Book Image

Learn Linux Quickly

By : Ahmed AlKabary
Book Image

Learn Linux Quickly

By: Ahmed AlKabary

Overview of this book

Linux is one of the most sought-after skills in the IT industry, with jobs involving Linux being increasingly in demand. Linux is by far the most popular operating system deployed in both public and private clouds; it is the processing power behind the majority of IoT and embedded devices. Do you use a mobile device that runs on Android? Even Android is a Linux distribution. This Linux book is a practical guide that lets you explore the power of the Linux command-line interface. Starting with the history of Linux, you'll quickly progress to the Linux filesystem hierarchy and learn a variety of basic Linux commands. You'll then understand how to make use of the extensive Linux documentation and help tools. The book shows you how to manage users and groups and takes you through the process of installing and managing software on Linux systems. As you advance, you'll discover how you can interact with Linux processes and troubleshoot network problems before learning the art of writing bash scripts and automating administrative tasks with Cron jobs. In addition to this, you'll get to create your own Linux commands and analyze various disk management techniques. By the end of this book, you'll have gained the Linux skills required to become an efficient Linux system administrator and be able to manage and work productively on Linux systems.
Table of Contents (24 chapters)

Your first alias

Let's assume that you always forget that the command free -h displays the memory information of your system:

elliot@ubuntu-linux:~$ free -h
total used free shared buff/cache available
Mem: 3.9G 939M 2.2G 6.6M 752M 2.7G
Swap: 947M 0B 947M

You may be asking yourself: "Why can't I just type memory to display the memory information instead of free -h?". Well, you certainly can do that by creating an alias.

The alias command instructs the shell to replace one string (word) with another. Well, how is this useful? Let me show you; if you run the following command:

elliot@ubuntu-linux:~$ alias memory="free -h"

Then every time you enter memory, your shell will replace it with free -h:

elliot@ubuntu-linux:~$ memory
total used free shared buff/cache available
Mem: 3.9G 936M 2.2G 6.6M 756M 2.7G
Swap: 947M...