-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 On 18/05/12 13:18, Muhammad Yousuf Khan wrote:
> Ok I have been working in IT network field since 7 years and just one and > half year back i have started exploring Linux and I believe, someone said > to me lately that if you start loving black and white terminal then you > will never look back to Windows GUI. I literally can experience this thing > at the stage I am standing with Linux. As I consider myself a newbie in > Linux but according to my previous experience if i don’t practice I will > forget things very easy (as there are tons of commands to remember which I > will forget with less or 0 practice). so i am here to ask all the old Pros > that how you guys manage to remember all the commands and practice all the > previous work. Since after the deployment of some Linux services there is > only the log which i have to see for further errors. So how it is possible > to keep in my mind all the old stuff and along with that I can move forward > with the new goals. As people have pointed out, the command line is the way to go. It can be intimidating (i.e.`rm` unless you apply safeguards, does *mean* `rm` especially if you put a `-Rf` after it) but that's part of its beauty: simplicity & absolute power when run as root (or sudo). I use man pages a lot. I also use vim for everything. Reading man pages with less can be a tedious affair so I put: `manvim() { vim -c "Man$1" -c 'silent! only';}` &: `export TERM=xterm-256-color` in my ~/.bashrc &: `source $VIMRUNTIME/ftplugin/man.vim` in my ~/.vimrc & then calling the man page like so `$ manvim foo` & they're much easier to read. For everything else, I have hard copies of "Unix and Linux System Administration Handbook" by Evi Nemeth & others & "Classic Shell Scripting: Hidden Commands that Unlock the Power of Unix" by Arnold Robbins & "Sed & Awk" by Dale Dougherty. For everything else, there's the internet. As was pointed out by an earlier poster, just keep reading. I read hundreds of pages of documentation a day on every different circumstance I'm likely to encounter. That in itself is a full-time job :-). Cheers, Phil... - -- currently (ab)using Debian Squeeze, Fedora Verne, OS X Snow Leopard, Ubuntu Oneiric -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1.4.11 (GNU/Linux) Comment: Using GnuPG with Mozilla - http://enigmail.mozdev.org/ iQEcBAEBAgAGBQJPtozIAAoJECPmYW6gk8Jj2/UH/177uJVoHlsHRr96ptSAgE++ 3UrJYXyDYecQ8JoMR5JxZV4BQdv5n8wPzyKTn8TruHT1tGPpQ7tXbMtqdGm81cEI 2Yk17U72jo72m4W4pKVlQ7fO/D/OUrOZF6Hk5oLIUThKL3EjQEyhpQt8KkFyau0E ULgbYDWJ3+eDhzFD60OIL7GYeukImTj5MJZSNql3+XfHhaQFJKMHe+WML4MDHU1E BN6mtIbH6ziIPq40JukYHEcAmujMljaDDudRm6lTZS/3g629fFBnw2x+ErBZ8GTB rTtNZrx0c4BD6tbI36OsNNuUqMEF2TBVNwJpNgoc8Hmmy9X92PUSarrICSaUt+g= =bT3Q -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org Archive: http://lists.debian.org/4fb68cc9.6020...@gmail.com