If you are looking for how to change the time please refer to date here: Section 8.1.
time is a utility to measure the amount of time it takes a program to execute. It also measures CPU usage and displays statistics.
Use time -v (verbose mode) to display even more detailed statistics about the particular program.
Example usage:
time program_name options |
The files under the /proc (process information pseudo file-system) show various information about the system. Consider it a window to the information that the kernel uses.
For example:
cat /proc/cpuinfo |
Displays information about the CPU.
less /proc/modules |
Use the above command to view information about what kernel-modules are loaded on your system.
dmesg can be used to print (or control) the “ kernel ring buffer”. dmesg is generally used to print the contents of your bootup messages displayed by the kernel. This is often useful when debugging problems.
Simply type:
dmesg |
Displays information about the space on mounted file-systems. Use the -h option to have df list the space in a 'human readable' format. ie. if there are 1024 kilobytes left (approximately) then df will say there is 1MB left.
Command syntax:
df -options /dev/hdx |
The latter part is optional, you can simply use df with or without options to list space on all file-systems.
Displays information on which users are logged into the system including the time they logged in.
Command syntax:
who |
Displays information on who is logged into the system and what they are doing (ie. the processes they are running). It's similar to who but displays slightly different information.
Command syntax:
w |
Very similar to who except it only prints out the user names who are currently logged in. (Doesn't need or take any options).
Command syntax:
users |
Displays records of when various users have logged in or out. This includes information on when the computer was rebooted.
To execute this simply type:
last |
Displays a list of users and what day/time they logged into the system.
Simply type:
lastlog |
Tells the user who they are currently logged in as, this is normally the usename they logged in with but can be changed with commands like su). whoami does not need or take any options.
Simply type:
whoami |
Displays memory statistics (total, free, used, cached, swap). Use the -t option to display totals of everything and use the -m to display memory in megabytes.
Example:
free -tm |
This will display the memory usage including totals in megabytes.
Print how long the computer has been “up”, how long the computer has been running. It also displays the number of users and the processor load (how hard the CPU has been working...).
The w command | |
---|---|
The w command displays the output of the uptime command when you run this command. You could use the w command instead of uptime. |
uname is used to print information on the system such as OS type, kernel version et cetera.
Some uname options:
-a --- print all the available information.
-m --- print only information related to the machine itself.
-n --- print only the machine hostname.
-r --- print the release number of the current kernel.
-s --- print the operating system name
-p --- print the processor type.
Command syntax:
uname -options |
Note that xargs is an advanced, confusing, yet powerful command. xargs is a command used to run other commands as many times as necessary, this way it prevents any kind of overload... When you run a command then add a “| xargs command2”. The results of command1 will be passed to command2, possibly on a line-by-line basis or something similar.
Understanding xargs tends to be very difficult and my explanation is not the best. Refer to the examples below or try [6] of the Bibliography for another xargs tutorial.
Alternatives to using xargs | |
---|---|
Please note that the below explanation of xargs is not the strongest (at the time of writing I could not find anything better :()). Alternatives may include writing a simple bash script to do the job which is not the most difficult task in the world. |
Examples:
ls | xargs grep work |
The first command is obvious, it will list the files in the current directory. For each line of output of ls, xargs will run grep on that particular line and look for the string “work”. The output have the each time grep is executed on a new line, the output would look like:
file_name: results_of_grep |
If grep didn't find the word then there would be no output if it had an error then it will output the error. Obviously this isn't very useful (you could just do:
grep 'word' * |
This is just a simple example...
xargs also takes various options:
-nx --- will group the first x commands together
-lx --- xargs will execute the command for every x number of lines of input
-p --- prompt whether or not to execute this particular string
-t --- (tell) be verbose, echo each command before performing it
-i --- will use substitution similar to find's -exec option, it will execute certain commands on something.
Example:
ls dir1 | xargs -i mv dir1/'{}' dir2/'{}' |
The {} would be substituted for the current input (in this example the current file/directory) listed within the directory. The above command would move every file listed in dir1 to dir2. Obviously this command won't be too useful, it would be easier to go to dir1 and type mv * ../dir2
Here is a more useful example:
\ls *.wav | xargs -i lame -h '{}' '{}'.mp3 |
This would find all wave files within the current directory and convert them to mp3 files (encoded with lame) and append a “.mp3” to the end of the filename, unfortunately it doesn't remove the .wav and so its not too useful...but it works.