This is not a post from the series of those describing the cd
command. It's just a list of commands and tricks I'm using (almost) every day.
Port forwarding
Sometimes I have to connect to database and of course I prefer to use my GUI manager (JetBrains DataGrip).
So, if security policy exist in your company and your database's port is not exposed you can execute
ssh -L{port on your PC}:localhost:{database's port} root@{server IP}
The command below will open port 3308
on your laptop and everything will be forwarded to 192.168.1.2:3306
ssh -L3308:localhost:3306 root@192.168.1.2
localhost
means that database is listening on 192.168.1.2
. You can type for example 192.168.3.77
and everything will be forwarded to .3.77
server via .1.2
.
Edit file in VIM without sudo
, but save with sudo
Have you ever edited some configs file and forgot to sudo
? Me too... There is a trick to save the file anyway, just type in VIM:
:w !sudo tee %
Go to beggining/end of line in terminal
If you wrote a very long command in the terminal it may take a long time before you return to the begging of the line to add missing sudo
. And back to the end to add some parameters.
Press crtl + a
to move to the begging and crtl + e
to the end of the line in terminal.
ll
Save few days in a year by typing ll
instead of ls -la
. Works on most Linux servers.
Execute command you executed in the past
Last command
To execute last command over again you can of course press ↑ (arrow up) key. But you can also type !!
. So executing last command as a root is very easy
sudo !!
To run the last command that started with apt
type !apt
Search history
To find the command that contains /tmp
you have executed in the past press ctrl + r
and type /tmp
. Press ctrl + r
again for next result.
To show all commands or to search using regular expression use
history | grep "/tmp"
Agree for everything
To say yes for each question you can use application called yes
yes | yum install curl
use yes no
to say no and discard.
WARNING
As @patricnox
notices in the comment - using yes
may do unexpected things. You can accidentally install 10 GB of dependencies or other things you don't want to do.
Run a long-lasting process in the background and close the terminal
If you run a script that will end in 3 days, you don't have to wait with the terminal window open to end. You can run it using nohup
command
nohup wget http://large-files.com/10gb-super-movie.avi &
wget
works in the background, output is saved to nohup.out
file in working directory.
Checking who has stolen your favourite port
It's really annoying when you are trying to run nginx but you can't because there is already apache running and port 443 is busy.
So, how to determinate which process is listening on port 80:
$ netstat -tulpn | grep 80
tcp6 0 0 :::80 :::* LISTEN 10177/java
10177
is a pid you are looking for. Now execute
ps aux | grep 10177
for more details.
Reading logs
Everyone knows that less
is a very good way to read a logs files. But you can also read gziped logs without extracting!
less /var/log/my-app/my-app.log.2015.12.14.gz
Live reading
tail -f /var/log/my-app/my-app.log | grep ERROR
The command above will show only new lines that contains ERROR
.
Sort process
Show top 3 processes sorted by CPU usage
ps aux --sort=-pcpu | head -n 4
Show top 3 processes sorted by memory usage
ps aux --sort=-rss | head -n 4
Executing command every X seconds
To print command's output every X seconds you can use watch
command. For example to create clock run
watch -n 1 date
Quiet mode
A lot of standards commands has quiet or silent mode. Very useful when you are creating some bash script. In most of the cases just add -q
or -s
(read --help
or man
or check on StackOverflow)
zip -q archive.zip big-file.jpg
But sometimes (practically always with in-house scripts) you have to ignore the output (send to /dev/null
)
./very-verbose.sh 1>/dev/null
Create log files for scripts executed by crontab
0 22 * * 1-5 /opt/scripts/send-report.sh 2>/var/log/scripts/report-error.log
So next time when your script will fail you won't lose the reason
Top comments (44)
Those are great tips.
In the terminal, one trick I like is going back to previous folder with
(that is a minus sign)
Say, you are in
/var/logs
and youcd /data/dev/myproject
, then you can go back to logs withcd -
.Useful in some situations only, but quite handy nonetheless.
If you're editing config files with vim and need to use that sudo tee hack, stop.
You should be using
sudoedit
. It safely copies the config to /tmp and runs$EDITOR
as your regular user with your user config, and only overwrites the file you're editing if you actually save. This is far more desirable than running your editor as root.Very good point, I think that we should never use sudo vim.
alt + .
is a great one too, in bash.$ mkdir -p /tmp/some/nested/directory
$ cd <alt+.> # types the LAST argument - /tmp/some/nested/directory
Re:
netstat
, it still works, of course, and you can continue using it, but it is deprecated in favour ofss
.Re:
ssh
ing into a DB server as root, no offence, but I don't believe your company actually has a security policy :D (hopefully it was just an example).Yup, it was a 'funny' example
For years I looked for this, and finally found it. Thank you very much for your contribution Patryk.
Working with drush, the last one is very neat!
I have a concern regarding "Yes". I find it a bad idea to use this since what if you encounter a new tool? Maybe you install something and Yes makes it install, or maybe skip, dependencies that's crucial to have/not have in the project
(Vague example scenario, but you get the point!)
A lot of commands take a
-y
flag too.If you're particularly concerned about it doing something you don't want, you can use an
expect
script instead. It's kind of like selenium for the command line.Yep! I tend to use the y flag.
Thanks, PatricNox! I've added little warning in the post
Yup, you are right.
yes
program may do unexpected thing, but sometimes you do know the script very well and you know all the questions.Maybe I should change the example and add some warning
While
!!
is great, the overall!
method becomes really powerful if you understand that you're neither limited to re-executing just the last command or re-executing the command relatively unmodified.ssh host1.my.domain
and now need to connect tohost2.my.domain
? Execute either of^host1^host2^
or!!:s/host1/host2
history
and see that you previously connected tohost1
with the 23rd command in your history-buffer, you could do!23:s/host1/host2
!43:gs/orig_string/new_string
I would be suuuuuuuper leery about developing habits around the
yes
command. Great sadness can ensue from habituating to its use ...especially if you have privileged access to a system. For commands that implement a built-in auto-yes feature (e.g. youryum
does via the-y
flag). Even there, I'd tend to avoid auto-yes except in the very specific context of scripted routines where you've validated the the auto-acknowleged behavior always acts the way you expect and need it to.It's also worth noting that not every command you use will understand accepting a yes from piped <STDIN>
There are a non-trivial number of commands that don't react well to being backgrounded. You might think, "lemme background this thing and let it go about its business" only to come back minutes/hours/days later to find that it's done nothing. Basically, whenever you background a command, it's always a good idea to run the
jobs
command immediately afterwards to verify that it's in a running state. You may, instead, find that your backgrounded command is in a stopped state.Even better than using shells' built-in job-control for long-running tasks may be to use a terminal-multiplexer like
screen
ortmux
. They're also great if you're connecting to a system over crappy links (remote in, fire up screen, kick off your tasks ...even if your connection dies, stuff keeps running and you can re-connect and re-attach to your session to finish things up).Yeah! I was also going to suggest
tmux
instead ofnohup
.Great tips! I think it worth to mention the !$ operator in addition to !!.
Where !$ is the argument of last command.
So if you:
mkdir foo
You can enter the folder typing:
cd !$
If you have to telecommute, and your company's vpn connection is sh*tty, and they don't allow you to ssh in, reverse ssh tunneling is your friend:
thegeekstuff.com/2013/11/reverse-s...
Also a good way to get your security team grumpy with you ;) Outbound SSH from prod sets off about a dozen alarm bells for us. Talking to your manager or DevOps team member is another option for addressing rough inbound access :)
Awesome list.
I vote to add
ctrl + r
for searching your previous commands to this list!Testing Gunicorn or Prometheus or something with a long pipeline? Run it once then
ctrl + r
and type some keywords to find it again without having to type it all out or mash the up arrow.If you've a common SSH login with sudo (shouldn't be the case mostly), do be careful with !! as you could end up running a potentially dangerous command in a hurry.
You could use
sudo lsof -i :80
to identify which app is taking up a port instead ofnetstat
&ps
Also
zless
to view gzipped logs without extraction &wget -c URL
to retry downloads in case of issues.For me 'screen' is unmissable when working in terminal applications. It is like having multiple windows! ctrl-a then 'c' creates new screen, ctrl-a 'space' switches through screens.
Agreed. I tend to map my F-keys to swich between next, prev and list screens.
bindkey -k k3 prev
bindkey -k k4 next
bindkey -k k5 windowlist
generally use tmux nowadays