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My top terminal commands

Rembrandt Reyes (He/Him) on August 03, 2020

I was recently watching a video that was walking beginners through terminal commands and they listed over 50 commands that you should use. 50!? Who...
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Vlastimil Pospichal • Edited
  • vim - to edit anything
  • sed - to filter and update
  • awk - to manage table data
  • alias - to create own command acronyms
  • git - to version controll
  • find - to search files
  • make - to run tasks
  • xmllint, xsltproc, xqilla, xmlstarlet - to working with XML
  • jq - to working with JSON
  • php, python3, gcc, clisp, bc, octave ... compilers and interpreters
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Rembrandt Reyes (He/Him)

vim, alias, & git are ones I use often as well. Can't say the same for the other two (awk & sed)

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Vlastimil Pospichal

They are very useful for working with huge files.

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Hamza Jadid

history | grep "search text"

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Tanami

no love for find? it's so powerful!

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Rembrandt Reyes (He/Him)

I have honestly rarely/never used it 😂

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Wicked

Ive been making a lot of use out of these commands lately: (I'll admit they might not be a frequent use type of command but helpful to know)

ps -elf 
top

The first to check if prcoesses im expecting to run are running. Sometimes combined with a grep to search for a specific part of a command. And then top to see what kinda usage those processes are producing.

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Rembrandt Reyes (He/Him)

👏 Don't use these often, but they do come in handy.

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Marcell Cruz

Great article, my favorite

grep -ril 'search_string' ./folder

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Rembrandt Reyes (He/Him)

One of my favorite commands lsof -nP -i4TCP | grep LISTEN to see what open connections I have.

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David Cantrell

In order from most- to least-used, the top 20 on one of my machines are ...

mutt, ps, ls, cd, ssh, vi, ping, find, host, grep, which, rm, cat, nslookup, man, history, whois, tree, touch, mount, ...

... and that's ignoring everything that's used from within any of my own scripts, and only counting the first command on a line, it ignores anything that might follow in a pipeline such as awk, sed, sort, uniq, tac, head, tail, cut, ...

... and that also ignores anything used in development (which I generally do on a different machine) such as git, cc, make, perl, python, go, ...

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Rembrandt Reyes (He/Him)

Yeah if I introduce development commands then git would be the number 1 command that I use.

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Peter Vivo

history 0 | grep "..."

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Ali Abbas

cd, clear, touch, ls, rm they are the most used

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Fairen

Greate summary !
You could also use fasd to replace cd and use tail -f <some_file> when the file is too long for cat.

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Rembrandt Reyes (He/Him)

Interesting command, thanks for the share!

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Akram Narejo

it's very few bro but again it's good that u have shared.