SEARCH KEYWORD -- Linux command
Shortest command on Linux
Usually when we log in to a Linux system,. we may type some frequently used Linux commands such as pwd,ls, ps etc. All these commands are really simple but powerful with different options. But do you know what is the shortest command on Linux? The answer is w. According to Linux manual, w will show who is logged on and what they are doing on the system. w displays information about the users currently on the machine, and their processes. The header shows, in this order, the current time, how l...
Linux,w,shortest command 2014-04-30 11:07:38
Differences between bashrc and profile in Linux
After login to a Linux system, the command console will show up with a prompt label such as # or ~, a shell command can be typed after this prompt and the system can execute the command thereafter. All these operations are handled by shell. Shell is a command language interpreter that executes commands read from the standard input device (keyboard) or from a file. There are different types of shells such as bash, ksh, csh etc. The most commonly used of them is bash and it's also the de...
LINUX,PROFILE,BASH,BASHRC,.BASHRC,.PROFILE 2016-11-05 22:17:51
A simple tutorial on Linux nohup command
In our daily work, there might be need to run some important program for hours or even days without being abruptly terminated. In such case, we may want to run the program with command nohup. nohup is the abbreviation of no hangup, i.e, don't hang up or terminate the process. This command will tell the process to ignore the system HUP signal. The HUP signal will be emitted when the terminal is exited or disconnected. Normally process will abort its execution when receiving this signal. Bas...
Linux Kernel is replacing HTTP link with HTTPS
Linux kernel is in the process of replacing the HTTP links in its source code with HTTPS links. HTTPS is considered more secure than HTTP and can prevent lots of attacks like Man-In-The-Middle attack. Currently there are more than 150 patches submitted by Linux Kernel developers to replace these HTTP links. One thing to be noted is this replacement process is not a manual search and replace process. Indeed, some scripts are created to find out these links and try to find whethe...
LINUX KERNEL,HTTP,HTTPS 2020-08-08 01:35:20
A possible way to recover deleted files on Linux
Last week I was generating a MD5 sum for an virtual machine image on one OpenNebula server: # ls -l test.img -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 10486808576 Oct 12 02:21 test.img # md5sum test.img At the same time I was clearing the files on the server on another terminal and deleted the above image file mistakenly with : # rm test.img Since this image file is 10GB, it took some time to remove this file from the server, so I used the Ctrl+Z command to suspend the remove command. [1]+ Stopped ...
Format JSON data on Ubuntu
JSON now becomes a very popular data format because of its simplicity and light-weight. Nowadays many RESTful APIs will offer a choice of exchanging JSON data between the server and client. Sometimes the data may not be formatted and it cannot be easily read by human beings. It's frequently desired that the unformatted JSON data should be formatted before read. Today we will show a few ways to format JSON data on Ubuntu. Assume we have a json file test.json with below content. { "title": "Test"...
RUBY,PYTHON,NODEJS,JSON,JQ,PERL,LINUX,UBUNTU,YAJL 2016-08-17 11:05:09
Find files by size in Linux
In Linux systems, you may encounter a situation where there is no enough space on the system while you are trying to install some new packages or writing some data. In this case, you may want to clear some unneeded files. A frequent need will be find the largest files in the system so that they can be deleted first and disk space can be released quickly. In this post, we will show a simple command to find files by size so that we know what files are taking the specified space on the system, This...
My frequently used Linux commands
In our day to day work. We may have many chances working on Linux/Unix systems. There are many things we may need to do, checking logs, navigating in directories, creating file or installing software. We may use many commands to complete the work, such as ls, mkdir, cd etc. Below are my frequently used Linux commands or programs recently: pwd : print working directory, sometimes I need to check which working directory I am in in order to know where to go next. ls : List current directory files,...
Microsoft is the 17th largest contributor to Linux
The Linux Foundation has released 2012 Linux White Paper which analyzes developers and contributors of the Linux kernel from 2.6.36 to 3.2.The top ten contributors are: Red Hat, Intel, Novell, IBM, Texas Instruments, Broadcom, Nokia, Samsung, Oracle, and Google. The software giant Microsoft's contribution ranked at 17, while the company's CEO Steve Ballmer has claimed previously that Linux is a cancer. Microsoft engineers have contributed 688 patches, which are mostly related to Hyper-V vir...
Linux,Microsoft,Contribution 2012-04-05 07:43:19
/dev/null and /dev/tty in Linux
In Linux, there are two special files /dev/null and /dev/tty. /dev/null will drop all the data written to it, i.e, when program writes data to this file, it means the program has completed the data write operation. But in fact it does nothing, if you just want the status of a command but not the output of a command, this feature will be very useful. See below shell codes: /> vi test_dev_null.sh #!/bin/bash if grep...
RECENT
- How Artificial Intelligence Is Helping Fight Environmental Challenges
- How to Deal with Accusations of Negligence as a Business
- Google's Business Operations in China Amid Antitrust Scrutiny
- Deploying DeepSeek-R1 Locally with a Custom RAG Knowledge Data Base
- Balancing Convenience and Security in the Digital World
- My AI Learning Journey: Exploring the Future of Technology
- Power Grid Simulation System 02 : FDI Power Outage Attack Case Study
- Be Careful When Using Cursor to Help Build Application
- Calculating Token Count for Claude API Using Go: A Step-by-Step Guide
- Understanding Cursor and WindSurf's Code Indexing Logic
- more>>