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suse linux enterprise desktop administration

SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop Administration. Objectives. Objective 1

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suse linux enterprise desktop administration

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    1. SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop Administration Chapter 8 Work with the Linux Shell and Command Line

    2. SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop Administration 2

    3. SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop Administration Objective 1—Get to Know the bash Shell Shell Accepts a user’s entries, interprets them, converts them to system calls, and delivers system messages back to the user, making it a command interpreter To understand the bash shell, you need to know the following: Types of Shells bash Configuration Files Completion of Commands and Filenames History Function 3

    4. SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop Administration Types of Shells Examples of some popular shells: The Bourne Shell (/bin/sh; symbolic link to /bin/bash) The Bourne Again Shell (/bin/bash) The Korn shell (/bin/ksh) The C shell (/bin/csh; symbolic link to /bin/tcsh) The TC shell (/bin/tcsh) Shells differ in the functionality they provide Every shell can be started like a program You can switch at any time to a different shell 4

    5. SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop Administration Types of Shells (continued) The shell does not terminate on its own You need to enter the exit command to return to the previous shell Login shell A shell is started at a text console right after a user logs in Which shell is started for which user is defined in the user database The standard Linux shell is bash 5

    6. SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop Administration bash Configuration Files Login shells Started whenever a user logs in to the system or a user logs in through an X display manager The following files are read when starting a login shell: /etc/profile /etc/bash.bashrc For your own systemwide bash configurations, use the file /etc/bash.bashrc.local ~/.bashrc Configuration file in which users store their customizations 6

    7. SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop Administration bash Configuration Files (continued) Nonlogin shells The following files are read when starting a nonlogin shell: /etc/bash.bashrc /etc/bash.bashrc.local ~/.bashrc SLED has a default setup that ensures users do not see any difference between both types of shell To read in a changed configuration file and to apply the changes to the current session Use the internal shell source command 7

    8. SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop Administration Completion of Commands and Filenames The bash shell supports a function of completing commands and filenames Just enter the first characters of a command (or a filename) and press Tab If more than one possibility exists The bash shell shows all possibilities when you press Tab a second time 8

    9. SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop Administration History Function bash stores the commands you enter so you have easy access to them again when needed later By default, the commands are written in the .bash_history file in the user’s home directory You can display the content of the file by using the history command You can display the commands stored in the history cache (one at a time) by using the arrow keys Enter part of the command and press Ctrl+r To search the history list for matching commands and display them 9

    10. SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop Administration Objective 2—Get to Know Common Command-Line Tasks Two features make working with the bash shell more powerful: Variables Aliases 10

    11. SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop Administration Variables Environment variables Control the behavior of a program that is started from a shell Shell variables Control the behavior of the shell itself Some important environment variables include the following: PATH HOME USER 11

    12. SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop Administration Variables (continued) To display the value of a shell or environment variable, enter echo $variable To set the value of a variable or to create a new variable, use the syntax variable=value 12

    13. SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop Administration Aliases Allow you to create shortcuts for commands and their options Or to create commands with entirely different names You can find out about the aliases defined on your system with the alias command To see whether a given command is an alias for something else, use the type command 13

    14. SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop Administration Aliases (continued) Most of the aliases used on a systemwide basis are defined in the file /etc/bash.bashrc Aliases are defined with the alias command and can be removed with the unalias command Syntax for defining aliases: alias aliasname=‘‘command options’’ An alias defined in this way is only valid for the current shell To make an alias persistent, you need to store the definition in one of the shell’s configuration files 14

    15. SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop Administration Exercise 8-1: Execute Commands at the Command Line In this exercise, use the history feature of the shell Then create an alias labeled hello that prints a personal welcome message, Hello username, on the screen Finally, remove this alias 15

    16. SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop Administration Objective 3—Understand Command Syntax and Special Characters You can use specific characters to provide special functionality In this objective, you learn about the following: Select Your Character Encoding Name Expansion Using Search Patterns Prevent the Shell from Interpreting Special Characters 16

    17. SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop Administration Select Your Character Encoding Variables are used to determine the localization Use the locale command to get a list of the localization variables 17

    18. SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop Administration Select Your Character Encoding (continued) The variable LANG specifies the language SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop uses UTF-8 encoding for all users, except the user root The output of some commands depends on the type of encoding 18

    19. SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop Administration Name Expansion Using Search Patterns Occasionally, you might want to perform operations on a series of files without having to name all the files In this case, you could make use of the search patterns shown in Table 8-1 If search patterns (wildcards) are given on the command line The shell tries to compare these with the filenames in the file system and, if they match, the expression is replaced with all the filenames found 19

    20. SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop Administration 20 Name Expansion Using Search Patterns (continued)

    21. SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop Administration Prevent the Shell from Interpreting Special Characters To prevent the shell from interpreting special characters in the command line They must be “masked” by using the following: \ “…” ‘…’ 21

    22. SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop Administration Exercise 8-2: Work with Command Syntax and Special Characters In this exercise, you learn how to use wildcards and other special characters Change the character encoding from UTF-8 to POSIX Then, list all filenames in the /bin directory that: Start with the character a Consist of four characters Consist of four or more characters Do not start with any of the characters from a to r 22

    23. SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop Administration Exercise 8-2: Work with Command Syntax and Special Characters (continued) In the next part of this exercise, use the Nautilus file manager to create new files named My, File, and My File Then, list the files and remove them To do this, you have to mask special characters 23

    24. SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop Administration Objective 4—Get to Know Linux Text Editors Several text editors are available in Linux, including: vi emacs xemacs xedit gedit kwrite Two types of editors exist: Graphical editors Command-line editors 24

    25. SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop Administration Work with gedit (Graphical Editor) The gedit editor can be started from the main menu (Computer > More Applications > Tools > gedit) See Figure 8-1 25

    26. SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop Administration 26

    27. SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop Administration Work with vi (Command-Line Editor) The advantage of command-line editors You can use them without having a graphical desktop environment installed vi is used by most administrators because it is available on every Linux and UNIX system Always available, even on the rescue system In SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop, vim (vi improved) by Bram Moolenaar is the standard vi editor 27

    28. SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop Administration Start vi You can start vi by entering vi or vim in a terminal window See Figure 8-2 28

    29. SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop Administration 29

    30. SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop Administration Use the Editor vi You can move the cursor: With the k, j, h, and l keys (k–one line up, j–one line down, h–to the left, l–to the right) By using the arrow keys (Up-arrow, Down-arrow, Left-arrow, Right-arrow) 30

    31. SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop Administration Learn the Working Modes vi is mode-oriented When vi is first started, it is in command mode Anything you enter is considered a command To enter text, you must first switch the editor to insert mode by: Typing i (insert) Pressing the Insert key Press Esc once to take you back to command mode From command mode, you can switch to command-line mode by entering ‘‘:’’ 31

    32. SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop Administration Learn the Working Modes (continued) Available modes Command mode Insert mode Command-line mode 32

    33. SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop Administration 33 Learn the Working Modes (continued)

    34. SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop Administration 34 Learn the Working Modes (continued)

    35. SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop Administration Exercise 8-3: Use vi to Edit Files in the Linux System In this exercise, create a new vi_test file with the text editor vi Then, edit the text in the command mode of vi 35

    36. SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop Administration Summary After logging in to a Linux system, a login shell is started Although there are many shells available for use in Linux, the default shell is the Bourne Again Shell (bash) The bash shell is case-sensitive Several environment variables are loaded when a shell is started that is used by programs to set the user environment and locale Aliases are special shell variables that contain commands 36

    37. SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop Administration Summary (continued) Wildcards are special characters that can be used to represent patterns when specifying file or directory names on the file system Although many text-based and graphical text editors are available for Linux systems, the vi editor is the most commonly used editor across different distributions of Linux and versions of UNIX 37

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