CGI, Perl (6)
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E-Mail Services (4)
MySQL (2)
PayPal IPN & Testing (17)
SSH and Misc. (1)
Web and Files (9)
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SSH and Misc.:Common SSH Commands Common SSH Commands or Linux Shell Commands, ls
: list files/directories in a directory, comparable to dir in
windows/dos. ls -al : shows all files (including ones that start
with a period), directories, and details attributes for each file.
cd : change directory · · cd /usr/local/apache : go to
/usr/local/apache/ directory cd ~ : go to your home directory
cd - : go to the last directory you were in cd .. : go
up a directory cat : print file contents to the screen
cat filename.txt : cat the contents of filename.txt to your screen
tail : like cat, but only reads the end of the
file tail /var/log/messages : see the last 20 (by default) lines of
/var/log/messages tail -f /var/log/messages : watch the file
continuously, while it's being updated tail -200 /var/log/messages
: print the last 200 lines of the file to the
screen
more : like cat, but opens the file one
screen at a time rather than all at once more /etc/userdomains :
browse through the userdomains file. hit Spaceto go to the next page,
q to quit
pico : friendly, easy to use file
editor pico /home/burst/public_html/index.html : edit the index
page for the user's website.
vi : another editor, tons
of features, harder to use at first than pico vi
/home/burst/public_html/index.html : edit the index page for the user's
website.
grep : looks for patterns in files
grep root /etc/passwd : shows all matches of root in
/etc/passwd grep -v root /etc/passwd : shows all lines that do not
match root
touch : create an empty file touch
/home/burst/public_html/404.html : create an empty file called 404.html in
the directory /home/burst/public_html/
ln : create's
"links" between files and directories ln -s
/usr/local/apache/conf/httpd.conf /etc/httpd.conf : Now you can edit
/etc/httpd.conf rather than the original. changes will affect the orginal,
however you can delete the link and it will not delete the original.
rm : delete a file rm filename.txt :
deletes filename.txt, will more than likely ask if you really want to delete
it rm -f filename.txt : deletes filename.txt, will not ask for
confirmation before deleting. rm -rf tmp/ : recursively deletes the
directory tmp, and all files in it, including subdirectories. BE VERY CAREFULL
WITH THIS COMMAND!!!
last : shows who logged in and
when last -20 : shows only the last 20 logins last -20 -a
: shows last 20 logins, with the hostname in the last field
w : shows who is currently logged in and where they are
logged in from.
netstat : shows all current network
connections. netstat -an : shows all connections to the server, the
source and destination ips and ports. netstat -rn : shows routing
table for all ips bound to the server.
top : shows live
system processes in a nice table, memory information, uptime and other useful
info. This is excellent for managing your system processes, resources and ensure
everything is working fine and your server isn't bogged down. top
then type Shift + M to sort by memory usage or Shift + P to
sort by CPU usage
ps: ps is short for process status,
which is similar to the top command. It's used to show currently
running processes and their PID. A process ID is a unique number that
identifies a process, with that you can kill or terminate a running program on
your server (see kill command). ps U username : shows
processes for a certain user ps aux : shows all system
processes ps aux --forest : shows all system processes like the
above but organizes in a hierarchy that's very useful!
file
: attempts to guess what type of file a file is by looking at it's
content. file * : prints out a list of all files/directories in a
directory
du : shows disk usage. du -sh :
shows a summary, in human-readble form, of total disk space used in the current
directory, including subdirectories. du -sh * : same thing, but for
each file and directory. helpful when finding large files taking up space.
wc : word count wc -l filename.txt : tells
how many lines are in filename.txt
cp : copy a file
cp filename filename.backup : copies filename to
filename.backup cp -a /home/burst/new_design/* /home/burst/public_html/
: copies all files, retaining permissions form one directory to another.
kill: terminate a system process kill -9
PID EG: kill -9 431 kill PID EG: kill 10550 Use
top or ps ux to get system PIDs (Process IDs)
EG:
| PID |
TTY |
TIME |
COMMAND |
| 10550 |
pts/3 |
0:01 |
/bin/csh |
| 10574 |
pts/4 |
0:02 |
/bin/csh |
| 10590 |
pts/4 |
0:09 |
APP |
Each line represents one process, with a process being loosely defined as a
running instance of a program. The column headed PID (process ID) shows the
assigned process numbers of the processes. The heading COMMAND shows the
location of the executed process.
Putting commands
together Often you will find you need to use different commands on
the same line. Here are some examples. Note that the | character is called a
pipe, it takes date from one program and pipes it to another. >
means create a new file, overwriting any content already there.
>> means tp append data to a file, creating a newone if it
doesn not already exist. < send input from a file back into a
command.
grep User /usr/local/apache/conf/httpd.conf |more
This will dump all lines that match User from the httpd.conf, then
print the results to your screen one page at a time.
last -a >
/root/lastlogins.tmp This will print all the current login history to a
file called lastlogins.tmp in /root/
tail -10000
/var/log/exim_mainlog |grep domain.com |more This will grab the last
10,000 lines from /var/log/exim_mainlog, find all occurances of domain.com (the
period represents 'anything', -- comment it out with a so it will be
interpretted literally), then send it to your screen page by page.
netstat -an |grep :80 |wc -l Show how many active
connections there are to apache (httpd runs on port 80)
mysqladmin
processlist |wc -l Show how many current open connections there are to
mysql
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