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- The Psychotic Internet Services' Unix Bible- A reference for all of us.
-
-
- A list of commands and a quick description
- alias ........ this allows the user view the current aliases
- awk ........ this allows the user to search for a pattern within a file
- bdiff ......... compares two large files
- bfs .......... scans a large file
- cal ......... shows a calendar
- cat ......... concatenates and prints a file
- cc ......... c compiler
- cd ........ changes directories
- chgrb ......... changes a file groups ownership
- chmod ....... changes the permission on a file
- chown .......... changes the individual ownership of a file
- cmp ......... compairs two files
- comm .......... compares two files so as to determine which lines are common to both
- cp .......... copies file to another location
- cu ......... calls another unix sysytem
- date .......... returns the date and time
- df ......... shows all mounted drives on your machine
- diff ......... displays the diference between two files
- du ......... shows the disk usage in blocks for a directory
- echo ........ echoes the data to the screen or file
- ed ........ text editor
- env ......... lists the current environment variables
- ex ........ another text editor
- expr ........ evaluates a mathmatical formula
- find ........ finds a file
- f77 .......... fortran complier
- format ........ initializes a floppy disk
- grep ......... searches for a pattern within a file
- help ......... gives help
- kill ........ stops a running process
- ln ........ creates a link between two files
- lpr ......... copies the file to the line printer
- ls ......... lists the files in a directory
- mail ........ allows the user to send/receive mail
- mkdir .......... makes directory
- more ......... displays a data file to the screen
- mv ........... used to move or rename files
- nohup ........ allows a command to continue running even when you log out
- nroff ......... used to format text
- passwd ........ changes your password
- pkgadd ......... installs a new program onto your machine
- ps ........... Lists the current processes running
- pwd ........ displays the name of the working directory
- rm ........ removes files
- rmdir ........ removes directories
- set ......... lists all the variables in the current shell
- setenv ......... sets the environment variables
- sleep ......... causes a process to become inactive
- source ......... allows the user to execute a file and update any changed values in that file
- sort .......... sorts files
- spell ......... checks for spelling errors in a file
- split ........ divides a file
- stty ......... sets the terminal options
- tail ......... displays the end of a file
- tar ......... copies all specified files into one
- touch ........ creates an empty file or updates the time/date stamp on a file
- troff ......... outputs formatted output
- tset ........ sets the terminal type
- umask ......... specify a new creation mask
- uniq ......... compairs two files
- uucp ........ unix to unix execute
- vi ........ full screen editor
- vipw ......... opens the vi editor as well as password file for editing
- volcheck ......... checks to see if there is a floppy disk mounted to your machine
- wc ......... displays detail in the full size
- who ........ inf. on other people online
- write ......... send a message to another user
- ! ....... repeats commands
-
-
- More commands with a better description (Not all commands are listed).
- cat: -b, --number-nonblank
- Number all nonblank output lines, starting with 1.
-
- -e
- Equivalent to -vE.
-
- -n, --number
- Number all output lines, starting with 1.
-
- -s, --squeeze-blank
- Replace multiple adjacent blank lines with a single blank line.
-
- -t
- Equivalent to -vT.
-
- -u
- Ignored; for Unix compatibility.
-
- -v, --show-nonprinting
- Display control characters except for LFD and TAB using `^' notation and precede
- characters that have the high bit set with `M-'.
-
- -A, --show-all
- Equivalent to -vET.
-
- -E, --show-ends
- Display a `$' after the end of each line.
-
- -T, --show-tabs
- Display TAB characters as `^I'.
-
- --help
- Print a usage message and exit with a status code indicating success.
-
- --version
- Print version information on standard output then exit.
- _____________________________________________________________________________________
- cd: directory becomes the new working directory. The process must have execute (search) permission
- in directory. If cd is used without arguments, it returns you to your login directory. In csh you
- may specify a list of directories in which directory is to be sought as a subdirectory if it is not a
- subdirectory of the current directory; see the description of the cdpath variable in csh.
- chmod: The format of a symbolic mode is `[ugoa...][[+=][rwxXstugo...]...][,...]'. Multiple symbolic
- operations
- can be given, separated by commas.
-
- A combination of the letters `ugoa' controls which users' access to the file will be changed: the user
- who owns it (u), other users in the file's group (g), other users not in the file's group (o), or all users
- (a). If none of these are given, the effect is as if `a' were given, but bits that are set in the umask are
- not affected.
-
- The operator `+' causes the permissions selected to be added to the existing permissions of each
- file; `-' causes them to be removed; and `=' causes them to be the only permissions that the file has.
-
- The letters `rwxXstugo' select the new permissions for the affected users: read (r), write (w),
- execute (or access for directories) (x), execute only if the file is a directory or already has execute
- permission for some user (X), set user or group ID on execution (s), save program text on swap
- device (t), the permissions that the user who owns the file currently has for it (u), the permissions
- that other users in the file's group have for it (g), and the permissions that other users not in the file's
- group have for it (o).
-
- A numeric mode is from one to four octal digits (0-7), derived by adding up the bits with values 4,
- 2, and 1. Any omitted digits are assumed to be leading zeros. The first digit selects the set user ID
- (4) and set group ID (2) and save text image (1) attributes. The second digit selects permissions for
- the user who owns the file: read (4), write (2), and execute (1); the third selects permissions for
- other users in the file's group, with the same values; and the fourth for other users not in the file's
- group, with the same values.
-
- chmod never changes the permissions of symbolic links; the chmod system call cannot change their
- permissions. This is not a problem since the permissions of symbolic links are never used. However,
- for each symbolic link listed on the command line, chmod changes the permissions of the pointedto
- file. In contrast, chmod ignores symbolic links encountered during recursive directory traversals.
-
- OPTIONS
- -c, --changes
- Verbosely describe only files whose permissions actually change.
-
- -f, --silent, --quiet
- Do not print error messages about files whose permissions cannot be changed.
-
- -v, --verbose
- Verbosely describe changed permissions.
-
- -R, --recursive
- Recursively change permissions of directories and their contents.
-
- --help
- Print a usage message on standard output and exit successfully.
-
- --version
- Print version information on standard output then exit successfully.
- clear: clear clears your screen if this is possible. It looks in the environment for the terminal type and then
- in /etc/termcap to figure out how to clear the screen.
- date: This manual page documents the GNU version of date. date with no arguments prints the current
- time and date (in the format of the `%c' directive described below). If given an argument that starts
- with a `+', it prints the current time and date in a format controlled by that argument, which has the
- same format as the format string passed to the `strftime' function. Except for directives that start with
- `%', characters in that string are printed unchanged.
-
- The directives are:
-
- %
- a literal %
-
- n
- a newline
-
- t
- a horizontal tab
-
- Time fields:
-
- %H
- hour (00..23)
-
- %I
- hour (01..12)
-
- %k
- hour ( 0..23)
-
- %l
- hour ( 1..12)
-
- %M
- minute (00..59)
-
- %p
- locale's AM or PM
-
- %r
- time, 12-hour (hh:mm:ss [AP]M)
-
- %s seconds since 1970-01-01 00:00:00 UTC (a nonstandard extension)
-
- %S
- second (00..61)
-
- %T
- time, 24-hour (hh:mm:ss)
-
- %X
- locale's time representation (%H:%M:%S)
-
- %Z time zone (e.g., EDT), or nothing if no time zone is determinable
-
- Date fields:
-
- %a
- locale's abbreviated weekday name (Sun..Sat)
-
- %A locale's full weekday name, variable length (Sunday..Saturday)
-
- %b
- locale's abbreviated month name (Jan..Dec)
-
- %B locale's full month name, variable length (January..December)
-
- %c
- locale's date and time (Sat Nov 04 12:02:33 EST 1989)
-
- %d
- day of month (01..31)
-
- %D
- date (mm/dd/yy)
-
- %h
- same as %b
-
- %j
- day of year (001..366)
-
- %m
- month (01..12)
-
- %U week number of year with Sunday as first day of week (00..53)
-
- %w
- day of week (0..6) with 0 corresponding to Sunday
-
- %W week number of year with Monday as first day of week (00..53)
-
- %x
- locale's date representation (mm/dd/yy)
-
- %y
- last two digits of year (00..99)
-
- %Y
- year (1970...)
-
- By default, date pads numeric fields with zeroes. GNU date recognizes the following nonstandard
- numeric modifiers:
-
- -
- (hyphen) do not pad the field
-
- _
- (underscore) pad the field with spaces
-
- If given an argument that does not start with `+', date sets the system clock to the time and date
- specified by that argument. The argument must consist entirely of digits, which have the following
- meaning:
-
- MM month
-
- DD
- day within month
-
- hh hour
-
- mm minute
-
- CC
- first two digits of year (optional)
-
- YY
- last two digits of year (optional)
-
- ss
- second (optional)
-
- Only the superuser can set the system clock.
-
- OPTIONS
- -d datestr, --date datestr
- Display the time and date specified in datestr, which can be in almost any common format. The
- display is in the default output format, or if an argument starting with `+' is given to date, in the
- format specified by that argument.
-
- --help
- Print a usage message on standard output and exit successfully.
-
- -s datestr, --set datestr
- Set the time and date to datestr, which can be in almost any common format. It can contain
- month names, timezones, `am' and `pm', etc.
-
- -u, --universal
- Print or set the time and date in Coordinated Universal Time (also known as Greenwich
- Mean Time) instead of in local (wall clock) time.
-
- --version
- Print version information on standard output then exit successfully.
- find: find recursively descends the directory hierarchy for each pathname in the pathname-list, seeking
- files that match a logical expression written using the operators listed below.
-
- find does not follow symbolic links to other files or directories; it applies the selection criteria to the
- symbolic links themselves, as if they were ordinary files (see ln(1V) for a description of symbolic
- links).
-
- If the fast-find feature is enabled, find displays pathnames in which a filename component occurs.
-
- USAGE
-
- Operators
- In the descriptions, the argument n is used as a decimal integer where +n means more than n, -n
- means less than n, and n means exactly n.
-
- -fstype type
- True if the filesystem to which the file belongs is of type type, where type is typically 4.2 or
- nfs.
-
- -name filename True if the
- filename argument matches the current file name. Shell argument syntax can be used if
- escaped (watch out for [, ? and *).
-
- -perm onum
- True if the file permission flags exactly match the octal number onum (see chmod(1V)). If
- onum is prefixed by a minus sign, more flag bits (017777, see chmod(1V)) become
- significant and the flags are compared: (flags&onum)==onum.
-
- -prune
- Always yields true. Has the side effect of pruning the search tree at the file. That is, if the
- current path name is a directory, find will not descend into that directory.
-
- -type c
- True if the type of the file is c, where c is one of:
-
- b
- for block special file c
-
- c
- for character special file
-
- d
- for directory
-
- f
- for plain file
-
- p
- for named pipe (FIFO)
-
- l
- for symbolic link
-
- s
- for socket
-
- -links n
- True if the file has n links.
-
- -user uname
- True if the file belongs to the user uname. If uname is numeric and does not appear as a
- login name in the /etc/passwd database, it is taken as a user ID.
-
- -nouser
- True if the file belongs to a user not in the /etc/passwd database.
-
- -group gname
- True if the file belongs to group gname. If gname is numeric and does not appear as a login
- name in the /etc/group database, it is taken as a group ID.
-
- -nogroup
- True if the file belongs to a group not in the /etc/group database.
-
- -size n
- True if the file is n blocks long (512 bytes per block). If n is followed by a c, the size is in
- characters.
-
- -inum n
- True if the file has inode number n.
-
- -atime n
- True if the file has been accessed in n days. Note: the access time of directories in
- path-name-list is changed by find itself.
-
- -mtime n
- True if the file has been modified in n days.
-
- -ctime n
- True if the file has been changed in n days. "Changed" means either that the file has been
- modified or some attribute of the file (its owner, its group, the number of links to it, etc.) has
- been changed.
-
- -exec command
- True if the executed command returns a zero value as exit status. The end of command must
- be punctuated by an escaped semicolon. A command argument {} is replaced by the current
- pathname.
-
- -ok command
- Like -exec except that the generated command is written on the standard output, then the
- standard input is read and the command executed only upon response y.
-
- -print
- Always true; the current pathname is printed.
-
- -ls
- Always true; prints current pathname together with its associated statistics. These include
- (respectively) inode number, size in kilobytes (1024 bytes), protection mode, number of hard
- links, user, group, size in bytes, and modification time. If the file is a special file the size field
- will instead contain the major and minor device numbers. If the file is a symbolic link the
- pathname of the linked-to file is printed preceded by `->'. The format is identical to that of ls
- -gilds (see ls(1V)). Note: formatting is done internally, without executing the ls program.
-
- -cpio device
- Always true; write the current file on device in cpio(5) format (5120-byte records).
-
- -ncpio device
- Always true; write the current file on device in cpio -c format (5120-byte records).
-
- -newer file
- True if the current file has been modified more recently than the argument filename.
-
- -xdev
- Always true; find does not traverse down into a file system different from the one on which
- current argument pathname resides.
-
- -depth
- Always true; find descends the directory hierarchy, acting on the entries in a directory before
- acting on the directory itself. This can be useful when find is used with cpio to transfer files
- that are contained in directories without write permission.
-
- (expression)
- True if the parenthesized expression is true. Note: Parentheses are special to the shell and
- must be escaped.
-
- !primary
- True if the primary is false (! is the unary not operator).
-
- primary1 [ -a ] primary2
- True if both primary1 and primary2 are true. The -a is not required. It is implied by the
- juxtaposition of two primaries.
-
- primary1 -o primary2
- True if either primary1 or primary2 is true (-o is the or operator).
-
- Fast-Find
- The fast-find feature is enabled by the presence of the find.codes database in /usr/lib/find. You must
- be root to build or update this database by running the updatedb script in that same directory. You
- may wish to modify the updatedb script to suit your needs.
-
- An alternate database can be specified by setting the FCODES environment variable.
- cp: cp copies the contents of filename1 onto filename2. The mode and owner of filename2 are
- preserved if it already existed; the mode of the source file is used otherwise. If filename1 is a
- symbolic link, or a duplicate hard link, the contents of the file that the link refers to are copied; links
- are not preserved.
-
- In the second form, cp recursively copies directory1, along with its contents and subdirectories, to
- directory2. If directory2 does not exist, cp creates it and duplicates the files and subdirectories of
- directory1 within it. If direc_tory2 does exist, cp makes a copy of the directory1 directory within
- directory2 (as a subdirectory), along with its files and subdirectories.
-
- In the third form, each filename is copied to the indicated directory; the basename of the copy
- corresponds to that of the original. The destination directory must already exist for the copy to
- succeed.
-
- cp refuses to copy a file onto itself.
- finger: By default, finger displays information about each logged-in user, including his or her: login name, full
- name, terminal name (prepended with a `*' if write-permission is denied), idle time, login time, and
- location (comment field in /etc/ttytab for users logged in locally, hostname for users logged in
- remotely) if known.
-
- Idle time is minutes if it is a single integer, hours and minutes if a `:' is present, or days and hours if a
- d is present.
-
- When one or more name arguments are given, more detailed information is given for each name
- specified, whether they are logged in or not. A name may be a first or last name, or an account
- name. Information is presented in a multiline format, and includes, in addition to the information
- mentioned above:
- the user's home directory and login shell the time they logged in if they are currently logged in, or the
- time they last logged in if they are not, as well as the terminal or host from which they logged in and,
- if a terminal, the comment field in /etc/ttytab for that terminal
- the last time they received mail, and the last time they read their mail
- any plan contained in the file .plan in the user's home directory
- and any project on which they are working described in the file .project (also in that directory)
-
- If a name argument contains an at-sign, `@', then a connection is attempted to the machine named
- after the at-sign, and the remote finger daemon is queried. The data returned by that daemon is
- printed. If a long format printout is to be produced, finger passes the -l option to the remote finger
- daemon over the network using the /W feature of the protocol (see NAME/FINGER Protocol).
- grep: Grep searches the named input files (or standard input if no files are named, or the file name - is
- given) for lines containing a match to the given pattern. By default, grep prints the matching lines.
-
- There are three major variants of grep, controlled by the following options.
- -G Interpret pattern as a basic regular expression (see below). This is the default.
- -E Interpret pattern as an extended regular expression (see below).
-
- -F
- Interpret pattern as a list of fixed strings, separated by newlines, any of which is to be
- matched. In addition, two variant programs egrep and fgrep are available. Egrep is similiar
- (but not identical) to grep -E, and is compatible with the historical Unix egrep. Fgrep is the
- same as grep -F.
-
- All variants of grep understand the following options: -num Matches will be printed with num lines
- of leading and trailing context. However, grep will never print any given line more than once.
- -A num
- Print num lines of trailing context after matching lines.
- -B num
- Print num lines of leading context before matching lines.
-
- -C
- Equivalent to -2. -V Print the version number of grep to standard error. This version number
- should be included in all bug reports (see below).
-
- -b
- Print the byte offset within the input file before each line of output.
-
- -c
- Suppress normal output; instead print a count of matching lines for each input file. With the -v
- option (see below), count non-matching lines. -e pattern Use pattern as the pattern; useful
- to protect patterns beginning with -. -f file Obtain the pattern from file.
-
- -h
- Suppress the prefixing of filenames on output when multiple files are searched.
-
- -i
- Ignore case distinctions in both the pattern and the input files. -L Suppress normal output;
- instead print the name of each input file from which no output would normally have been
- printed. -l Suppress normal output; instead print the name of each input file from which output
- would normally have been printed. -n Prefix each line of output with the line number within its
- input file.
-
- -q
- Quiet; suppress normal output.
-
- -s
- Suppress error messages about nonexistent or unreadable files. -v Invert the sense of
- matching, to select non-matching lines. -w Select only those lines containing matches that
- form whole words. The test is that the matching substring must either be at the beginning of
- the line, or preceded by a non-word constituent character. Similarly, it must be either at the
- end of the line or followed by a non-word constituent character. Word-constituent characters
- are letters, digits, and the underscore. -x Select only those matches that exactly match the
- whole line.
- kill: kill sends the TERM (terminate, 15) signal to the processes with the specified pids. If a signal name
- or number preceded by `-' is given as first argument, that signal is sent instead of terminate. The
- signal names are listed by using the -l option, and are as given in <signal.h>, stripped of the common
- SIG prefix.
-
- The terminate signal will kill processes that do not catch the signal, so `kill -9 ...' is a sure kill, as the
- KILL (9) signal cannot be caught. By convention, if process number 0 is specified, all members in
- the process group (that is, processes resulting from the current login) are signaled (but beware: this
- works only if you use sh(1); not if you use csh(1).) Negative process numbers also have special
- meanings; see kill(2V) for details. The killed processes must belong to the current user unless he is
- the super-user.
-
- To shut the system down and bring it up single user the super-user may send the initialization
- process a TERM (terminate) signal by `kill 1'; see init(8). To force init to close and open terminals
- according to what is currently in /etc/ttytab use `kill -HUP 1' (sending a hangup signal to process 1).
-
- The shell reports the process number of an asynchronous process started with `&' (run in the
- background). Process numbers can also be found by using ps(1).
-
- kill is built in to csh(1); it allows job specifiers, such as `kill % ...', in place of kill arguments. See
- csh(1) for details.
- less: Less is a program similar to more (1), but which allows backwards movement in the file as well as
- forward movement. Also, less does not have to read the entire input file before starting, so with
- large input files it starts up faster than text editors like vi (1). Less uses termcap (or terminfo on
- some systems), so it can run on a variety of terminals. There is even limited support for hardcopy
- terminals. (On a hardcopy terminal, lines which should be printed at the top of the screen are
- prefixed with an uparrow.)
-
- Commands are based on both more and vi. Commands may be preceeded by a decimal number,
- called N in the descriptions below. The number is used by some commands, as indicated.
- In the following descriptions, ^X means control-X. ESC stands for the ESCAPE key; for example
- ESC-v means the two character sequence "ESCAPE", then "v".
-
- H
- Help: display a summary of these commands. If you forget all the other commands, remember
- this one.
-
- SPACE or f or ^F or ^V
- Scroll forward N lines, default one window (see option -z below). If N is more than the screen size,
- only the final screenful is displayed. Warning: some systems use ^V as a special literalization
- character.
-
- b or ^B or ESC-v
- Scroll backward N lines, default one window (see option -z below). If N is more than the screen
- size, only the final screenful is displayed.
-
- RETURN or ^N or e or ^E or j or ^J
- Scroll forward N lines, default 1. The entire N lines are displayed, even if N is more than the screen
- size.
-
- y or ^Y or ^P or k or ^K
- Scroll backward N lines, default 1. The entire N lines are displayed, even if N is more than the
- screen size. Warning: some systems use ^Y as a special job control character.
-
- d or ^D
- Scroll forward N lines, default one half of the screen size. If N is specified, it becomes the new
- default for subsequent d and u commands.
-
- u or ^U
- Scroll backward N lines, default one half of the screen size. If N is specified, it becomes the new
- default for subsequent d and u commands.
-
- r or ^R or ^L
- Repaint the screen.
-
- R
- Repaint the screen, discarding any buffered input. Useful if the file is changing while it is being
- viewed.
-
- g or < or ESC-<
- Go to line N in the file, default 1 (beginning of file). (Warning: this may be slow if N is large.)
-
- G or > or ESC->
- Go to line N in the file, default the end of the file. (Warning: this may be slow if N is large, or if N is
- not specified and standard input, rather than a file, is being read.)
-
- p or %
- Go to a position N percent into the file. N should be between 0 and 100. (This works if standard
- input is being read, but only if less has already read to the end of the file. It is always fast, but not
- always useful.)
-
- m
- Followed by any lowercase letter, marks the current position with that letter.
-
- `
- (Single quote.) Followed by any lowercase letter, returns to the position which was
- previously marked with that letter. Followed by another single quote, returns to the postion at
- which the last "large" movement command was executed. All marks are lost when a new file
- is examined.
-
- ^X^X Same as single quote.
-
- /pattern
- Search forward in the file for the N-th line containing the pattern. N defaults to 1. The pattern is a
- regular expression, as recognized by ed. The search starts at the second line displayed (but see the
- -a option, which changes this).
-
- ?pattern
- Search backward in the file for the N-th line containing the pattern. The search starts at the line
- immediately before the top line displayed.
-
- /!pattern
- Like /, but the search is for the N-th line which does NOT contain the pattern.
-
- ?!pattern
- Like ?, but the search is for the N-th line which does NOT contain the pattern.
-
- n
- Repeat previous search, for N-th line containing the last pattern (or NOT containing the last
- pattern, if the previous search was /! or ?!).
-
- E [filename]
- Examine a new file. If the filename is missing, the "current" file (see the N and P commands below)
- from the list of files in the command line is re-examined. If the filename is a pound sign (#), the
- previously examined file is re-examined.
-
- ^X^V or :e
- Same as E. Warning: some systems use ^V as a special literalization character.
-
- N or :n
- Examine the next file (from the list of files given in the command line). If a number N is specified (not
- to be confused with the command N), the N-th next file is examined.
-
- P or :p
- Examine the previous file. If a number N is specified, the N-th previous file is examined.
-
- = or ^G
- Prints some information about the file being viewed, including its name and the line number and byte
- offset of the bottom line being displayed. If possible, it also prints the length of the file and the
- percent of the file above the last displayed line.
-
- -
- Followed by one of the command line option letters (see below), this will change the setting
- of that option and print a message describing the new setting. If the option letter has a
- numeric value (such as -b or -h), or a string value (such as -P or -t), a new value may be
- entered after the option letter.
-
- _
- (Underscore.) Followed by one of the command line option letters (see below), this will print
- a message describing the current setting of that option. The setting of the option is not
- changed.
-
- +cmd Causes the specified cmd to be executed each time a new
- file is examined. For example, +G causes less to initially display each file starting at the end
- rather than the beginning.
-
- V
- Prints the version number of less being run.
-
- q or :q or ZZ
- Exits less.
-
- The following two commands may or may not be valid, depending on your particular installation.
-
- v
- Invokes an editor to edit the current file being viewed. The editor is taken from the
- environment variable EDITOR, or defaults to "vi".
-
- ! shell-command
- Invokes a shell to run the shell-command given. A percent sign in the command is replaced by the
- name of the current file. "!!" repeats the last shell command. "!" with no shell command simply
- invokes a shell. In all cases, the shell is taken from the environment variable SHELL, or defaults to
- "sh".
- logout: Built-in commands are executed within the C shell. If a built-in command occurs as any component
- of a pipeline except the last, it is executed in a subshell.
-
- :
- Null command. This command is interpreted, but performs no action.
-
- alias [ name [ def ] ]
- Assign def to the alias name. def is a list of words that may contain escaped historysubstitution
- metasyntax. name is not allowed to be alias or unalias. If def is omitted, the alias name is displayed
- along with its current definition. If both name and def are omitted, all aliases are displayed.
-
- bg [%job] ...
- Run the current or specified jobs in the background.
-
- break
- Resume execution after the end of the nearest enclosing foreach or while loop. The remaining
- commands on the current line are executed. This allows multilevel breaks to be written as a
- list of break commands, all on one line.
-
- breaksw
- Break from a switch, resuming after the endsw.
-
- case label:
- A label in a switch statement.
-
- cd [ dir ]
- chdir [ dir ]
- Change the shell's working directory to directory dir. If no argument is given, change to the home
- directory of the user. If dir is a relative pathname not found in the current directory, check for it in
- those directories listed in the cdpath variable. If dir is the name of a shell variable whose value starts
- with a /, change to the directory named by that value.
-
- continue Continue execution of the nearest enclosing while or foreach.
-
- default: Labels the default case in a switch statement. The default should come after all case labels.
- Any remaining commands on the command line are first executed.
-
- dirs [ -l ]
- Print the directory stack, most recent to the left; the first directory shown is the current directory.
- With the -l argument, produce an unabbreviated printout; use of the ~ notation is suppressed.
-
- echo [ -n ] list
- The words in list are written to the shell's standard output, separated by SPACE characters. The
- output is terminated with a NEWLINE unless the -n option is used.
-
- eval argument ...
- Reads the arguments as input to the shell, and executes the resulting command(s). This is usually
- used to execute commands generated as the result of command or variable substitution, since
- parsing occurs before these substitutions. See tset(1) for an example of how to use eval.
-
- exec command
- Execute command in place of the current shell, which terminates.
-
- exit [ (expr) ]
- The shell exits, either with the value of the status variable, or with the value of the specified by the
- expression expr.
-
- fg % [ job ]
- Bring the current or specified job into the foreground.
-
- foreach var (wordlist)
- ...
-
- end
- The variable var is successively set to each member of wordlist. The sequence of commands
- between this command and the matching end is executed for each new value of var. (Both
- foreach and end must appear alone on separate lines.)
-
- The built-in command continue may be used to continue the loop prematurely and the built-in
- command break to terminate it prematurely. When this command is read from the terminal, the loop
- is read up once prompting with ? before any statements in the loop are executed.
-
- glob wordlist
- Perform filename expansion on wordlist. Like echo, but no \ escapes are recognized. Words are
- delimited by null characters in the output.
-
- goto label
- The specified label is filename and command expanded to yield a label. The shell rewinds its input
- as much as possible and searches for a line of the form label: possibly preceded by SPACE or
- TAB characters. Execution continues after the indicated line. It is an error to jump to a label that
- occurs between a while or for built-in, and its corresponding end.
-
- hashstat Print a statistics line indicating how effective the internal hash table has been at locating
- commands (and avoiding execs). An exec is attempted for each component of the path where the
- hash function indicates a possible hit, and in each component that does not begin with a `/'.
-
- history [ -hr ] [ n ]
- Display the history list; if n is given, display only the n most recent events.
-
- -r
- Reverse the order of printout to be most recent first rather than oldest first. -h Display the
- history list without leading numbers. This is used to produce files suitable for sourcing using
- the -h option to source.
-
- if (expr) command
- If the specified expression evaluates to true, the single command with arguments is executed.
- Variable substitution on command happens early, at the same time it does for the rest of the if
- command. command must be a simple command, not a pipeline, a command list, or a parenthesized
- command list. Note: I/O redirection occurs even if expr is false, when command is not executed
- (this is a bug).
-
- if (expr) then
- ...
- else if (expr2) then ...
- else
- ...
-
- endif
- If expr is true, commands up to the first else are executed. Otherwise, if expr2 is true, the
- commands between the else if and the second else are executed. Otherwise, commands
- between the else and the endif are executed. Any number of else if pairs are allowed, but only
- one else. Only one endif is needed, but it is required. The words else and endif must be the
- first nonwhite characters on a line. The if must appear alone on its input line or after an else.)
-
- jobs[ -l ]
- List the active jobs under job control.
-
- -l
- List process IDs, in addition to the normal information.
-
- kill [ -sig ] [ pid ] [ %job ] ...
- kill -l Send the TERM (terminate) signal, by default, or the signal specified, to the specified process
- ID, the job indicated, or the current job. Signals are either given by number or by name. There is no
- default. Typing kill does not send a signal to the current job. If the signal being sent is TERM
- (terminate) or HUP (hangup), then the job or process is sent a CONT (continue) signal as well.
-
- -l
- List the signal names that can be sent.
-
- limit [ -h ] [ resource [ max-use ] ] Limit the consumption by the current process or any process it
- spawns, each not to exceed max-use on the specified resource. If max-use is omitted, print the
- current limit; if resource is omitted, display all limits.
-
- -h
- Use hard limits instead of the current limits. Hard limits impose a ceiling on the values of the
- current limits. Only the super-user may raise the hard limits.
-
- resource is one of:
-
- cputime
- Maximum CPU seconds per process.
-
- filesize
- Largest single file allowed.
-
- datasize
- Maximum data size (including stack) for the process.
-
- stacksize
- Maximum stack size for the
-
- process.
- coredumpsize Maximum size of a core dump (file).
- descriptors Maximum value for a file descriptor.
-
- max-use is a number, with an optional scaling factor, as follows:
-
- nh
- Hours (for cputime).
-
- nk
- n kilobytes. This is the default for all but cputime.
-
- nm
- n megabytes or minutes (for cputime).
-
- mm:ss
- Minutes and seconds (for cputime).
-
- login [ username|-p ]
- Terminate a login shell and invoke login(1). The .logout file is not processed. If username is omitted,
- login prompts for the name of a user.
-
- -p
- Preserve the current environment (variables).
-
- logout
- Terminate a login shell.
-
- nice [ +n|-n ] [ command ]
- Increment the process priority value for the shell or for command by n. The higher the priority
- value, the lower the priority of a process, and the slower it runs. When given, command is always
- run in a subshell, and the restrictions placed on commands in simple if commands apply. If
- command is omitted, nice increments the value for the current shell. If no increment is specified, nice
- sets the nice value to 4. The range of nice values is from -20 through 19. Values of n outside this
- range set the value to the lower, or to the higher boundary, respectively.
-
- +n
- Increment the process priority value by n.
-
- -n
- Decrement by n. This argument can be used only by the super-user.
-
- nohup [ command ]
- Run command with HUPs ignored. With no arguments, ignore HUPs throughout the remainder of a
- script. When given, command is always run in a subshell, and the restrictions placed on commands
- in simple if commands apply. All processes detached with & are effectively nohup'd.
-
- notify [ %job ] ...
- Notify the user asynchronously when the status of the current, or of specified jobs, changes.
-
- onintr [ - | label]
- Control the action of the shell on interrupts. With no arguments, onintr restores the default action of
- the shell on interrupts. (The shell terminates shell scripts and returns to the terminal command input
- level). With the - argument, the shell ignores all interrupts. With a label argument, the shell executes
- a goto label when an interrupt is received or a child process terminates because it was interrupted.
-
- popd [+n]
- Pop the directory stack, and cds to the new top directory. The elements of the directory stack are
- numbered from 0 starting at the top.
-
- +n
- Discard the n'th entry in the stack.
-
- pushd [+n | dir]
- Push a directory onto the directory stack. With no arguments, exchange the top two elements.
-
- +n
- Rotate the n'th entry to the top of the stack and cd to it. dir Push the current working
- directory onto the stack and change to dir.
-
- rehash
- Recompute the internal hash table of the contents of directories listed in the path variable to
- account for new commands added.
-
- repeat count command
- Repeat command count times command is subject to the same restrictions as with the one-line if
- statement.
-
- set [var [ = value ] ]
- set var[n] = word
- With no arguments, set displays the values of all shell variables. Multiword values are displayed as a
- parenthesized list. With the var argument alone, set assigns an empty (null) value to the variable var.
- With arguments of the form var = value set assigns value to var, where value is one of:
-
- word
- A single word (or quoted string). (wordlist) A space-separated list of words
-
- enclosed in parentheses.
-
- Values are command and filename expanded before being assigned. The form set var[n] = word
- replaces the n'th word in a multiword value with word.
-
- setenv [ VAR [ word ] ]
- With no arguments, setenv displays all environment variables. With the VAR argument sets the
- environment variable VAR to have an empty (null) value. (By convention, environment variables are
- normally given upper-case names.) With both VAR and word arguments setenv sets the
- environment variable NAME to the value word, which must be either a single word or a quoted
- string. The most commonly used environment variables, USER, TERM, and PATH, are
- automatically imported to and exported from the csh variables user, term, and path; there is no need
- to use setenv for these. In addition, the shell sets the PWD environment variable from the csh
- variable cwd whenever the latter changes.
-
- shift [ variable ]
- The components of argv, or variable, if supplied, are shifted to the left, discarding the first
- component. It is an error for the variable not to be set, or to have a null value.
-
- source [ -h ] name
- Reads commands from name. source commands may be nested, but if they are nested too deeply
- the shell may run out of file descriptors. An error in a sourced file at any level terminates all nested
- source commands.
-
- -h
- Place commands from the file name on the history list without executing them.
-
- stop [%job] ...
- Stop the current or specified background job.
-
- suspend Stop the shell in its tracks, much as if it had been sent a stop signal with ^Z. This is most
- often used to stop shells started by su.
-
- switch (string)
- case label:
- ...
- breaksw
- ... default:
- ...
- breaksw
-
- endsw
- Each label is successively matched, against the specified string, which is first command and
- filename expanded. The file metacharacters *, ? and [...] may be used in the case labels,
- which are variable expanded. If none of the labels match before a "default" label is found,
- execution begins after the default label. Each case statement and the default statement must
- appear at the beginning of a line. The command breaksw continues execution after the endsw.
- Otherwise control falls through subsequent case and default statements as with C. If no label
- matches and there is no default, execution continues after the endsw.
-
- time [ command ]
- With no argument, print a summary of time used by this C shell and its children. With an optional
- command, execute command and print a summary of the time it uses.
-
- umask [ value ]
- Display the file creation mask. With value set the file creation mask. value is given in octal, and is
- XORed with the permissions of 666 for files and 777 for directories to arrive at the permissions for
- new files. Common values include 002, giving complete access to the group, and read (and
- directory search) access to others, or 022, giving read (and directory search) but not write
- permission to the group and others.
-
- unalias pattern
- Discard aliases that match (filename substitution) pattern. All aliases are removed by unalias *.
-
- unhash
- Disable the internal hash table.
-
- unlimit [ -h ] [ resource ]
- Remove a limitation on resource. If no resource is specified, then all resource limitations are
- removed. See the description of the limit command for the list of resource names.
-
- -h
- Remove corresponding hard limits. Only the super-user may do this.
-
- unset pattern
- Remove variables whose names match (filename substitution) pattern. All variables are removed by
- `unset *'; this has noticeably distasteful sideeffects.
-
- unsetenv variable
- Remove variable from the environment. Pattern matching, as with unset is not performed.
-
- wait
- Wait for background jobs to finish (or for an interrupt) before prompting.
-
- while (expr)
- ...
-
- end
- While expr is true (evaluates to non-zero), repeat commands between the while and the
- matching end statement. break and continue may be used to terminate or continue the loop
- prematurely. The while and end must appear alone on their input lines. If the shell's input is a
- terminal, it prompts for commands with a question-mark until the end command is entered
- and then performs the commands in the loop.
-
- %[ job ] [ & ]
- Bring the current or indicated job to the foreground. With the ampersand, continue running job in
- the background.
-
- @ [ var =expr ]
- @ [ var[n] =expr ]
- With no arguments, display the values for all shell variables. With arguments, the variable var, or the
- n'th word in the value of var, to the value that expr evaluates to. (If [n] is supplied, both var and its
- n'th component must already exist.)
-
- If the expression contains the characters >, <, & or |, then at least this part of expr must be placed
- within parentheses.
-
- The operators *=, +=, etc., are available as in C. The space separating the name from the
- assignment operator is optional. Spaces are, however, mandatory in separating components of expr
- that would otherwise be single words.
-
- Special postfix operators, ++ and -- increment or decrement name, respectively.
- lpq: lpq displays the contents of a printer queue. It reports the status of jobs specified by job#, or all
- jobs owned by the user specified by username. lpq reports on all jobs in the default printer queue
- when invoked with no arguments.
-
- For each print job in the queue, lpq reports the user's name, current position, the names of input files
- comprising the job, the job number (by which it is referred to when using lprm(1)) and the total size
- in bytes. Normally, only as much information as will fit on one line is displayed. Jobs are normally
- queued on a first-in-first-out basis. Filenames comprising a job may be unavailable, such as when lpr
- is used at the end of a pipeline; in such cases the filename field indicates ``(standard input)''.
-
- If lpq warns that there is no daemon present (that is, due to some malfunction), the lpc(8) command
- can be used to restart a printer daemon.
- -P printer
- Display information about the queue for the specified printer. In the absence of the -P
- option, the queue to the printer specified by the PRINTER variable in the environment is
- used. If the PRINTER variable isn't set, the queue for the default printer is used.
-
- -l
- Display queue information in long format; includes the name of the host from which the job
- originated.
-
- +[ interval ]
- Display the spool queue periodically until it empties. This option clears the terminal screen
- before reporting on the queue. If an interval is supplied, lpq sleeps that number of seconds in
- between reports.
- lpr: lpr creates a printer job in a spooling area for subsequent printing as facilities become available.
- Each printer job consists of a control file and one or more data files. The data files are copies of (or,
- with -s , symbolic links to) each filename you specify. The spool area is managed by the line printer
- daemon, lpd(8). Jobs that specify a printer on a remote machine are forwarded by lpd.
-
- lpr reads from the standard input if no files are specified.
- -Pprinter
- Send output to the named printer. Otherwise send output to the printer named in the
- PRINTER environment variable, or to the default printer, lp.
-
- -#copies
- Produce the number of copies indicated for each named file. For example:
-
- example% lpr -#3 index.c lookup.c
-
- produces three copies of index.c, followed by three copies of lookup.c. On the other hand,
-
- example% cat index.c lookup.c | lpr -#3
-
- generates three copies of the concatenation of the files.
-
- -Cclass
- Print class as the job classification on the burst page. For example,
-
- example% lpr -C Operations new.index.c
-
- replaces the system name (the name returned by hostname) with "Operations" on the burst page,
- and prints the file new.index.c.
-
- -Jjob
- Print job as the job name on the burst page. Normally, lpr uses the first file's name.
-
- -Ttitle
- Use title instead of the file name for the
-
- title used by pr(1V).
-
- -i[ indent ]
- Indent output indent SPACE characters. Eight SPACE characters is the default. The indent
- is passed to the input filter. If no input filter is present, this option is ignored. -1 font -2 font
- -3 font
-
- -4 font
- Mount the specified font on font position 1, 2, 3 or 4. The daemon will construct a .railmag
- file in the spool directory that indicates the mount by referencing /usr/lib/vfont/font.
-
- -wcols
- Use cols as the page width for pr.
-
- -r
- Remove the file upon completion of spooling, or upon completion of printing with the -s
- option.
-
- -m
- Send mail upon completion.
-
- -h
- Suppress printing the burst page.
-
- -s
- Create a symbolic link from the spool area to the data files rather than trying to copy them (so
- large files can be printed). This means the data files should not be modified or removed until
- they have been printed. This option can be used to avoid truncating files larger than the
- maximum given in the mx capability of the printcap(5) entry. -s only prevents copies of local
- files from being made. Jobs from remote hosts are copied anyway. -s only works with named
- data files; if the lpr command is at the end of a pipeline, the data is copied to the spool.
-
- filter-option The following single letter options notify the line printer spooler that the files are not
- standard text files. The spooling daemon will use the appropriate filters to print the data accordingly.
-
- -p
- Use pr to format the files (lpr -p is very much like `pr | lpr'). -l Print control characters and
- suppress page breaks. -t The files contain troff(1) (cat phototypesetter) binary data. -n The
- files contain data from ditroff (device independent troff). -d The files contain data from tex
- (DVI format from Stanford). -g The files contain standard plot data as produced by the
- plot(3X) routines (see also plot(1G) for the filters used by the printer spooler). -v The files
- contain a raster image, see rasterfile(5). The printer must support an appropriate imaging
- model such as PostScript in order to print the image. -c The files contain data produced by
- cifplot. -f Interpret the first character of each line as a standard FORTRAN carriage control
- character.
-
- If no filter-option is given (and the printer can interpret PostScript), the string `%!' as the first two
- characters of a file indicates that it contains PostScript commands.
-
- These filter options offer a standard user interface, and all options may not be available for, nor
- applicable to, all printers.
- lprm: lprm removes a job or jobs from a printer's spooling queue. Since the spool directory is protected
- from users, using lprm is normally the only method by which a user can remove a job.
-
- Without any arguments, lprm deletes the job that is currently active, provided that the user who
- invoked lprm owns that job.
-
- When the super-user specifies a username, lprm removes all jobs belonging to that user.
-
- You can remove a specific job by supplying its job number as an argument, which you can obtain
- using lpq(1). For example:
-
- example% lpq -Phost
- host is ready and printing
- Rank Owner Job Files Total Size active wendy 385 standard input 35501 bytes example% lprm
- -Phost 385
-
- lprm reports the names of any files it removes, and is silent if there are no applicable jobs to remove.
-
- lprm kills the active printer daemon, if necessary, before removing spooled jobs; it restarts the
- daemon when through.
- -Pprinter
- Specify the queue associated with a specific printer. Otherwise the value of the PRINTER
- variable in the environment is used. If this variable is unset, the queue for the default printer is
- used.
-
- -
- Remove all jobs owned by you. If invoked by the super-user, all jobs in the spool are
- removed. (Job ownership is determined by the user's login name and host name on the
- machine where the lpr command was invoked).
- ls: -a, --all
- List all files in directories, including all files that start with `.'.
-
- -b, --escape
- Quote nongraphic characters in file names using alphabetic and octal backslash sequences
- like those used in C.
-
- -c, --time=ctime, --time=status
- Sort directory contents according to the files' status change time instead of the modification
- time. If the long listing format is being used, print the status change time instead of the
- modification time.
-
- -d, --directory
- List directories like other files, rather than listing their contents.
-
- -f
- Do not sort directory contents; list them in whatever order they are stored on the disk. The
- same as enabling -a and -U and disabling -l, -s, and -t.
-
- --full-time
- List times in full, rather than using the standard abbreviation heuristics.
-
- -g
- Ignored; for Unix compatibility.
-
- -i, --inode
- Print the index number of each file to the left of the file name.
-
- -k, --kilobytes
- If file sizes are being listed, print them in kilobytes. This overrides the environment variable
- POSIXLY_CORRECT.
-
- -l, --format=long, --format=verbose
- In addition to the name of each file, print the file type, permissions, number of hard links,
- owner name, group name, size in bytes, and timestamp (the modification time unless other
- times are selected). For files with a time that is more than 6 months old or more than 1 hour
- into the future, the timestamp contains the year instead of the time of day.
-
- -m, --format=commas
- List files horizontally, with as many as will fit on each line, separated by commas.
-
- -n, --numeric-uid-gid
- List the numeric UID and GID instead of the names.
-
- -p
- Append a character to each file name indicating the file type.
-
- -q, --hide-control-chars
- Print question marks instead of nongraphic characters in file names.
-
- -r, --reverse
- Sort directory contents in reverse order.
-
- -s, --size
- Print the size of each file in 1K blocks to the left of the file name. If the environment variable
- POSIXLY_CORRECT is set, 512-byte blocks are used instead.
-
- -t, --sort=time
-
- Sort directory contents by timestamp instead of alphabetically, with the newest files listed first.
-
- -u, --time=atime, --time=access, --time=use
- Sort directory contents according to the files' last access time instead of the modification time.
- If the long listing format is being used, print the last access time instead of the modification
- time.
-
- -x, --format=across, --format=horizontal
- List the files in columns, sorted horizontally.
-
- -A, --almost-all
- List all files in directories, except for `.' and `..'.
-
- -B, --ignore-backups
- Do not list files that end with `~', unless they are given on the command line.
-
- -C, --format=vertical
- List files in columns, sorted vertically.
-
- -F, --classify
- Append a character to each file name indicating the file type. For regular files that are
- executable, append a `*'. The file type indicators are `/' for directories, `@' for symbolic
- links, `|' for FIFOs, `=' for sockets, and nothing for regular files.
-
- -G, --no-group
- Inhibit display of group information in a long format directory listing.
-
- -L, --dereference
- List the files linked to by symbolic links instead of listing the contents of the links.
-
- -N, --literal
- Do not quote file names.
-
- -Q, --quote-name
- Enclose file names in double quotes and quote nongraphic characters as in C.
-
- -R, --recursive
- List the contents of all directories recursively.
-
- -S, --sort=size
- Sort directory contents by file size instead of alphabetically, with the largest files listed first.
-
- -U, --sort=none
-
- Do not sort directory contents; list them in whatever order they are stored on the disk. This option is
- not called -f because the Unix ls -f option also enables -a and disables -l, -s, and -t. It seems
- useless and ugly to group those unrelated things together in one option. Since this option doesn't do
- that, it has a different name.
-
- -X, --sort=extension
- Sort directory contents alphabetically by file extension (characters after the last `.'); files with
- no extension are sorted first.
-
- -1, --format=single-column
- List one file per line.
-
- -w, --width cols
- Assume the screen is cols columns wide. The default is taken from the terminal driver if
- possible; otherwise the environment variable COLUMNS is used if it is set; otherwise the
- default is 80.
-
- -T, --tabsize cols
- Assume that each tabstop is cols columns wide. The default is 8.
-
- -I, --ignore pattern
- Do not list files whose names match the shell pattern pattern unless they are given on the
- command line. As in the shell, an initial `.' in a filename does not match a wildcard at the start
- of pattern.
-
- --color, --colour, --color=yes, --colour=yes
- Colorize the names of files depending on the type of file. See DISPLAY COLORIZATION
- below.
-
- --color=tty, --colour=tty
- Same as --color but only if standard output is a terminal. This is very useful for shell scripts
- and command aliases, especially if your favorite pager does not support color control codes.
-
- --color=no, --colour=no
- Disables colorization. This is the default. Provided to override a previous color option.
-
- --help
- Print a usage message on standard output and exit successfully.
-
- --version
- Print version information on standard output then exit successfully.
-
- DISPLAY COLORIZATION
- When using the --color option, this version of ls will colorize the file names printed according to the
- name and type of file. By default, this colorization is by type only, and the codes used are ISO 6429
- (ANSI) compliant.
-
- You can override the default colors by defining the environment variable LS_COLORS (or
- LS_COLOURS). The format of this variable is reminicent of the termcap(5) file format; a
- colon-separated list of expressions of the form "xx=string", where "xx" is a two-character variable
- name. The variables with their associated defaults are:
-
- no
- 0 Normal (non-filename) text
-
- fi
- 0 Regular file di 32 Directory
-
- ln
- 36 Symbolic link
-
- pi
- 31 Named pipe (FIFO) so 33 Socket
-
- bd
- 44;37 Block device
-
- cd
- 44;37 Character device
-
- ex
- 35 Executable file
-
- mi
- (none) Missing file (defaults to fi)
-
- or
- (none) Orphanned symbolic link (defaults to ln)
-
- lc
- \e[ Left code
-
- rc
- m Right code
-
- ec
- (none) End code (replaces lc+no+rc)
-
- You only need to include the variables you want to change from the default.
-
- File names can also be colorized based on filename extension. This is specified in the LS_COLORS
- variable using the syntax "*ext=string". For example, using ISO 6429 codes, to color all C-language
- source files blue you would specify "*.c=34". This would color all files ending in .c in blue (34)
- color.
-
- Control characters can be written either in C-style \escaped notation, or in stty-like ^-notation. The
- C-style notation adds \e for Escape, \_ for a normal space characer, and \? for Delete. In addition,
- the \ escape character can be used to override the default interpretation of \, ^, : and =.
-
- Each file will be written as <lc> <color code> <rc> <filename> <ec>. If the <ec> code is
- undefined, the sequence <lc> <no> <rc> will be used instead. This is generally more convenient to
- use, but less general. The left, right and end codes are provided so you don't have to type common
- parts over and over again and to support weird terminals; you will generally not need to change
- them at all unless your terminal does not use ISO 6429 color sequences but a different system.
-
- If your terminal does use ISO 6429 color codes, you can compose the type codes (i.e. all except
- the lc, rc, and ec codes) from numerical commands separated by semicolons. The most common
- commands are:
-
- 0
- to restore default color
-
- 1
- for brighter colors
-
- 4
- for underlined text
-
- 5
- for flashing text
-
- 30
- for black foreground
-
- 31
- for red foreground
-
- 32
- for green foreground
-
- 33
- for yellow (or brown) foreground
-
- 34
- for blue foreground
-
- 35
- for purple foreground
-
- 36
- for cyan foreground
-
- 37
- for white (or gray) foreground
-
- 40
- for black background
-
- 41
- for red background
-
- 42
- for green background
-
- 43
- for yellow (or brown) background
-
- 44
- for blue background
-
- 45
- for purple background
-
- 46
- for cyan background
-
- 47
- for white (or gray) background
-
- Not all commands will work on all systems or display devices.
-
- A few terminal programs do not recognize the default end code properly. If all text gets colorized
- after you do a directory listing, try changing the no and fi codes from 0 to the numerical codes for
- your standard fore- and background colors.
- mail: mail is a comfortable, flexible, interactive program for composing, sending and receiving electronic
- messages. While reading messages, mail provides you with commands to browse, display, save,
- delete, and respond to messages. While sending mail, mail allows editing and reviewing of messages
- being composed, and the inclusion of text from files or other messages.
-
- Incoming mail is stored in the system mailbox for each user. This is a file named after the user in
- /var/spool/mail. mail normally looks in this file for incoming messages, but you can use the MAIL
- environment variable to have it look in a different file. When you read a message, it is marked to be
- moved to a secondary file for storage. This secondary file, called the mbox, is normally the file
- mbox in your home directory. This file can also be changed by setting the MBOX environment
- variable. Messages remain in the mbox file until deliberately removed.
- If no recipient is specified, mail attempts to read messages from the system mailbox.
-
- -d
- Turn on debugging output. (Neither particularly interesting nor recommended.)
-
- -e
- Test for presence of mail. If there is no mail, mail prints nothing and exits (with a successful
- return code).
-
- -F
- Record the message in a file named after the first recipient. Override the record variable, if
- set.
-
- -H
- Print header summary only.
-
- -i
- Ignore interrupts (as with the ignore variable).
-
- -n
- Do not initialize from the system default Mail.rc file.
-
- -N
- Do not print initial header summary.
-
- -U
- Convert uucp style addresses to Internet standards. Overrides the conv environment variable.
-
- -v
- Pass the -v flag to sendmail(8).
-
- -f [filename] Read messages from filename instead of
- system mailbox. If no filename is specified, the mbox is used.
-
- -f +folder
- Use the file folder in the folder directory (same as the folder command). The name of this
- directory is listed in the folder variable.
-
- -h number
- The number of network "hops" made so far. This is provided for network software to avoid
- infinite delivery loops.
-
- -r address
- Pass address to network delivery software. All tilde (~) commands are disabled.
-
- -s subject
- Set the Subject header field to subject.
-
- -T file
- Print the contents of the article-id fields of all messages that were read or deleted on file (for
- the use of network news programs if available).
-
- -u user
- Read user's system mailbox. This is only effective if user's system mailbox is not read
- protected.
- man: man displays information from the reference manuals. It can display complete manual pages that you
- select by title, or one-line summaries selected either by keyword (-k), or by the name of an
- associated file (-f).
-
- A section, when given, applies to the titles that follow it on the command line (up to the next
- section, if any). man looks in the indicated section of the manual for those titles. section is either a
- digit (perhaps followed by a single letter indicating the type of manual page), or one of the words
- new, local, old, or public. The abbreviations n, l, o and p are also allowed. If section is omitted,
- man searches all reference sections (giving preference to commands over functions) and prints the
- first manual page it finds. If no manual page is located, man prints an error message.
-
- The reference page sources are typically located in the /usr/man/man? directories. Since these
- directories are optionally installed, they may not reside on your host; you may have to mount
- /usr/man from a host on which they do reside. If there are preformatted, up-to-date versions in
- corresponding cat? or fmt? directories, man simply displays or prints those versions. If the
- preformatted version of interest is out of date or missing, man reformats it prior to display. If
- directories for the preformatted versions are not provided, man reformats a page whenever it is
- requested; it uses a temporary file to store the formatted text during display.
-
- If the standard output is not a terminal, or if the `-' flag is given, man pipes its output through
- cat(1V). Otherwise, man pipes its output through more(1) to handle paging and underlining on the
- screen.
- -t man arranges for the specified manual pages to be troffed to a suitable raster output device (see
- troff(1) or vtroff(1)). If both the - and -t flags are given, man updates the troffed versions of each
- named title (if necessary), but does not display them.
-
- -M path
- Change the search path for manual pages. path is a colon-separated list of directories that
- contain manual page directory subtrees. For example, /usr/man/u_man:/usr/man/a_man
- makes man search in the standard System V locations. When used with the -k or -f options,
- the -M option must appear first. Each directory in the path is assumed to contain
- subdirectories of the form man[1-8l-p].
-
- -T macro-package
- man uses macro-package rather than the standard -man macros defined in
- /usr/lib/tmac/tmac.an for formatting manual pages.
-
- -k keyword ...
- man prints out one-line summaries from the whatis database (table of contents) that contain
- any of the given keywords. The whatis database is created using the catman(8) command
- with the -w option.
-
- -f filename ...
- man attempts to locate manual pages related to any of the given filenames. It strips the
- leading pathname components from each filename, and then prints one-line summaries
- containing the resulting basename or names. This option also uses the whatis database.
- mkdir: mkdir creates directories. Standard entries, `.', for the directory itself, and `..' for its parent, are
- made automatically.
-
- The -p flag allows missing parent directories to be created as needed.
-
- With the exception of the set-gid bit, the current umask(2V) setting determines the mode in which
- directories are created. The new directory inherits the set-gid bit of the parent directory. Modes
- may be modified after creation by using chmod(1V).
-
- mkdir requires write permission in the parent directory.
- more: more is a filter that displays the contents of a text file on the terminal, one screenful at a time. It
- normally pauses after each screenful, and prints --More-- at the bottom of the screen. more
- provides a two-line overlap between screens for continuity. If more is reading from a file rather than
- a pipe, the percentage of characters displayed so far is also shown.
-
- more scrolls up to display one more line in response to a RETURN character; it displays another
- screenful in response to a SPACE character. Other commands are listed below.
-
- page clears the screen before displaying the next screenful of text; it only provides a one-line overlap
- between screens.
-
- more sets the terminal to noecho mode, so that the output can be continuous. Commands that you
- type do not normally show up on your terminal, except for the / and ! commands.
-
- If the standard output is not a terminal, more acts just like cat(1V), except that a header is printed
- before each file in a series.
- -c Clear before displaying. Redrawing the screen instead of scrolling for faster displays. This option
- is ignored if the terminal does not have the ability to clear to the end of a line.
-
- -d
- Display error messages rather than ringing the terminal bell if an unrecognized command is
- used. This is helpful for inexperienced users.
-
- -f
- Do not fold long lines. This is useful when lines contain nonprinting characters or escape
- sequences, such as those generated when nroff(1) output is piped through ul(1).
-
- -l
- Do not treat FORMFEED characters (CTRL-D) as "page breaks." If -l is not used, more
- pauses to accept commands after any line containing a ^L character (CTRL-D). Also, if a file
- begins with a FORMFEED, the screen is cleared before the file is printed.
-
- -s
- Squeeze. Replace multiple blank lines with a single blank line. This is helpful when viewing
- nroff(1) output, on the screen.
-
- -u
- Suppress generation of underlining escape sequences. Normally, more handles underlining,
- such as that produced by nroff(1), in a manner appropriate to the terminal. If the terminal can
- perform underlining or has a stand-out mode, more supplies appropriate escape sequences as
- called for in the text file.
-
- -lines
- Display the indicated number of lines in each screenful, rather than the default (the number of
- lines in the terminal screen less two).
-
- +linenumber
- Start up at linenumber.
-
- +/pattern
- Start up two lines above the line containing the regular expression pattern. Note: unlike
- editors, this construct should not end with a `/'. If it does, then the trailing slash is taken as a
- character in the search pattern.
- mv: mv moves files and directories around in the file system. A side effect of mv is to rename a file or
- directory. The three major forms of mv are shown in the synopsis above.
-
- The first form of mv moves (changes the name of) filename1 to filename2. If filename2 already
- exists, it is removed before filename1 is moved. If filename2 has a mode which forbids writing, mv
- prints the mode (see chmod(2V)) and reads the standard input to obtain a line; if the line begins with
- y, the move takes place, otherwise mv exits.
-
- The second form of mv moves (changes the name of) directory1 to directory2, only if directory2
- does not already exist if it does, the third form applies.
-
- The third form of mv moves one or more filenames (may also be directories) with their original
- names, into the last directory in the list.
-
- mv refuses to move a file or directory onto itself.
- -
- Interpret all the following arguments to mv as file names. This allows file names starting with
- minus.
-
- -f
- Force. Override any mode restrictions and the -i option. The -f option also suppresses any
- warning messages about modes which would potentially restrict overwriting.
-
- -i
- Interactive mode. mv displays the name of the file or directory followed by a question mark
- whenever a move would replace an existing file or directory. If you type a line starting with y,
- mv moves the specified file or directory, otherwise mv does nothing with that file or directory.
- passwd: passwd changes (or installs) a password, login shell (-s option), or full name (-f option) associated
- with the user username (your own by default). chsh is equivalent to passwd with the -s option, and
- chfn is equivalent to passwd with the -f option.
-
- Use `passwd -y' or yppasswd(1) to change your password in the Network Information Service
- (NIS). This will not affect your local password, or your password on any remote machines on which
- you have accounts. passwd calls yppasswd automatically if you do not have an entry in the local
- passwd file, and the -l option is not specified.
-
- When changing a password, passwd prompts for the old password and then for the new one. You
- must supply both, and the new password must be typed twice to forestall mistakes.
-
- If password aging is enabled, the first time an ordinary user enters the new password passwd
- checks to see if the old password has "aged" sufficiently. Password "aging" is the amount of time
- (usually a certain number of days) that must elapse between password changes. If "aging" is
- insufficient the new password is rejected and passwd terminates.
-
- New passwords should be at least five characters long, if they combine upper-case and lower-case
- letters, or at least six characters long if in monocase. Users that persist in entering shorter passwords
- are compromising their own security. The number of significant characters in a password is eight,
- although longer passwords will be accepted.
-
- Only the owner of the name or the super-user may change a password; the owner must prove he
- knows the old password. The super-user can change any password and is not forced to comply
- with password aging requirements.
-
- When changing a login shell, passwd displays the current login shell and then prompts for the new
- one. The new login shell must be one of the approved shells listed in /etc/shells unless you are the
- super-user. If /etc/shells does not exist, the only shells that may be specified are /bin/sh and /bin/csh.
-
- The super-user may change anyone's login shell; normal users may only change their own login shell.
-
- When changing a full name, passwd displays the current full name, enclosed between brackets, and
- prompts for a new full name. If you type a RETURN, the full name is not changed. If the full name is
- to be made blank, you must type the word "none".
-
- The super-user may change anyone's full name; normal users may only change their own.
- -a Display the name and aging information for all users. Can only be invoked by the super-user.
-
- -f
- Change the full name.
-
- -l
- Change the local password, login shell, or full name. If username exists in the local passwd
- file, this is the default.
-
- -s
- Change the login shell.
-
- -y
- Change passwd, login shell, or full name in the NIS database.
-
- -d [username]
- Display the name and aging information for the caller or the user specified if the invoker has
- the right privileges.
-
- -e username
- Expire the password for the user name specified. Can only be invoked by the super-user.
-
- -F filename
- Treat filename as the password file.
-
- -n numdays username
- Set the maturity time of the password for username. Passwords that have not "aged" enough
- cannot be changed. Can only be set by the super-user.
-
- -x numdays username
-
- Set the expiration time of the password for username. Can only be set by the super-user.
- ps: ps displays information about processes. Normally, only those processes that are running with your
- effective user ID and are attached to a controlling terminal (see termio(4)) are shown. Additional
- categories of processes can be added to the display using various options. In particular, the -a
- option allows you to include processes that are not owned by you (that do not have your user ID),
- and the -x option allows you to include processes without control terminals. When you specify both
- -a and -x, you get processes owned by anyone, with or without a control terminal. The -r option
- restricts the list of processes printed to "running" processes: runnable processes, those in page wait,
- or those in short-term non-interruptible waits.
-
- ps displays the process ID, under PID; the control terminal (if any), under TT; the cpu time used by
- the process so far, including both user and system time), under TIME; the state of the process,
- under STAT; and finally, an indication of the COMMAND that is running.
-
- The state is given by a sequence of four letters, for example, `RWNA'.
-
- First letter
- indicates the runnability of the process:
-
- R
- Runnable processes.
-
- T
- Stopped processes.
-
- P
- Processes in page wait.
-
- D
- Processes in non-interruptible waits; typically short-term waits for disk or NFS I/O.
-
- S
- Processes sleeping for less than about 20 seconds.
-
- I
- Processes that are idle (sleeping longer than about 20 seconds).
-
- Z
- Processes that have terminated and that are waiting for their parent process to do a wait(2V)
- ("zombie" processes).
-
- Second letter indicates whether a process is swapped out; blank Represented as a SPACE
- character, in this position indicates that the process is loaded (in memory).
-
- W
- Process is swapped out.
-
- >
- Process has specified a soft limit on memory requirements and has exceeded that limit; such a
- process is (necessarily) not swapped.
-
- Third letter indicates whether a process is running with altered CPU scheduling priority (nice(1)):
- blank Represented as a SPACE character, in this position indicates that the process is running
- without special treatment.
-
- N
- The process priority is reduced,
-
- <
- The process priority has been raised artificially.
-
- Fourth letter indicates any special treatment of the process for virtual memory replacement. The
- letters correspond to options to the vadvise(2) system call. Currently the possibilities are:
- blank Represented as a SPACE character, in this position stands for VA_NORM.
-
- A
- Stands for VA_ANOM. An A typically represents a program which is doing garbage
- collection.
-
- S
- Stands for VA_SEQL. An S is typical of large image processing programs that are using
- virtual memory to sequentially address voluminous data.
-
- kernel-name specifies the location of the system namelist. If the -k option is given, c-dump-file tells
- ps where to look for the core dump. Otherwise, the core dump is located in the file /vmcore and this
- argument is ignored. swap-file gives the location of a swap file other than the default, /dev/drum.
- pwd: pwd prints the pathname of the working (current) directory.
-
- If you are using csh(1), you can use the dirs builtin command to do the same job more quickly; but
- dirs can give a different answer in the rare case that the current directory or a containing directory
- was moved after the shell descended into it. This is because pwd searches back up the directory
- tree to report the true pathname, whereas dirs remembers the pathname from the last cd(1)
- command. The example below illustrates the differences.
-
- example% cd /usr/wendy/january/reports example% pwd
- /usr/wendy/january/reports
- example% dirs
- ~/january/reports
- example% mv ~/january ~/february
- example% pwd
- /usr/wendy/february/reports
- example% dirs
- ~/january/reports
- example%
-
- pwd and dirs also give different answers when you change directory through a symbolic link. For
- example: example% cd /usr/wendy/january/reports example% pwd
- /usr/wendy/january/reports
- example% dirs
- ~/january/reports
- example% ls -l /usr/wendy/january
- lrwxrwxrwx 1 wendy 17 Jan 30 1983 /usr/wendy/january -> /usr/wendy/1984/jan/ example% cd
- /usr/wendy/january
- example% pwd
- /usr/wendy/1984/jan
- example% dirs
- /usr/wendy/january
-
- The pathnames of files mounted with the Automounter can also change if the file is not used for a
- certain time interval (the default is five minutes).
- rm: rm removes (directory entries for) one or more files. If an entry was the last link to the file, the
- contents of that file are lost. See ln(1V) for more information about multiple links to files.
-
- To remove a file, you must have write permission in its directory; but you do not need read or write
- permission on the file itself. If you do not have write permission on the file and the standard input is a
- terminal, rm displays the file's permissions and waits for you to type in a response. If your response
- begins with y the file is deleted; otherwise the file is left alone.
-
- rmdir removes each named directory. rmdir only removes empty directories.
- -
- Treat the following arguments as filenames `-' so that you can specify filenames starting with a
- minus.
-
- -f
- Force files to be removed without displaying permissions, asking questions or reporting
- errors.
-
- -i
- Ask whether to delete each file, and, under -r, whether to examine each directory.
- Sometimes called the interactive option.
-
- -r
- Recursively delete the contents of a directory, its subdirectories, and the directory itself.
- rmdir: rm removes (directory entries for) one or more files. If an entry was the last link to the file, the
- contents of that file are lost. See ln(1V) for more information about multiple links to files.
-
- To remove a file, you must have write permission in its directory; but you do not need read or write
- permission on the file itself. If you do not have write permission on the file and the standard input is a
- terminal, rm displays the file's permissions and waits for you to type in a response. If your response
- begins with y the file is deleted; otherwise the file is left alone.
-
- rmdir removes each named directory. rmdir only removes empty directories.
- -
- Treat the following arguments as filenames `-' so that you can specify filenames starting with a
- minus.
-
- -f
- Force files to be removed without displaying permissions, asking questions or reporting
- errors.
-
- -i
- Ask whether to delete each file, and, under -r, whether to examine each directory.
- Sometimes called the interactive option.
-
- -r
- Recursively delete the contents of a directory, its subdirectories, and the directory itself.
- spell: spell collects words from the named files, and looks them up in a hashed spelling list. Words that do
- not appear in the list, or cannot be derived from those that do appear by applying certain inflections,
- prefixes or suffixes, are displayed on the standard output.
-
- If there are no filename arguments, words to check are collected from the standard input. spell
- ignores most troff(1), tbl(1), and eqn(1) constructs. Copies of all output words are accumulated in
- the history file, and a stop list filters out misspellings (for example, their=thy-y+ier) that would
- otherwise pass.
-
- By default, spell (like deroff(1)) follows chains of included files (.so and .nx troff(1) requests),
- unless the names of such included files begin with /usr/lib.
-
- If a +local_file argument is specified, words found in local_file are removed from spell's output.
- local_file is the name of a user-provided file that contains a sorted list of words, one per line. With
- this option, the user can specify a set of words that are correct spellings (in addition to spell's own
- spelling list) for each job.
-
- The standard spelling list is based on many sources, and while more haphazard than an ordinary
- dictionary, is also more effective in respect to proper names and popular technical words. Coverage
- of the specialized vocabularies of biology, medicine and chemistry is light.
-
- Three programs help maintain and check the hash lists used by spell:
-
- hashmake
- Reads a list of words from the standard input and writes the corresponding nine-digit hash
- code on the standard output.
-
- spellin
- Reads n hash codes from the standard input and
-
- writes a compressed spelling list on the standard output.
-
- hashcheck Reads a compressed spelling_list and recreates the nine-digit hash codes for all the
- words in it; it writes these codes on the standard output.
- -b
- Check British spelling. Besides preferring "centre", "colour", "programme", "speciality",
- "travelled", and so on, this option insists upon -ise in words like standardize, despite what
- Fowler and the OED say.
-
- -l
- Follow the chains of all included files.
-
- -v
- Print all words not literally in the spelling list, as well as plausible derivations from spelling list
- words.
-
- -x
- Print every plausible stem with `=' for each word.
-
- -d hlist
- Use the file hlist as the hashed spelling list.
-
- -h spellhist
- Place misspelled words with a user/date stamp in file spellhist.
-
- -s hstop
- Use hstop as the hashed stop list.
-
-
- Not all command descriptions were listed here. But look for the update to
- this text, it will have more commands and more descriptions. This text file
- was just one of the many files made by The Psychotic Internet Services.
-