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Fundamentals

of
UNIX

Index
Topic UNIX Operating System Unix Commands Files & Directories Unix Utilities Process Shell Programming Reference Lab Page # 3 25 34 61 99 111 162 163
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Chapter 1
UNIX Operating System

Objectives
In this session, you learn about: The functions of OS The history of Unix The features of UNIX The Unix architecture Process management CPU scheduling Memory management File management

Operating System (OS)


OS is a system software
OS can be defined as an organized collection of software consisting of procedures for operating a computer 1. OS provides an environment for execution of programs 1. OS acts as an interface between the user and the hardware of the computer system.
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Operating System
Operating system interacts with user in two ways 1.Operating system commands Enables user to interact directly with the operating system.

Operating system calls


Provides an interface to a running program and the operating system. System calls in UNIX are written in C.
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History of UNIX
Ken Thompson of AT&T Bell Laboratories designed
UNIX in late 1960s

Two versions of UNIX that emerged are AT&T Unix


and BSD Unix

In 1989, AT&T and Sun Microsystems joined together


and developed system V release 4 (SVR4)

Two of the main standards mainly in use are POSIX


(Portable Operating System Interface) and X/open standard. In 1988, MIT formed Xconsortium developed vendor-neutral Xwindow System.
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What is Linux?
1.An open-source UNIX like operating system 1.Initially created by Linus Torvalds for PC architecture 1.Ports exist for Alpha and Sparc processors 1.Developer community world-wide contribute 12 to its enhancement and growth

Features of UNIX
Multi-user, multitasking, timesharing Portability Modularity File structure Security Strong networking support & advanced graphics
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Layered Architecture

...
cp comp shell as ld vi ed

banner ls

kernel
hardware

sort

sh who a.out date grep wc

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UNIX System Architecture Unix system follows a layered approach. It has four layers The innermost layer is the hardware layer In the second layer, the kernel is placed The utilities and other application programs form the third layer
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Kernel Kernel is that part of the OS which directly makes interface with the hardware system. Actions: 1.Provides mechanism for creating and deleting processes 2.Provides processor scheduling, memory, and I/O management 3.Provides inter-process communication.

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The Shell A utility program that comes with the UNIX system. Features of Shell are: 1.Interactive Processing 2.Background Processing 3.I/O Redirection 4.Pipes 5.Shell Scripts 6.Shell Variables 7.Programming Constructs

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Process Management
A process is a program in execution Several processes can be executed simultaneously in a UNIX system. A process is generally created using the fork( ) system call.

The process that invokes the fork( ) system call is the parent process, and the newly created process is called the child process.
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CPU Scheduling Unix uses round-robin scheduling to support its multi-user and time-sharing feature.

Round-robin fashion of scheduling is considered to be the oldest, simplest and widely used algorithm.
Every process is given a time slice (10100 millisec.)

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File Management UNIX uses a hierarchical file system with / as its root. Every non-leaf node of the tree is called as a directory file. Every leaf node can either be a file, or an empty directory
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File System

dev

bin

tmp home

etc

var spool

lib bin

usr src

sh
console lp0 ls user1

inittab passwd
user2

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File System
File system is the structure in which files are stored on disk File in UNIX is sequence of bytes organized in the form of blocks The size of each block is 512 bytes (depends on architecture) Block size can be decided while creating the file system structure 22

File System Structure


Type of the file Link counter Uid, gid, size Date and time of Creation Date and time of access Date and time of modification : :

Boot Block Super Block Inode Block Data Block

Address of datablock Address of datablock : :

Address of the addr block Address of the addr block Address of the addr block

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Common UNIX Flavours


BSD:
Solaris: Ultrix: OSF 1: HPUX: AIX: IRIX:

Berkeley, BSD
Sun Microsystems, Sys 5/BSD Digital Equipment Corporation, BSD Digital Equipment Corporation, BSD/sys 5 Hewlett-Packard, Sys 5 IBM, Sys 5 / BSD Silicon Graphics, Sys 5

GNU/Linux: GNU, BSD/Posix


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Types of UNIX Users


Broad classification of users root (most privileged) Non-root (less privileged) 1. Group 1. UNIX allows user IDs to be grouped 2. A single user ID can be member of multiple groups

Differentiating users w.r.to file access 1. Owner 2. Group 3. Others

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Working With UNIX User logs in with a valid user ID User logs out to terminate the login session

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Summary
In this session, you learned about The functions of OS The History of Unix The features of UNIX The Unix Architecture Process management CPU Scheduling Memory management File management

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Chapter 2
UNIX Commands

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Objectives
In this session, you will learn to: 1.Use the basic Unix commands 1.pwd 2.date 3.who 4.ls 5.man Use man pages
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Simple Commands

pwd Displays the current working directory. 1.date 1.Displays the current date and time

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Simple Commands

who Displays the names of all the users who have currently logged in 1.who am i 1.Displays the name of the current user.

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Listing the Directory Contents


ls Syntax options:

:ls [options] [file.] -l list in long format -a list all files including those beginning with a dot -i list inode no of file in first column -s reports disk blocks occupied by file -R recursively list all sub directories -F mark type of each file -C display files in columns
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Meta Characters
Meta Characters * ? [] Purpose Example $ ls l *.c file* $ ls l file? $ ls l file[abc] $ cat file1; cat file2 $ cat abc | wc $ (echo ==== x.c ====; cat x.c) > out

Match with one or more characters or none Match with any single character Match with any single character within the brackets ; Command separator | Pipe two commands () Group commands Useful when the output of thecommand group has to be redirected `command` Execute the command enclosed within back quotes. Useful when the output of a command into a variable in a shell script string string Quote all characters with no substitution (ex. no special meaning for $ ) Quote all characters with substitution. The characters $,\ (back slash) and back quote have special meaning.

count=`expr $count + 1` assuming count has value3, this increments the value of count echo expr $count + 1 displays expr $count + 1 echo expr $count + 1 displays expr 3 + 1 assuming the variable count has value 3
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Listing the Directory Contents


$ ls l
total 6 -rwxr-xr-x 1 user1 projA 12373 Dec 15 14:45 a.out drwxr-xr-x 2 user2 projD 4096 Dec 22 14:00 awkpro -rw-r--r-1 user1 projA 12831 Dec 12 13:59 c File access File Date & -rw------1User id user1 projA size 61440 time of File name Dec 15 11:16 permissions in bytes modification core Group id Link -rw-r--r-- count 1 user3 projC 255 Dec 20 14:29 cs

File type

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Getting Help on Commands


The Unix manual, usually called man pages, is available on-line to explain the usage of the Unix system and commands. Syntax: man [options] command_name Common Options -k keyword list command synopsis line for all keyword matches -M path path to man pages -a show all matching man pages (SVR4) info command_name - help for commands help -command_name gives command synatx
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Summary
In this session, you have learned to 1.use the basic Unix commands like 1.pwd 2.date 3.who 4.ls 5.man use man pages
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Chapter 3
Files & Directories

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Objectives
In this session, you will learn to: 1.set file permissions using the chmod command 2.use directory-related commands namely mkdir, rmdir, cd commands 3.use file-related commands namely cp, mv, rm commands 4.access advanced file permissions using commands umask, suid, sgid, linking files, stickybit 5.create and edit files using the vi editor

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File Access Permissions


Refers to the permissions associated with a file with respect to the following Permission Levels User (owner) (u) Group (wheel, staff, daemon, etc.) (g) World (guest, anonymous and all other users) (o) 1. Permission Settings 1. Read (r) 2. Write (w) 3. Execute (x)
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File Access Permissions


No read permission does not allow the user to: List the contents of directory Remove the directory 1. No Write permission does not allow the user to : 1. copy files to the directory 2. remove files from the directory 3. rename files in the directory 4. make a subdirectory 5. remove a subdirectory from the directory 6. move files to, and from the directory

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File Access Permissions No execute permission does not allow the user to:

display the contents of a directory file from within the directory change to the directory display a file in the directory
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Changing Permissions - chmod

chmod u+x file_name Syntax: chmod <category> <operation> <permission> <filename(s)> or chmod <octal number> filename
Octal Number 4 - for read 2 - for write 1 - for execution $ chmod 744 xyz this sets read, write and execute permissions for owner, read permission for group and others
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Directory Creation
Command Syntax mkdir [OPTION] DIRECTORY $ mkdir <path>/<directory> $ mkdir m <directory> $ mkdir p <directory1>/<directory2>/<directory3> Example: $ mkdir project1 This creates a directory project1 under current directory Note: Write and execute permissions are needed for the directory in which user wants to create a directory
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Directory Removal
rmdir command removes directory Syntax rmdir <directory name> Example Removes project1 directory in the current directory rmdir project1 Remove multiple directories rmdir pos1 pos2 Remove the directory recursively rmdir p dir1/dir2/dir3 rmdir removes a directory if it is empty and is not the current directory
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Command - cd
cd command is used to change the directory cd cd .. cd / - take to the home directory - takes to the parent directory - takes to the root directory

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File-Related Commands
File Operation Copying a file Moving a file Removing a file Displaying a file and concatenating files Command cp mv rm cat

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Command - cp

Used to copy files across directories Syntax cp <source file> <new file name> Example cp file1 file2

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Command - cp
Options to cp 1. -p Copies the file and preserves the following attributes 1.owner id 2.group id 3.permissions 4.last modification time -r recursive copy; copy subdirectories under the directory if any 1. -i 1.interactive; prompts for confirmation before overwriting the target file, if it already exists
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Command - mv
Used to move a file, or rename a file

Preserves the following details owner id group id permissions Last modification time
-f -i suppresses all prompting (forces overwriting of target) prompts before overwriting destination file
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Command - rm Used to remove a file 1.Syntax : rm file(s) -f suppresses all prompting

-i

prompts before deleting destination file will recursively remove the file from a directory (can be used to delete a directory along with the content ) 50

-r

Command chown & chgrp


$ ls l -rwxr-xr-x -rwxr-xr-x 1 user1 training 3 user1 faculty 12373 Dec 15 14:45 a.out 4096 Dec 24 11:56 awkpro

$chown user2 a.out $ls l -rwxr-xr-x -rwxr-xr-x

1 user2 training 3 user1 faculty

12373 Dec 15 14:45 a.out 4096 Dec 24 11:56 awkpro

$ chgrp training awkpro

$ls l -rwxr-xr-x -rwxr-xr-x

1 user2 training 3 user1 training

12373 Dec 15 14:45 a.out 4096 Dec 24 11:56 awkpro


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Command - umask
umask value is used to set the default permission of a file and directory while creating umask command is used to see the default mask for the file permission Default umask value will be set in the system environment file like /etc/profile umask 022 will set a mask of 022 for the current session The file permission after setting this umask value will be 644 And the directory permission will be 755
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Command - ln
Linking files
1.Hard Link (in the same filesystem) 1.$ ln /usr/bin/clear /usr/bin/cls

1.Hard link uses the same inode


number
Soft Link (in different filesystems also used to link directories) $ ln s /usr/bin/clear /home/user1/cls

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Special Permission Bits


Set user ID (SUID) 1.This means that if the SUID bit is set for any application then your user ID would be set as that of the owner of application/file rather than the current user, while running that application

1.set user ID bit can be set in one of the two ways:


chmod u+s <filename> 1.chmod 4755 <filename>

1.The leftmost octal number 4 indicates set user ID bit


to be set, other octal digits indicate regular file permissions. This is meaningful for executable files only.
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Special Permission Bits


Set group id (SGID) 1.Just like SUID, setting the SGID bit for a file sets your group ID to the file's group while the file is executing

1.set group ID bit can be set in one of the two ways:


chmod g+s <filename>
1.chmod 2755 <filename>

1.The leftmost octal number 2 indicates set group ID


bit to be set, other octal digits indicate regular file permissions. This is meaningful for executable files only.
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Special Permission Bits


Sticky bit (SVTX) 1.Typically set to a directory that is shareable 2.Any user can create a file in such sharable directory 3.Only owner of the file or super user (root) can remove a file from the directory

1.sticky bit can be set in one of the two ways:


chmod +t <directoryname> 1.chmod 1555 <directoryname> The leftmost octal number 1 indicates sticky bit to be
set, other octal digits indicate regular file permissions.
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Vi Editor
vi is a visual editor used to create and edit text files. A screen-oriented text editor Included with most UNIX system distributions Command driven 1. Categories of commands include 1.Cursor movement 2.Editing commands 3.Search and replace commands 1. The vi editor is invoked by the following command: $ vi filename
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Navigation
Backspace h j k Space l

the quick brown fox w w w

the quick brown fox $ the quick brown fox ^

the quick brown fox 2 w the quick brown fox b b b

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Editing Commands
Text insertion / replacement

1.i 2.a 3.I 4.A 5.o 6.O 7.R 8.s


S

- inserts text to the left of the cursor - inserts text to the right of the cursor - inserts text at the beginning of the line - appends text at end of the line - opens line below - opens line above - replaces text from cursor to right - replaces a single character with any number of characters - replaces entire line
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Editing Commands
Deletion

1.x 2.3x 3.dw 4.2dw 5.dd 6.2dd

- to delete character at cursor position - to delete 3 characters at cursor position

- to delete word
- to delete 2 word - to delete a line - to delete 2 lines

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Editing Commands
Yanking Y 3Y p P - copy line into buffer - copy 3 lines into buffer - copy buffer below cursor - copy buffer above cursor

1. Save and quit 1. :w - to save 2.:w! - to name a file (:w! filename -> save as) 3.:x - save and quit 4.:q - cancel changes 5.:q! - cancel and quit
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The following commands are applicable for vi editor in Linux /pat searches for the pattern pat and places cursor where pattern occurs. / repeat last search

Search & Replace Commands

:%s/old/new/g to change every occurrence in the whole file.

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Summary
In this session, you have learned how to 1.use file permissions using the chmod command 2.use directory-related commands namely mkdir, rmdir, cd commands 3.use file-related commands namely cp, mv, rm commands 4.access advanced file permissions using commands umask, suid, sgid, linking the files, stickybit 5.create and edit files using the vi editor
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Chapter 4
UNIX Utilities

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Objectives
In this session, you will learn how to: 1.use the Unix utilities such as 1.cat, echo, touch, more, file, wc, cmp, comm, find employ redirection operators use filters such as sort, grep, cut, head, tail, tr, and paste 1.use communication commands 1.telnet, ftp 2.use backup commands 1.zip/gzip and tar
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cat
cat command takes the input from the keyboard, and sends the output to the monitor 1. We can redirect the input and output using the redirection operators $ cat > file1 Type the content here press <ctrl d> $ cat file1 Displays the content of the file $cat >> file1 This will append standard input to the content of file1

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touch

touch is used to change the time stamp of the file

Syntax: touch [options] file

Options: -a to change the access time -m to change the modification time -c no create if not exists
touch <file> will change the time of change of the file if the file exists

If the file does not exist, it will create a file of zero byte size.

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echo & read


echo command is used to print output to the screen echo This is an example This is an example x=10 echo $x 10 read command allows to read input from user and assign it to the variable specified. read x

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General Purpose Utilities

more Allows user to view one page-full of information at a time. 1. file Used to display the type of the file 2. tty 1.Prints the terminals name

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General Purpose Utilities

wc 1.A filter used to count the number of lines, words, and characters in a disk file or from the standard input. 2.-l - displays the number of lines 3.-w - displays the number of words 4.-c - displays the number of characters

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find

1.

Lets user to search set of files and directories based on various criteria Syntax: find [path...] [expression] [path] where to search [expression] What type of file to search (specified with type option) What action to be applied (exec, print, etc.) Name of the files (specified as part of name option, enclosed in ) Example find . name *.c -print lists all files with .c extension from the current dir & its subdirectories

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find
Finding files on the basis of file size 1. size [+ ]n[bc] n represents size in bytes (c) or blocks (b) of 512 bytes

find . size 1000c


1000 bytes in size find . size +1000c 1000 bytes in size find . size 1000c 1000 bytes in size

lists all files that are exactly

lists all files that are more than lists all files that are less than
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find
Finding files on the basis of access time (atime) or modified time (mtime) 1. atime [+-]n 2. mtime [+-]n n represents number of days ( actually 24 * n hours)

find . atime 2
find . atime +2 2 days ago find / mtime 2 days ago

lists files accessed exactly 2 days ago


lists files accessed more than

lists files modified less than 2


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find
Applying a command on files matching the criteria with exec and ok options 1. exec command {} \; command is command to be applied on the matching files (does not prompt user) find . -name *.dat exec ls l {} \; Long listing of all files with .dat extension in the current and its subdirectories

-ok command {} \;
Functionality is similar to exec, but prompts user before applying the command on the file matching the criteria.
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Standard Files
Standard Input file Keyboard, file descriptor is 0 1.Standard Output file 1.Monitor, file descriptor is 1 Standard Error file Monitor, file descriptor is 2
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I/O Redirection < file file redirect standard input from

> file
2> file

redirect standard output to file


redirect standard error to file

2>&1 $ cat > abc

merge standard error with

standard output

$ ls l > outfile

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Filters
Filters are programs that takes its input from the standard input file, process it, and sends it to the standard output file. Commonly used filter commands 1.sort 2.grep 3.cut 4.head 5.tail 6.paste
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sort
Sorts the contents of the given file based on the first char of each line. -n -r -t +num +num [-num] numeric sort (comparison made according to strings numeric value) reverse sort specify delimiter for fields specify sorting field numbers to specify the range

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grep
grep -Global Regular Expression Printer is used for searching regular expressions Syntax 1.grep <options> <pattern> <filename(s)>

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grep options
-c displays count of the number of occurrences

-n
-v -i

displays line numbers along with the lines


displays all lines except lines matching pattern Ignores case for matching

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Patterns
* - matches 0 or more characters [^pqr] - Matches a single character which is not p ,q or r ^pqr -Matches pqr at the beginning of the line pqr$ -Matches pqr at the end of the line . - Matches any one character \ - ignores the special meaning. grep New\[abc\] filename
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Filter Command - head


Displays the first n lines of the file $ head -3 file1

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Filter Command - tail


Displays the last n lines of a file
$ tail -3 file1 Can also specify the line number from which the data has to be displayed till the end of file $ tail +5 file1

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Filter command - tr
tr - translate filter used to translate a given set of characters Example : tr [a-z] [A-Z] < filename This converts standard input read from lower case to upper case.

option -s can be used to squeeze the repeated characters.

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Filter command - tr
Useful options for tr -s char
Squeeze multiple contiguous occurrences of the character into single char

-d char
Remove the character
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Command Piping
Allows the output (only the standard output) of a command to be sent as input to another command.

Multiple pipes may appear in one command line. Example:


$ cat * | wc
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Filter Command tee


tee command allows the normal output to the standard output, as well as to a file Useful to capture intermediate output of a long command pipeline for further processing, or debugging purpose. Example who | tee userlist cat - | tee file1 | wc -l
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Filter Command cut


Used to extract specified columns of a text Option remark -c used to extract characters -d Delimiter for fields -f Field no. Examples $ cut -c2-5 file1 $ cut -d | -f2,3 file1
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ftp

Ftp is a file transfer program Provides necessary user interface to the standard File Transfer Protocol Allows users to transfer files to and from a remote host
Syntax $ ftp hostname

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ftp - commands

Ftp program supports the following commands


get receive file from host mget receive multiple files from host put send file to host mput send multiple files from host

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ftp - commands

Ftp program supports the following commands as well


ls cd lcd

list directory of host change directory on the host change directory on the local machine

To set transfer format ascii set to ascii mode binary set to binary mode

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ftp - commands

Progress indication of transfer hash command


Quitting ftp session bye command

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Tape Archive - tar


Tar is an archiving utility to store and retrieve files from an archive, known as tarfile.

Though archives are created on a tape, it is common to have them as disk files as well.
1.

tar c|t|x [vf destination] source...

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Tape Archive - tar


Examples: Create a new tar file containing all .dat files (assuming a.dat, b.dat and c.dat exist) $ tar cf mytar *.dat

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Compression Utilities
gzip, Usage is very similar to compress and pack utilities in Unix: gzip [-vc] filename where -v displays the compression ratio. -c sends the compressed output to standard output and leaves the original file intact. gunzip gunzip can uncompress files originally compressed with compress.
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In this session, you have learned to: 1.use the Unix Utilities like 1.cat, echo, touch, more, file, wc, find employ redirection operators use filters like sort, grep, cut, head, tail, tr, ftp 1.backup commands 1.tar and zip/gzip
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Summary

Chapter 5
Process

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Objectives
In this session, you will learn to: 1.Use process-related commands like 1.ps, kill, sleep Start a background process Use background and foreground-related commands like bg, fg, jobs , nice , nohup

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Processes
Process - a program in execution When program is executed, a new process is created The process is alive till the execution of the program is complete Each process is identified by a number called pid

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Login shell
As soon as the user logs in, a process is created which executes the login shell. Login shell is set for each login in /etc/passwd file.

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ps

The ps command is used to display the characteristics of a process It fetches the pid, tty, time, and the command which has started the process. 1.-f lists the pid of the parent process also. 2.-u lists the processes of a given user 3.-a lists the processes of all the users 4.-e lists all the processes including the system 101 processes

Background Process
Enables the user to do more than one task at a time. If the command terminates with an ampersand (&), UNIX executes the command in the background Shell returns by displaying the process ID (PID) and job id of the process

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Controlling Background Processes

jobs List the background process 1. fg % <job id> Runs a process in the foreground 2. bg %<job id> 1.Runs a process in the background

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The kill Command


kill: Kills or terminates a process kill command send a signal to the process The default signal is 15 ( SIGTERM) kill -9 (SIGKILL) 1. Terminates the process abruptly

1.

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In this session, you learned to: 1.Define a process 2.Use process-related commands like 1.ps, kill, sleep 3.Start a background process 4.Use background and foregroundrelated commands like 1.bg, fg, jobs
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Summary

Chapter 6
UNIX Shell Programming

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Objectives
In this session, you will learn to: 1.Use Shell variables

2.Write scripts to process positional parameters 3.Use test command 4.Use if construct 5.Use for loop 6.Use while loop 7.Use case construct 8.Define and use functions 9.Debug shell scripts
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Flavours of the Unix shell Bourne shell C shell Korn shell csh ksh sh

Bourne again shell bash (shell distributed with linux)


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Command processing
1. Displays the shell prompt and reads the command typed by the user. 1. Interprets the command and classifies it as an internal (built-in), or an external command. 1. If it is NOT a built-in command, searches for the command in the PATH-specified directories, and executes that command if it is found.
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Shell Features
Parent shell process
fork

$ vi test.c

(bash) Child shell process

command typed by user


Exec of vi test.c

(bash)

User Mode Kernel Mode

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Additional Shell Features

1.Each shell, apart from the basic features, provides additional features such as:

Maintaining command history (C, korn


and bash)

Renaming (aliasing) a command (C,


korn, bash)
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History
some UNIX shells support command history facility to keeps track of commands that were executed facility to rerun previously executed commands bash shell supports the following !! !num recall the last command and execute it. execute nth command where n is the the num specified after !

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alias
alias can be used to give new name to an existing command A better name that represents a single command or a sequence of commands to be executed, often with appropriate options alias is an internal command alias newname=command $ alias l=ls l The unalias command cancels previously defined alias.
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Allows 1.Defining and referencing variables 2.Logic control structures such as if, for, while, case 3.Input and output

Shell Programming

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Shell Variables
A variable is a name associated with a data value, and it offers a symbolic way to represent and manipulate data variables in the shell. They are classified as follows 1.user-defined variables 2.environment variables 3.predefined variables

value assigned to the variable can then be referred to by preceding the variable name with a $ sign.
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Shell Variables

The shell provides the facility to define normal, and environment variables. A normal variable can be only used in the shell where it is defined. An environment variable can be used in the shell where it is defined, plus any child shells invoked from that shell.
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Using Normal Variables


To define a normal variable, use the following syntax: variable_name=value Examples: x=10 textline_1=This line was entered by $USER textline_2=This line was entered by $USER allusers=`who` usercount=`who | wc l`

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Using Normal Variables Once variables are defined, one can use the echo command to display the value of each variable: $ echo $x $ echo $textline_1 $ echo $textline_2 $ echo $allusers $ echo $usercount
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Using Environment Variables

To define an environment variable, use following syntax: variable_name=value export variable_name


Examples: 1.$ x=10; export x 2.$ allusers=`who` ; export allusers

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Built-in environment variables

PATH 1.BASH_E
NV

2.HOME 3.PWD 4.SHELL 5.TERM

MAIL 1.USER 2.LOGNAME 3.PS1 4.PS2

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Sample Shell Script #! /bin/bash # The above line has a special meaning. It must be the # first line of the script. It says that the commands in # this shell script should be executed by the bash # shell (/bin/bash). # --------------------------------------------------------121

Executing Shell Scripts There are two ways of executing a shell script: By passing the shell script name as an argument to the shell. For example: sh script1.sh If the shell script is assigned execute permission, it can be executed using its name. For example:

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Passing Parameters to Scripts


parameter can be passed to a shell script
parameters are specified after the name of the shell script when invoking the script. Within the shell script, parameters are referenced using the predefined variables $1 through $9. In case of more than 9 parameters, other parameters can be accessed by shifting.
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Built-in variables

Following are built-in variables supported 1.$0, $1$9 - positional arguments 2.$* - all arguments 3.$@ - all arguments 4.$? - exit status of previous command
executed

5.$$ 6.$!
process

- PID of the current process - PID of the last background


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Passing Parameters to Scripts

Consider following shell script:

----------------------script2.sh-------------------------echo Total parameters entered: $# echo First parameter is : $1 echo The parameters are: $* shift echo First parameter is : $1 -----------------------------------------------------------

Execute the above script using the script2.sh these are the parameters command.
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Passing Parameters to Scripts


The shell parameters are passed as strings. to pass a string containing multiple words as a single parameter, it must be enclosed within quotes.

For example,
$ ./script2.sh this string is a single parameter
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Doing Arithmetic Operations


Arithmetic operations within a shell script can be performed using expr command.
Example, x=10 y=5 number_1 = `expr $x + $y` number_2 = `expr $x - $y` number_3 = `expr $x / $y` number_4 = `expr $x \* $y` number_5 = `expr $x % $y`

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Using the test Command


The general syntax of test command is:
test expression The expression can be formed using a combination of shell variables and the operators supported by the test command. These operators provide facility to compare numbers, string and logical values, file types and file access modes.
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Using the test Command To compare two integers using test following operators are available: -eq (equal to)
-ne (not equal to) -lt (less than) -le (less than or equal to) -gt (greater than) -ge (greater than or equal to)
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Using the test Command


General syntax test expression or [ expression ] test integer1 operator integer2 OR [ integer1 operator integer2 ]
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Using the test Command

To compare two strings using the test command, following operators are available:

1.string1 = string2 (equal to, please note it is a


single =) 2.string1 != string2 (not equal to) 3.string1 (string is not NULL) 4.-n string1 (string is not NULL and exists) 5.-z string1 (string is NULL and exists)
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Using the test Command

The syntax for this string comparison is:


test string1 operator string2 OR [ string1 operator string2 ] OR test operator string OR [ operator string ]
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Using the test Command

To check a file type/access permissions using the test command, following operators are available:

-s file (file is not empty and exists) -f file (Ordinary file and exists) -d file (file is a directory and exists) -r file (file is readable and exists) -w file (file is write-able and exists) -x file (file is executable and exists)

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Using the test Command


To check a file type/access permissions using the test command, following operators are available:

-b file (file is a block device and exists) -c file (file is a character device and exists) -p file (file is a named pipe and exists) -g file (file has sticky bit set) -u file (file has setuid bit set) -t file_des (file descriptor is standard
output)
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Combining Conditions It is possible to combine conditions by using following operators:

1.-a (logical AND operator) 2.-o (logical OR operator) 3.! (logical NOT operator)

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Combining Conditions
The syntax for this is:
test expression_1 a expression _2, OR [ expression _1 a expression _2 ] test expression_1 o expression _2, OR [ expression_1 o expression_2 ] test ! expression _1 OR [ ! expression _1 ]

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Condition Checking in Scripts


Bash shell provides the if command to test if a condition is true. The general format of this command is: if condition then command fi

The condition is typically formed using the test command.


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Example
# to check if the current directory is the same as your home directory curdir=`pwd` if test $curdir != $HOME then echo your home dir is not the same as your pesent working directory else echo $HOME is your current directory fi
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Checking Multiple Conditions


The complex form of if statement is as follows: if condition_1 then command elif condition_2 then command else command fi

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Using for Loop


The Bash shell provides a for loop. The syntax of this loop is: for variable in list do command command done

Example:

for i in 1 2 3 4 5 do echo -n $i \* $i =" " echo `expr $i \* $i ` done 140

Example
----------------------script.sh-------------------------#! /bin/sh usernames=`who | cut d f1` # for user in ${usernames} do echo $user done ----------------------------------------------------------141

Using while Loop


The Bash shell provides a while loop. The syntax of this loop is: while condition do command command done
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Example Shell script checks for a blank/non blank string eg: read nam while [ -z $nam ] do read nam done echo the string is $nam
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Example
Shell script to compute factorial of a given number
#!/bin/bash n=$1 if [ $n -eq 0 ]; then fact=0 else fact=1 while [ $n ne 0 ] do fact=`expr $fact \* $n` n=`expr $n 1` done fi echo $fact

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The case Statement


The structure of case statement case value in
pattern1) command command;; pattern2) command command;; patternn) command;; esac
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Example #!/bin/bash echo enter 2 nos


(contd.) case $choice in 1) res=`expr $num1 + $num2` echo result is $res;; 1) res=`expr $num1 - $num2` echo result is $res;; *) echo invalid input;; esac
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read num1
read num2 echo enter 1 (for addition) or 2 (for subtraction)

read choice

Example
#!/bin/bash read number case $number 1) echo 1st break;; 2) echo 2nd break;; 3) echo 3rd break;; *) echo ${number}th break;; esac
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Functions

Shell functions are a way to group commands for later execution using a single name for the group. They are executed just like a "regular" command.

Shell functions are executed in the current shell context; no new process is created to interpret them. Functions are declared using this syntax: 148

Functions

Shell functions can accept arguments Arguments are passed in the same way as given to commands Functions refer to arguments using $1, $2 etc., similar to the way shell scripts refer to command line arguments

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Functions Function to convert standard input into upper case toupper() { tr a-z A-Z } This function can be used as
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Debugging Shell Scripts


Two options help in debugging shell scripts -v (verbose) option: causes shell to print the lines of the script as they are read. $ bash v script-file -x (verbose) option: prints commands and their arguments as they are executed. $ bash x script-file
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Programming in C vs Shell Comparison between A solution in C A shell solution written like a C program A proper shell/unix solution e.g: The problem is to count the no of lines in a file ( the file is called the_file)
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A solution in C
#include <stdio.h> void main(void) { int lcount=0; FILE *infile; char line[500]; infile=fopen("the_file","r"); while(!feof(infile)) { fgets(line,500,infile); lcount ++; } printf("no of lines is %d\n",lcount); }

A shell solution
count=0 while read line do count=`expr $count + 1` done < the_file echo Number of lines is $count

Solution using existing commands


$ wc l the_file
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Summary
In this session, you have learned to: 1.Use Shell variables

2.Write scripts to process positional parameters 3.Use test command 4.Use if construct 5.Use for loop 6.Use while loop 7.Use case construct 8.Define and use functions 154 9.Debug shell scripts

UNIX Bibliography
UNIX in a Nutshell for BSD 4.3: A Desktop Quick Reference For Berkeley (O'Reilly & Associates, Inc., 1990, ISBN 0-937175-20-X).

UNIX in a Nutshell: A Desktop Quick Reference for System V & Solaris 2.0 (O'Reilly & Associates, Inc., 1992, ISBN 0-56592-001-5).
The UNIX Programming Environment, Brian W. Kernighan & Rob Pike (Prentice Hall, 1984).
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Thank You

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