| C
O M M A N D L I S T
cd | pwd | ls | cat | mkdir | rmdir | cp | mv | rm | grep | tar
| zip | unzip | compress | uncompress
|
| cd |
[directory]
The cd command changes your current working directory to the directory
you specify.
DOS Equivalent: cd
|
| pwd |
The pwd
command prints your current (or present) working directory.
Usage: Simply type "pwd" and hit return to display
your current working directory.
|
| ls |
[directory]
The ls command lists the files and subdirectories in the directory
you specify. If not directory is specified, a list of the files
and subdirectories in the current working directory is displayed.
Usage: The ls command will display all files in the current
working directory - simply type "ls" and hit return. You
can also add some additional arguments to customize the list
display.
If you type "ls -F" it will append a forward slash to
the subdirectory names so you can easily distinguish them from
file names.
If you type "ls -a" it will show all "hidden
files". Hidden files begin with a ".", i.e. ".htaccess"
files.
If you type "ls -l" it will show detailed information
about each file and directory, including permissions, ownership,
file size, and when the file was last modified.
You can mix the arguments, i.e. if you type "ls -aF"
you will see a list of all file names (including hidden files and
a forward slash will be appended to directory names.
DOS Equivalent: dir
|
| cat |
[filename]
The cat command displays the contents of the filename you
specify. If you want to display the file one screen at a time try
"cat [filename] | more" or simply "more
[filename]" (you've probably done this at a DOS prompt-
"type [filename] | more").
DOS Equivalent: type
|
| mkdir |
[directory]
The mkdir command makes a new directory with the name, directory,
that you specify. Simply type "mkdir [directory name]"
and hit return.
DOS Equivalent: md or mkdir
|
| rmdir |
[directory]
The rmdir command removes the directory that you specify.
Simply type "rmdir [directory name]" and hit return.
DOS Equivalent: rd or rmdir
|
| cp |
[source-file]
[target-file]
The cp command copies a source-file to a target-file. Simply type
"cp [source-file] [target-file]" and hit return. You can
specify pathnames as part of the file specification. If
target-file exists then it is overwritten.
DOS Equivalent: copy
|
| mv |
[source-file]
[target-file]
The mv command renames a file or moves it to a new location.
Simply type "mv [source-file] [target-file]" and hit
return. You can specify pathnames as part of the file
specification. If target-file exists then it is overwritten.
DOS Equivalent: rename
|
| rm |
[filename]
The rm command deletes (removes) a file. Simply type "rm
[filename]" and hit return. You can specify pathnames as part
of the file specification.
DOS Equivalent: del
|
| grep |
[pattern]
[filenames]
The grep command finds lines in files that match specified text
patterns. Simply type "grep [pattern] [filenames]" and
hit return. You can specify pathnames as part of the file
specification. For example if you want to search for a patter
"gif" in all html files in your current working
directory, you would type "grep gif *.html" and hit
return. The grep command would then list all occurrences of
"gif" it finds in .html files in the current working
directory.
DOS Equivalent: find
|
| tar |
[options]
[tarfile] [files]
The tar command copies a file or files to or from an archive. To
put all the files in a directory into one tar format file, simply
type "tar cvf tarfile directory" at a telnet command
prompt and replace tarfile with the name you want to call your
archived file, and replace directory with the name of the
directory that contains the files you want to tar.
To extract the files from a tar format archive, simply type
"tar xvf tarfile at a telnet command prompt and replace
tarfile with the name of the archived file you are extracting.
For example, you could type tar cvf pages.tar htdocs" at a
telnet command prompt to archive the files in the htdocs directory
to a tar format file called pages.tar.
To view the contents of the pages.tar tarfile without
extracting them, type "tar tvf pages.tar". This will
display all files that are included in the tar archive.
You could also type "tar xvf pages.tar" at a telnet
command prompt to extract into the current directory the files in
the archive pages.tar.
|
| zip |
[options]
[zipfile] [files]
The zip command compresses a file or list of files into a zip
format archive file. This command is compatible with pkzip on a
PC. Simply type "zip zipfile file1 file2 file3" at a
telnet command prompt and replace zipfile with the name you want
to use for your compressed zip archive file, and replace fileX
with the name of the file(s) you want to compress into the zip
archive.
For example, type "zip backup.zip home.html index.html"
at a telnet command prompt to compress and archive the files
called home.html and index.html into the file called backup.zip.
DOS Equivalent: pkzip
|
| unzip |
[options]
[zipfile]
The unzip command extracts a zip format archive file. This command
is compatible with pkunzip files from a PC. Simply type
"unzip zipfile" at a telnet command prompt and replace
zipfile with the name of your zip format archive file.
For example, type "unzip -aL old.zip" at a telnet
command prompt to extract files contained in the archive called
old.zip. The "-aL" are options that are generally useful
when unzipping files created on a PC.
DOS Equivalent: pkunzip
|
| compress |
[files]
The compress command shrinks a file or files into compressed
versions to save space on your Virtual Server. This command is
good for you to use on your log files when they get very large.
Simply type "compress filename(s)" at a telnet command
prompt and replace filename(s) with the name of your files you
want to compress.
For example, type "compress access_log agent_log" at
a telnet command prompt to compress the access_log and agent_log
files. The compressed files will then be access_log.Z and
agent_log.Z.
|
| uncompress |
[files]
The uncompress command expands a compressed file or set of
compressed files. Simply type "uncompress filename(s)"
and hit return.
|