Difference between revisions of "Linux"

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To check your server info, do lscpu <br>
To run a bash script without executing it, do bash -n scriptname.sh<br>
To see help commands do command --help or man command. To paste into PuTTY, use SHIFT + INSERT.<br>
To see help commands do command --help or man command. To paste into PuTTY, use SHIFT + INSERT.<br>
For detailed software and hardware info do apt-get install hardinfo then hardinfo. For CentOS 6 use [http://pkgs.repoforge.org/hardinfo/hardinfo-0.5.1-1.el6.rf.x86_64.rpm this].<br>
For detailed software and hardware info do apt-get install hardinfo then hardinfo. For CentOS 6 use [http://pkgs.repoforge.org/hardinfo/hardinfo-0.5.1-1.el6.rf.x86_64.rpm this].<br>
To write to a user in the same SSH server, do w, get their tty  session and then do write user ttySession. If they are root, do  write root Session<br>
To write to a user in the same SSH server, do w, get their tty  session and then do write user ttySession. If they are root, do  write root Session<br>
[http://www.linuxfocus.org/English/September1999/article103.html Awk introduction], [http://tldp.org/LDP/Bash-Beginners-Guide/html/sect_07_01.html If manual].
[http://www.linuxfocus.org/English/September1999/article103.html Awk introduction], [http://tldp.org/LDP/Bash-Beginners-Guide/html/sect_07_01.html If manual].
== Append date to same line ==
Either of these will work:
<pre>| awk '{ print strftime("%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S"), $0; }'
| ts '%F %T'</pre>
To customise date, put a + symbol in front of the flag:
<pre>date +%R
14:32</pre>
To get this format of the date/time:
24 May 2013 10:25:33
Use:
<pre>date +%d\ %B\ %Y\ %H:%M:%S</pre>
== authorized_keys (RSA) ==
This will show you how to SCP, SSH and rSync without prompting for password between two servers.
Whenever you need to use SCP to copy files, it asks for passwords. Same with rSync as it (by default) uses SSH as well. Usually SCP and rSync commands are used to transfer or backup files between known hosts or by the same user on both the hosts. It can get really annoying the password is asked every time. I even had the idea of writing an expect script to provide the password. Of course, I didn't. Instead I browsed for a solution and found it after quite some time. There are already a couple of links out there which talk about it. I am adding to it...
Lets say you want to copy between two hosts host_src and host_dest. host_src is the host where you would run the SCP, SSH or rSync command, irrespective of the direction of the file copy!
On host_src, run this command as the user that runs SCP/SSH/rSync
<pre>ssh-keygen -t rsa</pre>
This will prompt for a passphrase. Just press the enter key. It'll then generate an identification (private key) and a public key. Do not ever share the private key with anyone! ssh-keygen shows where it saved the public key. This is by default ~/.ssh/id_rsa.pub:
Your public key has been saved in <your_home_dir>/.ssh/id_rsa.pub
Transfer the id_rsa.pub file to host_dest by either FTP, SCP, rSync or any other method.
On host_dest, '''login as the remote user which you plan to use when you run SCP, SSH or rSync on host_src'''.
Make sure the folder ~/.ssh exists first, if not do:
<pre>mkdir ~/.ssh</pre>
Copy the contents of id_rsa.pub to ~/.ssh/authorized_keys
<pre>cat id_rsa.pub >>~/.ssh/authorized_keys
chmod 700 ~/.ssh/authorized_keys</pre>
If this file does not exists, then the above command will create it. Make sure you remove permission for others to read this file. If its a public key, why prevent others from reading this file? Probably, the owner of the key has distributed it to a few trusted users and has not placed any additional security measures to check if its really a trusted user.
Note that SSH by default does not allow root to log in. This has to be explicitly enabled on host_dest. This can be done by editing /etc/ssh/sshd_config and changing the option of PermitRootLogin from no to yes. Don't forget to restart SSHD so that it reads the modified config file. Do this only if you want to use the root login.
Well, thats it. Now you can run SCP, SSH and rSync on host_src connecting to host_dest and it won't prompt for the password. Note that this will still prompt for the password if you are running the commands on host_dest connecting to host_src. You can reverse the steps above (generate the public key on host_dest and copy it to host_src) and you have a two way setup ready!
== .bash_history ==
Change Epoch time in .bash_history:
https://askubuntu.com/questions/391082/how-to-see-time-stamps-in-bash-history/391087
== .bashrc ==
<pre>vim /root/.bashrc</pre>
=== Colours ===
https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Color_Bash_Prompt
Add these:
<pre>alias ls='ls --color=auto'
alias grep='grep --color=auto'</pre>
<pre>source /root/.bashrc</pre>
<pre>vim /root/.vimrc</pre>
<pre>syntax on</pre>
Exit your session and re-enter it.
=== Crontab editor ===
Add this line in:
<pre>EDITOR=vim; export EDITOR</pre>
<pre>crontab -e</pre>


== Binary/binaries ==
== Binary/binaries ==


These are normally in the bin folder for a program.
These are normally in the bin or sbin folder for a program.


== Calendar ==
== Calendar ==
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== Check Linux version/kernel ==
== Check Linux version/kernel ==
cat /etc/issue


For Ubuntu do cat /etc/issue or for some CentOS distributions use cat /etc/redhat-release
For Ubuntu do cat /etc/issue or for some CentOS distributions use cat /etc/redhat-release
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sestatus
sestatus
selinuxenabled</pre>
selinuxenabled</pre>
== Check if Virtualization is available for server ==
CentOS:
<pre>egrep '(vmx|svm)' --color=always /proc/cpuinfo</pre>
Ubuntu:
<pre>apt-get install cpu-checker
kvm-ok</pre>
== Check your PuTTY (TTY) session ==
Type this into command line:
tty
== Clear last login info ==
[https://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/howto-display-clear-last-login-information/ Clear last login info]


== CLI/bash Commands and scripting ==
== CLI/bash Commands and scripting ==


* [http://www.thegeekstuff.com/2011/07/bash-for-loop-examples for loop examples]
* [http://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/unix-linux-bsd-appleosx-bash-assign-variable-command-output Assign variable command output]
 
* For variables with multiple pipes "|", use tacs `` instead of quotes ""
* For variables with multiple pipes "|", use tacs `` instead of quotes ""
* If you are attempting to use the Unix mail function, you have to specify a body otherwise it will hang.
* If you have an if statement and its requirements are not met (e.g. greater than) and it then moves onto the next if statement, if it uses a mail function it may send it to the root user's email or the Admin/Administrator's email address. To avoid this use > /dev/null . 2>&1 likely won't work.
* It seems if you are using the read function, you can only call a variable that is inside of it (subshell), from [http://www.unixguide.net/unix/bash/E4.shtml here].
* To stop a ping after x amount of responses, do ping -c x or use ping -oc y (where y equals a maximum amount of tries)
* Use >> to append an output to the end of the file.
* Use >> to append an output to the end of the file.
* Use [[ instead of [, via http://mywiki.wooledge.org/BashFAQ/031
* If you want a script to make changes to your current shell, not the subshell a bash script works in, execute the script by doing:
<pre>. script</pre>
This information was provided by these sources: [http://stackoverflow.com/questions/874452/change-current-directory-from-a-script 1], [http://stackoverflow.com/questions/255414/why-doesnt-cd-work-in-a-bash-shell-script 2]
* The use of && means that you only echo the name of the directory if the directory creation is successful.  
* The use of && means that you only echo the name of the directory if the directory creation is successful.  


- The $() syntax allows you to load anything echoed to STDOUT to be loaded into a variable, and the single quotes ensure that if there are any spaces in the directory name, it still gets loaded into a single variable.
- The $() syntax allows you to load anything echoed to STDOUT to be loaded into a variable, and the single quotes ensure that if there are any spaces in the directory name, it still gets loaded into a single variable. To use command substitution, enclose any command that generates output to standard output inside parentheses and precede the opening parenthesis with a dollar sign, $(command). Command substitution is useful when assigning a value to a variable. It is handy for using the output of one command as an argument to another command. [http://mywiki.wooledge.org/BashFAQ/082 Why is $(...) preferred over `...` (backticks)?] . A good use of this is in http://serverkb.co.uk/tools/slow.sh


- If you have an if statement and its requirements are not met (e.g. greater than) and it then moves onto the next if statement, if it uses a mail function it may send it to the root user's email or the Admin/Administrator's email address. To avoid this use > /dev/null . 2>&1 likely won't work.
* To quote double quotes (") do the following: echo -e "Testing \"quotes\" here" - this will show as Testing "quotes"
* Quotes prevent wildcard (*) expansion.


=== $? ===
=== $? ===
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This is the exit status/code of the last executed function/program/command.
This is the exit status/code of the last executed function/program/command.


==== Awk ====
=== [http://beyondgrep.com ack] ===
 
To look into.
 
=== [http://www.grymoire.com/Unix/Awk.html Awk] ===


To '''print out a list of just folders/file'''s you want, do;
To '''print out a list of just folders/file'''s you want, do;
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awk '{print $1,$2,$4,$X;}'
awk '{print $1,$2,$4,$X;}'


 
If you want to '''get rid of/cut certain/specific lines/rows from STDOUT''' aka '''print a specific line''', use awk in this way:
If you want to '''get rid of/cut certain/specific lines/rows from STDOUT''', use awk in this way:


<pre>awk 'NR==22'</pre>
<pre>awk 'NR==22'</pre>
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The command sed '22 ! d' would do the same as the awk 'NR==22' example.
The command sed '22 ! d' would do the same as the awk 'NR==22' example.


==== Cut ====
To '''get rid of pipe symbols in a file''', do:
 
awk -F'|' '{print $1,$10}' FileWithPipes > FileWithoutPipes
 
Alternatively if you get a list, e.g of domains from MySQL with only one column selected, put them in a file and you can remove the pipes by doing:
 
<pre>cat domainlist | awk '{print $2}' > list</pre>
 
awk '{ printf "%-20s %-40s\n", $1, $2}' allows you to '''[http://stackoverflow.com/questions/6462894/how-can-i-format-the-output-of-a-bash-command-in-neat-columns print information in columns]'''
 
=== Cat ===
 
Parse JSON file:
 
<pre>cat file | python .mjson.tool</pre>
 
=== Cut ===


This tool can be used in an example where you get an output but want to strip it to exactly what you need e.g.
This tool can be used in an example where you get an output but want to strip it to exactly what you need e.g.
Line 99: Line 231:
Cut counts the first number/letter as 1, not 0.
Cut counts the first number/letter as 1, not 0.


==== Find ====
=== eval ===
 
Use this if you want to run a variable after a pipe and to shorten down your scripts. e.g. in http://serverkb.co.uk/tools/getdns.sh
 
<pre>ns="ns.nameserver.co.uk"
d="domain.co.uk"
g="grep $d | grep -v 'DiG\|;'"
 
echo "dig @$ns $d A"
dig @$ns $d A | eval $g</pre>
 
It is a good replacement instead of $() or `` or running just a variable.
 
=== [http://unixhelp.ed.ac.uk/CGI/man-cgi?find Find] ===
 
==== [http://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/linux-unix-osx-bsd-find-command-exclude-directories Exclude directories] ====
 
==== [http://www.cyberciti.biz/tips/linux-findinglocating-files-with-find-command-part-1.html Guide Part 1] ====


[http://content.hccfl.edu/pollock/unix/findcmd.htm Find Help] (this includes [http://www.unix.com/tips-tutorials/20526-mtime-ctime-atime.html mtime] commands)
[http://content.hccfl.edu/pollock/unix/findcmd.htm Find Help] (this includes [http://www.unix.com/tips-tutorials/20526-mtime-ctime-atime.html mtime] commands)


find . -maxdepth 1 -type f -printf "%f\n"  | sed s/,$//
<pre>find . -maxdepth 1 -type f -printf "%f\n"  | sed s/,$//</pre>


'''Finds all files that contain "some string"'''. This command is useful in a directory (e.g. mail), so you would do ls -lah | grep year-mm then:
'''Finds all files that contain "some string"'''. This command is useful in a directory (e.g. mail), so you would do ls -lah | grep year-mm then:


find . -type f -exec grep -l "some string" {} \;
<pre>find . -type f -exec grep -l "some string" {} \;</pre>
 
=== [http://www.thegeekstuff.com/2011/07/bash-for-loop-examples for loop examples] ===
 
=== Functions ===


==== Grep ====
A prime use of functions is in our script to replace the date.timezone settings in php.ini at http://serverkb.co.uk/tools/phptimezone.sh


Do grep for multiple terms (or exclude), do:
<pre>#!/bin/bash
APACHEPHP="/etc/php5/apache2/php.ini"
CURRENT="\n\nThis is the current timezone configuration:"
DONE="If the settings were wrong, they are as below now:"
ETC="/etc/php.ini"


grep -v 'chroot\|default\|fs\|fs-passwd\|httpsdocs'
function UBDEB(){
echo -e "\nThe operating system is Debian/Ubuntu, so editing $APACHEPHP" $CURRENT
grep "date." $1 | head -7 | grep -v '; http\|Define' ; echo ""
  sed -i -e 's/;date.timezone\ =/date.timezone\ =\ \"Europe\/London\"/g' $1
  sed -i -e 's/;date.default_latitude\ =\ 31.7667/date.default_latitude\ =\ 51.500181/g' $1
  sed -i -e 's/;date.default_longitude\ =\ 35.2333/date.default_longitude\ =\ 0.12619/g' $1
echo $DONE
grep "date." $1 | head -7 | grep -v '; http\|Define' ; echo ""
}


==== Head ====
function RHEL(){
echo -e "\nThe operating system is likely CentOS, editing $ETC" "$CURRENT
grep "date." $1 | head -7 | grep -v '; http\|Define' ; echo ""
  sed -i -e 's/;date.timezone\ =/date.timezone\ =\ \"Europe\/London\"/g' $1
  sed -i -e 's/;date.default_latitude\ =\ 31.7667/date.default_latitude\ =\ 51.500181/g' $1
  sed -i -e 's/;date.default_longitude\ =\ 35.2333/date.default_longitude\ =\ 0.12619/g' $1
echo $DONE
grep "date." $1 | head -7 | grep -v '; http\|Define' ; echo ""
}
 
if [[ `cat /etc/issue | sed '1 ! d' | awk '{print $1;}'` == "Debian" || `cat /etc/issue | sed '1 ! d' | awk '{print $1;}'` == "Ubuntu" ]];
then
UBDEB "$APACHEPHP"
  else
RHEL "$ETC"
fi</pre>
 
Credit to Sam Teale for helping me with this.
 
=== Grep ===
 
If you are grepping a a .gz or .zip file you generally need to use zgrep.
 
==== Exclude multiple directories ====
 
<pre>grep 'string' -R . -il --exclude="/proc" --color
grep -iR "string" * | grep -v "/proc"</pre>
 
==== Look for IP address ====
 
do this:
 
grep -E -o '(25[0-5]|2[0-4][0-9]|[01]?[0-9][0-9]?)\.(25[0-5]|2[0-4][0-9]|[01]?[0-9][0-9]?)\.(25[0-5]|2[0-4][0-9]|[01]?[0-9][0-9]?)\.(25[0-5]|2[0-4][0-9]|[01]?[0-9][0-9]?)'
 
courtesy of [http://stackoverflow.com/questions/427979/how-do-you-extract-ip-addresses-from-files-using-a-regex-in-a-linux-shell/428086#428086 SO]
 
==== Multiple terms ====
 
Exclude using -v
 
<pre>grep 'chroot\|default\|fs\|fs-passwd\|httpsdocs'</pre>
 
'''It is important to remember to not put a \| after the last text term.'''
 
This can be used with tail as well.
 
==== Remove pipe symbols from MySQL ====
 
mysql -pPASSWORD admin -e"select domain from domains;" grep -v "|" > FileWithoutPipes
 
==== Switches/flags ====
 
<pre>-A after
-B before</pre>
 
==== Wildcards for filepaths ====
 
From http://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/203195/wildcards-for-filepaths-arent-working-in-grep :
 
<pre>* in a regex is not like a filename glob. It means 0 or more of the previous character/pattern. So your examples would be looking for a A then 0 or more B then -DEF
. in regex means "any character" so you could fix your pattern by using
grep 'AB.*DEF'</pre>
 
=== Head ===


If for example you do /var/qmail/bin/qmail-qstat and it prints two separate lines, do this to get just the first line:
If for example you do /var/qmail/bin/qmail-qstat and it prints two separate lines, do this to get just the first line:
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head -1
head -1


==== [http://www.dreamsyssoft.com/unix-shell-scripting/ifelse-tutorial.php If and Else] ====
=== [http://www.dreamsyssoft.com/unix-shell-scripting/ifelse-tutorial.php If and Else] ===
 
[http://tldp.org/LDP/Bash-Beginners-Guide/html/sect_07_02.html Advanced if usage]


Use -f for files, -d for directories
Use -f for files, -d for directories
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fi</pre>
fi</pre>


==== sed ====
Combine if and $? to get to do something with the exit status of the last executed command.
 
<pre>if [ $? -eq 0 ]; then
commands
fi</pre>
 
If you want to prompt for both y and Y for yes input, use:
 
<pre>if [[ $variable1 = y || $variable2 = Y ]];</pre>
 
Another example of the above if x '''or''' y is [http://www.unix.com/302444803-post5.html here]. Use || to do if = x or y.
 
<pre>if [[ value = x || y ]</pre>
 
If you get the following error when executing a bash script outside of it's directory:
 
[[: not found
 
You need to either bash /file/path/to/script or alter the syntax to use:
 
<pre>-eq instead of =</pre>
or
<pre>(( command )) instead of [[ command ]]</pre>
 
=== If value equals multiple values ===
 
Using the syntax above:
 
<pre>echo -ne "Enter a server number (1, 2 or 3): "
read ServerNo
 
if [[ ( $ServerNo -eq 1 ) || ( $ServerNo -eq 2 ) || ( $ServerNo -eq 3 ) ]]; then
  echo "$ServerNo is a valid server, continuing."
else
  echo "$ServerNo is not a valid server, exiting."
fi</pre>
 
=== read ===
 
One of the simplest uses of this command is to do it like so:


If you want to '''get rid of/cut certain/specific lines/rows from STDOUT''', use sed in this way:
<pre>echo -ne "Enter the filename you want to create: "
read createdfilename
touch $createdfilename</pre>
 
You will need the -n for echo to allow input next to echo instead of a line below.
 
=== sed ===
 
If you want to '''get rid of/cut certain/specific lines/rows from STDOUT''' aka '''print a specific line''', use sed in this way:


sed '22 ! d'
sed '22 ! d'
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Notes: Blank lines count as a row. The command awk 'NR==22' would do the same.
Notes: Blank lines count as a row. The command awk 'NR==22' would do the same.


'''To get rid of multiple lines do:'''
'''To print individual/separate lines, e.g. 1, 4 and 5:'''
 
sed -ne '1p;4p;5p'
 
'''To print between lines 22 to 39:'''


sed '22,39 ! d'
sed '22,39 ! d'
Line 147: Line 428:


sed "22,$variable ! d"
sed "22,$variable ! d"
'''To delete parenthesis/brackets, use this:'''
sed 's/['''()''']//g'<br>
sed 's/[''')''']//g'<br>
sed 's/['''(''']//g'<br>
sed 's/['''[]''']//g'<br>
sed 's/[''']''']//g'<br>
sed 's/['''[''']//g'
==== Replace text in a file ====
sed -i -e 's/TextToFindToReplace/TextToReplaceItWith/g' filename
To handle spaces, forward slashes and quotes " ", use back slashes like you do in filenames:
sed -i -e 's/'''File\"quotes\"WithA\ Space'''/''HereIs''\/''ABackslash''/g' filename
=== sleep and usleep ===
Use sleep if you want to "wait" X seconds. usleep is measured in microseconds and cannot do more than 1 second. 100000 (100,000 / 100k) = 0.1 seconds. 1,000,000 = 1 second.
=== Shells and subshells ===
If you want a script to make changes to your current shell, not the subshell a bash script works in, execute the script by doing the following (sometimes you may need to do ./ still):
<pre>. script</pre>
This information was provided by these sources: [http://stackoverflow.com/questions/874452/change-current-directory-from-a-script 1], [http://stackoverflow.com/questions/255414/why-doesnt-cd-work-in-a-bash-shell-script 2]
=== tee ===
Tee command is used to store and view (both at the same time) the output of any other command.
Tee command writes to the STDOUT, and to a file at a time.
By default the tee command overwrites the file. You can instruct tee command to append (like >> does) to the file using the option –a as shown below.
<pre>ls | tee –a outputfile</pre>
=== [http://mywiki.wooledge.org/BashFAQ/031 Use [[ instead of [] ===
=== Variables ===
If you store a variable with a command within it as follows:
<pre>variablename=`command`</pre>
you should instead store it like this:
<pre>variablename=$(command)</pre>
And then call it as follows:
<pre>${variablename}</pre>
=== Watch ===
Example/s:
To monitor a file's size:
<pre>watch -n 1 'ls -lh | grep filename'</pre>
=== xargs ===
This can be incredibly useful if you get "Argument list too long"
cd /to/directory , find . -type f | xargs rm -Rf
If you need to remove a list of files with spaces in them, do this:
<pre>ls -lah | grep "SpecificString" | awk '{print $9,$10,$11,$etc}' | xargs -I {} rm -v {}</pre>
Use ls -lh to not include hidden files/file starting with a full stop.
For simple removal of normal files do this in a screen session:
<pre>ls -lh | awk '{print $9}' | xargs -t rm</pre>
Otherwise try using find:
<pre>find . -exec grep PATTERN {} + | wc -l</pre>
Copying multiple files:
<pre>ls -lh | grep TEXT | awk '{print $9}' | xargs cp -t /target/path/</pre>


== Compare a remote file with a local file ==
== Compare a remote file with a local file ==
Line 174: Line 542:
Credit to User [http://www.commandlinefu.com/commands/by/SQUIIDUX Squiidux]
Credit to User [http://www.commandlinefu.com/commands/by/SQUIIDUX Squiidux]


== Create backup of file whilst in vim ==
<!-- == Create chroot user with SCP access ==
 
http://www.linuxscrew.com/2012/07/05/linux-restricted-shells-rssh-and-scponly<br>
http://ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=128206<br>
http://internetpartner.info/en/ubuntu/87-openssh-sftp-chroot-on-ubuntu.html<br>
http://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/9837/do-you-need-a-shell-for-scp<br>
http://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/48509/configure-scp-access-for-login-without-a-local-account
 
<pre>apt-get install rssh
cd /usr/src
wget http://serverkb.co.uk/tools/scponly-20110526.tgz
tar scponly-20110526.tgz
cd scponly-20110526
./configure
make
make install</pre>
 
vim /etc/rssh.conf
 
Uncomment:
 
<pre>allowscp
allowsftp
chrootpath = /path/to/new/home/directory
user=username:011:000110:/path/to/new/home/directory</pre>
 
<pre>adduser username --home /path/to/new/home/directory</pre>
http://aristomagnus.wordpress.com/2007/09/28/easy-sftp-and-chroot-sftp-with-scponly/
<!-- https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/SFTP-chroot
http://answers.tectia.com/questions/605/how-do-i-chroot-users-on-unix-platforms
http://administratosphere.wordpress.com/2011/11/04/restricting-users-to-sftp-only-and-to-home-directories-using-a-chroot/
<pre>adduser username --home /path/to/home/directory</pre>
<pre>usermod conscp -s /sbin/nologin</pre>
<pre>vim /etc/ssh/sshd_config</pre>
<pre>Match User username
        ChrootDirectory /path/to/home/directory
        ForceCommand internal-sftp</pre> --> -->


<pre>vim file
== Create symlink ==
:!cp % %-</pre>
 
https://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/creating-soft-link-or-symbolic-link/
 
How to chown a symlink: https://superuser.com/questions/68685/chown-is-not-changing-symbolic-link


Press enter and continue to edit
Old method:


Credit to User [http://www.commandlinefu.com/commands/by/mpb MPB]
<pre>ln -s TARGET LINK_NAME</pre>


== Cronjob/Crontab ==
== Cronjob/Crontab ==
To check a cronjob has at least attempted to run/execute, check this at the time of execution:
<pre>tail -f /var/log/syslog | grep CRON</pre>


[http://www.openjs.com/scripts/jslibrary/demos/crontab.php Generator]
[http://www.openjs.com/scripts/jslibrary/demos/crontab.php Generator]
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|    |    |  |    |
|    |    |  |    |
|    |    |  |    +----- day of week (0 - 6) (Sunday=0)
|    |    |  |    +----- day of week (0 - 6) (Sunday = 0 or 7)
|    |    |  +------- month (1 - 12)
|    |    |  +------- month (1 - 12)
|    |    +--------- day of        month (1 - 31)
|    |    +--------- day of        month (1 - 31)
Line 204: Line 615:
http://www.adminschoice.com/crontab-quick-reference
http://www.adminschoice.com/crontab-quick-reference


To do a job every X minutes, do */X
To do a job every X minutes, do */X * * * *
 
To do a job every minute in a specific hour, do * X * * *
 
To do a job every X hours, do * */X * * *


To do a job every day at X hour on the hour, do 0 9 * * * for 9am each day.
To do a job every day at X hour on the hour, do 0 9 * * * for 9am each day.


To do a job every minute in a specific hour, do * X * * *
To do a job every week at 2am on Sunday, do 0 2 * * 0


To monitor active cron jobs, do tail -f /var/log/cron  
To monitor active cron jobs, do tail -f /var/log/cron  
Line 233: Line 648:
touch /var/log/mail.warn /var/log/syslog /var/log/mail.info
touch /var/log/mail.warn /var/log/syslog /var/log/mail.info
/etc/init.d/sysklogd restart</pre>
/etc/init.d/sysklogd restart</pre>
== Date ==
=== Spaces ===
To put spaces between variables (e.g +%H%M) use single quotes:
<pre>The time is `date '+%R:%S %Y %Z'` on the following Day/Month/Year `date '+%a %b %d'`</pre>
== Echo colours ==
[http://misc.flogisoft.com/bash/tip_colors_and_formatting Tips for colours and formatting]
Place 0; for the normal version (e.g. Black is 0;30)<br>
Place 1; before these to get the light colour version.
Here are the colour codes:
{| border="1" align="center" style="text-align:center;" class="collapsible collapsed wikitable"
|-
! colspan="3"|
|-
|'''Colour'''
|'''Foreground'''
|'''Background'''
|-
|Black
|30
|40
|-
|Dark Grey
|1;30
|1;40
|-
|Red
|31
|41
|-
|Light Red
|1;31
|1;41
|-
|Green
|32
|42
|-
|Light Green
|1;32
|1;42
|-
|Yellow
|1;33
|1;43
|-
|Brown
|0;33
|0;43
|-
|Blue
|34
|44
|-
|Light Blue
|1;34
|1;44
|-
|Magenta (Purple)
|35
|45
|-
|Light Purple
|1;35
|1;45
|-
|Cyan
|36
|46
|-
|Light Cyan
|1;36
|1;46
|-
|White
|37
|47
|-
|Light Gray
|0;37
|0;47
|-
|}
An example:
<pre>#!/bin/bash
wipe="\033[1m\033[0m"
black="40m"
darkggrey='\E[1;30m'
red='\E[31m'
lightred='\E[1;31m'
green='\E[32m'
lightgreen='\E[1;32m'
yellow='\E[1;33m'
brown='\E[0;33m'
blue='\E[34m'
lightblue='\E[1;34m'
purple='\E[35m'
lightpurple='\E[1;35m'
cyan='\E[36m'
lightcyan='\E[1;36m'
white='\E[37m'
lightgray='\E[0;37m'
green='\E[32m;'</pre>
<pre>echo -e "$green$black"
echo Hello World
echo -e "$wipe"</pre>
or
<pre>echo -e "Output a ${green}coloured${wipe} word."</pre>
<pre>./colourtest.sh
Hello World</pre>
The Hello World text appears green.


== Execute one off command whenever ==
== Execute one off command whenever ==
Line 241: Line 785:


Credit to User [http://www.commandlinefu.com/commands/by/root Root]
Credit to User [http://www.commandlinefu.com/commands/by/root Root]
== File Locations (index priority) ==
/etc/apache2/mods-enabled/dir.conf (on Ubuntu) or /etc/httpd/conf/httpd.conf (on CentOS, ~line 402) and it should show something like:
<pre>DirectoryIndex index.html index.html.var index.shtml index.cfm index.php index.htm</pre>
This shows the default priority in which the index page is picked up and this can be set in the [[.htaccess]] file as well with:
<pre>DirectoryIndex index.html index.php</pre>
These are good places to check if you are using all of your [[Resource_Usage|disk space]].
cd /var/log<br>
cd /var/www/vhosts (website and statistics)<br>
cd /var/lib/mysql (database) or mysql/mysql<br>
cd /usr/bin/mysqldump (mysql dump)<br>
cd var/qmail (mail logs, queue and configuration)<br>
cd /var/lib/psa/dumps (physical Plesk backups)<br>
cd opt/psa/tmp/ (Plesk stores temporary files here for backups)


== File Permissions ==
== File Permissions ==
Line 296: Line 860:
7755  -rwsr-sr-t</pre>
7755  -rwsr-sr-t</pre>


== File Locations (index priority) ==
[http://serverfault.com/questions/111350/what-chmod-and-ownergroup-settings-are-best-for-a-web-application Owner and Group advice for websites]


/etc/apache2/mods-enabled/dir.conf (on Ubuntu) or /etc/httpd/conf/httpd.conf (on CentOS, ~line 402) and it should show something like:
== [http://adminlogs.info/2011/06/02/linux-find-command-tips Find command guide] ==
 
<pre>DirectoryIndex index.html index.html.var index.shtml index.cfm index.php index.htm</pre>
 
This shows the default priority in which the index page is picked up and this can be set in the [[.htaccess]] file as well with:
 
<pre>DirectoryIndex index.html index.php</pre>
 
These are good places to check if you are using all of your [[Resource_Usage|disk space]].
 
cd /var/log<br>
cd /var/www/vhosts (website and statistics)<br>
cd /var/lib/mysql (database) or mysql/mysql<br>
cd /usr/bin/mysqldump (mysql dump)<br>
cd var/qmail (mail logs, queue and configuration)<br>
cd /var/lib/psa/dumps (physical Plesk backups)<br>
cd opt/psa/tmp/ (Plesk stores temporary files here for backups)


== [http://adminlogs.info/2011/06/02/linux-find-command-tips Find command guide] ==
== [http://serverfault.com/questions/35076/need-to-fix-file-permissions-in-a-users-home-directory Fix file and folder permissions easily] ==


== FreeBSD ==
== FreeBSD ==


mysqldump location: /mysql/bin/mysqldump
* mysqldump location: /mysql/bin/mysqldump
* Remove syntax:


Remove syntax:
- rm -r folderName
 
* Generic tunneling interface starts with gif
rm -r folderName


=== [http://forums.freebsd.org/showthread.php?t=5852 Check software versions] ===
=== [http://forums.freebsd.org/showthread.php?t=5852 Check software versions] ===
Line 369: Line 917:
http://www.webhostingtalk.com/showthread.php?t=959646<br>
http://www.webhostingtalk.com/showthread.php?t=959646<br>
http://askmatt.co.uk/blog/2010/05/block-countries-using-apache-mod-geo-ip-list-of-countries-by-fraud-risk
http://askmatt.co.uk/blog/2010/05/block-countries-using-apache-mod-geo-ip-list-of-countries-by-fraud-risk
== Gunzip and Zip ==
To gzip a file (.gz) up, do:
<pre>gzip file</pre>
The above won't work for folders.
Or if zip is installed:
<pre>zip -r filename.zip filename</pre>
To unzip a .gz file, do:
<pre>gunzip file</pre>
To extract a .tgz file, do:
<pre>tar zxvf fileNameHere.tgz</pre>
See http://serverkb.co.uk/wiki/Linux#tar_command for further details.
=== 7zip ===
https://www.howtoforge.com/tutorial/how-to-install-and-use-7zip-file-archiver-on-ubuntu-linux/
DO NOT USE the 7-zip format for backup purpose on Linux/Unix because:
- 7-zip does not store the owner/group of the file.
On Linux/Unix, in order to backup directories you must use tar:
- to backup a directory  : tar cf -  directory  |  7za  a  -si  directory.tar.7z
- to restore your backup : 7za x -so directory.tar.7z | tar xf -
If  you  want  to send files and directories (not the owner of file) to others Unix/MacOS/Windows users, you can use the 7-zip format.
Example:
7za a directory.7z  directory
Do not use "-r" because this flag does not do what you think.
Do not use directory/* because of ".*" files (example  :  "directory/*" does not match "directory/.profile")
https://www.unixtutorial.org/2014/08/7zip-ubuntu/
== [http://eng.eelcowesemann.nl/plesk/changing-the-servers-hostname-in-plesk Hostname guide] (rough) ==
If the server runs Plesk and Virtuozzo, the permanent one needs setting on the hardware or in Virtuozzo.
Run dig -x IP.IP.IP.IP from any Linux server and it will show you the PTR/hostname.
'''Note:''' Most servers by default come with a non resolving hostname of localhost, localhost.localdomain or something generic.
The hostname should never be left as the default value on a server sending mail, as it is one of three things mail recipient's mailservers see to determine if mail is spam or not. The other two are reverse DNS and the SMTP banner.
If Plesk throws an error when clicking Websites & Domains tab regarding hostname -f, see [[Plesk_Errors#Domains_area_is_blank | this resolution]].
== How to fix broken packages ==
Run the following commands below:
<pre>dpkg --configure -a
apt-get install -f
#or
apt-get -f install</pre>
If the problem still exists, then edit dpkg status file:
<pre>gksudo gedit /var/lib/dpkg/status</pre>
Find the package in question, and remove everything that has anything to do with it and save the file.
== How to install .deb files ==
<pre>dpkg -i filename.deb</pre>


== [[.htaccess]] ==
== [[.htaccess]] ==
Line 380: Line 1,007:


A lot of the time the cause can be /tmp (/var/lib/php/session/ on Plesk) due to sessions. You may want to delete the files in there.
A lot of the time the cause can be /tmp (/var/lib/php/session/ on Plesk) due to sessions. You may want to delete the files in there.
== Investigating high load ==
If you are getting a high load average in top, these are some of the steps you can take to investigate the issue.
Check which process has the most open of itself:
<pre>ps aux | awk '{print $11}' | sort | uniq -c | sort -nk1 | tail -n5</pre>
Stop that process, then run the above command a second time. Then start it again and run the command a third time.
=== Useful software ===
* top
* htop
* iotop
All these will do the job. Firstly check the CPU wait time, this is shown within top in Cpu(s):  8.0%us,  2.8%sy,  0.0%ni, 40.7%id, 48.3%wa
<pre>%wa in</pre>
If this is high, check the Status column (S column in top) to see if any are labelled D. The [http://stackoverflow.com/questions/666783/how-to-find-out-which-process-is-consuming-wait-cpu-i-e-i-o-blocked processes blocked on IO] are the ones marked as D.
=== On a Plesk server ===
Ensure sites are running PHP as Fast CGI Application instead of Apache module so you can see which USER the process is running as. Pressing the letter "c" on your keyboard will show the path and normally the website name.
<pre>wget http://serverkb.co.uk/tools/memcpu.sh ; chmod +x memcpu.sh ; ./memcpu.sh > usage.log &
tail -f usage.log</pre>
You can alter the PHP Handler on Plesk boxes in the psa database easily by doing:
<pre>mysql -uadmin -p`cat /etc/psa/.psa.shadow`;
use psa
select * from hosting\G
select dom_id,www_root,php_handler_type from hosting;
update hosting set php_handler_type="module" where dom_id=x;</pre>
If sites run PHP as an Apache module scripts will execute as the Apache user www-data, this can make it difficult to see which site they belong to. This also means scripts run with privileges of the Apache user so if an account is compromised an attacker can get access to all other accounts. Also running as Apache module can make the Apache process CPU report look artificially high. Running PHP as Fast-CGI executes scripts as an FTP user associated with each subscription allowing easier identification of problem scripts and limit the damage of rogue scripts.
CPU reports are not an easy way to determine server health. We'd recommend you look at changes and trends rather than the absolute numbers. Most importantly consider your real world performance.
== Linux Container ==
This install below is for an Ubuntu physical server, I may update this in the future for CentOS, Fedora and others.
https://help.ubuntu.com/12.04/serverguide/lxc.html
If you need to get file off the container, you can just scp it off. If the recipient server is slow, try moving the file to the host machine by doing:
scp -Psshport file root@hostIPaddress:~
=== Installation of LXC ===
<pre>apt-get install lxc
cat /etc/init/lxc-net.conf | grep USE_LXC_BRIDGE</pre>
If true set to false unless you want the containers to NAT to your servers real IP addresses, and to be accessible externally.
=== Pre-container creation steps ===
To reduce errors pre-container creation do the following:
<pre>dpkg-reconfigure locales
locale-gen en_GB
update-locale LANG=en_GB.UTF-8</pre>
<!-- <pre>vim ~/.profile
export LC_CTYPE=en_GB.UTF-8 export LC_ALL=en_GB.UTF-8</pre>
Or:
<pre>vim /etc/environment
LC_ALL="en_GB.utf8"</pre>-->
=== Creating/deleting containers ===
[http://wiki.openvz.org/Download/template/precreated OpenVZ Template list]
Check the templates below and pick one:
<pre>cd /usr/lib/lxc/templates/ ; ls -lah</pre>
Create a container from one of the templates:
<pre>lxc-create -t ubuntu -n NameOfTheContainer</pre>
If you want to install the fedora package, do apt-get install yum
To delete it just do:
<pre>lxc-destroy -n NameOfTheContainer</pre>
=== Start/stop a container ===
<pre>lxc-start -n NameOfTheContainer -d</pre>
/etc/init.d/lxc stop
=== Access the container ===
The default user is 'ubuntu' with the password 'ubuntu', to enter a container, do:
<pre>lxc-console -n NameOfTheContainer
sudo -i</pre>
Exit using Ctrl + a, then press q
To re-enter the container, do lxc-console -n NameOfTheContainer and then press enter (you may have to a few times)
'''Access externally:'''
iptables -t nat -A PREROUTING -p tcp --dport 2222 -j DNAT --to 10.0.3.61:22
'''Make sure you remove this rule afterwards and DO NOT reboot your server.'''
=== Configuration settings ===
* By default you can ping a container from the host, and vice versa, and you can ping the outside world from the container.
* You can set the hostname just like a normal server, if you want to rename the container.
==== Default configuration of system files ====
<pre>cd /var/lib/lxc/nameofcontainer/rootfs/etc/sysconfig/network-scripts
vim ifcfg-eth0</pre>
<pre>DEVICE=eth0
BOOTPROTO=dhcp
ONBOOT=yes
HOSTNAME=phptester
NM_CONTROLLED=no
TYPE=Ethernet
MTU=</pre>
<pre>vim /var/lib/lxc/nameofcontainer/config</pre>
<pre>lxc.network.type=veth
lxc.network.link=lxcbr0
lxc.network.flags=up
lxc.network.hwaddr = MAC Address
lxc.utsname = MT</pre>
<pre>vim /etc/lxc/lxc.conf</pre>
<pre>lxc.network.type=veth
lxc.network.link=lxcbr0
lxc.network.flags=up</pre>
You can add the below to /etc/network/interfaces
<pre>auto br1
iface br1 inet dhcp
    bridge_ports eth0</pre>
==== Fedora ====
The mirrors/repositories the container uses may be broken by default, don't try to install anything. You'll likely get:
''Error: Cannot retrieve repository metadata (repomd.xml) for repository: fedora. Please verify its path and try again''
And you likely won't be able to ping anything except the host machine and localhost/127.0.0.1
iptables -t nat -A POSTROUTING -s ContainerIP/24 -j SNAT --to-source PhysicalHostIP<br>
iptables -t nat -A PREROUTING -m tcp -p tcp --dport 10022 -j DNAT -i eth0 --to-destination ContainerIP:80<br>
iptables -t nat -A PREROUTING -m tcp -p tcp --dport 10443 -j DNAT -i eth0 --to-destination ContainerIP:443
[https://www.berrange.com/posts/2011/09/27/getting-started-with-lxc-using-libvirt libvirt]
<pre>vi /etc/yum.repos.d/fedora.repo
vi /etc/yum.repos.d/fedora-updates.repo</pre>
Uncomment (#) the lines starting with "baseurl"
yum update
==== OpenSUSE ====
[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OpenSUSE#Version_history Version history]
http://www.lacerta.be/d7/content/opensuse-lxc-container-inside-ubuntu
=== List containers ===
lxc-list
=== Set passwords ===
Log in as the root user of the container:
'''Fedora''' container:
<pre>Username: root
Password: root</pre>
Set the root password to something different:
<pre>passwd</pre>
You will need to do yum install vim when inside the server.
'''Ubuntu''' container:
<pre>sudo -i
Username: ubuntu
Password: ubuntu</pre>
Set the user's password:
<pre>passwd ubuntu</pre>
Set the root user's password:
passwd
=== SSH in externally ===
'''To route from externally through the host to the container, just do the below iptables rule''':
<pre>iptables -t nat -A PREROUTING -p tcp --dport 1337 -j DNAT --to 10.0.4.60:22
iptables-save</pre>
In the above case we are saying:
- You want to SSH in on port 1337<br>
- The container's eth0 IP address is 10.0.4.60<br>
- Then below we are saying the physical machine has an IP address of 110.111.112.113
Then externally from the server do:
<pre>ssh [email protected] -p2222</pre>
And bingo! You should be in the container.
<pre>passwd</pre>
<!-- OpenVZ
https://code.google.com/p/ovz-web-panel/
apt-get install vzctl vzdump vzquota
wget -O - http://ovz-web-panel.googlecode.com/svn/installer/ai.sh | sh
gem install net-ssh
gem install net-sftp -->


== [http://wiki.debian.org/LSBInitScripts LSB Init Scripts] ==
== [http://wiki.debian.org/LSBInitScripts LSB Init Scripts] ==
== ls list only directories or files ==
Directories:
<pre>ls -lad */</pre>
Files:
<pre>ls -la | grep -v ^d</pre>
== Kill tty session ==
<pre>w
ps aux | grep bash | grep -v grep
ps aux | grep tty | grep -v grep
kill -HUP <processid></pre>
[http://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/howto-kill-unix-linux-user-session Further info]


== Maldet ==
== Maldet ==


Always run your scans from in Screen, and detach by doing CTRL + A, then press D
[http://www.rfxn.com/projects/linux-malware-detect Documentation]<br>
[http://www.rfxn.com/downloads/maldetect-current.tar.gz Maldet .tar.gz]<br>
[http://blog.hostonnet.com/how-to-install-and-configure-maldet-linux-malware-detect-lmd Install and Configure]
 
<pre>cd /root ; wget http://serverkb.co.uk/tools/maldet.sh ; chmod +x maldet.sh ; ./maldet.sh</pre>
 
Always run your scans from chroot environment (if it has one/is possible) and in Screen (screen -S NameIt), and detach by doing CTRL + A, then press D


Scan reports are normally stored in /usr/local/maldetect/sess/ as session. files.
Scan reports are normally stored in /usr/local/maldetect/sess/ as session. files.
Line 412: Line 1,302:
/etc/init.d/ntpd restart or start
/etc/init.d/ntpd restart or start
date</pre>
date</pre>
== Mount NFS drive ==
<pre>apt-get install nfs-common
cd /media
mount -t nfs HostName:/export/ftpbackup/ServiceName /FolderMount</pre>
The example above contains variables, which you will need to substitute with your own values.
HostName: The host name of your backup storage<br>
ServiceName: The name of your server (e.g. ns0000000.ip-123-123-123.net)<br>
FolderMount: The folder where you want to mount the NFS share
e.g.
mount -t nfs ftpback-xxx1-123.ovh.net:/export/ftpbackup/ns123456.ip-XX-XXX-XXX.eu /media/YourNewFolder
== Move files into your home directory not owned by your own user ==
Copy to /var/tmp or /tmp (for small files) and do:
<pre>chmod ugo+rw <filename></pre>


== PID ==
== PID ==
Line 420: Line 1,332:


To determine the usage of a specific process, do top -p PID
To determine the usage of a specific process, do top -p PID
You can use the "c" key to show the file path a PID is being called from.


The maximum number of pids can be obtained from /proc/sys/kernel/pid_max
The maximum number of pids can be obtained from /proc/sys/kernel/pid_max


== Restart service or service ==
== .profile ==
 
Put this in .profile file for on user startup:
 
<pre>echo "" ; df -h | sed -ne '1p;5p' ; echo "rootfs"
echo "" ; free -m
echo "" ; w | head -1 | sed 's/^ *//g'
echo "" ; w | tail -10 | grep -v average ; echo ""</pre>
 
== Proxmox ==
 
To access via the web go to https://IPaddress:8006
 
Rough notes:
 
apt-get install sudo
 
Proxmox
 
/var/lib/vz
 
dump is for backups<br>
images is for OS images<br>
private is for OpenVZ container file systems<br>
template/cache is for OpenVZ templates
 
http://openvz.org/Download/template/precreated
 
Create VM creates KVM<br>
Create CT creates OpenVZ container<br>
 
vzctl enter id<br>
vzctl start/stop id<br>
 
iptables -t nat -A POSTROUTING -o vmbr1 -j MASQUERADE<br>
restart networking on host and CT
 
=== cman_tool: Cannot open connection to cman ===
 
<pre>pvecm status
pvecm nodes
cman_tool: Cannot open connection to cman, is it running ?</pre>
 
<pre>service pve-cluster restart
pvecm delnode NodeName</pre>
 
=== Force remove an OpenVZ container ===
 
<pre>vzctl stop 100 ; vzctl destroy ContainerID
cd /var/lib/vz/private
rm ContainerIDfolder -R
cd /var/lib/vz/root
rm ContainerIDfolder -R
cd /etc/pve/nodes/ContainerName/openvz
mv ContainerID.conf ContainerID.bak</pre>
 
Make sure it does not exist in cat /etc/pve/.members
 
=== Remount a logical partition/volume ===
 
lvdisplay
 
/dev/mapper/pve-data /var/lib/vz (this will be different in your file system)
 
=== Unable to get local IP address ===
 
<pre>/etc/init.d/pve-cluster restart
service pve-cluster start
Starting pve cluster filesystem : pve-cluster[main] crit: Unable to get local IP address
(warning).</pre>
 
Make sure in /etc/hosts your domain name resolves to the server and you also have it without the .co.uk/.com etc in the file as so:
 
<pre>ServerIPaddress domain.co.uk domain pvelocalhost
127.0.0.1 localhost localhost.localdomain</pre>
 
Then do:
 
<pre>/etc/init.d/hostname.sh stop
/etc/init.d/hostname.sh start
service pve-cluster start</pre>
 
=== Transport endpoint is not connected ===
 
<pre>df -h
df: `/etc/pve': Transport endpoint is not connected</pre>
 
<pre>ls -lah /etc/pve
ls: cannot access pve: Transport endpoint is not connected
d?????????  ? ?    ?                      ?            ? pve</pre>
 
Do this:
 
<pre>umount /etc/pve
pvecm status</pre>
 
You will get:
 
unable to get IP for node 'hostname' - node offline?
 
The fix is the same as [[Linux#Unable_to_get_local_IP_address | this]] one, ensure you have the domain without the web extension in /etc/hosts resolving to the servers IP address. Then do:
 
service pve-cluster start
 
== Recover deleted files ==
 
You need to install this software before you delete any files:
 
<pre>apt-get install foremost</pre>
 
Then see this documentation:
 
https://help.ubuntu.com/community/DataRecovery<br>
http://ddailygirl.wordpress.com/2010/08/17/recovering-files-after-rm-in-linux<br>
http://www.howtoforge.com/recover-deleted-files-with-foremost<br>
http://www.webupd8.org/2009/03/recover-deleted-files-in-ubuntu-debian.html
 
== Remove file starting with dash ==


Useful for differently named ones, e.g.
<pre>rm -- -filename</pre>


[ -f /etc/init.d/mysqld ] && service mysqld restart ; [ -f /etc/init.d/mysql ] && service mysql restart
Remove folder starting with dash


[ -f /etc/init.d/httpd ] && service httpd restart ; [ -f /etc/init.d/apache2 ] && service apache2 restart
<pre>rm -rf -- -folder/</pre>


== [http://eng.eelcowesemann.nl/plesk/changing-the-servers-hostname-in-plesk Rough Hostname guide] ==
== Remove/rename file called tilde ==


If the server runs Plesk and Virtuozzo, the permanent one needs setting on the hardware or in Virtuozzo.
<pre>mv '~' newfilename
rm '~'</pre>


Run dig -x IP.IP.IP.IP from any Linux server and it will show you the PTR/hostname.
== Restart service or service ==


'''Note:''' Most servers by default come with a non resolving hostname of localhost, localhost.localdomain or something generic.
Useful for differently named ones, e.g.


The hostname should never be left as the default value on a server sending mail, as it is one of three things mail recipient's mailservers see to determine if mail is spam or not. The other two are reverse DNS and the SMTP banner.
[ -f /etc/init.d/mysqld ] && service mysqld restart ; [ -f /etc/init.d/mysql ] && service mysql restart


If Plesk throws an error when clicking Websites & Domains tab regarding hostname -f, see [[Plesk_Errors#Domains_area_is_blank | this resolution]].
[ -f /etc/init.d/httpd ] && service httpd restart ; [ -f /etc/init.d/apache2 ] && service apache2 restart


== Roughly list file count ==
== Roughly list file count ==
Line 459: Line 1,491:
<pre>scp -P 22 index.html [email protected]:/</pre>
<pre>scp -P 22 index.html [email protected]:/</pre>


To move a folder, put -r in between the port and the folder. If you receive the following error while trying to SCP a file from one server to the other:
To move a folder, put -r in between the port and the file(s)/folder(s) like so:
 
<pre>scp -P 22 -r testdirectory/ root@127.0.0.1:/</pre>
 
If you receive the following error while trying to SCP a file from one server to the other:


<pre>stdin: is not a tty</pre>
<pre>stdin: is not a tty</pre>
Line 472: Line 1,508:


== Screen ==
== Screen ==
Re-join screen session
<pre>screen -r</pre>
or
<pre>screen -D -r '1234.somescreensession'</pre>
A better alternate is [[Linux#tmux | tmux]].


[http://www.ubuntugeek.com/screen-manages-multiple-sessions-on-one-terminal.html#more-1415 Manage Multiple sessions in one Terminal]<br>
[http://www.ubuntugeek.com/screen-manages-multiple-sessions-on-one-terminal.html#more-1415 Manage Multiple sessions in one Terminal]<br>
[http://www.samsarin.com/blog/2007/03/11/gnu-screen-working-with-the-scrollback-buffer Scrollback] (vim /home/.screenrc + defscrollback 1000)<br>
[http://polishlinux.org/howtos/screen-tips-tricks Tips and Tricks]
[http://polishlinux.org/howtos/screen-tips-tricks Tips and Tricks]


Line 480: Line 1,527:
http://geoffhankerson.com/node/112<br>
http://geoffhankerson.com/node/112<br>
http://codeghar.wordpress.com/2007/12/06/manage-time-in-ubuntu-through-command-line/
http://codeghar.wordpress.com/2007/12/06/manage-time-in-ubuntu-through-command-line/
== Standard redirection ==
http://www.xaprb.com/blog/2006/06/06/what-does-devnull-21-mean/
STDIN, STDOUT and STDERR.
0, 1 and 2
1>/dev/null<br>
2>/dev/null
== sudo ==
If you exit out of root access and want to run the last command you entered without authentication, do:
<pre>sudo !!</pre>


== System Logs and Shutdown troubleshooting ==
== System Logs and Shutdown troubleshooting ==
Line 486: Line 1,550:


<pre>last reboot
<pre>last reboot
last
last</pre>
 
Do this  to check which files exist:
 
ls -lh /var/log/syslog ; ls -lh /var/log/kern.log ; ls -lh /var/log/dmesg ; ls -lh /var/log/messages


/var/log/syslog
Then do one or more of these depending on which exist:
/var/log/kern.log
/var/log/dmesg
/var/log/messages


grep -i error /var/log/syslog ; grep -i panic /var/log/syslog ; grep -i warning /var/log/syslog<br>
grep -i error /var/log/dmesg ; grep -i panic /var/log/dmesg ; grep -i warning /var/log/dmesg<br>
grep -i error /var/log/kern.log ; grep -i panic /var/log/kern.log ; grep -i warning /var/log/kern.log<br>
grep -i error /var/log/messages ; grep -i panic /var/log/messages ; grep -i warning /var/log/messages
grep -i error /var/log/messages ; grep -i panic /var/log/messages ; grep -i warning /var/log/messages


errpt</pre>
errpt may show an error report on some Unix OS'.


To find .log files, run [[General_Linux#updatedb | updatedb]] and then locate *.log
To find .log files, run [[Linux#updatedb_.28locate_command.29 | updatedb]] and then locate *.log


To restart and [http://go2linux.garron.me/reboot-check-disks-for-errors-avoid-force-fsck on boot do a disk check] do (or -rF):
To restart and [http://go2linux.garron.me/reboot-check-disks-for-errors-avoid-force-fsck on boot do a disk check] do (or -rF):
Line 521: Line 1,589:


#for .tgz or tar.gz
#for .tgz or tar.gz
tar xvfz file.tar.gz</pre>
tar zxvf file.tar.gz</pre>


[http://www.fluidthoughts.com/howto/tar-gzip/ Guide 1]<br>
[http://www.fluidthoughts.com/howto/tar-gzip/ Guide 1]<br>
[http://www.thegeekstuff.com/2010/04/unix-tar-command-examples/ Guide 2]<br>
[http://www.thegeekstuff.com/2010/04/unix-tar-command-examples/ Guide 2]<br>
[http://superuser.com/questions/305128/how-to-specify-level-of-compression-when-using-tar-zcvf 3] and [http://superuser.com/questions/156207/untar-ungz-gz-tar-how-do-you-remember-all-the-useful-options 4]
[http://superuser.com/questions/305128/how-to-specify-level-of-compression-when-using-tar-zcvf 3] and [http://superuser.com/questions/156207/untar-ungz-gz-tar-how-do-you-remember-all-the-useful-options 4]
For bz2 files, use:
<pre>tar -xvjpf file</pre>
== top ==
The TIME column in top is displayed in minutes:seconds.hundredths
== tmux ==
C-c is CTRL+C<br>
C-m is ENTER
=== New session ===
Latest:
<pre>tmux new -s session_name</pre>
Also possible:
<pre>tmux new-session -s session_name</pre>
Old:
<pre>tmux new-session -n NameTheSession</pre>
=== Detach from a session ===
<pre>CTRL +B then D</pre>
=== Kill session ===
<pre>tmux kill-session -t myname</pre>
If this fails and it says:
"''session not found''"
Do the following:
<pre>tmux ls
tmux kill-session -t X</pre>
- where X is the number of the session on the left.
=== List sessions available ===
<pre>tmux ls</pre>
=== Re-attach to session ===
<pre>tmux attach
tmux attach -t ID or NameTheSession</pre>
=== Remotely execute a command ===
<pre>tmux send-keys -t ID "command" ENTER</pre>
== User ID 99 ==
This is most commonly the user nobody. This can be caused by PHP or done on purpose. cat /etc/passwd | grep 99 ; vim /etc/passwd
== User is not in the sudoers file ==
If you try to sudo into a server or run sudo and get the following message:
"''is not in the sudoers file.  This incident will be reported.''"
Do the following command as root and add the username into the file in the same format as the root user:
visudo


== Use unusual characters in filenames ==
== Use unusual characters in filenames ==


If you want to specify a space, you need to name the file/folder as follows:
If you want to specify a space, lets say the file = /usr/local/etc/'''testingdatabase.sql'''


File = /usr/local/etc/'''testingdatabase.sql'''
You need to name the file/folder as follows:


<pre>mv /usr/local/etc/testingdatabase.sql /usr/local/etc/testing\ database.sql</pre>
<pre>mv /usr/local/etc/testingdatabase.sql /usr/local/etc/testing\ database.sql</pre>
Line 563: Line 1,704:
and put the following inside of it:
and put the following inside of it:


PRUNE_BIND_MOUNTS="yes"PRUNEPATHS="/tmp /var/spool /media"PRUNEFS="NFS nfs nfs4 rpc_pipefs afs binfmt_misc proc smbfs autofs iso9660 ncpfs coda devpts ftpfs devfs mfs shfs sysfs cifs lustre_lite tmpfs usbfs udf"
<pre>PRUNE_BIND_MOUNTS="yes"
PRUNEPATHS="/tmp /var/spool /media"
PRUNEFS="NFS nfs nfs4 rpc_pipefs afs binfmt_misc proc smbfs autofs iso9660 ncpfs coda devpts ftpfs devfs mfs shfs sysfs cifs lustre_lite tmpfs usbfs udf"</pre>


Alternatively run the below script after reading this file http://serverkb.co.uk/tools/README.txt:
Alternatively run the below script after reading this file http://serverkb.co.uk/tools/README.txt:
Line 569: Line 1,712:
http://serverkb.co.uk/tools/updatedbscript.sh
http://serverkb.co.uk/tools/updatedbscript.sh


To vim a file you locate, see [http://stackoverflow.com/questions/8228831/why-does-locate-filename-xargs-vim-cause-strange-terminal-behaviour this]. vim $(command)
=== Cannot find an existing file ===
Ensure that the directory path of the file that '''does''' exist is not in the following section in /etc/updatedb.conf:
<pre>PRUNEPATHS="/tmp /var/spool /media"</pre>
<!-- Alternate prune file:
<!-- Alternate prune file:
PRUNE_BIND_MOUNTS="yes"
PRUNE_BIND_MOUNTS="yes"
Line 574: Line 1,724:
PRUNEPATHS="/tmp /var/spool /media"
PRUNEPATHS="/tmp /var/spool /media"
PRUNEFS="NFS nfs nfs4 rpc_pipefs afs binfmt_misc proc smbfs autofs iso9660 ncpfs coda devpts ftpfs devfs mfs shfs sysfs cifs lustre_lite tmpfs usbfs udf (FROM HERE IS DIFFERENT) fuse.glusterfs fuse.sshfs ecryptfs fusesmb devtmpfs" -->
PRUNEFS="NFS nfs nfs4 rpc_pipefs afs binfmt_misc proc smbfs autofs iso9660 ncpfs coda devpts ftpfs devfs mfs shfs sysfs cifs lustre_lite tmpfs usbfs udf (FROM HERE IS DIFFERENT) fuse.glusterfs fuse.sshfs ecryptfs fusesmb devtmpfs" -->
== vim ==
To make a copy the line below where you cursor is, hold CTRL + e. Then put a hash (comment) in front of this line. This is useful for backing up an old value before changing it.
=== Create backup of file whilst in vim ===
<pre>vim file
:!cp % %-</pre>
Press enter and continue to edit
Credit to User [http://www.commandlinefu.com/commands/by/mpb MPB]
=== Enter Insert mode ===
Press the letter i (I)
=== Enter Replace mode ===
Press the letter r (R)
=== E21: Cannot make changes, 'Modifiable' is off ===
<pre>:set modifiable</pre>
=== Search in file for multiple terms ===
Go to search mode i.e. type '/' and then type \v followed by the words you want to search separated by '|' (pipe).
Example:
<pre>/\vword1|word2|word3</pre>
Go to search mode and type the words you want to search separated by '\|'.
Example:
<pre>/word1\|word2\|word3</pre>
The first way puts you in the regular expression mode so that you do not need to put any extra back slashes before every pipe or other delimiters used for searching.
=== See changes made before exiting ===
<pre>:w !diff % -</pre>
=== Editing a jar/zip file ===
(zip#Write) sorry, your system doesn't appear to have the zip pgm
1) Check zip is installed
2)
<pre>:set modifiable
:set write</pre>
3)
E382: Cannot write, 'buftype' option is set
Check if the file has -e on it using:
<pre>lsattr filename</pre>
If so, you likely cannot edit it.
4)
Alternatively, download the file (e.g. a jar) and use an Archive tool like 7-zip to edit it.


== [http://www.cymru1.net/linux-vps/vps-hints-and-tips.php VPS Hints and Tips] ==
== [http://www.cymru1.net/linux-vps/vps-hints-and-tips.php VPS Hints and Tips] ==

Latest revision as of 10:13, 8 July 2019

To check your server info, do lscpu
To run a bash script without executing it, do bash -n scriptname.sh
To see help commands do command --help or man command. To paste into PuTTY, use SHIFT + INSERT.
For detailed software and hardware info do apt-get install hardinfo then hardinfo. For CentOS 6 use this.
To write to a user in the same SSH server, do w, get their tty session and then do write user ttySession. If they are root, do write root Session
Awk introduction, If manual.

Append date to same line

Either of these will work:

| awk '{ print strftime("%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S"), $0; }'
| ts '%F %T'

To customise date, put a + symbol in front of the flag:

date +%R
14:32

To get this format of the date/time:

24 May 2013 10:25:33

Use:

date +%d\ %B\ %Y\ %H:%M:%S

authorized_keys (RSA)

This will show you how to SCP, SSH and rSync without prompting for password between two servers.

Whenever you need to use SCP to copy files, it asks for passwords. Same with rSync as it (by default) uses SSH as well. Usually SCP and rSync commands are used to transfer or backup files between known hosts or by the same user on both the hosts. It can get really annoying the password is asked every time. I even had the idea of writing an expect script to provide the password. Of course, I didn't. Instead I browsed for a solution and found it after quite some time. There are already a couple of links out there which talk about it. I am adding to it...

Lets say you want to copy between two hosts host_src and host_dest. host_src is the host where you would run the SCP, SSH or rSync command, irrespective of the direction of the file copy!

On host_src, run this command as the user that runs SCP/SSH/rSync

ssh-keygen -t rsa

This will prompt for a passphrase. Just press the enter key. It'll then generate an identification (private key) and a public key. Do not ever share the private key with anyone! ssh-keygen shows where it saved the public key. This is by default ~/.ssh/id_rsa.pub:

Your public key has been saved in <your_home_dir>/.ssh/id_rsa.pub

Transfer the id_rsa.pub file to host_dest by either FTP, SCP, rSync or any other method.

On host_dest, login as the remote user which you plan to use when you run SCP, SSH or rSync on host_src.

Make sure the folder ~/.ssh exists first, if not do:

mkdir ~/.ssh

Copy the contents of id_rsa.pub to ~/.ssh/authorized_keys

cat id_rsa.pub >>~/.ssh/authorized_keys
chmod 700 ~/.ssh/authorized_keys

If this file does not exists, then the above command will create it. Make sure you remove permission for others to read this file. If its a public key, why prevent others from reading this file? Probably, the owner of the key has distributed it to a few trusted users and has not placed any additional security measures to check if its really a trusted user.

Note that SSH by default does not allow root to log in. This has to be explicitly enabled on host_dest. This can be done by editing /etc/ssh/sshd_config and changing the option of PermitRootLogin from no to yes. Don't forget to restart SSHD so that it reads the modified config file. Do this only if you want to use the root login.

Well, thats it. Now you can run SCP, SSH and rSync on host_src connecting to host_dest and it won't prompt for the password. Note that this will still prompt for the password if you are running the commands on host_dest connecting to host_src. You can reverse the steps above (generate the public key on host_dest and copy it to host_src) and you have a two way setup ready!

.bash_history

Change Epoch time in .bash_history:

https://askubuntu.com/questions/391082/how-to-see-time-stamps-in-bash-history/391087

.bashrc

vim /root/.bashrc

Colours

https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Color_Bash_Prompt

Add these:

alias ls='ls --color=auto'
alias grep='grep --color=auto'
source /root/.bashrc
vim /root/.vimrc
syntax on

Exit your session and re-enter it.

Crontab editor

Add this line in:

EDITOR=vim; export EDITOR
crontab -e

Binary/binaries

These are normally in the bin or sbin folder for a program.

Calendar

apt-get install gcal
gcal -K -q GB_EN December/2012-January/2013 # Holidays for Dec/2012 and Jan/2013 with week numbers

Credit to User MPB

Check Linux version/kernel

cat /etc/issue

For Ubuntu do cat /etc/issue or for some CentOS distributions use cat /etc/redhat-release

uname -a
uname -r #for just the kernel
uname -rs #for OS and kernel

Check if SELinux is enabled

apt-get install chkconfig
yum install chkconfig

chkconfig --list
cat /etc/sysconfig/selinux
sestatus
selinuxenabled

Check if Virtualization is available for server

CentOS:

egrep '(vmx|svm)' --color=always /proc/cpuinfo

Ubuntu:

apt-get install cpu-checker
kvm-ok

Check your PuTTY (TTY) session

Type this into command line:

tty

Clear last login info

Clear last login info

CLI/bash Commands and scripting

  • For variables with multiple pipes "|", use tacs `` instead of quotes ""
  • If you are attempting to use the Unix mail function, you have to specify a body otherwise it will hang.
  • If you have an if statement and its requirements are not met (e.g. greater than) and it then moves onto the next if statement, if it uses a mail function it may send it to the root user's email or the Admin/Administrator's email address. To avoid this use > /dev/null . 2>&1 likely won't work.
  • It seems if you are using the read function, you can only call a variable that is inside of it (subshell), from here.
  • To stop a ping after x amount of responses, do ping -c x or use ping -oc y (where y equals a maximum amount of tries)
  • Use >> to append an output to the end of the file.
  • The use of && means that you only echo the name of the directory if the directory creation is successful.

- The $() syntax allows you to load anything echoed to STDOUT to be loaded into a variable, and the single quotes ensure that if there are any spaces in the directory name, it still gets loaded into a single variable. To use command substitution, enclose any command that generates output to standard output inside parentheses and precede the opening parenthesis with a dollar sign, $(command). Command substitution is useful when assigning a value to a variable. It is handy for using the output of one command as an argument to another command. Why is $(...) preferred over `...` (backticks)? . A good use of this is in http://serverkb.co.uk/tools/slow.sh

  • To quote double quotes (") do the following: echo -e "Testing \"quotes\" here" - this will show as Testing "quotes"
  • Quotes prevent wildcard (*) expansion.

$?

This is the exit status/code of the last executed function/program/command.

ack

To look into.

Awk

To print out a list of just folders/files you want, do;

ls -l filepath | awk '{print $9;}'

This won't work correctly if there is spaces in the filename. To resolve this, use this command whilst in the directory itself.

To do multiple sections of a result, do:

awk '{print $1,$2,$4,$X;}'

If you want to get rid of/cut certain/specific lines/rows from STDOUT aka print a specific line, use awk in this way:

awk 'NR==22'

This is for use without a file. This example will only display the 22nd row from your output.

Notes: Blank lines count as a row. To do multiple lines do awk 'NR==22,NR==25' . This will output line 22-25.

The command sed '22 ! d' would do the same as the awk 'NR==22' example.

To get rid of pipe symbols in a file, do:

awk -F'|' '{print $1,$10}' FileWithPipes > FileWithoutPipes

Alternatively if you get a list, e.g of domains from MySQL with only one column selected, put them in a file and you can remove the pipes by doing:

cat domainlist | awk '{print $2}' > list

awk '{ printf "%-20s %-40s\n", $1, $2}' allows you to print information in columns

Cat

Parse JSON file:

cat file | python .mjson.tool

Cut

This tool can be used in an example where you get an output but want to strip it to exactly what you need e.g.

lookupipscript.sh <IPaddress>

Output below:

Plan : Bronze, Silver, Gold
Type : IPv4 or IPv6
URL  : http
IP   : 0.0.0.0(primary)

lookupipscript.sh <IPaddress> | sed 'row ! d' | awk '{print $column;}'

This would output 0.0.0.0(primary). To get just the IP address and not the "(primary)" section, do:

| cut -c 1-7

Cut counts the first number/letter as 1, not 0.

eval

Use this if you want to run a variable after a pipe and to shorten down your scripts. e.g. in http://serverkb.co.uk/tools/getdns.sh

ns="ns.nameserver.co.uk"
d="domain.co.uk"
g="grep $d | grep -v 'DiG\|;'"

echo "dig @$ns $d A"
dig @$ns $d A | eval $g

It is a good replacement instead of $() or `` or running just a variable.

Find

Exclude directories

Guide Part 1

Find Help (this includes mtime commands)

find . -maxdepth 1 -type f -printf "%f\n"  | sed s/,$//

Finds all files that contain "some string". This command is useful in a directory (e.g. mail), so you would do ls -lah | grep year-mm then:

find . -type f -exec grep -l "some string" {} \;

for loop examples

Functions

A prime use of functions is in our script to replace the date.timezone settings in php.ini at http://serverkb.co.uk/tools/phptimezone.sh

#!/bin/bash
APACHEPHP="/etc/php5/apache2/php.ini"
CURRENT="\n\nThis is the current timezone configuration:"
DONE="If the settings were wrong, they are as below now:"
ETC="/etc/php.ini"

function UBDEB(){
 echo -e "\nThe operating system is Debian/Ubuntu, so editing $APACHEPHP" $CURRENT
 grep "date." $1 | head -7 | grep -v '; http\|Define' ; echo ""
  sed -i -e 's/;date.timezone\ =/date.timezone\ =\ \"Europe\/London\"/g' $1
  sed -i -e 's/;date.default_latitude\ =\ 31.7667/date.default_latitude\ =\ 51.500181/g' $1
  sed -i -e 's/;date.default_longitude\ =\ 35.2333/date.default_longitude\ =\ 0.12619/g' $1
 echo $DONE
 grep "date." $1 | head -7 | grep -v '; http\|Define' ; echo ""
}

function RHEL(){
 echo -e "\nThe operating system is likely CentOS, editing $ETC" "$CURRENT
 grep "date." $1 | head -7 | grep -v '; http\|Define' ; echo ""
  sed -i -e 's/;date.timezone\ =/date.timezone\ =\ \"Europe\/London\"/g' $1
  sed -i -e 's/;date.default_latitude\ =\ 31.7667/date.default_latitude\ =\ 51.500181/g' $1
  sed -i -e 's/;date.default_longitude\ =\ 35.2333/date.default_longitude\ =\ 0.12619/g' $1
 echo $DONE
 grep "date." $1 | head -7 | grep -v '; http\|Define' ; echo ""
}

if [[ `cat /etc/issue | sed '1 ! d' | awk '{print $1;}'` == "Debian" || `cat /etc/issue | sed '1 ! d' | awk '{print $1;}'` == "Ubuntu" ]];
then
 UBDEB "$APACHEPHP"
  else
 RHEL "$ETC"
fi

Credit to Sam Teale for helping me with this.

Grep

If you are grepping a a .gz or .zip file you generally need to use zgrep.

Exclude multiple directories

grep 'string' -R . -il --exclude="/proc" --color
grep -iR "string" * | grep -v "/proc"

Look for IP address

do this:

grep -E -o '(25[0-5]|2[0-4][0-9]|[01]?[0-9][0-9]?)\.(25[0-5]|2[0-4][0-9]|[01]?[0-9][0-9]?)\.(25[0-5]|2[0-4][0-9]|[01]?[0-9][0-9]?)\.(25[0-5]|2[0-4][0-9]|[01]?[0-9][0-9]?)'

courtesy of SO

Multiple terms

Exclude using -v

grep 'chroot\|default\|fs\|fs-passwd\|httpsdocs'

It is important to remember to not put a \| after the last text term.

This can be used with tail as well.

Remove pipe symbols from MySQL

mysql -pPASSWORD admin -e"select domain from domains;" grep -v "|" > FileWithoutPipes

Switches/flags

-A after
-B before

Wildcards for filepaths

From http://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/203195/wildcards-for-filepaths-arent-working-in-grep :

* in a regex is not like a filename glob. It means 0 or more of the previous character/pattern. So your examples would be looking for a A then 0 or more B then -DEF
. in regex means "any character" so you could fix your pattern by using
grep 'AB.*DEF'

Head

If for example you do /var/qmail/bin/qmail-qstat and it prints two separate lines, do this to get just the first line:

head -1

If and Else

Advanced if usage

Use -f for files, -d for directories

if [ -f $VARIABLE ]
then
parameters (e.g. echo, mkdir, touch, rm)
fi

Combine if and $? to get to do something with the exit status of the last executed command.

if [ $? -eq 0 ]; then
commands
fi

If you want to prompt for both y and Y for yes input, use:

if [[ $variable1 = y || $variable2 = Y ]];

Another example of the above if x or y is here. Use || to do if = x or y.

if [[ value = x || y ]

If you get the following error when executing a bash script outside of it's directory:

[[: not found

You need to either bash /file/path/to/script or alter the syntax to use:

-eq instead of =

or

(( command )) instead of [[ command ]]

If value equals multiple values

Using the syntax above:

echo -ne "Enter a server number (1, 2 or 3): "
read ServerNo

if [[ ( $ServerNo -eq 1 ) || ( $ServerNo -eq 2 ) || ( $ServerNo -eq 3 ) ]]; then
  echo "$ServerNo is a valid server, continuing."
 else
  echo "$ServerNo is not a valid server, exiting."
fi

read

One of the simplest uses of this command is to do it like so:

echo -ne "Enter the filename you want to create: "
read createdfilename
touch $createdfilename

You will need the -n for echo to allow input next to echo instead of a line below.

sed

If you want to get rid of/cut certain/specific lines/rows from STDOUT aka print a specific line, use sed in this way:

sed '22 ! d'

This is for use without a file. This example will only display the 22nd row from your output.

Notes: Blank lines count as a row. The command awk 'NR==22' would do the same.

To print individual/separate lines, e.g. 1, 4 and 5:

sed -ne '1p;4p;5p'

To print between lines 22 to 39:

sed '22,39 ! d'

To put a variable inside sed, use quotes instead of apostrophes:

sed "22,$variable ! d"

To delete parenthesis/brackets, use this:

sed 's/[()]//g'
sed 's/[)]//g'
sed 's/[(]//g'
sed 's/[[]]//g'
sed 's/[]]//g'
sed 's/[[]//g'

Replace text in a file

sed -i -e 's/TextToFindToReplace/TextToReplaceItWith/g' filename

To handle spaces, forward slashes and quotes " ", use back slashes like you do in filenames:

sed -i -e 's/File\"quotes\"WithA\ Space/HereIs\/ABackslash/g' filename

sleep and usleep

Use sleep if you want to "wait" X seconds. usleep is measured in microseconds and cannot do more than 1 second. 100000 (100,000 / 100k) = 0.1 seconds. 1,000,000 = 1 second.

Shells and subshells

If you want a script to make changes to your current shell, not the subshell a bash script works in, execute the script by doing the following (sometimes you may need to do ./ still):

. script

This information was provided by these sources: 1, 2

tee

Tee command is used to store and view (both at the same time) the output of any other command.

Tee command writes to the STDOUT, and to a file at a time.

By default the tee command overwrites the file. You can instruct tee command to append (like >> does) to the file using the option –a as shown below.

ls | tee –a outputfile

Use [[ instead of [

Variables

If you store a variable with a command within it as follows:

variablename=`command`

you should instead store it like this:

variablename=$(command)

And then call it as follows:

${variablename}

Watch

Example/s:

To monitor a file's size:

watch -n 1 'ls -lh | grep filename'

xargs

This can be incredibly useful if you get "Argument list too long"

cd /to/directory , find . -type f | xargs rm -Rf

If you need to remove a list of files with spaces in them, do this:

ls -lah | grep "SpecificString" | awk '{print $9,$10,$11,$etc}' | xargs -I {} rm -v {}

Use ls -lh to not include hidden files/file starting with a full stop.

For simple removal of normal files do this in a screen session:

ls -lh | awk '{print $9}' | xargs -t rm

Otherwise try using find:

find . -exec grep PATTERN {} + | wc -l

Copying multiple files:

ls -lh | grep TEXT | awk '{print $9}' | xargs cp -t /target/path/

Compare a remote file with a local file

ssh user@host cat /path/to/remotefile | diff /path/to/localfile -

Credit to User Root

Compare files in a directory

diff -bur folder1/ folder2/

Warning: when doing diff on folders, if the timestamps are different it will think the files are different. If you actually compare the files, they will be the same.

Console Clock in corner

while true; do echo -ne "\e[s\e[0;$((COLUMNS-27))H$(date)\e[u"; sleep 1; done &

Warning, this auto scrolls your SSH session. To kill it, do:

ps aux | grep bash | grep -v grep

Then kill the bash session at the time you ran it:

kill <processid>

Credit to User Squiidux

-->

Create symlink

https://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/creating-soft-link-or-symbolic-link/

How to chown a symlink: https://superuser.com/questions/68685/chown-is-not-changing-symbolic-link

Old method:

ln -s TARGET LINK_NAME

Cronjob/Crontab

To check a cronjob has at least attempted to run/execute, check this at the time of execution:

tail -f /var/log/syslog | grep CRON

Generator

crontab -e
crontab -l

*     *     *   *    *        command to be executed
-     -     -   -    -
|     |     |   |    |
|     |     |   |    +----- day of week (0 - 6) (Sunday = 0 or 7)
|     |     |   +------- month (1 - 12)
|     |     +--------- day of        month (1 - 31)
|     +----------- hour (0 - 23)
+------------- min (0 - 59)

Guides:

http://www.adminschoice.com/crontab-quick-reference

To do a job every X minutes, do */X * * * *

To do a job every minute in a specific hour, do * X * * *

To do a job every X hours, do * */X * * *

To do a job every day at X hour on the hour, do 0 9 * * * for 9am each day.

To do a job every week at 2am on Sunday, do 0 2 * * 0

To monitor active cron jobs, do tail -f /var/log/cron

/usr/local/bin/php: No such file or directory

Do whereis php

Generally it is actually in /usr/bin/php

Cron Daemon email

If you get the below email:

cd / && run-parts --report /etc/cron.daily
/etc/cron.daily/sysklogd:
chown: cannot access `/var/log/mail.warn': No such file or directory
chown: cannot access `/var/log/syslog': No such file or directory
chown: cannot access `/var/log/mail.info': No such file or directory

Do the following:

cd /var/log
touch /var/log/mail.warn /var/log/syslog /var/log/mail.info
/etc/init.d/sysklogd restart

Date

Spaces

To put spaces between variables (e.g +%H%M) use single quotes:

The time is `date '+%R:%S %Y %Z'` on the following Day/Month/Year `date '+%a %b %d'`

Echo colours

Tips for colours and formatting

Place 0; for the normal version (e.g. Black is 0;30)
Place 1; before these to get the light colour version.

Here are the colour codes:

An example:

#!/bin/bash

wipe="\033[1m\033[0m"

black="40m"
darkggrey='\E[1;30m'
red='\E[31m'
lightred='\E[1;31m'
green='\E[32m'
lightgreen='\E[1;32m'
yellow='\E[1;33m'
brown='\E[0;33m'
blue='\E[34m'
lightblue='\E[1;34m'
purple='\E[35m'
lightpurple='\E[1;35m'
cyan='\E[36m'
lightcyan='\E[1;36m'
white='\E[37m'
lightgray='\E[0;37m'
green='\E[32m;'
echo -e "$green$black"
echo Hello World
echo -e "$wipe"

or

echo -e "Output a ${green}coloured${wipe} word."
./colourtest.sh

Hello World

The Hello World text appears green.

Execute one off command whenever

echo "ls -l" | at midnight

This is an alternative to cron which allows a one-off task to be scheduled for a certain time.

Credit to User Root

File Locations (index priority)

/etc/apache2/mods-enabled/dir.conf (on Ubuntu) or /etc/httpd/conf/httpd.conf (on CentOS, ~line 402) and it should show something like:

DirectoryIndex index.html index.html.var index.shtml index.cfm index.php index.htm

This shows the default priority in which the index page is picked up and this can be set in the .htaccess file as well with:

DirectoryIndex index.html index.php

These are good places to check if you are using all of your disk space.

cd /var/log
cd /var/www/vhosts (website and statistics)
cd /var/lib/mysql (database) or mysql/mysql
cd /usr/bin/mysqldump (mysql dump)
cd var/qmail (mail logs, queue and configuration)
cd /var/lib/psa/dumps (physical Plesk backups)
cd opt/psa/tmp/ (Plesk stores temporary files here for backups)

File Permissions

One of the best permissions guide

The values and their equivalent permissions. R is Read, W is Write and X is Execute. There are three sets on a file or folder (e.g. -rwx-w--w- , -rw-r--r-- , -rwxr-xrwx) so you need to put in a value of three (or four in rare occasions) for a file/folder e.g. 644.

0  ---<br>
1  --x
2  -w-
3  -wx
4  r--
5  r-x
6  rw-
7  rwx

The syntax for chmod is (for example) 755 fileorfolder. The -R option can also be used to set the permissions on anything below a folder.
The syntax for chown is chown user:group fileorfolder . To apply the user:group to anything below a folder you need to use the -R option.

Permissions Calculator
Help Guide 1
Help Guide 2
Unix Notation
File protection with chmod

If you use PHP Support as Apache module, it will use the third value of -rw- r-- r-x to permissions. If it is using Fast CGI it will use the user:group for the first two values -rwx rw- --x

If you are using Plesk a good place to check if you are getting Forbidden errors on your website is /var/www/vhosts/yourdomain.com/httpdocs/statistics/logs/error_log . Access your site and tail -f that file. If you get .htaccess pcfg_openfile: unable to check htaccess file, ensure it is readable name your .htaccess file correctly, set your httpdocs to 757 and see this link.

Special permissions

There is also a, g & s which are not widely used as it just needs additional representation at the special/setid permission to the group.

To set a file to -rws--x--x for example use

4 = setuid - s
2 = setgid - s
4 + 2 = S
1 = Sticky Bit
4 + 2 + 1 = T
2511  -r-x--s--x (e.g. /var/qmail/bin/qmail-remote or /var/qmail/bin/qmail-queue)
4655  -rwSr-xr-x
4711  -rws--x--x
4744  -rwsr--r--
4755  -rwsr-xr-x
6411  -r-S--s--x.
6511  -r-s--s--x
6644  -rwSr-Sr--
6666  -rwSrwSrw-
7000  ---S--S--T
7644  -rwSr-Sr-T
7711  -rws--s--t
7744  -rwsr-Sr-T
7755  -rwsr-sr-t

Owner and Group advice for websites

Find command guide

Fix file and folder permissions easily

FreeBSD

  • mysqldump location: /mysql/bin/mysqldump
  • Remove syntax:

- rm -r folderName

  • Generic tunneling interface starts with gif

Check software versions

fetch instead of wget

To download a file.

whereis instead of locate command

To find files/folders.

Full Directory listing

apt-get install tree
yum install tree
tree > tree.txt

If you feel adventurous do cat tree.txt , it will take a while ;)

Find the deepest directory in your server/file structure

find . -type d -printf '%d:%p\n' | sort -n | tail -1

Find and remove specific file types from current directory

cd into the directory
find . -type f -name '*.filetype' -exec rm -v {} \;

Line count a file

wc -l /file/path

Generate random number

Between 1 and 10:

seq 10| shuf | head -1

GeoIP - Block countries accessing website

Ubuntu: apt-cache search geoip ; apt-get install geoip-database libgeoip-dev libgeoip1 python-geoip geoip-bin libapache2-mod-geoip tclgeoip
CentOS: yum list |grep -i geo , yum install GeoIP.x86_64
http://www.webhostingtalk.com/showthread.php?t=959646
http://askmatt.co.uk/blog/2010/05/block-countries-using-apache-mod-geo-ip-list-of-countries-by-fraud-risk

Gunzip and Zip

To gzip a file (.gz) up, do:

gzip file

The above won't work for folders.

Or if zip is installed:

zip -r filename.zip filename

To unzip a .gz file, do:

gunzip file

To extract a .tgz file, do:

tar zxvf fileNameHere.tgz

See http://serverkb.co.uk/wiki/Linux#tar_command for further details.

7zip

https://www.howtoforge.com/tutorial/how-to-install-and-use-7zip-file-archiver-on-ubuntu-linux/

DO NOT USE the 7-zip format for backup purpose on Linux/Unix because:

- 7-zip does not store the owner/group of the file.

On Linux/Unix, in order to backup directories you must use tar:

- to backup a directory  : tar cf - directory | 7za a -si directory.tar.7z

- to restore your backup : 7za x -so directory.tar.7z | tar xf -

If you want to send files and directories (not the owner of file) to others Unix/MacOS/Windows users, you can use the 7-zip format.

Example:

7za a directory.7z directory

Do not use "-r" because this flag does not do what you think.

Do not use directory/* because of ".*" files (example  : "directory/*" does not match "directory/.profile")

https://www.unixtutorial.org/2014/08/7zip-ubuntu/

Hostname guide (rough)

If the server runs Plesk and Virtuozzo, the permanent one needs setting on the hardware or in Virtuozzo.

Run dig -x IP.IP.IP.IP from any Linux server and it will show you the PTR/hostname.

Note: Most servers by default come with a non resolving hostname of localhost, localhost.localdomain or something generic.

The hostname should never be left as the default value on a server sending mail, as it is one of three things mail recipient's mailservers see to determine if mail is spam or not. The other two are reverse DNS and the SMTP banner.

If Plesk throws an error when clicking Websites & Domains tab regarding hostname -f, see this resolution.

How to fix broken packages

Run the following commands below:

dpkg --configure -a
apt-get install -f
#or
apt-get -f install

If the problem still exists, then edit dpkg status file:

gksudo gedit /var/lib/dpkg/status

Find the package in question, and remove everything that has anything to do with it and save the file.

How to install .deb files

dpkg -i filename.deb

.htaccess

HyperText access

inode usage

df --si
df -ih

A lot of the time the cause can be /tmp (/var/lib/php/session/ on Plesk) due to sessions. You may want to delete the files in there.

Investigating high load

If you are getting a high load average in top, these are some of the steps you can take to investigate the issue.

Check which process has the most open of itself:

ps aux | awk '{print $11}' | sort | uniq -c | sort -nk1 | tail -n5

Stop that process, then run the above command a second time. Then start it again and run the command a third time.

Useful software

  • top
  • htop
  • iotop

All these will do the job. Firstly check the CPU wait time, this is shown within top in Cpu(s): 8.0%us, 2.8%sy, 0.0%ni, 40.7%id, 48.3%wa

%wa in

If this is high, check the Status column (S column in top) to see if any are labelled D. The processes blocked on IO are the ones marked as D.

On a Plesk server

Ensure sites are running PHP as Fast CGI Application instead of Apache module so you can see which USER the process is running as. Pressing the letter "c" on your keyboard will show the path and normally the website name.

wget http://serverkb.co.uk/tools/memcpu.sh ; chmod +x memcpu.sh ; ./memcpu.sh > usage.log &
tail -f usage.log

You can alter the PHP Handler on Plesk boxes in the psa database easily by doing:

mysql -uadmin -p`cat /etc/psa/.psa.shadow`;
use psa
select * from hosting\G
select dom_id,www_root,php_handler_type from hosting;
update hosting set php_handler_type="module" where dom_id=x;

If sites run PHP as an Apache module scripts will execute as the Apache user www-data, this can make it difficult to see which site they belong to. This also means scripts run with privileges of the Apache user so if an account is compromised an attacker can get access to all other accounts. Also running as Apache module can make the Apache process CPU report look artificially high. Running PHP as Fast-CGI executes scripts as an FTP user associated with each subscription allowing easier identification of problem scripts and limit the damage of rogue scripts.

CPU reports are not an easy way to determine server health. We'd recommend you look at changes and trends rather than the absolute numbers. Most importantly consider your real world performance.

Linux Container

This install below is for an Ubuntu physical server, I may update this in the future for CentOS, Fedora and others.

https://help.ubuntu.com/12.04/serverguide/lxc.html

If you need to get file off the container, you can just scp it off. If the recipient server is slow, try moving the file to the host machine by doing:

scp -Psshport file root@hostIPaddress:~

Installation of LXC

apt-get install lxc
cat /etc/init/lxc-net.conf | grep USE_LXC_BRIDGE

If true set to false unless you want the containers to NAT to your servers real IP addresses, and to be accessible externally.

Pre-container creation steps

To reduce errors pre-container creation do the following:

dpkg-reconfigure locales
locale-gen en_GB
update-locale LANG=en_GB.UTF-8

Creating/deleting containers

OpenVZ Template list

Check the templates below and pick one:

cd /usr/lib/lxc/templates/ ; ls -lah

Create a container from one of the templates:

lxc-create -t ubuntu -n NameOfTheContainer

If you want to install the fedora package, do apt-get install yum

To delete it just do:

lxc-destroy -n NameOfTheContainer

Start/stop a container

lxc-start -n NameOfTheContainer -d

/etc/init.d/lxc stop

Access the container

The default user is 'ubuntu' with the password 'ubuntu', to enter a container, do:

lxc-console -n NameOfTheContainer
sudo -i

Exit using Ctrl + a, then press q

To re-enter the container, do lxc-console -n NameOfTheContainer and then press enter (you may have to a few times)

Access externally:

iptables -t nat -A PREROUTING -p tcp --dport 2222 -j DNAT --to 10.0.3.61:22

Make sure you remove this rule afterwards and DO NOT reboot your server.

Configuration settings

  • By default you can ping a container from the host, and vice versa, and you can ping the outside world from the container.
  • You can set the hostname just like a normal server, if you want to rename the container.

Default configuration of system files

cd /var/lib/lxc/nameofcontainer/rootfs/etc/sysconfig/network-scripts
vim ifcfg-eth0
DEVICE=eth0
BOOTPROTO=dhcp
ONBOOT=yes
HOSTNAME=phptester
NM_CONTROLLED=no
TYPE=Ethernet
MTU=
vim /var/lib/lxc/nameofcontainer/config
lxc.network.type=veth
lxc.network.link=lxcbr0
lxc.network.flags=up
lxc.network.hwaddr = MAC Address
lxc.utsname = MT
vim /etc/lxc/lxc.conf
lxc.network.type=veth
lxc.network.link=lxcbr0
lxc.network.flags=up

You can add the below to /etc/network/interfaces

auto br1
iface br1 inet dhcp
    bridge_ports eth0

Fedora

The mirrors/repositories the container uses may be broken by default, don't try to install anything. You'll likely get:

Error: Cannot retrieve repository metadata (repomd.xml) for repository: fedora. Please verify its path and try again

And you likely won't be able to ping anything except the host machine and localhost/127.0.0.1

iptables -t nat -A POSTROUTING -s ContainerIP/24 -j SNAT --to-source PhysicalHostIP
iptables -t nat -A PREROUTING -m tcp -p tcp --dport 10022 -j DNAT -i eth0 --to-destination ContainerIP:80
iptables -t nat -A PREROUTING -m tcp -p tcp --dport 10443 -j DNAT -i eth0 --to-destination ContainerIP:443

libvirt

vi /etc/yum.repos.d/fedora.repo
vi /etc/yum.repos.d/fedora-updates.repo

Uncomment (#) the lines starting with "baseurl"

yum update

OpenSUSE

Version history

http://www.lacerta.be/d7/content/opensuse-lxc-container-inside-ubuntu

List containers

lxc-list

Set passwords

Log in as the root user of the container:

Fedora container:

Username: root
Password: root

Set the root password to something different:

passwd

You will need to do yum install vim when inside the server.

Ubuntu container:

sudo -i
Username: ubuntu
Password: ubuntu

Set the user's password:

passwd ubuntu

Set the root user's password:

passwd

SSH in externally

To route from externally through the host to the container, just do the below iptables rule:

iptables -t nat -A PREROUTING -p tcp --dport 1337 -j DNAT --to 10.0.4.60:22
iptables-save

In the above case we are saying:

- You want to SSH in on port 1337
- The container's eth0 IP address is 10.0.4.60
- Then below we are saying the physical machine has an IP address of 110.111.112.113

Then externally from the server do:

ssh [email protected] -p2222

And bingo! You should be in the container.

passwd

LSB Init Scripts

ls list only directories or files

Directories:

ls -lad */

Files:

ls -la | grep -v ^d

Kill tty session

w
ps aux | grep bash | grep -v grep
ps aux | grep tty | grep -v grep
kill -HUP <processid>

Further info

Maldet

Documentation
Maldet .tar.gz
Install and Configure

cd /root ; wget http://serverkb.co.uk/tools/maldet.sh ; chmod +x maldet.sh ; ./maldet.sh

Always run your scans from chroot environment (if it has one/is possible) and in Screen (screen -S NameIt), and detach by doing CTRL + A, then press D

Scan reports are normally stored in /usr/local/maldetect/sess/ as session. files.

maldet -a -e -l filepath

Manually alter time/date

Ubuntu

date
date mmddtimeyear #as seen below

Cent OS

cd /etc/
ls -lah
rm localtime
ln -s /usr/share/zoneinfo/Europe/London /etc/localtime
date mmddtimeyear
     | |  |   | ---> 2012
     | |  | 24hr --> XX:XX without :
     | | dd -------> day
     | mm ---------> month

/etc/init.d/ntpd restart or start
date

Mount NFS drive

apt-get install nfs-common
cd /media
mount -t nfs HostName:/export/ftpbackup/ServiceName /FolderMount

The example above contains variables, which you will need to substitute with your own values.

HostName: The host name of your backup storage
ServiceName: The name of your server (e.g. ns0000000.ip-123-123-123.net)
FolderMount: The folder where you want to mount the NFS share

e.g.

mount -t nfs ftpback-xxx1-123.ovh.net:/export/ftpbackup/ns123456.ip-XX-XXX-XXX.eu /media/YourNewFolder

Move files into your home directory not owned by your own user

Copy to /var/tmp or /tmp (for small files) and do:

chmod ugo+rw <filename>

PID

Under construction.

Process ID.

To determine the usage of a specific process, do top -p PID

You can use the "c" key to show the file path a PID is being called from.

The maximum number of pids can be obtained from /proc/sys/kernel/pid_max

.profile

Put this in .profile file for on user startup:

echo "" ; df -h | sed -ne '1p;5p' ; echo "rootfs"
echo "" ; free -m
echo "" ; w | head -1 | sed 's/^ *//g'
echo "" ; w | tail -10 | grep -v average ; echo ""

Proxmox

To access via the web go to https://IPaddress:8006

Rough notes:

apt-get install sudo

Proxmox

/var/lib/vz

dump is for backups
images is for OS images
private is for OpenVZ container file systems
template/cache is for OpenVZ templates

http://openvz.org/Download/template/precreated

Create VM creates KVM
Create CT creates OpenVZ container

vzctl enter id
vzctl start/stop id

iptables -t nat -A POSTROUTING -o vmbr1 -j MASQUERADE
restart networking on host and CT

cman_tool: Cannot open connection to cman

pvecm status
pvecm nodes
cman_tool: Cannot open connection to cman, is it running ?
service pve-cluster restart
pvecm delnode NodeName

Force remove an OpenVZ container

vzctl stop 100 ; vzctl destroy ContainerID
cd /var/lib/vz/private
rm ContainerIDfolder -R
cd /var/lib/vz/root
rm ContainerIDfolder -R
cd /etc/pve/nodes/ContainerName/openvz
mv ContainerID.conf ContainerID.bak

Make sure it does not exist in cat /etc/pve/.members

Remount a logical partition/volume

lvdisplay

/dev/mapper/pve-data /var/lib/vz (this will be different in your file system)

Unable to get local IP address

/etc/init.d/pve-cluster restart
service pve-cluster start
Starting pve cluster filesystem : pve-cluster[main] crit: Unable to get local IP address
 (warning).

Make sure in /etc/hosts your domain name resolves to the server and you also have it without the .co.uk/.com etc in the file as so:

ServerIPaddress domain.co.uk domain pvelocalhost
127.0.0.1 localhost localhost.localdomain

Then do:

/etc/init.d/hostname.sh stop
/etc/init.d/hostname.sh start
service pve-cluster start

Transport endpoint is not connected

df -h
df: `/etc/pve': Transport endpoint is not connected
ls -lah /etc/pve
ls: cannot access pve: Transport endpoint is not connected
d?????????   ? ?    ?                      ?            ? pve

Do this:

umount /etc/pve
pvecm status

You will get:

unable to get IP for node 'hostname' - node offline?

The fix is the same as this one, ensure you have the domain without the web extension in /etc/hosts resolving to the servers IP address. Then do:

service pve-cluster start

Recover deleted files

You need to install this software before you delete any files:

apt-get install foremost

Then see this documentation:

https://help.ubuntu.com/community/DataRecovery
http://ddailygirl.wordpress.com/2010/08/17/recovering-files-after-rm-in-linux
http://www.howtoforge.com/recover-deleted-files-with-foremost
http://www.webupd8.org/2009/03/recover-deleted-files-in-ubuntu-debian.html

Remove file starting with dash

rm -- -filename

Remove folder starting with dash

rm -rf -- -folder/

Remove/rename file called tilde

mv '~' newfilename
rm '~'

Restart service or service

Useful for differently named ones, e.g.

[ -f /etc/init.d/mysqld ] && service mysqld restart ; [ -f /etc/init.d/mysql ] && service mysql restart

[ -f /etc/init.d/httpd ] && service httpd restart ; [ -f /etc/init.d/apache2 ] && service apache2 restart

Roughly list file count

This includes nested directories:

find /full/file/path -type f | wc -l

SCP Command - Secure Copy

To secure copy a file from one Linux server to another, use the following syntax form:

scp -P PORT file user@IPAddress:/filepath

For example:

scp -P 22 index.html [email protected]:/

To move a folder, put -r in between the port and the file(s)/folder(s) like so:

scp -P 22 -r testdirectory/ [email protected]:/

If you receive the following error while trying to SCP a file from one server to the other:

stdin: is not a tty

You can solve the issue quickly by doing the following on the destination server:

vi ~/.bashrc
  
if [ $(expr index "$-" i) -eq 0 ]; then
return
fi

Screen

Re-join screen session

screen -r

or

screen -D -r '1234.somescreensession'

A better alternate is tmux.

Manage Multiple sessions in one Terminal
Scrollback (vim /home/.screenrc + defscrollback 1000)
Tips and Tricks

Setting the time

http://geoffhankerson.com/node/112
http://codeghar.wordpress.com/2007/12/06/manage-time-in-ubuntu-through-command-line/

Standard redirection

http://www.xaprb.com/blog/2006/06/06/what-does-devnull-21-mean/

STDIN, STDOUT and STDERR.

0, 1 and 2

1>/dev/null
2>/dev/null

sudo

If you exit out of root access and want to run the last command you entered without authentication, do:

sudo !!

System Logs and Shutdown troubleshooting

If you are having an issue, a reboot should not be performed if the server can be accessed in any way (e.g. locally in the data centre, only if it is a Dedicated server). This is because after a reboot there is little you can find out from the logs as the important logs get cleared on restart.

last reboot
last

Do this to check which files exist:

ls -lh /var/log/syslog ; ls -lh /var/log/kern.log ; ls -lh /var/log/dmesg ; ls -lh /var/log/messages

Then do one or more of these depending on which exist:

grep -i error /var/log/syslog ; grep -i panic /var/log/syslog ; grep -i warning /var/log/syslog
grep -i error /var/log/dmesg ; grep -i panic /var/log/dmesg ; grep -i warning /var/log/dmesg
grep -i error /var/log/kern.log ; grep -i panic /var/log/kern.log ; grep -i warning /var/log/kern.log
grep -i error /var/log/messages ; grep -i panic /var/log/messages ; grep -i warning /var/log/messages

errpt may show an error report on some Unix OS'.

To find .log files, run updatedb and then locate *.log

To restart and on boot do a disk check do (or -rF):

shutdown -Fr now

tar command

To archive and compress a folder/files do:

tar -czvf files.tgz files/
tar -czvf folder.tar.gz folder/
tar cvf mubackup.tar mu/ ; gzip -9 mubackup.tar

#.tgz is same as .tar.gz

c creates the archive (tar), z compresses it into the gzip, v is verbose, f is the file/folder

To extract do:

#for tar
tar xvf file.tar

#for .tgz or tar.gz
tar zxvf file.tar.gz

Guide 1
Guide 2
3 and 4

For bz2 files, use:

tar -xvjpf file

top

The TIME column in top is displayed in minutes:seconds.hundredths

tmux

C-c is CTRL+C
C-m is ENTER

New session

Latest:

tmux new -s session_name

Also possible:

tmux new-session -s session_name

Old:

tmux new-session -n NameTheSession

Detach from a session

CTRL +B then D

Kill session

tmux kill-session -t myname

If this fails and it says:

"session not found"

Do the following:

tmux ls
tmux kill-session -t X

- where X is the number of the session on the left.

List sessions available

tmux ls

Re-attach to session

tmux attach
tmux attach -t ID or NameTheSession

Remotely execute a command

tmux send-keys -t ID "command" ENTER

User ID 99

This is most commonly the user nobody. This can be caused by PHP or done on purpose. cat /etc/passwd | grep 99 ; vim /etc/passwd

User is not in the sudoers file

If you try to sudo into a server or run sudo and get the following message:

"is not in the sudoers file. This incident will be reported."

Do the following command as root and add the username into the file in the same format as the root user:

visudo

Use unusual characters in filenames

If you want to specify a space, lets say the file = /usr/local/etc/testingdatabase.sql

You need to name the file/folder as follows:

mv /usr/local/etc/testingdatabase.sql /usr/local/etc/testing\ database.sql

This will make the file be testing database.sql , on command line this will appear as testing\ database.sql .

A backslash symbol \ needs to be used before an apostrophe ' , bracket (), exclamation/bang ! symbol or question marks ?:

01\ -\ It\'s\ You.txt
#How it appears: 01 - It's You.txt

02\ -\ Boom\!.m3u
#How it appears: 02 - Boom!.m3u

03\ -\ Why\ Wont\ You\ Work\?.sh
#How it appears: 03 - Why Wont You Work?.sh

04\ -\ Musical\ Playlist\ For\ \(VPS\)\ Server.m3u
#How it appears: 04 - Musical Playlist For (VPS) Server.m3u

updatedb (locate command)

This command is used when you cannot locate a file and you get "locate: warning: database /var/lib/slocate/slocate.db' is more than 8 days old". It is advised to run updatedb at least once a month. However if you get the following error when using it:

updatedb: fatal error: load_file: Could not open file: /etc/updatedb.conf: No such file or directory

You need to create or edit this file

vim /etc/updatedb.conf

and put the following inside of it:

PRUNE_BIND_MOUNTS="yes"
PRUNEPATHS="/tmp /var/spool /media"
PRUNEFS="NFS nfs nfs4 rpc_pipefs afs binfmt_misc proc smbfs autofs iso9660 ncpfs coda devpts ftpfs devfs mfs shfs sysfs cifs lustre_lite tmpfs usbfs udf"

Alternatively run the below script after reading this file http://serverkb.co.uk/tools/README.txt:

http://serverkb.co.uk/tools/updatedbscript.sh

To vim a file you locate, see this. vim $(command)

Cannot find an existing file

Ensure that the directory path of the file that does exist is not in the following section in /etc/updatedb.conf:

PRUNEPATHS="/tmp /var/spool /media"

vim

To make a copy the line below where you cursor is, hold CTRL + e. Then put a hash (comment) in front of this line. This is useful for backing up an old value before changing it.

Create backup of file whilst in vim

vim file
:!cp % %-

Press enter and continue to edit

Credit to User MPB

Enter Insert mode

Press the letter i (I)

Enter Replace mode

Press the letter r (R)

E21: Cannot make changes, 'Modifiable' is off

:set modifiable

Search in file for multiple terms

Go to search mode i.e. type '/' and then type \v followed by the words you want to search separated by '|' (pipe).

Example:

/\vword1|word2|word3

Go to search mode and type the words you want to search separated by '\|'.

Example:

/word1\|word2\|word3

The first way puts you in the regular expression mode so that you do not need to put any extra back slashes before every pipe or other delimiters used for searching.

See changes made before exiting

:w !diff % -

Editing a jar/zip file

(zip#Write) sorry, your system doesn't appear to have the zip pgm

1) Check zip is installed

2)

:set modifiable
:set write

3)

E382: Cannot write, 'buftype' option is set

Check if the file has -e on it using:

lsattr filename

If so, you likely cannot edit it.

4)

Alternatively, download the file (e.g. a jar) and use an Archive tool like 7-zip to edit it.

VPS Hints and Tips

To check for the filepath of a command run top and then press c.

If it is a container on a node, there are generally no datacentre / rack level restrictions as the container is virtualised on a node. The only restrictions are what is put in place via the container itself effectively.

To list all open Internet, x.25 (HP-UX), and UNIX domain files, use:

lsof -i -U

WHOIS script

Pipe Viewer, PV info page

apt-get install pv ; cd /var/www/vhosts ; ls -l | awk ' {print $9}' > domainlist ; wget serverkb.co.uk/tools/findregistrar.sh ; chmod +x findregistrar.sh

For CentOS use yum -y install jwhois.x86_64

Edit the file and replace domain registrar with the one you want to find. Then do:

./findregistrar.sh

write error

If you get the following error when doing write user TTYsession or write user Session:

write: write: you have write permission turned off.

Do this to fix the problem:

mesg y

Writing Shell Scripts