Difference between revisions of "Miscellaneous Linux Commands"

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Display all network interface names on any Linux system from the shell:
 
Display all network interface names on any Linux system from the shell:
<pre style="color:blue">ifconfig | grep BROADCAST | cut -d " " -f1 | sed 's/.$//' </pre>
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<pre style="color:blue">/sbin/ifconfig | grep BROADCAST | cut -d " " -f1 | sed 's/.$//' </pre>
 
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Most Linux machines will only display one network interface, such as shown on my Slackware 14.1 Virtual Machine Server:
 
Most Linux machines will only display one network interface, such as shown on my Slackware 14.1 Virtual Machine Server:

Revision as of 13:52, 17 November 2014

Shell Commands

Display all network interface names on any Linux system from the shell:

/sbin/ifconfig | grep BROADCAST | cut -d " " -f1 | sed 's/.$//' 


Most Linux machines will only display one network interface, such as shown on my Slackware 14.1 Virtual Machine Server:

eth0 


Other systems may have more than one, such as those with virtual machine software. Sample output from my Fedora 20 VirtualBox server:

em1
virbr0


And here is a sample output from my Fedora 17 (Beefy Miracle) laptop running VMWare:

p5p1                                                                           
vmnet1                                                                         
vmnet8


The "ps" Process Command Syntax

To show all executing processes:

$ ps ax


To show all processed running by a specific user(This example shows all processes running by the Apache WebServer):

$ ps -U apache