo-access-on-linux/

sudo adduser NEWUSER
sudo usermod -a -G sudo NEWUSER

sudo vs su

The Difference Between sudo and su Explained: password and shell.

How to Keep ‘sudo’ Password Timeout Session Longer in Linux

http://www.tecmint.com/set-sudo-password-timeout-session-longer-linux/

How to run multiple commands in sudo

https://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/how-to-run-multiple-commands-in-sudo-under-linux-or-unix/

Run sudo commands without a password?

Alternative browsers, text browsers

See Browser.

Filezilla

Keyboard shortcut. Especially, Alt+Down=Transfers the currently selected item to an item of the same name in the other pane.

The device is busy

brb@brb-P45T-A:~$ sudo umount /media/brb/TOSHIBA 
[sudo] password for brb: 
umount: /media/brb/TOSHIBA: device is busy.
        (In some cases useful info about processes that use
         the device is found by lsof(8) or fuser(1))
brb@brb-P45T-A:~$ sudo umount /dev/sdc1
umount: /media/brb/TOSHIBA: device is busy.
        (In some cases useful info about processes that use
         the device is found by lsof(8) or fuser(1))
brb@brb-P45T-A:~$ lsof /media/brb/TOSHIBA/
COMMAND  PID USER   FD   TYPE DEVICE   SIZE/OFF NODE NAME
VBoxSVC 5600  brb   18w   REG   8,33 4294967295    3 /media/brb/TOSHIBA/Windows 10.ova (deleted)
brb@brb-P45T-A:~$ kill -9 5600
brb@brb-P45T-A:~$ lsof /media/brb/TOSHIBA/
brb@brb-P45T-A:~$ sudo umount /dev/sdc1
brb@brb-P45T-A:~$ 
# fuser -m /dev/sdc1
/dev/sdc1: 538
# ps auxw|grep 538
donncha 538 0.4 2.7 219212 56792 ? SLl Feb11 11:25 rhythmbox

Another handy one is:

umount -l /dev/sdwhatever

mkfs command

dd and mkfs

How to Use the mkfs Command on Linux, How to Format Storage Drives Using the Linux Terminal

dd if=/dev/zero of=~/howtogeek.img bs=1M count=250
mkfs.ext2 ~/howtogeek.img
sudo mkdir /mnt/geek
sudo mount ~/howtogeek.img /mnt/geek
sudo chown dave:users /mnt/geek/

cd /mnt/geek
cp ~/Documents/Code/*.? .

sudo umount /mnt/geek
cd /mnt
sudo rmdir geek

Format a USB drive: exfat

Easily Format A USB Flash Drive On Ubuntu 18.04 Using USB Stick Formatter (mintStick deb & source)

This is a GUI application. After the installation, search "USB Stick Formatter".

For some reason, it doesn't have the 'exFAT' option. My system has installed exFAT drivers. This post said installing exFAT related drivers only helps reading/writing but not formatting.

If I want exFAT format, I need to use the USB Stick Formatter to format the drive first (for example fat32), plug it and then using the following command to format it to exFAT.

sudo apt install exfat-fuse exfat-utils # ubuntu 20.04 and lower
sudo apt install exfat-fuse exfatprogs # ubuntu 22.04 and higher

sudo fdisk /dev/sdc  # g,p,n,p,1,ENTER,ENTER,w
sudo fdisk -l /dev/sdc # the new partition has Id 83 and Type Linux. 

sudo mkfs.exfat -n Staples /dev/sdc1
sudo fdisk -l /dev/sdc # still Linux? but Gparted shows exfat

sudo mount /dev/sdc1 /mnt # to use

Note that fdisk or sfdisk cannot differentiate NTFS/exFAT. But cfdisk or GParted can.

sudo cfdisk /dev/sdX

Create an ext3/ext4 file system on a USB flash drive

umount /dev/sdb1   (depending on the device of course)
lsblk     # check the drive's partition name
sudo mkfs -t ext4 /dev/sdb1
lsblk -f  # Verify

sudo mkfs.ext3 /dev/sdb1
sudo e2label /dev/sdb1 usbdrive   (change the label)

sudo mkfs.vfat /dev/sdb1   # MS-DOS

exFat - cross platform partition format

sudo apt-get install exfat-utils exfat-fuse
# Still need to create a partition (ex. FAT32) first using gparted in order to get it mounted
sudo fdisk -l 
sudo mkfs.exfat -n LABEL /dev/sd**  #  LABEL with whatever you want to label your drive

lsblk -f  # verify the partitions, no sudo is needed

This should delivery a working exfat file system (read and write support, but not formatting the drives with exfat via Gnome Disks and GParted).

Add a new user with home directory; list all users

adduser xxx

adduser is better than useradd since useradd does not create home directory and it does not even ask the password for new user. adduser will interactively ask user information.

To delete the user and home directory, use

deluser --remove-home xxx

To view the user information, type id USERNAME or cat /etc/passwd.

How to List Users in Linux cat /etc/passwd | wc -l

gzip with multi cores: pigz

Use pigz utility. It makes a lot of difference. For example for a 21GB file, gzip can't finish the job after 30 minutes. But pigz only took 7 minutes on a 12-core machine.

According to 'pigz --help', the default threads is the number of online processors, or 8 if unknown.

sudo apt-get install pigz
pigz -9 FILENAME   # best compression method & convert the file to FILENAME.gz

tar cf - paths-to-archive | pigz -9 -p 12 > archive.tar.gz

There is no need to use pigz to un-compress the file. gunzip is fast enough and only takes 4 minutes to decompress.

The '-9' (best compression) option does not make difference (6.6G vs 6.5G).

Note that we have to be careful when we use md5sum to compare compressed files.

Compress a folder without full path name

Suppose we want to compress the folder ~/Documents and its subfolders. We want to include Documents folder name but not /home/brb/Documents name.

# Method 1. Include 'Documents' as the top folder name
cd ~/
tar -czvf tmp.tar.gz Documents
# Method 2. Mind the last dot. Not include 'Documents' as the top folder.
tar -czvf tmp.tar.gz -C /home/brb/Documents .

# Double check the tarball
tar -tzvf tmp.tar.gz  

If we want to strip the upper directories when we uncompress a tar file, use --strip-components. For example, we can use --strip-components=1 to remove the Documents folder.

Fix mess created by accidentally untarred files in the current dir

Suppose I accidentally untar a tarball in /var/www/html/ directory instead of /home/projects/www/current. It created mess in /var/www/html/. The easiest way to fix this mess:

cd /var/www/html/
/bin/rm -f "$(tar ztf /path/to/file.tar.gz)"
## or better ##
tar ztf /path/to/file.tar.gz | xargs -d'\n' rm -v

lzma

squashfs

squashfs

List contents of tar.gz or tar.bz2

tar -tzvf myfile.tar.gz

tar -tjvf myfile.tar.bz2  # replace z with j

gzip: stdin: not in gzip format

I got the following message when I try to run tar -xzvf or tar -tzvf command.

$ tar -tzvf filename.tar.gz 
gzip: stdin: not in gzip format
tar: Child returned status 1
tar: Error is not recoverable: exiting now
$ file filename.tar.gz 
filename.tar.gz: POSIX tar archive

The answer is How to solve: stdin: not in gzip format.

Solution: Since it was not a gzipped file, a simple tar is able to extract the file: tar xvf MyFile.tar.gz

Extract files, AVFS

See Extract files.

Show folder size for one level only

du --max-depth=1 -h

The graphical tool is called Disk Usage Analyze which is already available on Ubuntu.

Soft link and hard link

Soft link

ln -s /full/path/of/original/file /full/path/of/soft/link/file

Understanding Linux Links Part 1 & Part 2

The order of original and linked above in ln -s is similar to the mount command where we put the original volume first and the system's directory second. See an example here.

But when we issue "ls -l" we see it list the the original file at the end; e.g. /full/path/of/soft/link/file -> /full/path/of/original/file.

Hard link

What's the difference between a hard links and copied files?

  • Why are hard links not allowed for directories?
  • Hard linked file looks the same as the source file when viewed by "ls"
  • Change in either of hard linked file and the source file will affect the other
  • Hard linked file and source file can be deleted separately without affecting the other
echo "abcd" > foo
ln foo foo2
ls -l foo*
echo "efgh" >> foo2
cat foo
rm foo
cat foo2

Self-hosted servers

  • https://github.com/Kickball/awesome-selfhosted This is a list of Free Software network services and web applications which can be hosted locally. Selfhosting is the process of locally hosting and managing applications instead of renting from SaaS providers.
  • Sovereign: A set of Ansible playbooks to build and maintain your own private cloud: email, calendar, contacts, file sync, IRC bouncer, VPN, and more.

Cockpit: manage and monitor my servers using just a web browser

DNS

DNS

Port number is 53. An example is Pi-hole.

Email server

See Mail_server.

Backup

See Backup.

at command: Schedule a task

$ echo "rsync -av /home/tux/ me@myserver:/home/tux/" | at 1:30 AM

$ echo "command_to_be_run" | at 09:00

$ atq  # list of jobs

$ atrm 6   # delete the 6th job

Cron job by root

Note that there is a "user" field for cron jobs defined in /etc/crontab or /etc/cron.d.

  • Place one: /etc/crontab and /etc/cron.daily, /etc/cron.hourly, /etc/cron.monthly, /etc/cron.weekly.
    cat /etc/crontab
    # How to List Daily Cron Jobs
    ls -la /etc/cron.daily
    
  • Place two: /etc/cron.d. It contains "anacron" and "e2scrub_all" on my Debian 11. See How to run a cron job as a specific user?

Running a cron job as a user

Some examples

MIN HOUR DOM MON DOW CMD
30 08 10 06 * $HOME/full-backup >> $HOME/myscript.log 2>&1; echo "Executed at $(date)\n----------" >> $HOME
/myscript.log
#   30 – 30th Minute
#   08 – 08 AM
#   10 – 10th Day
#   06 – 6th Month (June)
#   * – Every day of the week
  • Twice a day
00 11,16 * * * /home/ramesh/bin/incremental-backup 
#    00 – 0th Minute (Top of the hour)
#    11,16 – 11 AM and 4 PM
#    * – Every day
#    * – Every month
#    * – Every day of the week
  • Every 10 minutes
*/10 * * * * /home/ramesh/check-disk-space
# Will only run on odd days:
0 0 1-31/2 * * command

# Will only run on even days:
0 0 2-30/2 * * command

crontab

crontab SOME-CRON-FILE; crontab -l

Make sure the .sh file gives a complete path. For example,

#!/bin/sh
R --vanilla  < arraytoolsip.R

does not work in cron job although it works perfect when we manually run it from the right path. The sh file should be

#!/bin/sh
R --vanilla  < $HOME/Dropbox/scripts/arraytoolsip.R

To disable everything on crontab -l, use one of the following methods:

  • run crontab -e then comment out each line you don't want to run with #. OR
  • run crontab -r to empty the current crontab. OR
  • run crontab with no arguments, and then type Ctrl+D. It will create an empty crontab, overwriting your previous crontab.

GUI

Schedule Commands And Scripts In Linux With Zeit (GUI For Cron And At)

PATH and Shell

Cron knows nothing about your shell; it is started by the system, so it has a minimal environment. If you want anything, you need to have that brought in yourself. For example, to use 'ifconfig' command, I need to give it a complete path in my script file.

$ cat syncIP 
/sbin/ifconfig eth0 | grep 'inet addr:' | cut -d: -f2 | awk '{ print $1}'

and the cron job

06 15 * * * /home/MYUSERNAME/Ubuntu\ One/syncIP > $HOME/Ubuntu\ One/ip.txt 2>&1

See here on how to add environment variable into cron environment.

Disable mail alert

If something went wrong with executing a cron job, cron will output a message "You have new mail in /var/mail/$USER". You can open this file using a text editor. To disable this alert, run 'crontab -e (see this post)

0 1 5 10 * /path/to/script.sh >/dev/null 2>&1
# OR
0 1 5 10 * /path/to/script.sh > /dev/null

Another way is to add MAILTO="" at the top of the crontab file.

Run a command at boot

rc.local

How to enable rc.local shell script on systemd while booting Linux system

Running crontab as root

Use sudo crontab -e to edit. After saving it, no need to initialize it. Use sudo crontab -l to list the cron job.

Display and back up cron jobs

Linux List / Display and view all cron jobs

Check log

sudo grep CRON /var/log/syslog --color

Anacron

Anacron keeps track of the last time a task was run, and if it was missed, it runs it.

Anacron typically runs daily, while cron runs every minute.

cat /etc/anacrontab

GUI cron

md5sum

Linux md5sum Command Explained For Beginners (5 Examples)

How to verify files?

md5sum file1.txt file2.txt file3.txt > hashes
md5sum --check hashes

fsck

Fsck error on boot

fsck error on boot: /dev/sda6: UNEXPECTED INCONSISTENCY; RUN fsck MANUALLY

This happened when I resize an Ubuntu partition.

fsck -fy /dev/sda1

Force fsck on the Next Reboot or Boot Sequence

https://www.linuxuprising.com/2019/05/how-to-force-fsck-filesystem.html

https://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/linux-force-fsck-on-the-next-reboot-or-boot-sequence/ Create a blank file /forcefsck and fsck will check your drive next time your reboot.

sudo touch /forcefsck

The fsck was used to fix a journal checksum error on a USB drive which has been formatted as Ext4 was used on a security camera application; see motionEyeOS.

Can I run fsck or e2fsck when Linux file system is mounted?

https://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/can-i-run-fsck-or-e2fsck-when-linux-file-system-is-mounted/

What is the difference between fsck and e2fsck?

https://superuser.com/a/19984

Swap partition

Swap file vs swap partition

Jetson Nano – Run on USB Drive

Mount drive, add a new hard drive

/etc/fstab and blkid

See Fstab.

autofs, /etc/auto.master

Building a network attached storage device with a Raspberry Pi

Fix a malfunctioning USB device or port

5 Ways to Fix a Malfunctioning USB Device or Port on Linux

Check the physical health of a USB stick

Linux check the physical health of a USB stick

USB drive

  • Rename USB drive partition label. It seems if a device does not have a label, Ubuntu will use its 32-digit UUID as the mount point (eg. /media/$USER/$Long_UUID). This is very cumbersome. To fix that, we can open the Disks utility and select the partition of the device. Click the two-gear icon and pick Edit Filesystem... where we can change the filesystem label. After that, we can reject the USB and re-plug it to see the new mount directory based on the new label we specified (/media/$USER/$Label). We can also use the command lsblk (no sudo needed) to check.
  • If I use "GParted" utility to check the "partition name ", it is not the same as the name I just specified through the "Disks" utility. But the "Information" window give a complete data. It is a little confusing that the partition label becomes the filsystem label and the Partition name shown on GParted was different & seems not to be used.

GpartedinfoSanDisk.png

Run the following to confirm the USB device is detected.

sudo fdisk -l
# OR
dmesg | grep -i "SCSI"

Now suppose the usb device is found in dev/sdb1.

sudo mkdir /mnt/usb
sudo mount -t vfat -o rw,users /dev/sdb1 /mnt/usb

The above mount command assumes the usb drive has Windows vfat partition and users give non-root users the ability to unmount the drive. If the USB drive is partitioned linux ext2/3, we can merely run mount command as

sudo mount /dev/sdb1 /mnt/usb

At the end, run umount command like

sudo umount /mnt/usb

To make the mounting automatically, edit the file /etc/fstab.

/dev/sdb1       /mnt/usb           vfat    defaults        0       0 
/dev/sdb2       /mnt/usb2          ext3    defaults        0       0
UUID=XXXXXXXXXX /mnt/usb3       ntfs-3g    rw              0       0

and run

sudo mount -a

Mount an iso file

sudo mkdir -p /mnt/mount_point # create a mount point
sudo mount -o loop /home/user/disk.iso /mnt/mount_point
mount  # verify

Mount remote Windows share

Sharing files with Windows by using NitroShare

Simple way of Sharing files between Ubuntu 16.04 and Windows 10 by using open-source NitroShare which is based on Qt framework.

NTFS usb drive in xubuntu

http://xflinux.blogspot.com/2011/01/mount-ntfs-volumes-automatically-in.html

sudo apt-get install ntfs-config

Now go to Applications>> System>> Ntfs Configuration Tool

Expand the "Advanced Configuration" and select all those partitions you want to be auto mounted and writable( The tool will detect all partitions at its startup).

Make sure the " Enable write support for internal devices" option is selected. Now click Close.

Many drives, one folder

Partition tables

Partition Tables and the Dangers of Editing Them

parted command

How to partition a disk in Linux

Recommended partition schemes

HOME /home directory

How to Move Your Linux home Directory to Another Drive

/var directory filled up

How to move /var directory to another partition

blkid | grep sdc1  # get UUID 
mkdir /mnt/newvar
mount /dev/sdc1 /mnt/newvar
df -h /mnt/newvar
rsync -aqxP /var/* /mnt/newvar  # q=quiet,x=one-file-system, P=partial,progress
umount /mnt/newvar/  /mnt/var/
nano /etc/fstab
# UUID=XXXX   /var    ext4  defaults  0   2

Reboot

Why put things other than /home to a separate partition?

Why put things other than /home to a separate partition?

The /var partition is used by Docker and Apache.

/home, /boot and /var partitions can be separated.

Process/job

ps and top commands

How to Use the ps Command to Monitor Linux Processes, Linux how long a process has been running?

ps -C shutter # Listing only a Process by Command
              # Adding the 'watch' command to show the process in real-time
ps -C dd --format pid,cmd,%cpu # Show PID, CMD and %CPU

sudo ps -p {PID} -o pid,cmd,lstart,etimes,etime

ps -e | less # Listing Process for All Users

ps -eH --forest | less # hierarchy

ps -e | grep firefox # Listing Processes by Name

ps -p 3403 # Listing Processes by Process ID

ps -u mary  # Listing Processes Owned by a User

sudo pkill top # Killing Processes by Name

sudo killall top # Killing Multiple Processes by Name

Kill a process and the pstree command

  • Killing a process and all of its descendants. This covers a PPID, PID and more importantly PGID, SID. Also ps j -A command can show these IDs for the running processes.
    $ tail -f /var/log/syslog | grep "CRON" &
    $ ps j
    $ kill -SIGTERM -- -($Some_PGID)
    
  • pgrep & kill
    # find the PID
    pgrep ProgramName
    # Kill the ProgramName process
    kill -9 PID
    
  • killall. For example, if Firefox is acting up (as Firefox will do from time to time) simply type killall firefox and it should kill the application completely. In the rare circumstances that this doesn’t work you can always type xkill and then click on the window that won’t close; this will completely close a given window immediately. See this. To kill a privileges process, use for example sudo killall crond.
    sudo killall -u USERNAME
    

Kill a process running on a specific port

Kill a Process Running on a Specific Port in Linux (via 4 Methods)

How to Kill Zombie Processes on Linux

How to Kill Zombie Processes on Linux

Simulate/produce high cpu load

How can I produce high CPU load on a Linux server?

# method 1:
sudo apt install stress
stress --cpu 3

# method 2:
for i in 1 2 3 ; do while : ; do : ; done & done
jobs   # list background jobs
for i in 1 2 3 4; do kill %$i; done  # kill "job" (not "PID") 1,2,3,4

ps, pgrep and pidof: How much resource is used by a process

Find the process ID first by ps -ef | grep APPLICATIONAME where "-e" is to show the running processes and "-f" is for a full listing. Then

ps -p <pid> -o %cpu,%mem,cmd

For example,

$ ps -ef | grep akregator
brb      15013  1942  1 10:41 ?        00:00:05 akregator --icon akregator -caption Akregator
brb      15186 24045  0 10:50 pts/11   00:00:00 grep --color=auto akregator
$ ps -p 15013 -o %cpu,%mem,cmd
%CPU %MEM CMD
 1.0  0.8 akregator --icon akregator -caption Akregator

pgrep

08:49AM ~$ ps -ef | grep firefox
brb       7798  7778  0 08:49 pts/2    00:00:00 grep --color=auto firefox
brb      25486 24869  0 Sep10 ?        00:42:48 /usr/lib/firefox/firefox
brb      25612 25486  0 Sep10 ?        00:19:49 /usr/lib/firefox/firefox .....
08:49AM ~$ pgrep firefox
25486

pidof

08:49AM ~$ pidof firefox
27951 25961 25612 25486
08:51AM ~$ pidof /usr/lib/firefox/firefox
27951 25961 25612 25486

$ kill $(pidof firefox)

Avoid concurrency

Avoid These Problems By Limiting Bash Scripts to Run Once At A Time. pgrep, lsof and flock commands.

All You Need To Know About Processes in Linux

http://www.tecmint.com/linux-process-management/

wait command and background jobs

The wait command in Linux is a shell built-in command that pauses the execution of a shell script until all background jobs or specified JobID/PIDs terminate and return their exit status.

# Example 1: Wait for all background processes to finish
command1 &
command2 &
wait
echo "All background processes have finished."

# Example 2: Wait for a specific process to finish
command1 &
PID=$!
command2 &
wait $PID
echo "Command1 has finished."

run commands in a background and allow log off

nohup /path/to/script >output 2>&1 &

Or to disable output and be more safe. It also explains the concept of file descriptor/fd in Unix.

nohup command </dev/null >/dev/null 2>&1 & 

See also Anonymous named pipe.

See also How to Setup OpenVPN on Fedora 24+ where we use nohup openvpn ... & to start the connection in the background and also make it not terminate on exiting the terminal.

job: How do I send an already-running process into the background

Steps:

  1. 'Ctrl+Z' to stop (pause) the program and get back to the shell. It sends SIGTSTP to a foreground application.
  2. bg to run it in the background.
  3. jobs -l to get the jobID and process ID
  4. disown -h [job-spec] where [job-spec] is the job number (like %1 for the first running job; find about your number with the jobs command) so that the job isn't killed when the terminal closes.

Stopped job

A stopped job is one that has been temporarily put into the background and is no longer running, but is still using resources (i.e. system memory). Because that job is not attached to the current terminal, it cannot produce output and is not receiving input from the user.

  • jobs -s showing stopped jobs
  • jobs -l showing the job PID

Send kill to a stopped job, it will do nothing but queue than bring it in in foreground, it will terminate. So don't repeatly sending a 'kill' command.

  • fg %1 move the stopped job ID #1 to the foreground (works)
  • kill %1 # kill job ID #1
  • kill 12345 # kill job PID 12345
  • kill -9 `jobs -ps` may not work
  • kill -9 $(jobs -p)

nice

How to Set Process Priorities With nice and renice on Linux

watch command

Watching activity on Linux with watch and tail commands. Both the watch -n and tail -f commands can provide auto-updating views of information/

We can use the watch command to monitor a specific process such as the progress of the dd command.

Terminal 1

watch -n 10 who
watch ps -C dd --format pid,cmd,%cpu

Terminal 2

dd if=/dev/zero of=/dev/null

Use --color for color output.

while + sleep

How To Repeat A Command Every X Seconds On Linux: watch, while + sleep,

ulimit

Notepadqq - Notepad++-like editor

Notepadqq. It is written using Qt. It does not have printing function:(

Note apps that can sync

Top 8 Notepad Apps for Linux That You Can Sync. Some are compatible with Evernote.

Evernote

Evernote alternative

How to Install Turtl Server - Evernote Alternative - on Ubuntu 16.04

Backup/restore Evernote

https://www.makeuseof.com/tag/backup-restore-evernote/

Markdown

Preview markdown/view markdown offline

sudo pip install grip
grip readme.md
# title 1
![screenshot](myfile.png?raw=true)
  • Chrome markdown preview plus extension does not show images from github.

Markdown editor

Text editor with navigation

Text editor with navigation

nano/pico editor

The nano editor is also called pico in R. See ?edit in R.

nano editor

vi editor

vi editor

Cloud

Cloud

Boot

U-boot

http://www.denx.de/wiki/U-Boot

Pandora linux client

COW (copy on write) file system

filesystem

tmpfs and /dev/shm

Apache redirection

http://cran.r-project.org/mirror-howto.html

Redirect a Website URL from One Server to Different Server in Apache

Important linux directories

Filesystem Hierarchy Standard, Wikipedia

  • /bin - executables used by the base system
  • /boot
  • /dev
  • /etc - configuration files
  • /media
  • /mnt
  • /opt - optional application packages
  • /proc - process information only. Access Kubernetes Objects Data From /Proc Directory
  • /sbin - critical executables for running the system, but should be used by superuser
  • /usr - non-critical files. For example /usr/bin contains most of the libraries used by apps. /usr/share/ contains Architecture-independent data (eg some pretty images are located in /usr/share/backgrounds)
  • /var - variable data such as databases, mails spools and system logs.

Difference of /bin, /sbin, /usr/local/bin, ...

  • /bin : For essential binaries; e.g. bash, cat, ls.
  • /sbin : is similar to /bin but for scripts with superuser (root) privileges required; e.g. shutdown command is located here. Local users have to use sudo to run binaries here.
  • /usr/bin : Same as first, but for general system-wide & non-essential binaries; e.g. grep, zip, docker, etc.
  • /usr/sbin : Same as above, but for scripts with superuser (root) privileges required.
  • /usr/local/bin or /usr/local/sbin for system-wide available (personal) scripts. For example, install docker-compose is merely to download the binary and place it under /usr/local/bin/ directory.

If you want to create your own scripts and make them available to all users, you’re pretty safe adding them to /usr/local/bin. Or to add my scripts to my local bin (~/bin) and then I create a symbolic link in /usr/local/bin to the commands I want to make public. As a result, I can manage all my scripts from the same directory but still make some of them publicly available since /usr/local/bin is added to $PATH. See this post.

DHCP

DHCP server IP

Linux find DHCP server IP address using CLI

Get a New IP Address

dhclient -r   #  release your IP Address

dhclient   #  get your DHCP to issue you a new IP Address based on how it’s been configured.

Open a file/URL using the default application from the command line

See also

Check a file's encoding

file -bi myfile

For example,

file -bi Downloads/hmv_.rc 
# text/x-c++; charset=utf-16le

Know you system using the command line

Alerting and visualization tools

5 alerting and visualization tools for sysadmins

System monitor tools (TUI)

glances command: more than htop

Glances is similar to htop but it provides network stats and disk usage too. It also supports web UI. Install it by sudo apt-get install glances.

conky and autostart

For auto start on Lubuntu, see How can I add new autostart programs in Lubuntu?

On Lubuntu 18.04, add the path to the application to ~/.config/lxsession/Lubuntu/autostart

top and htop command

nmon

CPU frequency

How To Optimize Performance And Battery Life With Auto-cpufreq In Linux

What is the correct way to view your CPU speed on Linux? (x86)

watch -n.1 "cat /proc/cpuinfo | grep \"^[c]pu MHz\""

How can I get the current CPU frequency of an ARM processor on Ubuntu?

ls /sys/devices/system/cpu/cpu0/cpufreq/

scout_realtimep

This is used by Dataplicity

gtop command (100% Javascript)

https://www.cyberciti.biz/howto/gtop-awesome-system-monitoring-dashboard-for-terminal/.

Pros:

  • CPU history graph in time
  • Memory history graph in time (not useful)
  • Network bandwidth usage is real-time. It is accurate as what nload gives.
  • Percentage usage of memory, swap, disk usage
  • Top processes
$ docker run --rm -it \
    --name gtop \
    --net="host" \
    --pid="host" \
    aksakalli/gtop

$ sudo apt install npm nodejs
$ npm install gtop -g
$ gtop
  • Press p to sort by process ID (PID).
  • Press c to sort by CPU usage.
  • Press m to sort by memory usage.

It can be installed on Linux Mint 18.2 but not in Ubuntu 14.04 or raspbian (9 stretch).

$ npm install gtop -g
npm http GET https://registry.npmjs.org/gtop
npm http GET https://registry.npmjs.org/gtop

npm http GET https://registry.npmjs.org/gtop
npm ERR! Error: CERT_UNTRUSTED
npm ERR!     at SecurePair.<anonymous> (tls.js:1370:32)
npm ERR!     at SecurePair.EventEmitter.emit (events.js:92:17)
npm ERR!     at SecurePair.maybeInitFinished (tls.js:982:10)
npm ERR!     at CleartextStream.read [as _read] (tls.js:469:13)
npm ERR!     at CleartextStream.Readable.read (_stream_readable.js:320:10)
npm ERR!     at EncryptedStream.write [as _write] (tls.js:366:25)
npm ERR!     at doWrite (_stream_writable.js:223:10)
npm ERR!     at writeOrBuffer (_stream_writable.js:213:5)
npm ERR!     at EncryptedStream.Writable.write (_stream_writable.js:180:11)
npm ERR!     at write (_stream_readable.js:583:24)
npm ERR! If you need help, you may report this log at:
npm ERR!     <http://github.com/isaacs/npm/issues>
npm ERR! or email it to:
npm ERR!     <[email protected]>

npm ERR! System Linux 4.4.0-119-generic
npm ERR! command "/usr/bin/nodejs" "/usr/bin/npm" "install" "gtop" "-g"
npm ERR! node -v v0.10.25
npm ERR! npm -v 1.3.10

gotop

A terminal based graphical activity monitor inspired by gtop and vtop. It is quite beautiful.

Gotop – Yet Another TUI Graphical Activity Monitor, Written In Go

Compared to gtop, it has a temperature monitor. However, it can only show the average CPU usage (one line) on my Xeon computer.

git clone --depth 1 https://github.com/cjbassi/gotop /tmp/gotop
/tmp/gotop/scripts/download.sh
sudo cp gotop /usr/local/bin; rm gotop
gotop

Note the temperatures do not show up in Raspbian (raspberry pi 3 b+).

termui: Golang terminal dashboard

https://github.com/gizak/termui

Bashtop and btop

S-tui command

Monitor Linux CPU temperature, frequency, power in a graphical way

below

below: a time traveling resource monitor

System monitor tools (GUI)

Comparisons:

Some lists:

Linux-Dash

https://github.com/afaqurk/linux-dash. Not working when I tested on RPi and Ubuntu.

Nagios

Zabbix

Munin and Monit

Server Monitoring with Munin and Monit on Ubuntu 16.04 LTS

Cacti

sysstat, sar

# CPU
sar 2 10 # every two seconds, 10 times
# Memory
sar -r  # look at the kbcommit and commit columns

sar -r -f /var/log/sysstat/sa02

Stacer

Linux System Optimizer and Monitoring

Prometheus

Curses and ncurses: TUI library

Position text on your screen in Linux with ncurses

Calcurse

Keep up with your calendar and to-do list with Calcurse

Bitbucket (free for 5 users)

Bitbucket 101

  • Unlimited private repos
  • Code reviews
  • JIRA integration
  • REST API
  • Custom domains

See this post to know how to fix the problem of unknown author. In short, when I uncheck "Use global user setting" from Repository-> Repository Settings -> Advanced does the commit author change as expected.

See here for a list of Android apps related to bitbucket.

Image

See Images.

GIMP

Reload/Refresh .profile file

https://askubuntu.com/a/59127

. ~/.profile

. is a bash builtin and a synonym for source, see man bash.

After changing the .profile file, you have to logout from your account and login, then it will be sourced once automatically.

History of commands

history command with date and time

Running the following code once and history will give date and time the next time you issue the history command.

echo 'export HISTTIMEFORMAT="%Y-%m-%d %T "' >> ~/.bashrc

Note that the original post asks to write the line to ~/.bash_profile but this is not working in the desktop environment.

Note that on zsh, the above method is not supported. We can use history -i instead. Type man zshoptions or man zshbuiltins for more information.

Bang bang - Run a command/Fetch parameters from previous history

  1. ^P: Move up through the command history list one command at a time.
  2. ^N: Move down through the command history list one command at a time.
  3. !!: Run the previous command. For example, we can run sudo !! in order to run the previous command with sudo.
  4. !n: Run command number n (useful)
  5. !string: Run most recent command starting with characters in string (useful). For example, !ls
  6. !?string: Run most recent command containing characters that match string
  7. !*: Fetch parameters from last command (useful). For example, if we run "ls /var" first. Then when we run stat !*, it would run stat /var. Or we can run cd !* and it will cd to /var directory.
  8. !_: Fetch the last parameter from last command. For example, if we run "ls /var/ /etc" first. Then when we run stat $_, it would run stat /etc. (zsh shell only)
  9. Ctrl + r and type a keyword (most useful). Press ctrl + r to scroll the match. This is called reverse i search.

For example,

!-1
!4
!tail

Recall commands with reverse-i-search

Ctrl + r. See Bash bang commands: A must-know trick for the Linux command line

To continue with the search, just hit Ctrl + r keys again.

To run a forward search, hit Ctrl + s. How to cycle through reverse-i-search in BASH?

Increase history limit

http://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/17574/is-there-a-maximum-size-to-the-bash-history-file Unlimited Bash History

$ echo $HISTSIZE  # $HISTSIZE variable controls how much history is displayed 
500
$ export HISTSIZE=1000
$ echo “HISTSIZE=1000” >> ~/.bashrc

# $HISTFILESIZE variable controls how many commands are retained in your .bash_history file.
$ echo $HISTFILESIZE
2000
$ wc -l .bash_history
2000 .bash_history

Not to add to bash history

Add a space after the command.

It is useful if there is a password in the command.

For example,

$ ls ~/             # this won't be recorded in history
$  ls ~/Downloads/  # this will be recorded in history
$ history

Delete a single command from history

To stop adding history entries, you can place a space before the command, as long as you have ignorespace in your HISTCONTROL environment variable.

You can force Bash to exclude commands starting with empty space by placing this in your .bashrc file:

export HISTCONTROL=$HISTCONTROL:ignorespace

How to Clear Bash History on Linux

$ cat /dev/null > ~/.bash_history && history -c && exit

multiple terminals

Use ‘’’history -a’’’ to write the history to the file if we do not plan to close the terminal. See How to use the history command on Linux.

Listen to HiChannel internet radio

Use Radio Tray

I use it to listen m3u file (VLC also supports it too).

Web Analytics Reporting Tools

Painting software

  • Pinta. It can be install by apt-get command. It works just line Window's paint. Ctr + v to paste an image and save to a file. To crop an image, click the selection tool on the most left hand side (it's a black color on v1.6 but a gray color on v1.7), then select a rectangle. Now click 'Image' > 'Crop to Selection' to finish. Pinta New Release After 5 Years. Here’s How to Get it!
    sudo add-apt-repository ppa:pinta-maintainers/pinta-stable
    sudo apt update
    sudo apt install pinta
    
  • mtPaint. It is included in Odroid - xu4 - Lubuntu 14.04. To crop an image, just select an area and click Image > Crop. It can be used to take a screenshot from the desktop by using either the application or through the command line (mtpaint -s). It will then display the screenshot in the application if you use the command line.
  • MyPaint

Take a screenshot (and edit them)

See Take screenshots.

Cozy - audiobook player

ebook readers

7 Best eBook Readers for Linux: Calibre, FBReader, Okular, Lucidor, Bookworm, Easy Ebook Viewer and Buka.

Calibre - Read ebook in epub format

See Calibre

RSS reader

Some references:

  1. 5 Best Feed Reader Apps for Linux
  2. 14 Best RSS Feed Readers for Linux in 2018. It contains nice screenshots.

Some examples:

  • Fluent Reader. Open source. Linux, Windows, macOS.
  • Akregator. KDE based. This is preinstalled in CentOS-KDE under the Internet category. It is also called 'Feed Reader'.
  • QuiteRSS. It works on Linux, Windows and MacOS.
  • Liferea. GTK based. It is considered one of the best RSS feed readers on Ubuntu Linux. It can synchronize with several online feed managers such as InoReader among others.
  • FeedReader. Looks nice. Works with several online feed managers.
  • Newsbeuter: RSS feed in terminal
  • Newsboat: terminal. Newsboat: The Best Terminal-Based RSS Feed Reader for Linux. Not for general use since it assumes the articles are all text-based.
  • RSSOwl. Depends on Java. Cross platform.
  • Firefox and Thunderbird have built-in support for RSS.

Clear gibberish all over the screen

Just type “reset”. See BASH Fix Display and Console Garbage and Gibberish on a Linux / Unix / macOS. It is useful, for example, accidentally I run cat command over binary file.

Display/screen

Turn off/on your monitor via command line

xset dpms force off # Press any key to turn it on 
xset dpms force on
xset -q # check the status of the X server settings

If we want to turn off/on the screen via ssh, add

export DISPLAY=:0.0

first before calling the xset command, or use '-display' argument

xset -display :0.0 dpms force off 
xset -display :0.0 dpms force on 

autoxrandr

Plug your laptop into different monitor setups. https://www.donarmstrong.com/posts/autorandr/

Move a window without clicking the titlebar

Hold down the Alt key and then click in the window anywhere, and move your mouse.

Add new screen/display resolutions

xrandr | grep maximum
gtf 800 480 59.9  # give some output used in the following line
xrandr --newmode "800x480_59.90" 29.53 800 816 896 992 480 481 484 497 -HSync +Vsync
xrandr --addmode "DISP3 BG" 800x480_59.90
xrandr --output "DISP3 BG" --mode 800x480_59.90

I cannot find the file /etc/X11/xorg.conf in my UDOObuntu 2 beta 2. It seems this file does not exist anymore. See this post about how to re-create it.

Wayland

  • echo $XDG_SESSION_TYPE to check whether X11 or Wayland is in use
  • To change from wayland to X11:
    • Method 1: log out, click the username, choose Xorg and type the password
    • Method 2:
sudo nano /etc/gdm3/custom.conf
Change the line WaylandEnable=true to WaylandEnable=false And restart the system1.
loginctl show-session $(awk '/tty/ {print $1}' <(loginctl)) -p Type | awk -F= '{print $2}'

export DISPLAY

  • What is the $DISPLAY environment variable? The value of the display environment variable is:
    hostname:displaynumber.screennumber
    
  • If we want to run a GUI app on a remote computer (such as Raspberry Pi/Beaglebone Black) and show the GUI app on the remote computer's screen using ssh, we can issue the following command before running the app.
    export DISPLAY=:0.0
    

See which groups you belong to, id & group commands

id <username>
groups 
groups <username>

Main Types of User Accounts on Linux

The 4 Main Types of User Accounts on Linux

finger: show user information

finger USERNAME

List all user groups

How to List All User Groups on Linux

groupadd, chgrp, usermod, ACL (access control lists)

sudo mkdir -p /var/www/reports/
sudo groupadd project 

sudo usermod -a -G project tecmint 
sudo chgrp -R project /var/www/reports/
sudo chmod -R 2775 /var/www/reports/

create more system users and add them to the directory group as follows:

sudo useradd -m -c "Aaron" -s/bin/bash -G project aaron
sudo useradd -m -c "John" -s/bin/bash -G project john
sudo useradd -m -c "Ravi" -s/bin/bash -G project ravi

sudo mkdir -p /var/www/reports/aaron_reports
sudo mkdir -p /var/www/reports/john_reports
sudo mkdir -p /var/www/reports/ravi_reports

See who's in a group

grep '^group_name_here:' /etc/group

finger USERNAME # See more detail about a user

Add a standard user to sudo group

This is useful on Debian distribution where a new user does not have the sudo power. First log in as root,

# usermod -aG sudo username

Shared library management

http://www.cyberciti.biz/tips/linux-shared-library-management.html

  1. ldconfig : Updates the necessary links for the run time link bindings.
  2. ldd : Tells what libraries a given program needs to run.
  3. ltrace : A library call tracer.
  4. ld.so/ld-linux.so: Dynamic linker/loader.

Log files

$ ls -lt /var/log

ssh log files: /var/log/auth.log

  • /var/log/syslog: it is useful to use tail -f /var/log/syslog to show the log in real time
  • /var/log/auth.log: it includes ssh log in information and lots of CRON sessions opened and closed every minutes.

And

lnav (The Logfile Navigator)

How to Monitor Log Files in Real Time in Linux (Desktop and Server) . sudo apt install lnav; sudo lnav

Apache log

  • /var/log/apache2/error.log (small 83K). Useful to troubleshoot errors/crashes of Apache.
grep "May 08" /var/log/apache2/error.log
  • /var/log/apache2/access.log (large 10M)

mail

/var/log/maillog

Logrotate

How to Setup Logrotate on Linux (to Keep Your Server from Running Out of Space)

uprecords command

uptime command

uptime
watch -n 60 uptime

Windows

Find out from the logs what caused system shutdown?

How to find out from the logs what caused system shutdown?

Get notified when a system is rebooted

Get Notified When Your Raspberry Pi is Booted with Pushbullet. This makes use of /etc/rc.local file. If it does not work, we can use cron to run a command at startup; see sending an email on boot.

timeout command

Linux command similar to top to show hard disk activity

Use iotop. On ubuntu, we can use sudo apt-get install to install it. Use sudo iotop to launch it. Use -o to show processes that are actually doing IO.

sudo apt-get install iotop

sudo iotop -o -u $USER

Another program is iostat and the -d (disk) option. The -x option will display extension I/O status.

sudo apt-get install sysstat
iostat -dx 5 # every 5 seconds

24 iostat, vmstat and mpstat Examples for Linux Performance Monitoring

curl and wget

See Curl.

Torrent

Torrench

Torrench: How To Search And Download Torrent Files Using Terminal (Linux, Mac, Windows)

aria2 - command line downloader supports torrents and multi-connection

aria2 command examples

The -x argument helps a little bit. Download a file 112MB; see https://www.archlinux.org/download/

$ time aria2c  http://mirror.jmu.edu/pub/archlinux/iso/2016.11.01/archlinux-bootstrap-2016.11.01-i686.tar.gz # 16 seconds
$ time aria2c -x10 http://mirror.jmu.edu/pub/archlinux/iso/2016.11.01/archlinux-bootstrap-2016.11.01-i686.tar.gz # 11 seconds

Axel

It can create an unlimited number of worker threads to download any kind of data. See https://www.beginnersheap.com/top-5-command-line-download-accelerators-linux/

lftp

Apply a patch to source code

For example Tophat 2.0.12 compatibility with Samtools 1.0,

$ ls
support_for_tophat_1.patch  tophat-2.0.12  tophat-2.0.12.tar.gz

$ grep -r -i "check_samtools" tophat-2.0.12/
tophat-2.0.12/src/tophat.py:def check_samtools():
tophat-2.0.12/src/tophat.py:        check_samtools()

$ cp support_for_tophat_1.patch tophat-2.0.12/src/
$ cd tophat-2.0.12/src/
$ patch tophat.py < support_for_tophat_1.patch 
patching file tophat.py
Hunk #1 succeeded at 1540 (offset 3 lines).
Hunk #2 succeeded at 1563 (offset 3 lines).

IP address fundamental

http://www.howtogeek.com/133943/geek-school-learning-windows-7-ip-addressing-fundamentals/.

There are three classes for private IP ranges.

  • 1-126.0.0.0 from Class A
  • 128-191.0.0.0 from Class B
  • 192-223.0.0.0 from Class C

Subnet

Gateway IP address

How To Find Default Gateway IP Address In Linux And Unix From Commandline

Get internal IP address

$ hostname -I

$ ifconfig  # also works on Android through Termux

Private/internal/local IP/network

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IPv4#Private_networks

  • 10.0.0.0 – 10.255.255.255
  • 172.16.0.0 – 172.31.255.255
  • 192.168.0.0 – 192.168.255.255

Get external IP address

Using a browser: Google.com and type "my ip"

How to find your IP address in Linux

Command for determining my public IP? wget -qO- https://ipecho.net/plain ; echo

5 Commands to Find the IP Address of a Domain in the Linux Terminal

https://github.com/jakewmeyer/Geo (one shell script)

How to Find the Public IP Address on a Linux System

It seems there is no way to get the external IP address without not using external services.

host myip.opendns.com resolver1.opendns.com
# Look for the bottom line output  myip.opendns.com has address XXX.XX.XX.XXX

# https://unix.stackexchange.com/a/81699
sudo apt-get install dnsutils
dig +short myip.opendns.com @resolver1.opendns.com
# OR
curl ifconfig.me   # by google
                # also works on Android through Termux
# 
curl http://ipecho.net/plain; echo
# OR
curl ipv4.ipogre.com   

To store my IP in a shell variable

myip="$(dig +short myip.opendns.com @resolver1.opendns.com)"
echo "My WAN/Public IP address: ${myip}"

The above only gives the IP. The following method gives geo information too.

curl ipinfo.io # ifconfig.me, icanhazip.com, ipecho.net/plain, ifconfig.co
# OR give a specific IP (domain name does not work)
curl ipinfo.io/216.58.194.46

{
  "ip": "216.58.194.46",
  "hostname": "dfw25s12-in-f14.1e100.net",
  "city": "Mountain View",
  "region": "California",
  "country": "US",
  "loc": "37.4192,-122.0574",
  "org": "AS15169 Google Inc.",
  "postal": "94043"
}

IP geolocation

Test url: ubuntu.mirrors.pair.com

curl https://ipapi.co/8.8.8.8/json/

curl https://ipinfo.io/8.8.8.8
  • command line - input is a web address
IP_ADDRESS=$(dig +short example.com)
curl https://ipapi.co/$IP_ADDRESS/json/

Domain, WHOIS

  • WHOIS LOOKUP. For example, consider "r-pkg.org" domain,
    • The 'Sponsoring Registrar' shows who is the sponsoring registrar (eg GoDaddy.com).
    • The 'Registrant Name' shows who registered this domain.
    • Command Line Interface.
      sudo apt-get install whois
      whois r-pkg.org 
      

Subnet

IPv4

  • Class A: 255.0.0.0 or /8;
  • Class B, 255.255.0.0 or /16;
  • Class C, 255.255.255.0 or /24.

For example, in the subnet 192.168.5.0/255.255.255.0 (192.168.5.0/24) the identifier 192.168.5.0 commonly is used to refer to the entire subnet.

In the /16 subnet 192.168.0.0/255.255.0.0, which is equivalent to the address range 192.168.0.0–192.168.255.255

IPv6

ping command

ping uses the ICMP Echo Message to force a remote host to echo a packet back to the local host. If packets can travel to and from a remote host, it indicates that the two hosts can successfully communicate.

Check if a server is up/down if pining to that machine is not allowed

Hint: use nmap to scan open ports

nmap -PS22 -p22 <hostname> # port 22 only
# OR
nc -z -v <hostname> 22

Shell script to check whether a server is reachable?. I found if a server is up and I am trying a closed port, it will take about 2 minutes before it returns.

if nc -z $server 22 2>/dev/null; then
    echo "$server ✓"
else
    echo "$server ✗"
fi

6 Methods to Quickly Check if a Website is up or down from the Linux Terminal

Check if Sites are Online using a PHP script

How to Use Crontab to Automate Repetitive Tasks in Linux

Build a home network

IP Subnet Calculator

https://www.dan.me.uk/ipsubnets?ip=10.0.0.0

  • CIDR block IP range (network - broadcast) Subnet Mask IP Quantity
  • 10.0.0.0/24 10.0.0.0 - 10.0.0.255 255.255.255.0 256
  • 10.0.0.0/16 10.0.0.0 - 10.0.255.255 255.255.0.0 65536=256^2
  • 10.0.0.0/8 10.0.0.0 - 10.255.255.255 255.0.0.0 16777216=256^3

How Use Your Router and ISP’s Modem/Router Combo In Tandem

http://www.howtogeek.com/255206/how-use-your-router-and-isps-modemrouter-combo-in-tandem/

Troubleshoot and repair network problems

http://www.linuxuser.co.uk/features/troubleshot-repair-linux-networks

Computer 1 can ping Computer 2 but not reverse

Use the route command to solve. See also this post.

Simple Network Management Protocol (snmp)

Monitor network by Cacti (GUI)

Monitor network by command line

3 Simple, Excellent Linux Network Monitors: iftop, nethogs and vnstat.

bandwidth

bandwhich Shows What`s Taking Up Your Network Bandwidth On Linux And macOS

iftop

Use the interface top iftop command. On ubuntu, we need to use sudo apt-get install iftop and then run it by sudo iftop -i eth0. After that, we can press some keys to toggle options.

  • p: port
  • s: source
  • d: destination

See thegeekstuff.

It is strange that the output shows other devices names in my network.

$ dig A pandora.com
$ ipcalc -b 208.85.40.20
$ sudo iftop -F 208.85.40.20/24 -i wlan0

nethogs

$ sudo nethogs wlan0

Why does the snapd service use so much data?

nload

nload -m

nload – Monitor Linux Network Bandwidth Usage in Real Time

The result is the same as gtop (gtop is cooler) gives.

bmon

https://www.tecmint.com/bmon-network-bandwidth-monitoring-debugging-linux/

vnstat for network traffic monitor

# 1. Install vnStat
sudo apt-get install vnstat

# 2. Pick a Interface to Monitor using vnStat
vnstat -u -i eth0
vnstat --iflist
vnstatd -d # start the daemon
ps -ef | grep vnst

# 3. vnStat Basic Usage
vnstat

# 4. vnStat hours, days, months, weeks Network Data
vnstat -d
vnstat -m

# 5. Export the data to Excel or other DB
vnstat --dumpdb

# 6. Display Live Network Statistics
vnstat -l

# 7. Change the default vnstat output format
vnstat -s (--short)
vnstat --style 0

# 8. Display Top 10 Traffic Days
vnstat --top10

Network related linux commands

nmcli and nmtui (useful for getting DNS IPs)

iwconfig

8 Linux Commands: To Find Out Wireless Network Speed, Signal Strength And Other Information

Getting information (Link Quality, Signal level) about the wireless.

sudo iwconfig

See link quality continuously on screen

watch -n 1 cat /proc/net/wireless

(GUI) NetworkManager

ps -ef | grep NetworkManager

ifconfig - spoof the hardware address at the software level

To change the MAC address temporarily on a NIC (network interface controller),

sudo ifconfig eth0 down
sudo ifconfig eth0 hw ether 00:11:22:33:44:55
sudo ifconfig eth0 up

And it seems there is no need to modify /etc/network/interfaces.

For wlan

sudo ifconfig wlan0 down
sudo ifconfig wlan0 hw ether 00:11:22:33:44:55
sudo ifconfig wlan0 up

See

ip command

It is said ip is replacing the old ifconfig command on modern Linux distributions.

Linux ip Command Examples

http://www.makeuseof.com/tag/networking-commands-linux-terminal/

ip a
ip addr
ip address show

ip link set DEVICE down # eg ip link set eth0 down

ip link set DEVICE up

iptables

route

7 Linux Route Command Examples

  1. Display Existing Routes (route -n)
  2. Adding a Default Gateway (route add default gw 192.168.1.1)
  3. List Kernel’s Routing Cache Information (route -Cn)
  4. Reject Routing to a Particular Host or Network (route add -host 192.168.1.51 reject)
  5. Make 192.168.3.* Accessible from 192.168.1.* (route add -net 192.168.3.0 netmask 255.255.255.0 gw 192.168.3.10)
  6. Make 192.168.1.* Accessible from 192.168.3.* (route add -net 192.168.1.0 netmask 255.255.255.0 gw 192.168.1.10)
  7. Allow Internet Access/External World (route add default gw 125.250.60.59)

On Ubuntu 16.04, it shows

$ route
Kernel IP routing table
Destination     Gateway         Genmask         Flags Metric Ref    Use Iface
default         FIOS_Quantum_Ga 0.0.0.0         UG    600    0        0 wlp3s0
link-local      *               255.255.0.0     U     1000   0        0 wlp3s0
192.168.1.0     *               255.255.255.0   U     600    0        0 wlp3s0
$ route -n   # showing numerical IP address instead of host name.
Kernel IP routing table
Destination     Gateway         Genmask         Flags Metric Ref    Use Iface
0.0.0.0         192.168.1.1     0.0.0.0         UG    600    0        0 wlp3s0
169.254.0.0     0.0.0.0         255.255.0.0     U     1000   0        0 wlp3s0
192.168.1.0     0.0.0.0         255.255.255.0   U     600    0        0 wlp3s0

Flag value 'U' means up and 'G' means gateway'.

Connect two networks

The trick is explained in this post or the above route command.

For example, my network structure is

  • Modem/router: LAN IP 192.168.1.*/24
  • PC1: connect to Modem/router
  • Second router (ASUS) connect to Modem/router: its WAN IP is 192.168.1.ASUS. It's LAN IP 192.168.2.*/24
  • PC2 (raspberry pi): connect to the second router (ASUS): its IP is 192.168.1.212

By default, PC2 can ssh to PC1 but PC1 cannot access PC2.

The following command will solve the problem that PC1 cannot access PC2:

# From PC1
$ sudo route add -net 192.168.2.0 netmask 255.255.255.0 gw 192.168.1.ASUS
$ ssh [email protected]    # 192.168.2.212 is the IP address for the Raspberry Pi

$ netstat -rn
Kernel IP routing table
Destination     Gateway         Genmask         Flags   MSS Window  irtt Iface
0.0.0.0         192.168.1.1     0.0.0.0         UG        0 0          0 eth0
192.168.1.0     0.0.0.0         255.255.255.0   U         0 0          0 eth0
192.168.2.0     192.168.1.ASUS   255.255.255.0   UG        0 0          0 eth0

One article from linux.com using the ip command.

traceroute

sudo apt-get install traceroute
traceroute 8.8.8.8

On Windows, we can use the tracert command. For example, tracert www.microsoft.com.

nslookup (convert between hostname and ip) and host

$ host google.com
google.com has address 172.217.5.238
google.com has IPv6 address 2607:f8b0:4004:802::200e
google.com mail is handled by 30 alt2.aspmx.l.google.com.
google.com mail is handled by 10 aspmx.l.google.com.
google.com mail is handled by 40 alt3.aspmx.l.google.com.
google.com mail is handled by 50 alt4.aspmx.l.google.com.
google.com mail is handled by 20 alt1.aspmx.l.google.com.

$ nslookup google.com
Server:         127.0.1.1
Address:        127.0.1.1#53

Non-authoritative answer:
Name:   google.com
Address: 172.217.7.238
mac$ nslookup cran.r-project.org
Server:		156.40.70.10
Address:	156.40.70.10#53

Non-authoritative answer:
cran.r-project.org	canonical name = cran.wu-wien.ac.at.
Name:	cran.wu-wien.ac.at
Address: 137.208.57.37

mac$ nslookup 137.208.57.37
Server:		156.40.70.10
Address:	156.40.70.10#53

Non-authoritative answer:
37.57.208.137.in-addr.arpa	name = cran.wu-wien.ac.at.

The first two lines show the IP address of my DNS. If we run the command inside a Docker container where DNS was specified manually, the IP address we specified will be shown here.

dig

Dig provided by Google G Suite Toolbox. If the office internet is interrupted, we can use a cell phone to search for the IP address of a website for trouble shooting.

$ sudo apt-get install dnsutils
$ dig world.std.com
; <<>> DiG 9.9.5-3ubuntu0.16-Ubuntu <<>> google.com
;; global options: +cmd
;; Got answer:
;; ->>HEADER<<- opcode: QUERY, status: NOERROR, id: 49227
;; flags: qr rd ra; QUERY: 1, ANSWER: 1, AUTHORITY: 0, ADDITIONAL: 1

;; OPT PSEUDOSECTION:
; EDNS: version: 0, flags:; udp: 512
;; QUESTION SECTION:
;google.com.                    IN      A

;; ANSWER SECTION:
google.com.             130     IN      A       172.217.5.238

;; Query time: 11 msec
;; SERVER: 127.0.1.1#53(127.0.1.1)
;; WHEN: Fri Dec 01 17:32:37 EST 2017
;; MSG SIZE  rcvd: 55

arp (Address Resolution Protocol)

The arp command can be used to show the MAC addresss of all hosts in LAN

arp -a

Check connectivity

Using bash tcp built-ins to test connectivity when nothing else is available:

echo >/dev/tcp/google.com/80; 
if [ $? -eq 0 ]; then echo "Connection Successful"; fi

Find open ports

command example comment
ss ss -lnt

sudo ss -tulpn | grep LISTEN

contain pid,

add "sudo" can show program/command names on the last column

lsof sudo lsof -i -P -n | egrep "PID|LISTEN" sudo is required. Contain pid. Using egrep to include header in output. It includes the command/program names on the first column.
nmap (network mapper) nmap localhost (OR IP) shortest output and input. Need to install. No 'sudo' needed. Works on non local.
netstat

(old 'net-tools' )

netstat -tlpn | grep LISTEN | awk '{print $4 "\t" $7}' show pid and program name. Need to install netstat. Windows already has it.
nc nc -zvw3 <hostname> <port> need to specify a port number. More accurate than nmap. "-w3" means time out after 3 seconds.

What are network interface ports

Understanding Network Interface Ports in Linux. In networking, the term "port" can refer to different concepts depending on the context:

  • Hardware Ports:
  • Software Ports: These are virtual endpoints in an operating system used by network protocols to manage connections. Software ports are identified by a number, ranging from 0 to 65535. For example, port 80 is used for HTTP, and port 443 is used for HTTPS.

Socket

What Are Unix Sockets and How Do They Work

nmap/network mapper - port scanning & IPs in local network

nmap - Network exploration tool and security / port scanner

  • nmap does not show all open ports By default, Nmap scans the most common 1,000 ports for each protocol.
  • https://nmap.org/book/nmap-os-db.html. Local OS database is located at /usr/share/nmap/nmap-os-db. The 2nd line will show the revision number.
    • Modifying the nmap-os-db Database Yourself
    • Download the latest from https://svn.nmap.org/nmap/nmap-os-db. Note that the current revision number has to be found from the website. You can edit the file and insert the revision number on the 2nd line of your local copy.
    • Even I update the database, it cannot detect my Ubuntu 14.04 OS (it only shows OS details: Linux 3.8 - 4.9). For the Raspberry Pi, it can show information from the network adapter; e.g. MAC Address: AA:BB:CC:DD:EE:FF (Raspberry Pi Foundation) but not the OS name (OS details: Linux 3.2 - 4.8).
      sudo mv /usr/share/nmap/nmap-os-db /usr/share/nmap/nmap-os-db-old
      
      cd /usr/share/nmap
      sudo wget https://svn.nmap.org/nmap/nmap-os-db
      
  • http://www.cyberciti.biz/networking/nmap-command-examples-tutorials/
  • http://bencane.com/2013/02/25/10-nmap-commands-every-sysadmin-should-know/
  • http://www.tecmint.com/nmap-command-examples/
    sudo apt-get install nmap
    
    nmap 192.168.1.100   # does not require root privileges
                         # used to check open ports
    
    nmap 192.168.1.*     # show IPs and ports in LAN
    
    sudo nmap -sP 192.168.1.1/24 # show connected IPs (no hostnames?) and MAC addresses
                                 # If you don't use 'sudo' only partial devices can be found
                                 # The output may contains the hostname. For example,
                                 # Nmap scan report for brb-P45T-A.fios-router.home (192.168.1.xxx)
    nmap -sV 192.168.1.1 # show Daemon name (in VERSION column) together with port number
    
    nmap -T4 -F 192.168.1.99-255 # show connected IPs and open ports
                                 # -F means fast
    nmap -F taichimd.us  # Note that domain name != server
    nmap -v taichimd.us
    
    nmap -A 192.168.1.1  # Aggressive scan (more output)
    
    nmap -p http,ssh,mysql taichimd.us  # scan ports/services
                                        # note that mysql will be shown as closed
                                        # ssh port is not correct. 
                                        # Not sure how to get the correct ssh port using nmap
    nmap --open taichimd.us   # scan open ports
    
    sudo nmap -traceroute nih.gov
    
    sudo nmap -sS -O 192.168.1.99 # -O shows operating system
                                  # eth0 MAC
    
    $ nmap localhost # showing the true ports from the server
    
    Starting Nmap 7.01 ( https://nmap.org ) at 2017-10-09 15:01 EDT
    Nmap scan report for localhost (127.0.0.1)
    Host is up (0.00016s latency).
    Not shown: 996 closed ports
    PORT    STATE SERVICE
    22/tcp  open  ssh
    25/tcp  open  smtp
    80/tcp  open  http
    631/tcp open  ipp
    
    $ nmap localhost -p 3838-4000  # Shiny
    
  • A gui version of nmap is called Zenmap. How to install Zenmap Nmap GUI on Ubuntu 20.04 LTS

netstat: get a list of all open ports

How to use netstat in GNU/Linux

  • -l or --listening shows only the sockets currently listening for incoming connection.
  • -a or --all shows all sockets currently in use.
  • -e --show extended/additional information
  • -t or --tcp shows the tcp sockets.
  • -u or --udp shows the udp sockets.
  • -n or --numeric shows the hosts and ports as numbers, instead of resolving in dns and looking in /etc/services.
  • -s --Print network stats
  • -r --Print the network routing information
  • -p --Print PID and name of the program to which each socket belongs
netstat -l             # only listening ports
netstat -rn            # displays the system's routing table
netstat -at
netstat -ant           # For tcp
sudo netstat -pant     # show ports and programs (pant = 喘氣). Best of the best!!!
sudo netstat -peanut   # (output is too wide)
netstat -anp | grep 3306 | wc -l  # print # of connections for the port mysql port

Other commands

sudo lsof -i -P -n | grep LISTEN
sudo ss -tulpn
sudo netstat -tulpn | grep LISTEN
sudo netstat -tulpn   # include dhcpcd & avahi-daemon

ss command

ss is one of 4 commands to check open ports for Linux. The 4 commands are netstat, nmap, ss and lsof.

How to Use the ss Command on Linux

lsof command

How to Use lsof in Linux (With a Practical Example. How to discover what files are currently open and in use on your system?

# Basic lsof Output
sudo su
lsof | head -n10

lsof -i   # this gives a more list than nmap command

Common ports

  • List of TCP and UDP port numbers
    • Well-known ports: 0 to 1023
    • Registered ports: 1024 to 49151
    • Dynamic, private or ephemeral ports: 49152–65535
  • A List of Common Ports
  • Replace the default port (such as 22 for ssh) with anyone from 1024-65535 because ports numbers up to 1023 are “well known” ports & should be avoided
  • Some services:

Copy text to a clipboard to be used in other apps

Install the xclip program. See here or here.

sudo apt-get install xclip
# Examples
sort -n -k 3, -k 2 file.txt | xclip -selection clipboard

cat ~/.ssh/id_rsa.pub | xclip -sel clip

Works.

Start Emacs without X

Add -nw (no window) option.

emacs -nw

Audio

Record audio from mic

How to Save Important Voicemails for Both iPhone and Android. Hint: use Audacity.

mp3 codecs

https://help.ubuntu.com/community/RestrictedFormats

sudo apt-get install ubuntu-restricted-extras

Concatenate mp3 files

sudo apt-get install mp3wrap
mp3wrap output.mp3 *.mp3

Reduce the size of an mp3 file

Specify a new lower bitrate using the -b option in lame. For example if your starting mp3 has a quality of 256kbs you can lower its bitrate to 128kbps (or even lower like 64kbps) by:

lame --mp3input -b 128 input.mp3 output.mp3

Convert ogg to mp3

ffmpeg is not included in Ubuntu repository. Use the avconv command. http://superuser.com/questions/15327/how-to-convert-ogg-to-mp3

sudo apt-get install libav-tools
avconv -i input.ogg -c:a libmp3lame -q:a 2 output.mp3

Convert m4a/webm to mp3

avconv -i input.m4a output.mp3

Remove the vocals from any song using Audacity

https://www.makeuseof.com/tag/remove-vocals-song-audacity/

How to Remove Ambient Noise From Audio Files Using Audacity

How to Remove Ambient Noise From Audio Files Using Audacity

Normalize the volume of an audio file

  • Can You Losslessly Increase the Volume of MP3 Files?
  • Use Audacity. To raise (Amplify) volume:
    1. Edit > Select All.
    2. Effect > Amplify. Increase db. Adjust the sound until the highest peaks and lowest valleys of the waveform reach the top and bottom of the window.
    3. Check clip3. Export > MP3 or just start to listen.
  • Command line tool: avconv (replace ffmpeg program). See this post.
avconv -ss 00:00:10 -i OLD.mp3 -vol 2560 NEW.mp3

The anconv/ffmpeg -vol parameter amplifies the sound. The default value is 256 (no amplification), and you can adjust the number accordingly. Here it’s 2560, as it’s 10 times louder. Note that these are not decibel values or anything that sophisticated, but just an integer value. 512 equals to twice the volume, 768 three times, 1024 four times, etc. The -ss parameter specifies the start time offset. Here it will skip the first 10 seconds.

I found the converted file by sox has about one half file size compared to anconv/ffmpeg program (source file=47MB, anconv converted=135MB, sox converted file=54MB).

sudo apt-get install sox libsox-fmt-all
sox --norm OLD.mp3 NEW.mp3 trim 10
sox --norm OLD.mp3 NEW.mp3 silence 1 0.1 1%
sox -v 4.0 OLD.mp3 NEW.mp3             # increase volume 

where '--norm' will normalize the audio and the 'trim' option set to skip the first 10 seconds. The silence parameter allows to trim silence at the beginning without a need to specify the number of seconds.

cut, delete or trim an audio

  1. Open the audio file in audacity.
  2. select a region in the waveform area. Do not select in the time interval area (above the waveform).
    1. To precisely select a range from one position to the end. Click Zoom in several times. Click one position in the waveform and click Edit -> Select -> Cursor to the track end to select
    2. Similarly, if we want to precisely select a range from the start to some position, we can click one position in the waveform and then click Edit -> Select -> Track start to cursor.
    3. To move around the track, use the scrollbar (below the waveform and above the bottom toolbar, not quite clear in Ubuntu/Unity)
  3. Click Edit -> Remove Audio or labels -> Cut/Delete/Trim Audio
  4. play the new audio by clicking the green triangle.
  5. File -> Export -> mp3 format.

Helpful resource for Audacity.

  1. Different Toolbars
  2. Tutorial - Editing an Existing Audio File

Fade out at the end of an audio

  1. Select a region.
  2. Effect -> Fade out

Wireshark

sudo apt-get install wireshark
sudo chmod 4711 `which dumpcap`

Track the Time a Command Takes

How To Find The Execution Time Of A Command Or Process In Linux

time command

time COMMAND
time (COMMAND1; COMMAND2)
time (COMMAND1 && COMMAND2)

help time

When I run a set of 7 jobs using parallel, time command gives an output

real  15m53.788s # the wall clock time the command took from execution till termination
user  95m20.238s # the time taken by the user space
sys   9m1.320s   # the time taken by kernel space

Here we see the real time is about 16m and the user time is about 6-7 times the real time. Indicating the parallel executing works.

/usr/bin/time command

/usr/bin/time provides more information then time command.

man time

Magazines

Latex

Editors

Online editing

  • Latex Base. You can start to try it without registration. Free accounts cannot publish but still can download.
  • Overleaf. Free account for 1GB space.
  • ShareLatex

Missing cls

$ apt-cache search IEEEtran
texlive-publishers - TeX Live: Publisher styles, theses, etc.
sudo apt-get install texlive-publishers

Missing sty

$ apt-cache search pseudocode
gpt - G-Portugol is a portuguese structured programming language
libgportugol-dev - Development files for the G-Portugol library
libgportugol0 - G-Portugol library
texlive-science - TeX Live: Natural and computer sciences
$ sudo apt-get install texlive-science

PDF

See PDF.

Flow chart

  • LibreOffice Draw OR MS_PowerPoint (insert > shape). Check youtube.
  • yEd
  • Dia & wikipedia
  • (online) www.draw.io

Clock

xclock (analog)

oclock -geometry 500x500+100+0 &

oclock (analog)

oclock -bg blue -geometry 500x500+100+0 -bd purple -transparent &
oclock -bg blue -geometry 500x500+100+0 -bd purple -jewel green &

See oclock, X - a portable, network-transparent window system which includes an example of specifying the geometry parameter.

dclock (digital)

Digital clock for the X Window System with flexible display.

sudo apt-get install dclock
dclock -h
dclock -d
dclock -date "Today is %A %B %Y" -led_off black -bg black -fg yellow -geometry 577x194+119+139         # 'q' to quit
dclock -date "Today is %m/%d/%y" -led_off black -bg black -fg yellow -geometry 400x150+0+0 # width x hight + X + Y

In practice, I create a shell script file <bin/clock> with the following content. The first ampersand sign is to hide warnings messages and the 2nd ampersand sign is to put the process in the background.

dclock -date "Today is %A %B %Y" -led_off black -bg black -fg yellow -geometry 577x194+119+139 &>/dev/null &

Lubuntu digital clock format

http://netgator.blogspot.com/2012/09/change-edit-panel-digital-clock-format.html. My format is

%a, %x, %r
# Tue, 05/17/2016, 09:42:27 PM

%a %m-%d-%y, %I:%M %p
# Mon 05-30-16, 08:31 AM

xdaliclock (digital)

https://www.mankier.com/1/xdaliclock

Scaling is not good. Colors is changing with time.

xdaliclock -noseconds -cycle  # 'q' to quit

date command

sudo apt install toilet
sudo apt install figlet
watch -n 60 "date +'%m/%d/%y   %H:%M:%S' | toilet"

ls /usr/share/figlet # list of fonts
                     # looking for *.tlf
date +'%m/%d/%y%H:%M:%S' | toilet -f mono12
date +'%m/%d/%y%H:%M:%S' | toilet -f bigmono12   # good on 1024x600
date +'%m/%d/%y%H:%M:%S' | toilet -f bigascii12
date +'%m/%d/%y%H:%M:%S' | toilet -f ascii12

watch --color "date +'%m/%d/%y%H:%M:%S' | toilet -f bigmono12 -F metal"

while true; do echo "$(date '+%H:%M:%S' | toilet -f bigmono12 -F border --metal)"; sleep 1; done

Reminder take a break, relieve eye strain

Stretchly. It's open-source and cross-platform. Nodejs is required.

Workrave is another choice. The source code is available too.

Prevent Eye Strain While Working On Your Linux Desktop With Safe Eyes, Github source code

wine

Wine

Running Linux in the AWS/Amazon Web Services

Forum software

RAID

Timer

How to track you laptop using Prey

https://www.howtoforge.com/tutorial/how-to-track-your-linux-laptop/

last command

Linux last Command Tutorial for Beginners (8 Examples)

Display a list of system shutdown/reboot date/time

Linux Find Out Last System Reboot Time and Date Command

# Works on Linux and Mac
last shutdown
last reboot

Automatic reboot after power failure

It seems there is no reliable way to find out when the power failed.

The linux command 'last' can show some information about system reboot.

Another way is to modify the BIOS to select the option like 'Power off and Reboot'. This won't automatically boot your computer when it is shutdown normally.

How to restart/shutdown server safely

How to restart CentOS or RHEL server safely

Wake up and Shut Down Linux Automatically

Two best options

  • Bios: BIOS may have an easy-to-use wakeup scheduler
  • wakeonlan:
    • Eanble it: Check if it is enabled by default. If not, we can 1) enable it through a command (ethtool -s eth0 wol g) or 2) using the Network Manager
    • Send a wake up command: (from a second linux) /usr/bin/wakeonlan D0:50:99:82:E7:2B where D0:50:99:82:E7:2B is the IP on the machine you want to wake it up

BIOS

Find out BIOS version

Linux Find Out BIOS Version Using a Command Line Option

How to update Lenovo BIOS from Linux without using Windows

https://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/update-lenovo-bios-from-linux-usb-stick-pen/

Internet speed test

Web

Speedtest-cli

See Track_Internet_Dropouts.

sudo apt-get intall python-pip
sudo pip install speedtest-cli
# A slightly modified code that will create a one-line space/semi-colon 
# delimited result is 
git clone https://github.com/HenrikBengtsson/speedtest-cli-extras.git

speedtest-cli-extras/bin/speedtest-csv

works. But if I want to put it in cron, cron will issue an error speedtest-cli cannot be found. So I need to modify line 52 of the code in <speedtest-cli-extras/bin/speedtest-csv> to explicitly specify the location of speedtest-cli.

    /usr/local/bin/speedtest-cli --share > $log

NOTE: 1. the results differ from the network connection. For example, the speed is good when I test it on the machine directly connected to the router. 2. It is helpful to modify the last line of the bash script to output what I need. 3. The separator is ";" in the output.

curl and wget

How to Run Speed Test from the Command Line to Check Internet Connection Speed

uname - Print system information

uname -a will give you

  • OS (uname = uname -s if you are under a Linux environment)
  • OS (uname -s) eg Linux
  • node name (uname -n=hostname)
  • kernel release (uname -r) eg 3.16.0-38-generic
  • kernel version (uname -v)
  • machine architecture (uname -m) eg x86_64
  • processor (uname -p)
  • hardware platform (uname -i)
  • operating system (uname -o)

How to check if running in Cygwin, Mac or Linux?

Hardware information

Command Line

hwinfo

https://www.2daygeek.com/python-hwinfo-check-display-system-hardware-configuration-information-linux/

On Ubuntu, use sudo apt install -y hwinfo to install hwinfo. Install hwinfo on Ubuntu 20.04

dmesg command

How to Use the dmesg Command on Linux

sudo dmesg -L -T
sudo dmesg -L -T --follow   # Watching Live Events
sudo dmesg -L -T | grep -i usb    # Search for a specific term
sudo dmesg | grep -E "memory|tty|dma"  # Search for multiple terms

where -L to is force color output and -T is to make timestamp human-readable.

Linux Logo and the current system information

odroid@odroid:~$ sudo apt-get install screenfetch
odroid@odroid:~$ screenfetch
                          ./+o+-       odroid@odroid
                  yyyyy- -yyyyyy+      OS: Ubuntu 15.10 wily
               ://+//////-yyyyyyo      Kernel: armv7l Linux 3.10.96-77
           .++ .:/++++++/-.+sss/`      Uptime: 4d 23h 8m
         .:++o:  /++++++++/:--:/-      Packages: 2000
        o:+o+:++.`..```.-/oo+++++/     Shell: 2263
       .:+o:+o/.          `+sssoo+/    Resolution: 1920x1080
  .++/+:+oo+o:`             /sssooo.   DE: MATE 1.10.2
 /+++//+:`oo+o               /::--:.   WM: Metacity (Marco)
 \+/+o+++`o++o               ++////.   GTK Theme: 'Ambiant-MATE' [GTK2/3]
  .++.o+++oo+:`             /dddhhh.   Icon Theme: Ambiant-MATE
       .+.o+oo:.          `oddhhhh+    Font: Ubuntu 10
        \+.++o+o``-````.:ohdhhhhh+     CPU: ARMv7 rev 3 (v7l) @ 1.4GHz
         `:o+++ `ohhhhhhhhyo++os:      GPU: Gallium 0.4 on llvmpipe (LLVM 3.6, 128 bits)
           .o:`.syhhhhhhh/.oo++o`      RAM: 537MiB / 1990MiB
               /osyyyyyyo++ooo+++/    
                   ````` +oo+++o\:    
                          `oo++.      

odroid@odroid:~$ screenfetch -h

Neofetch.png

Dictionary - Artha

  • Lifehacker. Once it is launched, it is sitting on the task bar. Press Ctrl+Alt+W after selecting a word to look it up in Artha (a balloon tip will pop up on the screen top-right). It also supports using regular expressions to search words.
sudo apt-get install artha

Translation

odroid@odroid:~/binary$ ./trans :zh-TW word
word
/wərd/

字
(Zì)

Definitions of word
[ English -> 正體中文 ]

noun
    字
        word, character, letter, calligraphy, symbol, style of writing
    詞
        word, term, speech, statement
    單詞
        word, individual word
    話
        words, word, dialect, saying, talk, speech
    言
        word, speech, character
    言辭
        words, word, what one says
    筆墨
        pen and ink, words, word, writings
    約言
        pledge, promise, word

verb
    為 ... 措辭
        word
odroid@odroid:~/binary$ time ./trans -brief :zh-TW word
字

real	0m4.249s
user	0m2.670s
sys	0m1.330s

ASCII art/ word art

  ____  ____  ____       ____            _____           _     
 | __ )|  _ \| __ )     / ___|  ___  __ |_   _|__   ___ | |___ 
 |  _ \| |_) |  _ \ ____\___ \ / _ \/ _` || |/ _ \ / _ \| / __|
 | |_) |  _ <| |_) |_____|__) |  __/ (_| || | (_) | (_) | \__ \
 |____/|_| \_\____/     |____/ \___|\__, ||_|\___/ \___/|_|___/
                                       |_|                     
  ____  _____  ____        _____         _______          _     
 |  _ \|  __ \|  _ \      / ____|       |__   __|        | |    
 | |_) | |__) | |_) |____| (___   ___  __ _| | ___   ___ | |___ 
 |  _ <|  _  /|  _ <______\___ \ / _ \/ _` | |/ _ \ / _ \| / __|
 | |_) | | \ \| |_) |     ____) |  __/ (_| | | (_) | (_) | \__ \
 |____/|_|  \_\____/     |_____/ \___|\__, |_|\___/ \___/|_|___/
                                         | |                    
                                         |_|                    
  ___ ___ ___     ___          _____         _    
 | _ ) _ \ _ )___/ __| ___ __ |_   _|__  ___| |___
 | _ \   / _ \___\__ \/ -_) _` || |/ _ \/ _ \ (_-<
 |___/_|_\___/   |___/\___\__, ||_|\___/\___/_/__/
                             |_|                  

Install And Manage Software From Source

How To Install And Manage Software From Source Using GNU Stow In Linux

Software that scan Malware and rootkits

Text to speech

VPN

Ubuntu -> VPN

Mono Project

Mono is a software platform designed to allow developers to easily create cross platform applications part of the .NET Foundation

Mono is required for Repetier-Host software for 3D printing.

NAS server

OpenMediaVault

OpenMediaVault

FreeNAS

ZFS system (FreeBSD-based).

10 Reasons Why You Should Store Your Data on a FreeNAS Box. Note With the current version of FreeNAS (FreeNAS 11) comes a hypervisor. See

Change detection

http://bhfsteve.blogspot.com/2013/03/monitoring-web-page-for-changes-using.html

3 command-line tools for feigning productivity

https://opensource.com/article/18/2/command-line-tools-productivity: Blessed-contrib (javascript), Genact, Hollywood.

Mind mapping

Diagram

Open source surveillance

ZoneMinder

Systemctl, systemd

Systemd vs SysVinit

Systemctl vs service commands

What is the difference between service and systemctl? service is an "high-level" command used for starting and stopping services in different unixes and linuxes. Depending on the "lower-level" service manager, service redirects on different binaries. For example, on CentOS 7 it redirects to systemctl.

$ service nginx start
# VS
$ systemctl start nginx

$ systemctl   # list all services
$ cat /lib/systemd/system/rsyslog.service
$ systemctl status rsyslog
$ cat /lib/systemd/system/ufw.service

How to Run a Linux Program at Startup with systemd

  • How to Run a Linux Program at Startup with systemd
    • Creating the Service Program for systemd to Start sudo nano /usr/local/bin/htg.sh, sudo chmod +x /usr/local/bin/htg.sh
    • Creating the Service Unit File sudo nano /etc/systemd/system/htg.service, sudo chmod 640 /etc/systemd/system/htg.service
    • Starting the Service Automatically with the systemd Command sudo systemctl daemon-reload, sudo systemctl enable htg, sudo systemctl start htg
    • Verifying the Service sudo systemctl status htg.service
    • Stopping and Disabling the Service - sudo systemctl stop htg.service
  • How to Create a New systemd Service on Linux

How Long Does it Take To Boot Your Linux System

Find Out How Long Does it Take To Boot Your Linux System

$ systemd-analyze       # total boot time along with the time taken by 
                        # firmware, boot loader, kernel and the userspace
$ systemd-analyze blame # breakdown the boot time into each unit

Check if Your Linux System Uses systemd

How to Check if Your Linux System Uses systemd

chkservice

chkservice Is A systemd Unit Manager With A Terminal User Interface

Kernel

Firmware update

Fwupd 1.9.9 Released with Support for Lenovo X1 Yoga Gen7 530E 2-in-1 Laptops

Game

See Game.

Best Linux Adobe Alternatives You Need to Know

Linux distributions

Linux Distribution

chroot

Chroot