Linux Training Academy
About Products Books Linux for Beginners Resources Video Training Courses
Linux Commands Cheat Sheet
Please Share!
Share LinkedIn Tweet Pin 308
SHARES
Did you know that there are literally hundreds of Linux commands? Even on a bare-bones Linux
server install there are easily over 1,000 different commands.
The interesting thing is that most people only need to use a very small subset of those
commands. Below you’ll find a Linux “cheat sheet” that breaks down some of the most
commonly used commands by category.
To get your own PDF and printable copy scroll to the bottom of the page
To get your own PDF and printable copy, scroll to the bottom of the page.
Enjoy!
Contents [hide]
1 – SYSTEM INFORMATION
2 – HARDWARE INFORMATION
3 – PERFORMANCE MONITORING AND STATISTICS
4 – USER INFORMATION AND MANAGEMENT
5 – FILE AND DIRECTORY COMMANDS
6 – PROCESS MANAGEMENT
7 – FILE PERMISSIONS
8 – NETWORKING
9 – ARCHIVES (TAR FILES)
10 – INSTALLING PACKAGES
11 – SEARCH
12 – SSH LOGINS
13 – FILE TRANSFERS
14 – DISK USAGE
15 – DIRECTORY NAVIGATION
1 – SYSTEM INFORMATION
# Display Linux system information
uname -a
# Display kernel release information
uname -r
# Show which version of Red Hat installed
cat /etc/redhat-release
# Show how long the system has been running + load
uptime
# Show system host name
hostname
# Display all local IP addresses of the host.
hostname -I
# Show system reboot history
last reboot
# Show the current date and time
date
# Show this month's calendar
cal
# Display who is online
w
# Who you are logged in as
whoami
2 – HARDWARE INFORMATION
# Display messages in kernel ring buffer
dmesg
# Display CPU information
cat /proc/cpuinfo
# Display memory information
cat /proc/meminfo
# Display free and used memory ( -h for human readable, -m for MB, -g for GB.)
free -h
# Display PCI devices
lspci -tv
# Display USB devices
lsusb -tv
# Display DMI/SMBIOS (hardware info) from the BIOS
dmidecode
# Show info about disk sda
hdparm -i /dev/sda
# Perform a read speed test on disk sda
hdparm -tT /dev/sda
# Test for unreadable blocks on disk sda
badblocks -s /dev/sda
3 – PERFORMANCE MONITORING AND STATISTICS
# Display and manage the top processes
top
# Interactive process viewer (top alternative)
htop
# Display processor related statistics
mpstat 1
# Display virtual memory statistics
vmstat 1
# Display I/O statistics
iostat 1
# Display the last 100 syslog messages (Use /var/log/syslog for Debian based systems.)
tail -100 /var/log/messages
# Capture and display all packets on interface eth0
tcpdump -i eth0
# Monitor all traffic on port 80 ( HTTP )
tcpdump -i eth0 'port 80'
# List all open files on the system
lsof
# List files opened by user
lsof -u user
# Display free and used memory ( -h for human readable, -m for MB, -g for GB.)
free -h
# Execute "df -h", showing periodic updates
watch df -h
4 – USER INFORMATION AND MANAGEMENT
4 – USER INFORMATION AND MANAGEMENT
# Display the user and group ids of your current user.
id
# Display the last users who have logged onto the system.
last
# Show who is logged into the system.
who
# Show who is logged in and what they are doing.
w
# Create a group named "test".
groupadd test
# Create an account named john, with a comment of "John Smith" and create the user's
home directory.
useradd -c "John Smith" -m john
# Delete the john account.
userdel john
# Add the john account to the sales group
usermod -aG sales john
5 – FILE AND DIRECTORY COMMANDS
# List all files in a long listing (detailed) format
ls -al
# Display the present working directory
pwd
# Create a directory
mkdir directory
# Remove (delete) file
rm file
# Remove the directory and its contents recursively
rm -r directory
# Force removal of file without prompting for confirmation
rm -f file
# Forcefully remove directory recursively
rm -rf directory
# Copy file1 to file2
cp file1 file2
# Copy source_directory recursively to destination. If destination exists, copy
source_directory into destination, otherwise create destination with the contents of
source_directory.
cp -r source_directory destination
# Rename or move file1 to file2. If file2 is an existing directory, move file1 into directory
file2
mv file1 file2
# Create symbolic link to linkname
ln -s /path/to/file linkname
# Create an empty file or update the access and modification times of file.
touch file
# View the contents of file
cat file
# Browse through a text file
less file
# Display the first 10 lines of file
head file
# Di l th l t 10 li f fil
# Display the last 10 lines of file
tail file
# Display the last 10 lines of file and "follow" the file as it grows.
tail -f file
6 – PROCESS MANAGEMENT
# Display your currently running processes
ps
# Display all the currently running processes on the system.
ps -ef
# Display process information for processname
ps -ef | grep processname
# Display and manage the top processes
top
# Interactive process viewer (top alternative)
htop
# Kill process with process ID of pid
kill pid
p
# Kill all processes named processname
killall processname
# Start program in the background
program &
# Display stopped or background jobs
bg
# Brings the most recent background job to foreground
fg
# Brings job n to the foreground
fg n
7 – FILE PERMISSIONS
PERMISSION EXAMPLE
U G W
rwx rwx rwx chmod 777 filename
rwx rwx r-x chmod 775 filename
rwx r-x r-x chmod 755 filename
rw- rw- r-- chmod 664 filename
rw- r-- r-- chmod 644 filename
# NOTE: Use 777 sparingly!
LEGEND
U = User
G = Group
W = World
r = Read
w = write
x = execute
- = no access
8 – NETWORKING
# Display all network interfaces and IP address
ip a
# Display eth0 address and details
ip addr show dev eth0
# Query or control network driver and hardware settings
ethtool eth0
# Send ICMP echo request to host
ping host
# Display whois information for domain
whois domain
# Display DNS information for domain
dig domain
# Reverse lookup of IP_ADDRESS
dig -x IP_ADDRESS
# Display DNS IP address for domain
host domain
# Display the network address of the host name.
hostname -i
# Display all local IP addresses of the host.
hostname -I
# Download http://domain.com/file
wget http://domain.com/file
# Display listening tcp and udp ports and corresponding programs
netstat -nutlp
9 – ARCHIVES (TAR FILES)
# Create tar named archive.tar containing directory.
tar cf archive.tar directory
# Extract the contents from archive.tar.
tar xf archive.tar
# Create a gzip compressed tar file name archive.tar.gz.
tar czf archive.tar.gz directory
# Extract a gzip compressed tar file.
tar xzf archive.tar.gz
g
# Create a tar file with bzip2 compression
tar cjf archive.tar.bz2 directory
# Extract a bzip2 compressed tar file.
tar xjf archive.tar.bz2
10 – INSTALLING PACKAGES
# Search for a package by keyword.
yum search keyword
# Install package.
yum install package
# Display description and summary information about package.
yum info package
# Install package from local file named package.rpm
rpm -i package.rpm
# Remove/uninstall package.
yum remove package
# Install software from source code.
tar zxvf sourcecode.tar.gz
g
cd sourcecode
./configure
make
make install
11 – SEARCH
# Search for pattern in file
grep pattern file
# Search recursively for pattern in directory
grep -r pattern directory
# Find files and directories by name
locate name
# Find files in /home/john that start with "prefix".
find /home/john -name 'prefix*'
# Find files larger than 100MB in /home
find /home -size +100M
12 – SSH LOGINS
# Connect to host as your local username.
ssh host
# Connect to host as user
ssh user@host
# Connect to host using port
ssh -p port user@host
13 – FILE TRANSFERS
# Secure copy file.txt to the /tmp folder on server
scp file.txt server:/tmp
# Copy *.html files from server to the local /tmp folder.
scp server:/var/www/*.html /tmp
# Copy all files and directories recursively from server to the current system's /tmp
folder.
scp -r server:/var/www /tmp
# Synchronize /home to /backups/home
rsync -a /home /backups/
# Synchronize files/directories between the local and remote system with compression
enabled
rsync -avz /home server:/backups/
14 – DISK USAGE
# Show free and used space on mounted filesystems
df -h
# Show free and used inodes on mounted filesystems
df -i
# Display disks partitions sizes and types
fdisk -l
# Display disk usage for all files and directories in human readable format
du -ah
# Display total disk usage off the current directory
du -sh
15 – DIRECTORY NAVIGATION
# To go up one level of the directory tree. (Change into the parent directory.)
cd ..
# Go to the $HOME directory
cd
# Change to the /etc directory
g y
cd /etc
Download My Linux Cheat Sheet!
Enter your email address below to download this Linux command line cheat sheet in an easy-to-
read and ready-to-print format.
Your Best Email Address
Send me my cheat sheet >
We respect your privacy.
Related Posts:
Linux ip Command Networking Cheat Sheet
Vim Cheat Sheet
Managing Linux Users and Groups
How to Find Any File or Command on a Linux System
Filed Under: blog — Tagged With: CentOS, cheat sheet, Command Line, Linux, RedHat, Server, Shell Scripting,
SSH, Ubuntu
M tP l
Most Popular
Linux Commands Cheat Sheet
Linux ip Command Networking Cheat
Sheet
Vim Cheat Sheet
Linux System Administrator Projects
1,500 Coding Project Ideas
Recent Linux Articles
CentOS is dead, long live CentOS!
Linux System Administrator and
DevOps Interview Questions
Q & A on Linux Career, Certification and
Online Courses
Linux Sed Command Tutorial
What It Takes to Become a Successful
Linux Administrator
Topics
Arch Linux Careers CentOS cheat
sheet Cloud Command
Line Debian Desktop DevOps
Fedora File System FTP Gentoo
Installation Interviewing Jobs
Linux Linux Certifications Linux Mint
Mageia MySQL Nginx OpenSuse
Programming Python RedHat SCP Sed
Server Shell Scripting
Slackware SSH Text Editors Ubuntu
Vagrant Video vim VirtualBox Web
Hosting Windows
Linux Cheat Sheet Download
Enter your email address below to
download this Linux command line
cheat sheet in an easy-to-read and
ready-to-print format.
Your Best Email Address
Send me my cheat sheet >
© 2021 · Linux Training Academy
Privacy Policy