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Linux Overview: Huy Nguyen

This document provides an overview of the Linux operating system. It describes Linux's kernel and shell interface, its multi-user and multi-process capabilities, and how everything in Linux is treated as a file. It also outlines Linux's directory structure and important directories like /bin, /home, and /etc. The document concludes by explaining basic Linux commands, relative and absolute paths, redirection, permissions, and process management.

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Ba VuVan
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
77 views

Linux Overview: Huy Nguyen

This document provides an overview of the Linux operating system. It describes Linux's kernel and shell interface, its multi-user and multi-process capabilities, and how everything in Linux is treated as a file. It also outlines Linux's directory structure and important directories like /bin, /home, and /etc. The document concludes by explaining basic Linux commands, relative and absolute paths, redirection, permissions, and process management.

Uploaded by

Ba VuVan
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 43

LINUX OVERVIEW

Huy Nguyen

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Outline
l  Overview of Unix System
l  Basic Commands
l  Relative & Absolute Path
l  Redirect, Append and Pipe
l  Permission
l  Process Management
l  Install Software
l  Text Editor
l  Foreground and Background Jobs
l  Remote log in and File transfer
l  Some tips
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Overview of Unix System
Kernel & Shell
l  Unix/Linux is operating system

(OS).
User
l  Unix system is described as kernel

& shell. input

l  Kernel is a main program of Unix Shell


system. it controls hard wares,
CPU, memory, hard disk, network Kernel
card etc.

l  Shell is an interface between user


and kernel. Shell interprets your
input as commands and pass them
to kernel.
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Unix Overview (cont.)
Multi-user & Multi-process
—  Many people can use one machine at the same time.

File & Process


—  Data, directory, process, hard disk etc (almost everything) are

expressed as a file.
—  Process is an running program identified by a unique id (PID).

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Unix Overview (cont.)

Directory Structure

l  Files are put in a directory.


l  All directories are in a hierarchical structure (tree structure).
l  User can put and remove any directories on the tree.
l  Top directory is “/”, which is called slash or root.
l  Users have the own directory. (home directory)

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Unix Overview (cont.)

—  Directory Structure

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Unix Overview (cont.)
Important Directories

l  /bin This contains files that are essential for correct operation
of the system. These are available for use by all users.
l  /home This is where user home directories are stored.
l  /var This directory is used to store files which change
frequently, and must be available to be written to.
l  /etc Various system configuration files are stored here.

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Unix Overview (cont.)

Important Directories

l  /dev This contains various devices as files, e.g. hard disk, CD-
ROM drive, etc.
l  /sbin Binaries which are only expected to be used by the super
user.
l  /tmp Temporary files.

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Unix Overview (cont.)
Normal user and Super user
l  In Unix system, there is one special user for administrator, which

can do anything.
l  This special user is called root or superuser.

Case Sensitivity
l  Unix is case-sensitive.

l  MYFILE.doc, Myfile.doc, mYfiLe.Doc are different.

Online Manual
l  Unix has well-written online manuals.

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Basic Commands
—  How to run commands
l  => Application => Accessories => Terminal
l  When you log on Unix machine, you will see,

[someone]$
l  One command consists of three parts, i.e. command name,

options, arguments.
Example:
[someone~]$ command-name optionA optionB argument1
argument2

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Basic Commands
How to run commands

l  Between command name, options and arguments, space is


necessary.
l  Opitions always start with “-”

l  Example:

cd ..
ls –l .bashrc
mv fileA fileB

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Basic Commands
Commands
l  ls show files in current position
l  cd change directory
l  cp copy file or directory
l  mv move file or directory
l  rm remove file or directory
l  pwd show current position
l  mkdir create directory
l  touch create new blank file
l  rmdir remove directory
l  less, more, cat display file contents
l  man display online manual
l  vi open and edit file
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Basic Commands
l  su switch user
l  passwd change password
l  useradd create new user account
l  userdel delete user account
l  mount mount file system
l  umount unmount file system
l  df show disk space usage
l  shutdown reboot or turn off machine

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Basic Commands
1. Type following command
in your directory.
—  ls 3. In your home directory,
—  ls –a ls .bash_profile
—  ls –la cp .bash_profile sample.txt
—  ls -Fa less/more/cat sample.txt
2. Make a directory (note: to quit less, press “q”)
—  mkdir linux rm sample.txt
—  pwd
—  cd linux
—  pwd
4. Check disk space usage
—  cd df
—  pwd df -h
—  rmdir linux
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Relative & Absolute Path

l  Path means a position in the directory tree.


l  To express a path, you can use relative path or absolute
path.
l  In relative path expression, the path is not defined uniquely,
depends on your current path.
l  In absolute path expression, the path is defined uniquely,
does not depend on your current path.

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Relative Path
l  Relative to your current location
. : your current location
.. : one directory above your current location
pwd: gives you your current location

l  Example
ls ./linux : lists the content of the dir linux
ls ../../ : lists everything that is two dir higher

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Relative & Absolute Path
l  Relative Path •  Ablsoute Path
pwd cd
cd . mkdir mydir
pwd pwd
cd /Users/invite
cd ..
pwd
pwd
cd /Users
cd .. pwd
pwd cd /
cd pwd
cd /Users/invite
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cd ~/mydir
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Redirect, Append and Pipe
Redirect and append
l  Output of command is displayed on screen.

l  Using “>”, you can redirect the output from screen to a file.

l  Using “>>” you can append the output to the bottom of the file.

Pipe
l  Some commands require input from a file or other commands.

l  Using “|”, you can use output from other command as input to

the command.

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Redirect, Append and Pipe

Commands
l  head show first several lines and omit other lines.
l  tail show last several lines and omit other lines.
tail -f /var/log/message
l  grep search the content of files
grep 'tel4vn' * -R

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Redirect, Append and Pipe
l  Use redirect
ls -all > test.txt

l Use append
ls -all >> test.txt

l  Use pipe


ps -ef | grep python

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Permission
l  All of files and directories have owner and permission.
l  There are three types of permission, readable, writeable and
executable.
l  Permissions are given to three kinds of group. owner, group
member and others.

Example:
ls -l .bash_profile
-rw-r--r-- 1 cnotred cnotred 191 Jan 4 13:11 .bash_profile

r:readable, w:writable, x: executable

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Permission
Command
l  chmod change file mode, add or remove
permission
l  chown change owner of the file

Example:
chmod a+w filename
add writable permission to all users
chmod o-x filename
remove executable permission from others
chmod a+x
Gives permission to the usser to execute a file

u: user (owner), g: group, o: others a: all


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Permission
l  Check permission
ls –l .bash_profile
cp .bash_profile sample.txt
ls –l sample.txt

l  Remove readable permission from all.


chmod a-r sample.txt
ls –l sample.txt
less sample.txt

l  Add readable & writable permissions to file owner.


chmod u+rw sample.txt
ls –l sample.txt
less sample.txt
rm sample.txt
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Process Management
l  Process is a unit of running program.

l  Each process has some information, like process ID, owner,
priority, etc.
Example: Output of “top” command"

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Process Management
Commands

l  kill Stop a program. The program is specified by process ID.


kill 1718
l  killall Stop a program. The program is specified by command
name.
killall -9 mysqld
l  ps -ef Show process status
l  top Show system usage statistics

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Process Management
l  Check your process.
ps
ps –u

l  Check process of all users.


top (To quit top, press “q”)
ps –e
ps –ef

l  Find your process.


ps –ef | grep cnotred

l  Check all using ports.


netstat -ntulp
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Install Software
•  ALWAYS update the repository first
•  Ubuntu: apt-get update, apt-get upgrade
•  CentOS: yum update
•  From binary file:
•  Ubuntu: dpkg -i package_name.deb
•  CentOS: rpm -Uvh package_name.rpm
•  By commands
•  Ubuntu:
•  apt-get update
•  apt-get install package_name
•  CentOS:
•  yum update
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•  yum -y install package_name
Install software
l  From source
l  MUST install some basic packages first:
-  CentOS: yum -y install make bison bison-devel ncurses ncurses-
devel zlib zlib-devel openssl openssl-devel gnutls-devel gcc gcc-c+
+ kernel-devel flex which
-  Ubuntu: apt-get install install build-essential g++ libncurses5-dev
flex bison
l  Download:
-  wget http://link_for_downloading_package
-  svn checkout http://svn.asterisk.org/svn/asterisk/trunk asterisk
-  git clone git://git.freeswitch.org/freeswitch.git
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Install Software
•  Extract:
•  package_name.tar.gz → tar zxvf package_name.tar.gz
•  package_name.tar.bz2 → tar jxvf package_name.tar.bz2
•  package_name.zip → unzip package_name.zip
•  Compile and install (read INSTALL or README file first)
•  cd /path/package_source_file
•  ./configure
•  make
•  make install

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Text Editor

vi
l  Programs & configuration files are text file.
l  There are some other popular text editors: nano, pico,
gedit ...
l  Although they are very powerful and useful, it is also true that
they are complicated for beginners and difficult to learn.
l  vi is an easy and simple alternative.

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Text Editor
l  Basic commands (press ESC to switch to command mode)
-  :wq → save and quit
-  :q! → quit but not save
-  /abc → search abc in that file, press n to see the next result, press N to go
back.
-  :180 → jump to line with number 180
-  Shift-g → jump to the end of file
-  x → delete character at cursor location
-  dd → delete one line at cursor location
-  u → undo any change from that file

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Foreground and Background

l  Running job has two modes, “foreground” and “background”

l  If program is running as “background”,


the program keeps running even after your session was closed

l  If program is running as “foreground”,


Ctrl-C stop program
Ctrl-Z let program background

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Foreground and Background

l  To run programs in background mode, use “&”


[tel4vn@lappy]$ command &

l  To get background job back into foreground mode, use “fg”
command.
[tel4vn@lappy]$ fg → check !!!!!

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Remote Login & File Transfer
l  SSH:
l  SSH server:
-  Ubuntu: apt-get install openssh-server
-  CentOS: yum -y install openssh
l  SSH Clients:
-  can use with some ssh clients: Putty (Windows), Pac(Linux)
-  Ubuntu: apt-get install openssh-client
-  CentOS: yum install openssh-clients
ssh 192.168.1.50
ssh [email protected]
•  Filezilla
•  Host: 192.168.1.50
•  Username: tel4vn
•  Password: Passw0rd
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•  Port: 22
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Monitor services

•  Check:
l  ps -ef | grep process_name

l  netstat -ntulp

•  Start: /etc/init.d/process_name start


•  Stop: /etc/init.d/process_name stop

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Debug network problem
l  Ping ip address
l  If using Virtualbox: NAT or Bridge ?

l  Check network configuration (if using desktop version, MUST

configure network on the GUI)


l  Ping local ip address, then ping public ip address

l  Ping domain


l  Ping dns server ip address

l  Check dns configuration

-  vi /etc/resolv.conf
-  vi /etc/hosts
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Set static ip address
l  CentOS
l  vi /etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/ifcfg-eth0

l  Configure as below:

DEVICE=eth0
BOOTPROTO=static
IPADDR=192.168.1.50
GATEWAY=192.168.1.1
NETMASK=255.255.255.0
HWADDR=.....
ONBOOT=yes
l  Restart network: /etc/init.d/network restart

l  Test: ping google.com

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Set static ip address(cont)
l  Ubuntu
l  vi /etc/network/interfaces

l  Configure as below:

auto eth0
iface eth0 inet static
address 192.168.1.50
gateway 192.168.1.1
netmask 255.255.255.0
l  Restart network

/etc/init.d/networking restart
l  Test: ping google.com

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Check iptables
l  iptables -L → check all current rules
l  iptables-save >> /etc/rules.save → backup rules
l  iptables-restore < /etc/rules.save → restore rules from file
l  /etc/init.d/iptables start/stop → monitor service

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Set environment variables
l  vi ~/.bashrc
l  Add as below:
l  PATH=$PATH:/path_to_where_application_is/bin

l  export PATH

l  source ~/.bashrc

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Reference

l  http://www.ee.surrey.ac.uk/Teaching/Unix/
l  http://www.linuxtopia.org/online_books/
linux_for_beginners_index.html

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THE END

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