(A). Linux simple command reference
1.
mount and access your atapi cdrom drive
To use an atapi cdrom drive you first have to mount the drive to your linux
filesystem. To do this you type the following:
mount /dev/cdrom /mnt/cdrom
To access the filesystem on the cdrom, you need to change to the mounted
devices directory:
cd /mnt/cdrom
The directory tree in the directory /mnt/cdrom is actually the directory
tree of the cdrom filesystem. You will not be allowed to remove the
cd disc from the cdrom drive while the device is mounted, you must first
unmount the device. To unmount the cdrom device, the directory tree
of cdrom can not be open and no file on the cdrom can be open or in use.
When you are certain that no directory in /mnt/cdrom or file there is open,
type the following to unmount the cdrom device from your linux filesystem:
umount /dev/cdrom
With the device now unmounted, you can safely eject your cd disc from
the cdrom drive.
2.
mount and access your floppy disk drive
To use your computer's floppy disk drive, you must first mount the device.
The explination is much the same as for mounting an atapi cdrom device
with one minor exception, you can eject the floppy disk while the device
is mounted, but you must NEVER do that, it may corrupt your filesystem.
To mount the floppy disk device type:
mount /dev/fd0 /mnt/floppy
Where fd0 is the device driver for a standard PC floppy disk drive.
Redhat linux will read from floppy disks formatted MS-DOS as well as a
linux filesystem. To locate the root directory of your floppy disk
type:
cd /mnt/floppy
Windows 95 long filenames will be truncated under the linux filesystem.
Before you should remove your floppy disk from the drive, you must close
all open files and directores on the mounted device. Then type:
umount /dev/fd0
With the device unmounted, you can now safely eject your floppy disk
from the drive.
3.
properly shutdown and turn off your linux pc
I can not stress to you how important it is to properly shutdown and turn
off your linux computer. By just pressing the power switch while
the machine is running, without executing a proper shutdown procedure,
you can corrupt your filesystem or the linux kernel
itself. If you are in X-Windows, first exit that, and in console
while logged in type the following:
shutdown -h now
That unmounts all your linux drives and stops or kills all running
processes. The -h switch indicates for linux to do a complete shutdown
and stop. The 'now' refers to when the shutdown will commence.
You can replace 'now' with a numeric amount in minutes to allow all the
users logged into the linux server an opportunity to save their work and
log off. When you initiate a shutdown, a global message goes out
to all the users logged into the system, alerting them there will be a
system shutdown and how soon the shutdown will commence. Two more
examples of shutdown are:
shutdown -h 5
This will initiate a system shutdown and halt in 5 minutes from the
time entered and alert all users currently logged in.
shutdown -r now
Causes the system to shutdown and then reboot itself.
In some older distributions this would not cleanly unmount the drives.
This is no longer a problem with most modern distributions.
4.
start XFree86 in more than 256 colours
The X-Window system can be started in more than the standard 256 colour
mode, given that you have the graphic hardware to support higher and true
colour modes. To start X-Windows in 32,768 colour mode type startx
with the following switches:
startx -- -bpp 15
Other options for command line switches relating to the colour mode
X loads in are: 15= 32768, 16 bpp= 65536, 24 or 32 bpp,= 16.7 million colours.
So to start X in 24 bit mode, with 16.7 million colours you simply type:
startx -- -bpp 24
5.
multi-tasking and multiple logins with hot keys
You can log in as 6 different users or log in 6 times as the same user
all from the linux server by switching consoles. Each console acts
as a remote login from a terminal unless logged in as root. You can
switch from console to console with the Hot Keys:
Alt-F2
You can use Alt-F1 though F6 to navigate from all six consoles.
So if you are in console one, the default, you can press 'alt-F2' to login
again on the second console. This creates a multi-tasking advantage
that most other operating systems can not accomplish without reduced performanced.
Each linux login has absolutly the same resources as the first. If
you are using the X-Windows interface in the default login (F1) you can
not Hot Key to another login console without first switching out of X.
This does not mean you have to shutdown X, only that you have to use the
addition of the control key to switch to a console. If I want to
switch from X on (F1) to the login prompt on (X2) then I press:
Ctrl-Alt-F2
That also applies as the first example, F2-F6 consoles with the addition
of the control key. The F7 Hot Key is reserved for switching back
into the X-Windows interface. So to go from console mode on (F2)
back into X on (F1) just type:
Alt-F7
6.
a simple way to edit a text file
To edit a text file from console on the command line type the following:
pico filename
pico is a simple text editor much like the MS-DOS edit text editor.
To edit a file called data.text in /usr/local, and also disable the word
wrap so that pico doesn't format the text, just type:
pico -w /usr/local/data.text
I recommend to always use the -w switch option, espically if modifying
linux executable scripts.
update: pico is part of the pine package, no longer included in Redhat's latest public distributions under the name Fedora.
You may install the pine package rpm or bite the bullet and learn 'vi'.
vi filename
7.
display the current working directory
To echo to the screen the current path of the working directory you are
in, just type:
pwd
It is also possible to make the shell prompt always display the working directory.
8.
display your current kernel version
To echo to the screen the current version of your linux kernel you need
only type:
uname -r
You may also wish to determine the Linux version.
uname -a
End of document one. June 16,
1998 www.robotz.com
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