ls
The ls command lists the content of the current directory (or one that is specified). It can be used with the -l flag to display additional information (permissions, owner, group, size, date and timestamp of last edit) about each file and directory in a list format. The -a flag allows you to view files beginning with . (i.e. dotfiles).
cd
Using cd changes the current directory to the one specified. You can use relative (i.e. cd directoryA) or absolute (i.e. cd /home/debix/directoryA) paths.
pwd
The pwd command displays the name of the present working directory: on a Debix, entering pwd will output something like /home/debix.
mkdir
You can use mkdir to create a new directory, e.g. mkdir newDir would create the directory newDir in the present working directory.
rmdir
To remove empty directories, use rmdir. So, for example, rmdir oldDir will remove the directory oldDir only if it is empty.
rm
The command rm removes the specified file (or recursively from a directory when used with -r). Be careful with this command: files deleted in this way are mostly gone for good!
cp
Using cp makes a copy of a file and places it at the specified location (this is similar to copying and pasting). For example, cp ~/fileA /home/otherUser/ would copy the file fileA from your home directory to that of the user otherUser (assuming you have permission to copy it there). This command can either take FILE FILE (cp fileA fileB), FILE DIR (cp fileA /directoryB/) or -r DIR DIR (which recursively copies the contents of directories) as arguments.
mv
The mv command moves a file and places it at the specified location (so where cp performs a 'copy-paste', mv performs a 'cut-paste'). The usage is similar to cp. So mv ~/fileA /home/otherUser/ would move the file fileA from your home directory to that of the user otherUser. This command can either take FILE FILE (mv fileA fileB), FILE DIR (mv fileA /directoryB/) or DIR DIR (mv /directoryB /directoryC) as arguments. This command is also useful as a method to rename files and directories after they’ve been created.
touch
The command touch sets the last modified time-stamp of the specified file(s) or creates it if it does not already exist.
cat
You can use cat to list the contents of file(s), e.g. cat thisFile will display the contents of thisFile. Can be used to list the contents of multiple files, i.e. cat *.txt will list the contents of all .txt files in the current directory.
head
The head command displays the beginning of a file. Can be used with -n to specify the number of lines to show (by default ten), or with -c to specify the number of bytes.
tail
The opposite of head, tail displays the end of a file. The starting point in the file can be specified either through -b for 512 byte blocks, -c for bytes, or -n for number of lines.
chmod
You would normally use chmod to change the permissions for a file. The chmod command can use symbols u (user that owns the file), g (the files group) , and o (other users) and the permissions r (read), w (write), and x (execute). Using chmod u+x filename will add execute permission for the owner of the file.
chown
The chown command changes the user and/or group that owns a file. It normally needs to be run as root using sudo e.g. sudo chown debix:root filename will change the owner to debix and the group to root.
ssh
ssh denotes the secure shell. Connect to another computer using an encrypted network connection. For more details see SSH (secure shell)
scp
The scp command copies a file from one computer to another using ssh. For more details see SCP (secure copy)
sudo
The sudo command enables you to run a command as a superuser, or another user. Use sudo -s for a superuser shell. For more details see Root user / sudo
dd
The dd command copies a file converting the file as specified. It is often used to copy an entire disk to a single file or back again. So, for example, dd if=/dev/sdd of=backup.img will create a backup image from an SD card or USB disk drive at /dev/sdd. Make sure to use the correct drive when copying an image to the SD card as it can overwrite the entire disk.
df
Use df to display the disk space available and used on the mounted filesystems. Use df -h to see the output in a human-readable format using M for MBs rather than showing number of bytes.
unzip
The unzip command extracts the files from a compressed zip file.
tar
Use tar to store or extract files from a tape archive file. It can also reduce the space required by compressing the file similar to a zip file.
To create a compressed file, use tar -cvzf filename.tar.gz directory/ To extract the contents of a file, use tar -xvzf filename.tar.gz
pipes
A pipe allows the output from one command to be used as the input for another command. The pipe symbol is a vertical line |. For example, to only show the first ten entries of the ls command it can be piped through the head command ls | head
tree
Use the tree command to show a directory and all subdirectories and files indented as a tree structure. You can install it with APT:
&
Run a command in the background with &, freeing up the shell for future commands.
wget
Download a file from the web directly to the computer with wget. So wget https://www.debix.io/public/uploads/files/20220127/68e3735204a9f7e09114e2ee677a7c9e.pdf will download the 68e3735204a9f7e09114e2ee677a7c9e.pdf datasheet and save it as 68e3735204a9f7e09114e2ee677a7c9e.pdf.
curl
Use curl to download or upload a file to/from a server. By default, it will output the file contents of the file to the screen. You can install it with APT: