Difference between revisions of "Kinky linux command-line"

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So the permissions for this ''Pictures'' directory are 755.
 
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Handy mental shortcuts for files:
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Handy mental shortcuts for directories:
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Revision as of 19:34, 8 July 2015

Graphical user interfaces (GUIs) are helpful for many tasks, but they box you in in the tasks the designer designed the GUI for. This is true to a certain extent for the command-line too, as it relies on the commands available. Still, some commands are so basic (close to the kernel), and come with many flags and options, or can be built on easily and be combined with other commands in shell scripts, that knowing the command-line and shell scripting is well worth the effort.

Farce of the Pinguins: A mockumentary that illuminates penguin survival and mating rituals, as well as one bird's search for love while on a 70-mile trek with his hedonistic buddies http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0488539/

Command Line Culture (CLC)

Some people use a Command Line Interface (CLI) extensively, and like it more than a GUI. After a ten-step program, they will admit something like, "I am a command line junkie, I like it far better than pointing and clicking. I have become addicted to the bash command, and the basic linux utilities. I find myself installing the basic GNU tools on any system I use. Heck I even installed cygnus-win on my windows gaming box. Mmmm... Command completion... Tasty!"

A only somewhat more sane version of that seems to be running a GUI and a command line at the same time and switching between the two depending on what needs doing. Usually things can be done faster with the command line, but there are situations, such as doing something with multiple directories, when a GUI is more efficient.

$ cd /insanely/long/directory/path/and/you/thought/you/were/there/yet/but/no/muhhahahaaa/aaaaah

Typing that tends to waste time, even when using that yummy command completion. When doing that same thing regularly with the GUI, that may get annoying too and scripting ensues. Goodbye ten step plan. :D

Since bodies and machines are often seen in opposition, I suggest that they are better perceived complementary in nature rather than antagonistic. For people who have never worked with command line computing on a standard *nix machine, – especially for people who are already conditioned to point and click methods cultivated by GUIs such as Windows OS or Mac OS – this involves sensitising procedures, (i.e. like one may endure with any new instrumental skill acquisition) for the operation of code as a series of interrelated programs. I will discuss how using the command line interface may be seen to possibly co-constitute one another in everyday life, operating as fields of embodied reflection. [1]

A lof of commands in linux are named as an abbreviation of a word or words describing them. This makes it easier to remember them.

Getting started

Man

Bash shells come with a very useful utility called man, short for manual files or manual pages. It gives a standardised format for documenting the purpose and usage of most of the utilities, libraries, and system calls https://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/. For documentation other than man pages, see the Linux Documentation Project site http://www.tldp.org/.

The manual pages are a set of pages that explain every command available on your system including what they do, the specifics of how you run them and what command line arguments they accept. They are fairly consistent in their structure so you can easily get the hang of it. Start up a console or terminal and invoke the manual pages with the following command:

$ man [command]

For example:

$ man grep
Man-grep.png

A few notes

Case sensitivity is very important and a common source of problems for people new to Linux. Other systems such as M$ windows are case insensitive when it comes to referring to files. Linux is not like this. As such it is possible to have two or more files and directories with the same name but letters of different case.

Everything is a file

Everything in linux can be viewed as a file:

  • regular files are documents, images, archives, recordings, directories (just a file containing names of other files) …
  • (character and block) device files give you access to hardware components
  • named pipes and sockets give access points for processes to communicate with each other
  • (hard and soft) links make a file accessible from different locations

Navigation

With pwd (present working directory) you can see your location in the file structure.

$ pwd 
/home/user
$

With ls (list) you can see what is in a location:

$ ls [options] [location]

For example:

$ ls -l /home/user
total 20
drwxr-xr-x 2 user user 4096 Jun 17 14:39 Desktop
drwxr-xr-x 2 user user 4096 Jul  2 00:45 Documents
drwxr-xr-x 4 user user 4096 Jul  2 00:46 Pictures

The result lines explained

  • The first character on a result line indicates whether it is a normal file (-) or a directory (d).
  • The next 9 characters are permissions for the file or directory. More on that in file permissions below.
  • A character representing the number of blocks.
  • The field following that is the owner of the file or directory (user in this case).
  • The group the file or directory belongs to (user)
  • File size
  • File modification time
  • Name of the file or directory

For more explanation on and examples of using ls do:

$ man ls

When referring to either a file or directory on the command line, like with /home/user in the ls example, we are referring to a path, a description of a route to get to a particular file or directory on the system. The linux file system is a hierarchical with at the very top of the structure a directory called the root directory denoted by a single slash ( / ). It has subdirectories and the subdirectories have subdirectories and so on. Files may reside in any of these directories.

Paths can be absolute or relative:

  • Absolute paths specify a location (file or directory) in relation to the root directory and begin with a /
  • Relative paths specify a location (file or directory) in relation to where you currently are in the system and do not begin with a /

More building blocks:

  • ~ (tilde), a shortcut for your home directory. For example /home/user/Pictures and ~/Pictures both refer to the Pictures folder in the home directory of user.
  • . (dot), a reference to your current directory. For example, ./Pictures refers to the same directory.
  • .. (dotdot), a reference to the parent directory. You can use this several times in a path to keep going up the hierarchy. If you are in the location the path /home/user refers to, you could run the command ls ../../ and this would return a listing of the root directory.

In order to move around in the system you can use a command called cd (change directory):

$ cd [location]

Typing out these paths can become tedious. Not to mention my typos. Yessss. Tab Completion. When you start typing a path and hit the Tab key on your keyboard at any time you will invoke an auto complete action. If nothing happens then that means there are several possibilities. If you hit Tab again it will show you those possibilities. You can continue typing and hit Tab again and it will again try to auto complete for you.

File manipulation

From the command line, there are many ways to create, find and list different types of files.

In systems such as M$ Windows the extension is important and the system uses it to determine what type of file it is. In linux the system ignores extensions and looks inside the file to determine what type of file it is. So sometimes it can be hard to know for certain what type of file a particular file is. You can determine the type of a file with the file command:

$ file privatelyinvestigating.wordpress.2015-05-02.xml 
privatelyinvestigating.wordpress.2015-05-02.xml: XML document text

With cp (copy) you can copy files and directories:

$ cp [options] [filename] [filename]

For example:

$ cp -u *.png /home/user/Pictures/

Will copy all files in the current directory with extension .png to the Pictures directory in the home directory of user.

With mv (move) you can move or rename files and directories. To rename a file, use like this:

$ mv [filename1] [filename2]

To move a file, use like this:

$ mv [filename1] [directory]

To move files, use like this:

$ mv [filename1] [filename2] [directory]

With rm (remove) you can remove files and directories. Linux does not have an undelete command. Once you delete something with rm, it's gone. You can inflict horrifying damage on your system with rm if you are not careful, particularly with wildcards such as *.

To remove a file:

$ rm [filename]

To remove directories:

$ rm -r [filename]

And with mkdir (make directory) you can create directories:

$ mkdir [directory]

File permissions

Unix-like operating systems differ from other computing systems in that they are not only multitasking but also multi-user. The multi-user capability of Unix-like systems is a feature that is deeply ingrained into the design of the *nix operating system. In the environment in which Unix was created, this makes perfect sense, and now, with the internet, this makes perfect sense again. In the beginning, computers were large, expensive, and centralised, access was by terminals and The Computer would support many users at the same time, as does the internet. A method had to be devised to protect users from each other.

In linux, each file and directory is assigned access rights for the owner of the file, the members of a group of related users, and everybody else. Rights can be assigned to read a file, to write a file, and to execute a file (run the file as a program). There are two ways to specify the permissions.

To see the permission settings for a file or directory, use the ls -l command (see above in Navigation):

drwxr-xr-x 4 user user 4096 Jul  2 00:46 Pictures

The ls -l output lines start with a (d) or a (-) and the next nine are for permissions. By translating drwxr-xr-x to 1's and 0's for "turned on" indicated by a letter, and "turned off" indicated by a (-), then translating the resulting binary number (subscript 2) to octal notation (subscript 8), you can move between the two types of permission specification:

d r w x r w x r w x
   Owner Group Other
Directory Read Write Execute Read Write Execute Read Write Execute
1 1 1 1 1 0 1 1 0 1
7 5 5

For owner, rwx = 1112 = 20 + 21 + 22 = 1 + 2 + 4 = 78

For group and other, r-x = 1012 = 20 + 22 = 1 + 4 = 58

So the permissions for this Pictures directory are 755.

Handy file permissions mental shortcuts

777

(rwxrwxrwx) No restrictions on permissions. Anybody may do anything. Generally not a desirable setting.

755

(rwxr-xr-x) The file's owner may read, write, and execute the file. All others may read and execute the file. This setting is common for programs that are used by all users.

700

(rwx------) The file's owner may read, write, and execute the file. Nobody else has any rights. This setting is useful for programs that only the owner may use and must be kept private from others.

666

(rw-rw-rw-) All users may read and write the file. But not execute.

644

(rw-r--r--) The owner may read and write a file, while all others may only read the file. A common setting for data files that everybody may read, but only the owner may change.

600

(rw-------) The owner may read and write a file. All others have no rights. A common setting for data files that the owner wants to keep private.

Handy directory permissions mental shortcuts

777

(rwxrwxrwx) No restrictions on permissions. Anybody may list files, create new files in the directory and delete files in the directory. Generally not a good setting.

755

(rwxr-xr-x) The directory owner has full access. All others may list the directory, but cannot create files nor delete them. This setting is common for directories that you wish to share with other users.

700

(rwx------) The directory owner has full access. Nobody else has any rights. This setting is useful for directories that only the owner may use and must be kept private from others.

With chmod you can modify access rights to a file:

$ chmod [permissions] [filename]

With su (super user) or sudo (as superuser do) you can temporarily become the superuser:

$ su 

You can get out with exit:

$ exit

In mint and ubuntu you do not have root access. It is as if it doesn't exist. Out-of-the-box you can use sudo. On a server you can perhaps use sudo su.

$ sudo

As if, because it does exist.

With chown (change ownership) you can change file ownership:

$ chown

With chgrp (change group) you can change a file's group ownership:

$ chgrp

Input/Output redirection

I/O redirection is one of the easiest things to master. It allows for combining different utilities effectively. For example, you may want to search through the output from nmap or tcpdump or a key-logger by feeding its output to another file or program for further analysis.

Regular expressions

Network connections

Process management (job control)

Shell scripting

Network connections

Reconnaissance

Reverse engineering

Network exploitation and monitoring

  1. Linux for Theatre Makers: Embodiment and *nix modus operandi http://networkcultures.org/blog/2007/04/23/linux-for-theatre-makers-embodiment-and-nix-modus-operandi/