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kubeadm
Flight Engineer Flight Engineer
Flight Engineer
  • 16.1K Views

What's your favorite tool/cmd in Linux?

The command "find" is one of my favorites -

Search for files in /search/path/  which are older than 5 days.

(if you want to search for directories, then use:   -type d )

find /search/path/ -type f -mtime +5 -print

find /search/path/ -type d -mtime +5 -print

If you want to do something with those files after you've found them, use:  -exec <somecmd> '{}' \; 

Example, delete files older than 50 days in the /search/path directory

find /search/path/ -type f -mtime +50 -exec rm '{}' \;

 

If only there is a 'find' equivalent in the real world ... now, where did I put my keys? 

Tags (2)
49 Replies
Susan
Flight Engineer Flight Engineer
Flight Engineer
  • 7,144 Views

I get more use out of grep either directly or in a pipe. The color option has really helped me identify my find and I am also a fan of the -A and -B options to show context. These display the matching line and the specfied number of lines After or Before. 

grep -i '^<directory' -A5 /etc/httpd/conf/httpd.conf

 

I also use a lot of cd - to flip back and forth between directories and CTR-r to search history.

 

TeachJohn
Cadet
Cadet
  • 6,973 Views

I agree with you. I love grep, especially  when filtering through a large amount of data using grep piped to grep with regular expressions. The -v option is great for eliminating lines that contain strings that are NOT included in the lines you are looking for. 

grep '^Apr 1 15:5[34].*ERROR' /var/log/messages | grep -v '[az0-9]\{32\}'

flozano
Moderator
Moderator
  • 7,125 Views

Hah, easye one: man

fuadar
Flight Engineer Flight Engineer
Flight Engineer
  • 7,120 Views

love man and how you can look up help anywhere with or without internet , Also  ps -ef has been by far my favorite followed by a kill -9

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Bishop
Cadet
Cadet
  • 6,856 Views


@fuadar wrote:

 ps -ef has been by far my favorite followed by a kill -9


pgrep and pkill are going to rock your world.

JAC
Cadet
Cadet
  • 6,788 Views

I recently discovered kill -15.

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mattikbk
Mission Specialist
Mission Specialist
  • 7,107 Views

Don't know about favorite, byt here's my most used commands from my bash history: ssh, nmcli, ls, sudo, cd, ansible, rm, rsync, cat, man, less, mv, curl, dnf, echo, scp, python, top, perl

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Scudder
Flight Engineer Flight Engineer
Flight Engineer
  • 6,887 Views

Apparently my own favorite is dnf. Lol.

25L/43U
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JamesM
Cadet
Cadet
  • 7,105 Views

Mine is not a command per se (at least not in the normal sense) but is the capabilities enabled by the pipe character. I've lost count how many ways I've been able to construct complex one-liners using the pipe character, to enormously beneficial effect.

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