From: Lynne J. Williams Date: Mon, 31 Dec 2012 15:00:06 +0000 (-0500) Subject: Adding shell_cheatsheet.md and shell_outline.md to my fork of the SWC boot-camps... X-Git-Url: http://git.tremily.us/?a=commitdiff_plain;h=4e544f29d9c9432259bb276b0cde5e3c6262d031;p=swc-modular-shell-hello.git Adding shell_cheatsheet.md and shell_outline.md to my fork of the SWC boot-camps repo --- 4e544f29d9c9432259bb276b0cde5e3c6262d031 diff --git a/shell_cheatsheet.md b/shell_cheatsheet.md new file mode 100644 index 0000000..173658f --- /dev/null +++ b/shell_cheatsheet.md @@ -0,0 +1,104 @@ +# Basic Shell Commands +*** + +## 1. Shell Basics: +* **`.`** (a single period) --> refers to the current directory +* **`..`** (a double period) --> refers to the directory above the current directory +* **`~`** --> refers to your home directory. _Note:_ this command does NOT work on Windows machines (Mac and Linux are okay) +* **`*`** --> wildcard (multiple characters). `*.txt` will match all files in the current directory that end with `.txt` +* **`?`** --> wildcard (single character). `?.txt` will match `a.txt` and `b.txt`, but not `ab.txt` +* **`cd ./dirname`** --> changes the current directory to the directory `dirname` +* **`ls -F`** --> tells you what files and directories are in the current directory + + + +## 2. Creating Things: +### a) How to create new files and directories... +* **`mkdir ./dirname`** --> makes a new directory called dirname below the current directory. _Note:_ Windows users will need to use `\` instead of `/` for the path separator +* **`nano filename`** --> if `filename` does not exist, `nano` creates it and opens the `nano` text editor. If the file exists, `nano` opens it. _Note:_ _(i)_ You can use a different text editor if you like. In gnome Linux, `gedit` works really well too. _(ii)_ `nano` (or `gedit`) create text files. It doesn't matter what the file extension is (or if there is one) + +### b) How to delete files and directories... +#### _Remember that deleting is forever. There is NO going back_ +* **`rm ./filename`** --> deletes a file called `filename` from the current directory +* **`rmdir ./dirname`** --> deletes the directory `dirname` from the current directory. _Note:_ `dirname` must be empty for `rmdir` to run. + +### c) How to copy and rename files and directories... +* **`mv tmp/filename .`** --> moves the file `filename` from the directory `tmp` to the current directory. _Note:_ _(i)_ the original `filename` in `tmp` is deleted. _(ii)_ `mv` can also be used to rename files (e.g., `mv filename newname` +* **`cp tmp/filename .`** --> copies the file `filename` from the directory `tmp` to the current directory. _Note:_ _(i)_ the original file is still there + + + +## 3. Pipes and Filters +### a) How to use wildcards to match filenames... +### b) That wildcards are expanded by the shell before commands are run... +### c) How to redirect a command's output to a file... +### d) How to redirect a command's input from a file... +### e) How to use the output of one command as the input to another with a pipe... +### f) That combining single-purpose filters with pipes is the most productive way to use the shell... +### g) That if a program conforms to Unix conventions, it can easily be combined with others... + + + +## 4. Variables +### a) Assignment +* **`varname=1`** --> + +### b) Indexing +* **`varname[0]`** --> _Note:_ the shell is zero indexed. That means you always start counting from zero + +### c) Referencing +* **`${varname}` --> +* **`${varname[@]` --> + + + +## 5. Loops +NEED TO DO VARIABLE ASSIGNMENT FIRST!!!! +### a) How to repeat operations using a loop... +* **`for`** --> + `for filename in *.dat + do + mv ${filename} ${newname} + done` + +* **`while`** --> + `count=0 + while ${count} -lte 6 + do + COMMAND HERE + done` + +### b) That the loop variable takes on a different value each time through the loop... +### c) The difference between a variable's name and its value... +### d) Why spaces and some punctuation characters shouldn't be used in files' names... +### e) How to display history and re-use commands... +* **`history`** --> displays your command history to the standard output (usually the screen) + + + +## 6. Shell Scripts +### a) How to store shell commands in a file... +### b) How to run a shell script... +### c) How to pass filenames into a shell script... + + + +## 7. Finding Things +### a) How to select lines matching patterns in text files... +* **`grep [options] day haiku.txt`** --> finds every instance of the string `day` in the file haiku.txt and pipes it to standard output. + * **`-E`** --> tells grep you will be using a regular expression. Enclose the regular expression in quotes. _Note:_ the power of `grep` comes from using regular expressions. Please see the regular expressions sheet for examples + * **`-i`** --> makes matching case-insensitive + * **`-n`** --> limits the number of lines that match to the first n matches + * **`-v`** --> shows lines that do not match the pattern (inverts the match) + * **`-w`** --> outputs instances where the pattern is a whole word + +### b) How to find files with certain properties... +* **`find . -type d` --> + * **`-type [df]`** --> d lists directories; f lists files + * **`-maxdepth n`** --> `find` automatically searches subdirectories. If you don't want that, specify the number of levels below the working directory you would like to search + * **`-mindepth n`** --> starts `find`'s search n levels below the working directory + +### c) How to use one command's output as arguments to another command... + +### d) How are text and binary files different?... + diff --git a/shell_outline.md b/shell_outline.md new file mode 100644 index 0000000..5227edb --- /dev/null +++ b/shell_outline.md @@ -0,0 +1,10 @@ +# Is Software Carpentry Right for you? +--- + +## Shell Outline +The Software Carpentry lessons on the shell will cover: +* How to create, delete and move files and directories using the command line +* How to use pipes and filters to redirect the input/output of commands to get commands to work together +* How to assign values to shell variables and reference them in your own code +* How to create loops to simplify repetitive tasks +* How to put all of the above into a script/function save and run later