Astuces tips - ligne de commande unix - modification des droits d’access/permissions

Posted on mars 31st, 2007 by Océane.
Categories: Non classé.

changer les permissions de plusieurs répertoires
exemple:

find . -type d -print -exec chmod 755 {} \;

changer les permissions de plusieurs fichiers

exemple:

find . -type f -print -exec chmod 644 {} \;

C’est plutôt simple …

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Commandes de base avec ssh

Posted on janvier 26th, 2007 by Océane.
Categories: Non classé.

Voila une compilation des commandes les plus utilisées en ssh ou avec le shell linux(bash), elles sont regroupées par nom,description et exemple. Bien entendu cette liste n’est pas exaustive
Commandes SSH ou commandes les plus utilisées avec le shell linux.
ls : liste les fichiers/répertoire dans un répertoire donné, comparable à la commande dir de windows/dos.
ls -al : liste tous les fichiers(les fichiers cachés sont inclus), répertoires, et tous les attributs de ses fichiers/répertoires.

cd : changer de répertoire · · cd /usr/local/apache : vous vous déplacer dans le répertoire /usr/local/apache/

Exemples:

cd ~ : vous allez dans votre r´pertoire home
cd - : vous allez dans le dernier répertoire où vous étiez
cd .. : remonte d’un répertoire dans l’architecture de votre système de fichier

cat : affiche le contenu d’un fichier sur l’ecran

Exemple:
cat nomdefichier.txt : cat affiche le contenu du fichier nomdefichier.txt sur l’ecran

chmod: modifie les droits d’accès à un fichier ou répertoire donné. Leur valeur se lie ou s’entend de gauche vers la droite:
UTILISATEUR - GROUPE - TOUTLEMONDE

0 = — Aucun droit
1 = –X droit d’exécution seulement
2 = -W- droit d’écriture seulement
3 = -WX droit décriture et d’execution
4 = R– droit de lecture seulement
5 = R-X droit de lecture et d’exécution
6 = RW- droit de lecture et d’écriture
7 = RWX droit de lecture, d’écriture et d’execution
Utilisation:
chmod numerodudroit nom de fichier
chmod 000 : Aucun accès au fichier n’est autorisé
chmod 644: souvent utilisé pour les pages web HTML
chmod 755
: utilise très souvent pour les scripts CGI

chown: modifie les droits de propriété d’un fichier
The set of 2 go in this order from left to right:
USER - GROUP

chown root myfile.txt : Changes the owner of the file to root
chown root.root myfile.txt : Changes the owner and group of the file to root

tail : like cat, but only reads the end of the file
tail /var/log/messages : see the last 20 (by default) lines of /var/log/messages
tail -f /var/log/messages : watch the file continuously, while it’s being updated
tail -200 /var/log/messages : print the last 200 lines of the file to the screen

more : like cat, but opens the file one screen at a time rather than all at once
more /etc/userdomains : browse through the userdomains file. hit Spaceto go to the next page, q to quit

pico : friendly, easy to use file editor
pico /home/burst/public_html/index.html : edit the index page for the user’s website.

File Editing with VI ssh commands
vi : another editor, tons of features, harder to use at first than pico
vi /home/burst/public_html/index.html : edit the index page for the user’s website.
Whie in the vi program you can use the following useful commands, you will need to hit SHIFT + : to go into command mode

:q! : This force quits the file without saving and exits vi
:w : This writes the file to disk, saves it
:wq : This saves the file to disk and exists vi
:LINENUMBER : EG :25 : Takes you to line 25 within the file
:$ : Takes you to the last line of the file
:0 : Takes you to the first line of the file

grep : looks for patterns in files
grep root /etc/passwd : shows all matches of root in /etc/passwd
grep -v root /etc/passwd : shows all lines that do not match root

ln : create’s “links” between files and directories
ln -s /usr/local/apache/conf/httpd.conf /etc/httpd.conf : Now you can edit /etc/httpd.conf rather than the original. changes will affect the orginal, however you can delete the link and it will not delete the original.

last : shows who logged in and when
last -20 : shows only the last 20 logins
last -20 -a : shows last 20 logins, with the hostname in the last field

w : shows who is currently logged in and where they are logged in from.
who : This also shows who is on the server in an shell.

netstat : shows all current network connections.
netstat -an : shows all connections to the server, the source and destination ips and ports.
netstat -rn : shows routing table for all ips bound to the server.

top : shows live system processes in a nice table, memory information, uptime and other useful info. This is excellent for managing your system processes, resources and ensure everything is working fine and your server isn’t bogged down.
top then type Shift + M to sort by memory usage or Shift + P to sort by CPU usage

ps: ps is short for process status, which is similar to the top command. It’s used to show currently running processes and their PID.
A process ID is a unique number that identifies a process, with that you can kill or terminate a running program on your server (see kill command).
ps U username : shows processes for a certain user
ps aux : shows all system processes
ps aux –forest : shows all system processes like the above but organizes in a hierarchy that’s very useful!

touch : create an empty file
touch /home/burst/public_html/404.html : create an empty file called 404.html in the directory /home/burst/public_html/

file : attempts to guess what type of file a file is by looking at it’s content.
file * : prints out a list of all files/directories in a directory

du : shows disk usage.
du -sh : shows a summary, in human-readble form, of total disk space used in the current directory, including subdirectories.
du -sh * : same thing, but for each file and directory. helpful when finding large files taking up space.

wc : word count
wc -l filename.txt : tells how many lines are in filename.txt

cp : copy a file
cp filename filename.backup : copies filename to filename.backup
cp -a /home/burst/new_design/* /home/burst/public_html/ : copies all files, retaining permissions form one directory to another.
cp -av * ../newdir : Copies all files and directories recurrsively in the current directory INTO newdir

mv : Move a file command
mv oldfilename newfilename : Move a file or directory from oldfilename to newfilename

rm : delete a file
rm filename.txt : deletes filename.txt, will more than likely ask if you really want to delete it
rm -f filename.txt : deletes filename.txt, will not ask for confirmation before deleting.
rm -rf tmp/ : recursively deletes the directory tmp, and all files in it, including subdirectories. BE VERY CAREFULL WITH THIS COMMAND!!!

TAR
: Creating and Extracting .tar.gz and .tar files
tar -zxvf file.tar.gz : Extracts the file
tar -xvf file.tar : Extracts the file
tar -cf archive.tar contents/ : Takes everything from contents/ and puts it into archive.tar
gzip -d filename.gz : Decompress the file, extract it

ZIP Files: Extracting .zip files shell command
unzip file.zip

Firewall - iptables commands
iptables -I INPUT -s IPADDRESSHERE -j DROP : This command stops any connections from the IP address
iptables -L : List all rules in iptables
iptables -F : Flushes all iptables rules (clears the firewall)
iptables –save : Saves the currenty ruleset in memory to disk
service iptables restart : Restarts iptables

Apache Shell Commands
httpd -v : Outputs the build date and version of the Apache server.
httpd -l : Lists compiled in Apache modules
httpd status : Only works if mod_status is enabled and shows a page of active connections
service httpd restart : Restarted Apache web server

MySQL Shell Commands
mysqladmin processlist : Shows active mysql connections and queries
mysqladmin drop databasenamehere : Drops/deletes the selected database
mysqladmin create databasenamehere : Creates a mysql database

Restore MySQL Database Shell Command
mysql -u username -p password databasename < databasefile.sql : Restores a MySQL database from databasefile.sql

Backup MySQL Database Shell Command
mysqldump -u username -p password databasename > databasefile.sql : Backup MySQL database to databasefile.sql

kill: terminate a system process
kill -9 PID EG: kill -9 431
kill PID
EG: kill 10550
Use top or ps ux to get system PIDs (Process IDs)

EG:

PID TTY TIME COMMAND
10550 pts/3 0:01 /bin/csh
10574 pts/4 0:02 /bin/csh
10590 pts/4 0:09 APP

Each line represents one process, with a process being loosely defined as a running instance of a program. The column headed PID (process ID) shows the assigned process numbers of the processes. The heading COMMAND shows the location of the executed process.

Putting commands together
Often you will find you need to use different commands on the same line. Here are some examples. Note that the | character is called a pipe, it takes date from one program and pipes it to another.
> means create a new file, overwriting any content already there.
>> means tp append data to a file, creating a newone if it doesn not already exist.
< send input from a file back into a command.

grep User /usr/local/apache/conf/httpd.conf |more
This will dump all lines that match User from the httpd.conf, then print the results to your screen one page at a time.

last -a > /root/lastlogins.tmp
This will print all the current login history to a file called lastlogins.tmp in /root/

tail -10000 /var/log/exim_mainlog |grep domain.com |more
This will grab the last 10,000 lines from /var/log/exim_mainlog, find all occurances of domain.com (the period represents ‘anything’,
– comment it out with a so it will be interpretted literally), then send it to your screen page by page.

netstat -an |grep :80 |wc -l
Show how many active connections there are to apache (httpd runs on port 80)

mysqladmin processlist |wc -l
Show how many current open connections there are to mysql

2 comments.

Bonne et heureuse à tous - merci pour les blogs gratuit

Posted on janvier 1st, 2007 by Océane.
Categories: Non classé.

Cher blogonaute ;) Je vous souhaite une bonne et heureuse année 2007.

Merci à océane qui a fait un travail monstre en cette fin d’année pour livrer un système de publication de blog gratuit et performant avec maintenant la possibilité d’avoir son sous-domaine.

Merci a tous …

Bisous

0 comments.

Bonjour tout le monde !

Posted on décembre 3rd, 2006 by jerry.
Categories: Non classé.

Bienvenue sur Noublog.com la plateforme de blog alternative !

1 comment.