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Brief introduction to UNIX

Brief introduction to UNIX. A. Emerson CINECA, High Performance Systems. Contents. Using Unix commands command syntax Getting Started Getting help, identity, logging out Files and directories Making, renaming, deleting and copying. Examining file contents. Further file handling

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Brief introduction to UNIX

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  1. Brief introduction to UNIX A. Emerson CINECA, High Performance Systems

  2. Contents • Using Unix commands • command syntax • Getting Started • Getting help, identity, logging out • Files and directories • Making, renaming, deleting and copying. • Examining file contents. • Further file handling • File compression and making archives. • File permissions • Miscellaneous • Jobs and processes • Editing with vi.

  3. Unix commands - usage • Unix commands are normally used in the form: • <command> <one or more options> <arguments> • Where the options are generally included with the – sign. • Example ls -l –a /usr/local/bin/files Single letter options can usually be combined: ls -la /usr/local/bin/files

  4. Unix commands - wildcards • If you want to do the command on multiple files you can use the * “wild card” character. • Examples $ mv *.pl programs/perl/ $ ls data/* • Be careful with rm (which does a delete) because there is no way to undo it.. rm *.* AARGH!

  5. Getting Started • Command • man • Purpose • Gives you the manual page for a given command • Example $ man pwd pwd(1) NAME pwd - print working directory name SYNOPSIS pwd DESCRIPTION pwd prints the path name of the working (current) directory. pwd is both an explicit command (invoked as /usr/bin/pwd), as well as a builtin

  6. Getting Started • Command • id • Purpose • Tells you your username (!) and what group you belong to. • Example $ id uid=50083(aem0) gid=30(cineca)

  7. Getting Started • Command • exit (or ctrl-d) • Purpose • Logs you out from the system • Example $ exit

  8. Files and directories • Command • mkdir • Purpose • Makes a directory • Common options • -p • creates all the sub-directories in a path if they don’t exist • Examples $ mkdir perl-programs $ mkdir –p 2003/jan/data

  9. Files and directories • Command • cd • Purpose • Changes directory. With no arguments changes to home directory. • Examples $ cd my_data $ cd /usr/local/bin/programs $ cd

  10. Files and directories • Command • mv • Purpose • Moves or renames a file or directory • Common options • -i • Asks confirmation before overwriting another file or directory • Examples $ mv first.pl perl-programs/jan $ mv blast.out blast.out.bak $ mv *.seq sequence-dir

  11. Files and directories • Command • rm • Purpose • Deletes or renames a file • Common options • -i • Asks confirmation first • -r • deletes all sub-directories of a directory (VERY DANGEROUS) • Examples $ rm *.old $ rm –i blast.pl File blast.pl. Remove ? (yes/no)[no] :

  12. Files and directories • Command • cp • Purpose • Makes a copy of a file or directory • Common options • -i • Asks confirmation first if overwriting another file • -r • copies all files of all sub-directories of a directory • Examples $ cp program.f90 program.f90.old $ cp blastdir/*.out . . means the current directory

  13. Files and directories • Command • ls • Purpose • Lists files and directories • Common options • -t • sort by modification time • -l • long format, gives all details of the file (very useful) • -a • shows file beginning with. (not visible with just ls) $ ls –lt total 136 -rw-r--r-- 1 bioinf00 cineca 15678 May 20 2002 test.out -rw-r--r-- 1 bioinf00 cineca 2939 May 20 2002 test.bas -rw-r--r-- 1 bioinf00 cineca 53541 May 20 2002 prova.bas size in bytes

  14. $ less fasta_1.seq >THC479287 CAGAACAGTAGCTAAGAGTCAAACCATGCGTTTGAGTCTCAGCTCTGCT CTCCACTTTACCTTTTGAAGGAGATCCGGACTACAAAGGAAAGGTCTTT CTAATTTTTATCTTTTTTTTTTTTTAAACAGGTGAAGGTGCCGAGCTAT AGAAATACAAAATAAAGATCACACATCAAGACTATCTACAAAAATTTAT AGAAGAAAAGCATGCATATCATTAAACAAATAAAATACTTTTTATCACA AGGAA fasta_1.seq (END) Files and directories • Command • more (traditional Unix), less (Linux) • Purpose • Allows you to view the contents of a file.

  15. Files and directories • Command • head, tail • Purpose • Allows you to view the first lines of a file (head) or the last lines of a file (tail) • Common options • n • The number of lines to show. The default is 10. $ head -5 seq.fasta >THC479329 SWI/SNF complex 155 KDa subunit^^SWI/SNF complex 155 KDa subunit (BAF155)^^SWI/SNF related TTTTAGAATCCAGAAATGGTGTTCCATTTATTCACTGAAAAAGAGAGAG TTCATTCATTTTCTCCATTCTTGCCAAACTCCCTCCCCTCATTTTTTCC ACACTGAGAAACATGTTTGTACAAAAACCACATATTATTCCCCCCCCTC TGGCTGAATTACAGGAATAAAACCAGATCAAAGACATGAAAAGAAAAAG

  16. Further file handling • Command • compress (standard UNIX), gzip (GNU version – faster) • uncompress, gunzip • Purpose • Compresses text files to save disk space • Common options • -v • verbose, gives % compression ratio $ ls -l MAG500 -rw-r--r-- 1 aem0 cineca 3249198 Jan 29 2002 MAG500 $ gzip –v MAG500 gzip -v MAG500 MAG500: 70.1% -- replaced with MAG500.gz $ $ ls –l MAG500.gz -rw-r--r-- 1 aem0 cineca 971325 Jan 29 2002 MAG500.gz

  17. Making archives • Command • tar • Purpose • Creates an archive of files and directories. Many Unix software packages consist of a tree of sub-directories which can be difficult to transfer between different machines. tarcan be used to create a single archive file which when untarred re-creates the original directory structure • Common options • -c • creates an archive • -f • uses a file for the archive (you can also use CDs,tapes, etc) • -x • extracts file from an archive • -v • verbose – tells the user what tar is doing (RECOMMENDED)

  18. Creating archives - Example • $ ls -F • blast/ • $ tar -cvf blast.tar blast • blast/ • blast/results/ • blast/input/ • blast/input/input1.dat • blast/input/input2.dat • blast/input/input3.dat • blast/data/ • blast/data/blast1.out • blast/data/blast2.out • blast/data/blast3.out • blast/data/blast4.out • blast/data/blast5.out • blast/data/data-old/blast-old.out • blast/data/blast0.out directory to archive name of archive file

  19. Extracting archives - Example • $ cd new-dir • $ tar -xvf blast.tar • blast/ • blast/results/ • blast/input/ • blast/input/input1.dat • blast/input/input2.dat • blast/input/input3.dat • blast/data/ • blast/data/blast1.out • blast/data/blast2.out • blast/data/blast3.out • blast/data/blast4.out • blast/data/blast5.out • blast/data/data-old/ • blast/data/blast0.out Often gzip is combined with tar archives to give files like blast.tar.gz or blast.tgz Sometimes called tarballs.

  20. - rwx r-- r-- File permissions • $ ls -l blast.tar • -rwxr--r-- 1 aem0 cineca 30720 Mar 13 10:47 blast.tar File permissions special owner group other r - read access w - write access (for a directory means files can be deleted in the directory, even if the files don’t have write access) x - executable (searchable for a directory) - permission not set

  21. File permissions • Command • chmod • Purpose • Changes the permissions of a file or directory. Only the owner of a file, or root, can change the permissions. • Common options • -R • changes all the permissions in a directory, including sub-directories $ chmod u+x myprog.pl $ chmod g+w,o-w seq.dat $ chmod +r *.fasta $ chmod 777 *.prog make file executable for owner write access for group, no write for others add read access for all octal notation, here = +rwx for all

  22. Running programs • To run a program which is an executable file, just type the name of the file: $ my_prog.pl • However, like this the terminal cannot be used until the program finishes. Add an & to return control to the user (running in the background): $ my_prog.pl & [1] 31705 • Now the user can do other things, logout and go home, etc. • Note that Unix assigns a job number and a process number to the running program.

  23. Running programs • To see what programs are running you can use the jobs command: $ jobs [1] + Running myprog.pl • But this only applies to programs run during the same session (the same shell). To see all programs (processes) being run use the ps command: $ ps –u aem0 31705 pts/3 00:00:40 myprog.pl 29775 pts/3 00:00:00 tcsh 31738 pts/3 00:00:00 ps

  24. Editing with vi • vi is the standard Unix text editor and is present on every Unix system. $ vi myprog.pl • vihas 3 modes: • Command mode • For manipulating and moving through the the text • Line mode • For special commands and interacting with Unix. • Insert mode • For entering text, i.e. writing programs, entering data, etc.

  25. Editing with vi • Command mode – the usual and initial mode (i.e. when starting vi) • Commands include • ←↑↓→ arrow keys move the cursor • hjkl same as arrow keys • x delete a character • dw delete a word • dd delete a line • 3dd delete 3 lines • u undo previous change • ZZ exit vi, saving changes

  26. Editing with vi • Line mode – entered by typing :, / , ? or ! . • Commands include • :q! save file, discarding changes • :q quit • :e filename edit a new file • :w filename write with new filename • :wq write file and quit • :!cmd run Unix command • /string look for string RETURN executes command and returns to command mode

  27. Editing with vi • Insert mode – entered by typing any of the following in command mode • a append after cursor • i insert before cursor • o open line below • O open line above • Rtext replace with text to exit insert mode, and return to command mode, type <ESC>.

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