Re: Useful Unix compatible commands
* Jonathan Matthew Gresham [24-02/25=Su 16:01 -0500]: > [...] I have been reading a Unix system administrators textbook. > ps -e > [...] > kill process > [...] > ls -R > [...] > If you know any more that can work on GNU compatible software or > Unix compatible software please indicate the commands in your reply. This is a decent introduction to the important commands: https://www.freecodecamp.org/news/the-linux-commands-handbook/
Re: Useful Unix compatible commands
Hellow Jonathan, Jonathan Matthew Gresham writes: > > ps -e > ls -R > ls -F Thanks, Byunghee from South Korea -- ^고맙습니다 _布德天下_ 감사합니다_^))//
Re: Useful Unix compatible commands
Jonathan Matthew Gresham wrote: > If you know any more that can work on GNU compatible software or Unix > compatible software please indicate the commands in your reply. Perhaps you want to read the Debian Administrator's Handbook? https://www.debian.org/doc/manuals/debian-handbook/ Or an introduction to Linux command line work? Or to BASH? Your question is very unfocused. -dsr-
Re: Useful Unix compatible commands
On 25 Feb 2024 16:01 -0500, from m...@jmgresham.xyz (Jonathan Matthew Gresham): > ps -e > > This lists the processes > > In that display (if I'm correct) if you see a program that has > extremely high time, then you should kill the process. > > kill process _Definitely_ not blindly. For example, among the highest-time processes on my system I currently see xfce4-panel, Xorg, apcupsd, rclone and a few ZFS housekeeping processes. Among slightly lower times, there's xfwm4, pipewire and systemd-journal. (All of these share the trait that they also have been running for a long period of wallclock time.) Another that could show up would likely be qemu/KVM related processes for long-running VMs, but I don't have any up and running currently. And if I'm doing something like watching a movie, mpv or one of its friends would probably be right up there as well. Killing those would have potentially severe negative impacts on my ability to actually use the computer to perform normal, useful tasks. _That a process is doing a lot of work doesn't by itself mean that it shouldn't be running._ -- Michael Kjörling 🔗 https://michael.kjorling.se “Remember when, on the Internet, nobody cared that you were a dog?”
Useful Unix compatible commands
Sorry for the misleading post the other day. However, I have been reading a Unix system administrators textbook. ps -e This lists the processes In that display (if I'm correct) if you see a program that has extremely high time, then you should kill the process. kill process There is also ls -R This command lists the files in each subdirectory. If you know any more that can work on GNU compatible software or Unix compatible software please indicate the commands in your reply.