cd
: This command is used to change current working directory.
cd ~
: Changes directory to home directory.
cd
: Changes directory to home directory.
cd <dirname>
: Changes directory to the directory dirname
.
pwd
: This command prints the current working directory.
echo <string>
: This command prints the string we give as argument.
ls
: Lists files and directories. Supports flags-
ls -a
: Shows hidden files too.
ls -l
: Long listing of files and directories. Displays some of their characteristics.
ls -al
: Displays all files(including hidden files) in long listing format.
ls ~
: Displays alll files in home directory.
ls .
: Same as ls
.
ls ..
: Displays files of parent directory of current directory.
<process> &
: Takes the current process being executed to the background i.e. the terminal does not
wait for it to finish and continues taking input from user.
Ex: emacs &
pinfo <pid>
: Displays process information about the process that spawned the shell if pid not given else
displays process information about process with process id pid.
nightswatch <options> <command>
:
Options :
-n seconds
: The time interval in which to execute the command (periodically).
Commands :
newborn
: Displays pid of the newest process spawned by the computer.
interrupt
: Displays how many times the Computer was interrupted by the keyboard controller.
The results are displayed till key q is pressed.
history <num>
: Displays past 20 commands typed in by the user if num not given else displays past num
commands.
setenv <var> <val>
: Creates environment variable var
with value val
.
unsetenv <var>
: Unsets environment variable var
.
jobs
: Displays all background jobs spawned by the shell along with their state. State can be either Running or Stopped.
kjob <job number> <signal number>
: Sends signal corresponding to signal number
to background job with
job number job number
.
fg <job number>
: Brings the job with job id job number
to the foreground from background.
bg <job number>
: Changes state of job with job id job number
to Running in background.
overkill
: Kills all the jobs running the background spawned by the shell.
quit
: Exits the terminal.
Supports signal handling
: CNTRL-C and CNTRL-Z. Terminates process when CNTRL-C is pressed. Stops the execution of the
process and moves it to the background if CNTRL-Z is pressed.
Supports piping and redirection
: Input, output and error can be redirected to desired files using <, >, >>
. Output
of one process can be given as input to another using |
operator.
Example: ls | wc -l > d.txt
./a.out < d.txt >> ans.txt
To clear the .o files, enter command make clean
.
To run the terminal, first compile the code by make
and then execute it by ./exe
.