Chapter 1. Linux Pocket Guide
Welcome to Linux! If you’re a new user, this book can serve as a quick introduction, as well as a guide to common and practical commands. If you have Linux experience, feel free to skip the introductory material.
What’s in This Book?
This book is a short guide, not a comprehensive reference. We cover important, useful aspects of Linux so you can work productively. We do not, however, present every single command and every last option (our apologies if your favorite was omitted), nor delve into detail about operating system internals. Short, sweet, and essential—that’s our motto.
We focus on commands, those pesky little words you type on a command line to tell a Linux system what to do. Here’s an example command that counts lines of text in a file, myfile:
wc -l myfile
We’ll cover the most important Linux commands for the average user,
such as ls
(list files), grep
(search for text), mplayer
(play audio and video files), and
df
(measure free disk space). We touch
only briefly on graphical windowing environments like GNOME and KDE, each
of which could fill a Pocket Guide by itself.
We’ve organized the material by function to provide a concise
learning path. For example, to help you view the contents of a file, we
introduce many file-viewing commands together: cat
for short text files, less
for longer ones, od
for binary files, and so on. Then we explain
each command in turn, briefly presenting its common uses and
options.
We assume you have access to a Linux ...
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