| 123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960616263646566676869707172737475767778798081828384858687888990919293949596979899100101102103104105106107108109110111112113114115116117118119120121122123124125126127128129130131132133134135136137138139140141142143144145146147148149150151152153154155156157158159160161162163164165166167168169170171172173174175176177178179180181182183184185186187188189190191192193194195196197198199200201202203204205206207208209210211212213214215216217218219220221222223224225226227228229230231232233234235236237238239240241242 | <sect2><title> </title><para> </para></sect2><sect2><title>Short descriptions</title><para><command>basename</command> strips any path and a given suffix fromthe given file name.</para><para><command>cat</command> concatenates files to standard output.</para><para><command>chgrp</command> changes the group ownership of each givenfile to the given group. The group can be either given a a name or a numericID.</para><para><command>chmod</command> changes the permissions of each given fileto the given mode. The mode can be either a symbolic representation of thechanges to make, or an octal number representing the new permissions.</para><para><command>chown</command> changes the user and/or group ownership ofeach given file to the given user:group pair.</para><para><command>chroot</command> runs a given command with the specifieddirectory as the <filename>/</filename> directory. The given command can be aninteractive shell. On most systems only <emphasis>root</emphasis> can dothis.</para><para><command>cksum</command> prints the CRC checksum and the bytecounts of each specified file.</para><para><command>comm</command> compares two sorted files, outputting inthree columns the lines that are unique, and the lines that are common.</para><para><command>cp</command> copies files.</para><para><command>csplit</command> splits a given file into several new files,separating them according to given patterns or line numbers, and outputtingthe byte count of each new file.</para><para><command>cut</command> prints parts of lines, selecting the partsaccording to given fields or positions.</para><para><command>date</command> displays the current time in the givenformat, or sets the system date.</para><para><command>dd</command> copies a file using the given blocksize andcount, while optionally performing conversions on it.</para><para><command>df</command> reports the amount of disk space available(and used) on all mounted filesystems, or only on the filesystems holding thegiven files.</para><para><command>dir</command> is the same as ls.</para><para><command>dircolors</command> outputs commands to set the LS_COLORenvironment variable, to change the color scheme used by ls.</para><para><command>dirname</command> strips the non-directory suffix froma given file name.</para><para><command>du</command> reports the amount of disk space used by thecurrent directory, or by each of the given directories including all theirsubdirectories, or by each of the given files.</para><para><command>echo</command> displays the given strings.</para><para><command>env</command> runs a command in a modified environment.</para><para><command>expand</command> converts tabs to spaces.</para><para><command>expr</command> evaluates expressions.</para><para><command>factor</command> prints the prime factors of all specifiedinteger numbers.</para><para><command>false</command> does nothing, unsuccessfully. It alwaysexits with a status code indicating failure.</para><para><command>fmt</command> reformats the paragraphs in the given files.</para><para><command>fold</command> wraps the lines in the given files.</para><para><command>groups</command> reports a user's group memberships.</para><para><command>head</command> prints the first ten lines (or the givennumber of lines) of each given file.</para><para><command>hostid</command> reports the numeric identifier(in hexadecimal) of the host.</para><para><command>hostname</command> reports or sets the name of thehost.</para><para><command>id</command> reports the effective user ID, group ID, andgroup memberships of the current user, or of a given user.</para><para><command>install</command> copies files while setting theirpermission modes and, if possible, their owner and group.</para><para><command>join</command> joins from two files the lines that haveidentical join fields.</para><para><command>kill</command> terminates the given process.</para><para><command>link</command> creates a hard link with the given nameto the given file.</para><para><command>ln</command> makes hard links or soft links between files.</para><para><command>logname</command> reports the current user's login name.</para><para><command>ls</command> lists the contents of each given directory.By default it orders the files and subdirectories alphabetically.</para><para><command>md5sum</command> reports or checks MD5 checksums.</para><para><command>mkdir</command> creates directories with the given names.</para><para><command>mkfifo</command> creates FIFOs with the given names.</para><para><command>mknod</command> creates device nodes with the given names.A device node is a character special file, or a block special file, or a FIFO.</para><para><command>mv</command> moves or renames files or directories.</para><para><command>nice</command> runs a program with modified scheduling priority.</para><para><command>nl</command> numbers the lines from the given files.</para><para><command>nohup</command> runs a command immune to hangups, withoutput redirected to a log file.</para><para><command>od</command> dumps files in octal and other formats.</para><para><command>paste</command> merges the given files, joiningsequentially corresponding lines side by side, separated by TABs.</para><para><command>pathchk</command> checks whether file names are validor portable.</para><para><command>pinky</command> is a lightweight finger. It reportssome information about the given users.</para><para><command>pr</command> paginates and columnates files for printing.</para><para><command>printenv</command> prints the environment.</para><para><command>printf</command> prints the given arguments according to thegiven format -- much like the C printf function.</para><para><command>ptx</command> produces from the contents of the given filesa permuted index, with each keyword in its context.</para><para><command>pwd</command> reports the name of the current directory.</para><para><command>readlink</command> reports the value of the given symboliclink.</para><para><command>rm</command> removes files or directories.</para><para><command>rmdir</command> removes directories, if they are empty.</para><para><command>seq</command> prints a sequence of numbers, within a givenrange and with a given increment.</para><para><command>sha1sum</command> prints or checks 160-bit SHA1checksums.</para><para><command>shred</command> overwrites the given files repeatedly withstrange patterns, to make it real hard to recover the data.</para><para><command>sleep</command> pauses for the given amount of time.</para><para><command>sort</command> sorts the lines from the given files.</para><para><command>split</command> splits the given file into pieces, by sizeor by number of lines.</para><para><command>stty</command> sets or reports terminal line settings.</para><para><command>su</command> runs a shell with substitute user and group IDs.</para><para><command>sum</command> prints checksum and block counts for eachgiven file.</para><para><command>sync</command> flushes filesystem buffers. It forceschanged blocks to disk and updates the super block.</para><para><command>tac</command> concatenates the given files in reverse.</para><para><command>tail</command> prints the last ten lines (or the givennumber of lines) of each given file.</para><para><command>tee</command> reads from standard input while writing bothto standard output and to the given files.</para><para><command>test</command> compares values and checks file types.</para><para><command>touch</command> changes file timestamps, setting the accessand modification times of the given files to the current time. Files that donot exist are created with zero length.</para><para><command>tr</command> translates, squeezes, and deletes the givencharacters from standard input.</para><para><command>true</command> does nothing, successfully. It always exitswith a status code indicating success.</para><para><command>tsort</command> performs a topological sort. It writes atotally ordered list according to the partial ordering in a given file.</para><para><command>tty</command> reports the file name of the terminalconnected to standard input.</para><para><command>uname</command> reports system information.</para><para><command>unexpand</command> converts spaces to tabs.</para><para><command>uniq</command> discards all but one of successiveidentical lines.</para><para><command>unlink</command> removes the given file.</para><para><command>uptime</command> reports how long the system has beenrunning, how many users are logged on, and the system load averages.</para><para><command>users</command> reports the names of the users currentlylogged on.</para><para><command>vdir</command> is the same as ls -l.</para><para><command>wc</command> reports the number of lines, words, and bytesfor each given file, and a total line when more than one file is given.</para><para><command>who</command> reports who is logged on.</para><para><command>whoami</command> reports the user name associated with thecurrent effective user ID.</para><para><command>yes</command> outputs 'y' or a given string repeatedly,until killed.</para></sect2>
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