Useful Linux Command Line Stuff
Networking
Get the IP address of all interfaces
networkctl status
hostname -I
Display all IP addresses of the host
ip link set <interface> up
ip link set <interface> down
Enable/disable interface
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- -
- Manage firewall rules
- enable firewall: sudo ufw enable
- list rules: sudo ufw status
- allow port: sudo ufw allow <port>
- deny port: sudo ufw deny <port>
- Connect remotely through SSH
- ssh <user>@<host IP>
Packages
Search for packages
apt search <string>
snap find <string>
List available updates
apt list --upgradable
Apply all available updates
sudo apt update && sudo apt upgrade
Install from the Ubuntu archive:
sudo apt install <package>
Install from the snap store:
sudo snap install <package>
Which package provides this file?
sudo apt install apt-file
sudo apt-file update
apt-file <filename or command>
Files
List files
ls
List files with permissions and dates
ls -al
Common file operations
create empty: touch <filename>
create with content: echo "<content>" > <filename>
append content: echo "<content>" >> <filename>
display a text file: cat <file>
copy: cp <file> <target filename>
move/rename: mv <file> <target directory/filename>
delete: rm <file>
Create a directory
mkdir <directory>
Create directories recursively
mkdir -p <directory1>/<directory2>
Delete a directory recursively
rm -r <directory>
Quick file search
locate
Search string in file
grep <string> <filename>
Search string recursively in
directory
grep -Iris <string> <directory>
Find files modified in the last n minutes
find <directory> -mmin -<n> -type f
eg. find . -mmin -5 -type f
Show only the nth column
col<n> “<separator>” <filename>
eg. col2 “,” foo.csv
Display file paginated
less <filename>
Display first n lines
head -n <n> <filename>
Display last n lines
tail -n <n> <filename>
Follow file content as it increases
tail -f <filename>
Pack a directory into an archive
zip: zip -r <target> <source dir>
tar.gz: tar cvzf <target>.tar.gz <source dir>
Unpack an archive
zip: unzip <zip file>
tar.gz: tar xf <tar.gz file>
Copy file to remote server
scp <filename> <user@server>:<destination>
eg. scp config.yaml admin@192.0.0.0:/config
Copy directory recursively
from remote server
scp -r <user@server>:<source> <destination>
eg. scp -r admin@192.0.0.0:/config /tmp
Security Show which users are logged in w Get password expiration date for <user> chage -l <user> Set password expiration date for <user> sudo chage <user> Lock a user account sudo passwd -l <user> Unlock a user account sudo passwd -u <user> List open ports and associated processes sudo netstat -tulpn
Automatically detect and ban abusive IP addresses sudo apt install fail2ban Show banned IP addresses sudo fail2ban-client status sudo fail2ban-client status <jail> Get the support status for installed packages ubuntu-support-status Enable kernel live patching sudo snap install canonical-livepatch sudo canonical-livepatch enable <token> Visit ubuntu.com/livepatch to get a free token for up to 3 machines.
System Display kernel version uname -r Get disk usage df -h Get memory usage cat /proc/meminfo Get system time timedatectl status Set system timezone timedatectl list-timezones sudo timedatectl set-timezone <zone> Get all running services systemctl --state running Start or stop a service service <service> start/stop Monitor new logs for a service journalctl -u <service> --since now -f
System Display kernel version uname -r Get disk usage df -h Get memory usage cat /proc/meminfo Get system time timedatectl status Set system timezone timedatectl list-timezones sudo timedatectl set-timezone <zone> Get all running services systemctl --state running Start or stop a service service <service> start/stop Monitor new logs for a service journalctl -u <service> --since now -f
Kubernetes and containers
Install MicroK8s and list available add-ons
sudo snap install microk8s --classic
microk8s.status --wait-ready
Enable a MicroK8s add-on
microk8s.enable <service>
View MicroK8s nodes and running services
microk8s.kubectl get nodes
microk8s.kubectl get services
More MicroK8s help at microk8s.io/docs
Launch a LXD container
lxd init
lxc launch ubuntu:18.04 <container name>
Or another distro
lxc launch images:centos/8/amd64
<container name>
Get a shell inside a LXD container
lxc exec <name> -- /bin/bash
Push a file to a LXD container
lxc file push <filename>
<container name>/<path>
Pull a file from a LXD container
lxc file pull <destination>
<container name>/<file path>
More LXD help at linuxcontainers.org/lxd
Virtualisation Install Multipass and launch an Ubuntu VM sudo snap install multipass --classic multipass launch <image> --name <VM name> Omitting <image> will launch a VM with the latest Ubuntu LTS Find available images multipass find
List existing VMs multipass list Get a shell inside a VM multipass shell <VM name> More Multipass help at discourse.ubuntu.com
OpenStack Install OpenStack and launch an instance sudo snap install microstack --classic sudo microstack.init microstack.launch The Horizon dashboard is available at 10.20.20.1 Default credentials: admin / keystone More MicroStack help at microstack.run/docs