On 11/21/2012 03:59 AM, Crypticmofo wrote: > Hello > > I'm new to debian and i hang out in the irc channels .. i realize that > irc is there really for support so i wanted to take my question here .. > > From the more exprienced Debian users can you guys paste or post a list > of the most common commands that you use > > I already know of the docs like > > debian-handbook > debian-kernel-handbook > debian-refernce > apt-common > > And yes most of the manpages > > What i really want are real life uses everyday ie.. do you use a lot of > dpkg commands do you use a lot of apt or aptitude commands everday > > Also .. in your experience what are good handy tools we should have and > learn that are a must to be able to navigate / use Debian
As long as your system works you only need to know little tools, e.g. the aptitude update && aptitude full-upgrade to update your system. Whenever anything breaks, it is always useful to know how to work on a terminal-only. And... while using Debian and customizing it, installing software, changing configuration files, etc. you will learn some tools automatically. You will find your favourite text-editor and (probably antoher) terminal-only editor for editing configuration files. I commonly use these commands and programs: ls, cp, rm, cd, dd, mkdir, touch, grep, cat, exit, vim, aptitude, 7z, tar, make, md5sum, mount, ifconfig, ip ("newer ifconfig", but more difficult IMO), ping, tail, mv, ln, su, ssh, service, halt There are certianly more but I do not remember them now. Some of them might be useful to you, some might be completely useless... it highly depends on what you usually do. For the commandline there are also interesting shortcuts, e.g. CTRL-C to terminate the program that is just running, CTRL-Z to stop a program and fg to continue it in the foreground or bg to continue it in the background. For automating/shortening commands, scripts and aliases are also very useful and time-saving. -- 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/50acdc52.80...@web.de