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Basic Linux Commands Cheat-Sheet

The document provides a cheat sheet of basic Linux commands for managing files and directories, operating with file contents, and additional useful commands. It lists commands for changing directories, viewing files and folders, copying and moving files, modifying permissions and ownerships, viewing file contents, sorting and cutting text, and checking system information like uptime and available memory. The cheat sheet serves as a quick reference for common Linux commands.

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John Paul Tuohy
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
366 views2 pages

Basic Linux Commands Cheat-Sheet

The document provides a cheat sheet of basic Linux commands for managing files and directories, operating with file contents, and additional useful commands. It lists commands for changing directories, viewing files and folders, copying and moving files, modifying permissions and ownerships, viewing file contents, sorting and cutting text, and checking system information like uptime and available memory. The cheat sheet serves as a quick reference for common Linux commands.

Uploaded by

John Paul Tuohy
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
Download as pdf or txt
Download as pdf or txt
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1/6/2021 Basic Linux Commands Cheat-Sheet | Coursera

Basic Linux Commands Cheat-Sheet


This list includes a bunch of different commands that are useful to know when working with Linux. Not all of these
commands are covered in the videos, so feel free to investigate them on your own.

Managing files and directories


cd directory: changes the current working directory to the specified one
pwd: prints the current working directory
ls: lists the contents of the current directory

ls directory: lists the contents of the received directory


ls -l: lists the additional information for the contents of the directory
ls -a: lists all files, including those hidden
ls -la: applies both the -l and the -a flags

mkdir directory: creates the directory with the received name


rmdir directory: deletes the directory with the received name (if empty)
cp old_name new_name: copies old_name into new_name
mv old_name new_name: moves old_name into new_name
touch file_name: creates an empty file or updates the modified time if it exists
chmod modifiers files: changes the permissions for the files according to the provided modifiers; we've seen +x
to make the file executable
chown user files: changes the owner of the files to the given user
chgrp group files: changes the group of the files to the given group

Operating with the content of files


cat file: shows the content of the file through standard output
wc file: counts the amount of characters, words, and lines in the given file; can also count the same values of
whatever it receives via stdin
file file: prints the type of the given file, as recognized by the operating system
head file: shows the first 10 lines of the given file
tail file: shows the last 10 lines of the given file
less file: scrolls through the contents of the given file (press "q" to quit)
sort file: sorts the lines of the file alphabetically
cut -dseparator -ffields file: for each line in the given file, splits the line according to the given separator and
prints the given fields (starting from 1)

https://www.coursera.org/learn/python-operating-system/supplement/bC5zL/basic-linux-commands-cheat-sheet 1/2
1/6/2021 Basic Linux Commands Cheat-Sheet | Coursera

Additional commands

echo "message": prints the message to standard output


date: prints the current date
who: prints the list of users currently logged into the computer
man command: shows the manual page of the given command; manual pages contain a lot of information
explaining how to use each command (press "q" to quit)
uptime: shows how long the computer has been running

free: shows the amount of unused memory on the current system

https://www.coursera.org/learn/python-operating-system/supplement/bC5zL/basic-linux-commands-cheat-sheet 2/2

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