Difference between revisions of "Centos Bash Commands"
(8 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown) | |||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
==Redirection (send output to file)== | |||
===Output descriptors=== | |||
#(0) Standard Input (stdin) | |||
#(1) Standard Output (stdout) | |||
#(2) Standard Error (stderr) | |||
ls /etc/hosts 1>outputfilename | |||
# the 1 is the standard output deliminator | |||
ls /etc/hosts 2>badoutput | |||
# will output only error because of the 2 | |||
===Redirecting Standard and Error Output to separate files=== | |||
ls /etc/hosts >goodoutput 2>badoutput | |||
'''To redirect both Standard Output and Standard Error to the same file without any loss of data, you must use special notation. To specify that Standard Output be sent to the file goodoutput and Standard Error be sent to the same place as Standard Output, you can do the following''' | |||
ls /etc/host > goodoutput 2>&1 | |||
'''You can also redirect a file to the Standard Input of a command using the < metacharacter.''' | |||
tr r R </etc/filename | |||
sort <newfile >finename | |||
===Pipes === | |||
ls -h |grep 405 | |||
# will filter files with "405" in the name | |||
[[File:Filtercommands.jpg|thumb|Filter Command]] | |||
You can also combine redirection and piping, as long as input redirection occurs at the beginning of the pipe and output redirection occurs at the end of the pipe. An example of this is shown in the following output, which replaces all lowercase a characters with upper- case A characters in the prologue file used in the previous example, then sorts the file, num- bers each line, and saves the output to a file called newprologue instead of sending the output to the terminal screen. | |||
tr a A <prologue |sort | nl > newprologue | |||
===SED command=== | |||
'''syntax s/search/replace/. For example, the following output demonstrates how sed can be used to search for the string “the” and replace it with the string “THE” in the prologue file used earlier:''' | |||
cat filename | sed s/the/THE/ | |||
====To have sed globally replace all occurrences of the string ==== | |||
cat filename | sed s/the/THE/g | |||
'''You can also force sed to perform a search-and-replace on certain lines only. To replace the | |||
string “the” with “THE” globally on lines 5 to 8 only, you can use the following command:''' | |||
cat filename |sed 5,8s/the/THE/g | |||
====You can also use sed to remove unwanted lines of text. To delete all the lines that contain the word “the,” you can use the following command:==== | |||
cat filename | sed /the /d | |||
====Delete Lines that contain a pattern==== | |||
sed '/wordtofind/d' filename.txt | |||
== Replace with special characters == | |||
Sample output | |||
./dem/dem-116.jpg | |||
find . -iname "*.jpg" | sed -e 's/\.\///g' | |||
'' the . and the / are escaped \.\/'' | |||
===Using AWK=== | |||
'''Like sed, the awk command searches for patterns of text and performs some action on the text found. However, the awk command treats each line of text as a record in a database, and each word in a line as a database field. For example, the line “Hello, how are you?” has four fields: “Hello,” “how,” “are,” and “you?”. These fields can be referenced in the awk command using $1, $2, $3, and $4. For example, to display only the first and fourth words only on lines of the prologue file that contains the word “the,” you can use the following command:''' | |||
cat prologue | awk ’/the/ {print $1, $4}’ | |||
'''By default, the awk command uses space or tab characters as delimiters for each field in a line. Most configuration files on Linux systems, however, are delimited using colon ( : ) char- acters. To change the delimiter that awk uses, you can specify the –F option to the com- mand. For example, the following example lists the last 10 lines of the colon-delimited file / etc/passwd and views only the 6th and 7th fields for lines that contain the word “bob” in the last 10 lines of the file:''' | |||
tail /etc/passwd | awk -F : '/bob/{print $6, $7}' | |||
===Environment Variables === | |||
'''List environment variables''' | |||
set | less | |||
'''Check Bash Shells installed''' | '''Check Bash Shells installed''' | ||
cat /etc/shells | cat /etc/shells | ||
Line 8: | Line 63: | ||
''' Check type of System''' | ''' Check type of System''' | ||
uname -a | uname -a | ||
=[[Centos OS]]= | |||
[[Category:Bash]] | |||
Latest revision as of 19:13, 29 May 2022
Redirection (send output to file)
Output descriptors
- (0) Standard Input (stdin)
- (1) Standard Output (stdout)
- (2) Standard Error (stderr)
ls /etc/hosts 1>outputfilename # the 1 is the standard output deliminator ls /etc/hosts 2>badoutput # will output only error because of the 2
Redirecting Standard and Error Output to separate files
ls /etc/hosts >goodoutput 2>badoutput
To redirect both Standard Output and Standard Error to the same file without any loss of data, you must use special notation. To specify that Standard Output be sent to the file goodoutput and Standard Error be sent to the same place as Standard Output, you can do the following
ls /etc/host > goodoutput 2>&1
You can also redirect a file to the Standard Input of a command using the < metacharacter.
tr r R </etc/filename sort <newfile >finename
Pipes
ls -h |grep 405 # will filter files with "405" in the name
You can also combine redirection and piping, as long as input redirection occurs at the beginning of the pipe and output redirection occurs at the end of the pipe. An example of this is shown in the following output, which replaces all lowercase a characters with upper- case A characters in the prologue file used in the previous example, then sorts the file, num- bers each line, and saves the output to a file called newprologue instead of sending the output to the terminal screen.
tr a A <prologue |sort | nl > newprologue
SED command
syntax s/search/replace/. For example, the following output demonstrates how sed can be used to search for the string “the” and replace it with the string “THE” in the prologue file used earlier:
cat filename | sed s/the/THE/
To have sed globally replace all occurrences of the string
cat filename | sed s/the/THE/g
You can also force sed to perform a search-and-replace on certain lines only. To replace the string “the” with “THE” globally on lines 5 to 8 only, you can use the following command: cat filename |sed 5,8s/the/THE/g
You can also use sed to remove unwanted lines of text. To delete all the lines that contain the word “the,” you can use the following command:
cat filename | sed /the /d
Delete Lines that contain a pattern
sed '/wordtofind/d' filename.txt
Replace with special characters
Sample output ./dem/dem-116.jpg
find . -iname "*.jpg" | sed -e 's/\.\///g'
the . and the / are escaped \.\/
Using AWK
Like sed, the awk command searches for patterns of text and performs some action on the text found. However, the awk command treats each line of text as a record in a database, and each word in a line as a database field. For example, the line “Hello, how are you?” has four fields: “Hello,” “how,” “are,” and “you?”. These fields can be referenced in the awk command using $1, $2, $3, and $4. For example, to display only the first and fourth words only on lines of the prologue file that contains the word “the,” you can use the following command:
cat prologue | awk ’/the/ {print $1, $4}’
By default, the awk command uses space or tab characters as delimiters for each field in a line. Most configuration files on Linux systems, however, are delimited using colon ( : ) char- acters. To change the delimiter that awk uses, you can specify the –F option to the com- mand. For example, the following example lists the last 10 lines of the colon-delimited file / etc/passwd and views only the 6th and 7th fields for lines that contain the word “bob” in the last 10 lines of the file:
tail /etc/passwd | awk -F : '/bob/{print $6, $7}'
Environment Variables
List environment variables
set | less
Check Bash Shells installed
cat /etc/shells
Check who is logged on
id whoami w who
Check type of System
uname -a