Difference between revisions of "Linux Commands"
From GWAVA Technologies Training
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Using find to recursively unzip all items in a directory structure to the current directory. | Using find to recursively unzip all items in a directory structure to the current directory. | ||
find /zippedDir -name "*.zip" -exec unzip {} \; | find /zippedDir -name "*.zip" -exec unzip {} \; | ||
+ | |||
+ | ==Copy a file== | ||
+ | cp origin /distination/file | ||
+ | |||
+ | to copy particular files recursively | ||
+ | cp -r *.txt /distination |
Revision as of 15:36, 23 October 2015
Useful Linux Commands
Contents |
Disk
gives you a quick overview of what disks are mounted and how full they are.
df -h
This is give you a total size of the directories under where this command was run and sorts by size. Warning can take a long time.
du -hsx * | sort -rh | head -10
List of files
This always works (show file size in bytes)
ls -s
This is a SLES alias of the above
l
File size in human-readable values (K,M,G)
l -h
Sorted by size ascending human-readable
l -Srh
Download a file
Download the Latest Version of Retain
wget "http://download.gwava.com/download.php?product=Retain&version=current"
Find a file
find / -name "fileName"
Using find to recursively unzip all items in a directory structure to the current directory.
find /zippedDir -name "*.zip" -exec unzip {} \;
Copy a file
cp origin /distination/file
to copy particular files recursively
cp -r *.txt /distination