You want to switch from the DOS world (this definition includes Windows) to Linux? Good idea: Linux is technically superior to DOS, Windows 9x and even Windows NT. But beware: it might not be useful for you. These are the main differences between DOS/Windows and Linux:
It's up to you to decide what you need. Furthermore, Linux gives you power, but it takes some time to learn how to harness it. Thus, if mostly need commercial sw, or if you don't feel like learning new commands and concepts, you had better look elsewhere. Be aware that many newcomers give up because of initial difficulties.
Work is underway to make Linux simpler to use, but don't expect to be proficient with it unless you read a lot of documentation and use it at least for a few months. Linux won't give you instant results. In spite of these warnings, I'm 100% confident that if you are the right user type you'll find in Linux your computer Nirvana. By the way, Linux + DOS/Win can coexist happily on the same machine.
Prerequisites for this howto: I'll assume that
COMMAND.COM
) is bash
.
Unless specified, all information in this work is aimed at bad ol' DOS. There is information about Windows here and there, but bear in mind that Windows and Linux are totally different, unlike DOS that is sort of a UNIX poor relation.
Please also note that this work is neither a complete primer nor a configuration guide!
The latest version of this document is available in several formats on ftp://sunsite.unc.edu:/pub/Linux/docs/howto.
You installed Linux and the programs you needed on the PC. You gave yourself
an account (if not, type adduser yourname
now!) and Linux is
running. You've just entered your name and password, and now you are looking
at the screen thinking: ``Well, now what?''
Now, don't despair. You're almost ready to do the same things you used to do with DOS/Win, and many more. If you were running DOS/Win instead of Linux, you would be doing some of the following tasks:
You'll be glad to know that these tasks can be accomplished under Linux in a fashion similar to DOS. Under DOS, the average user uses very few of the 100+ commands available: the same, up to a point, applies to Linux.
The best way to learn something new is to get your feet wet. You are strongly encouraged to experiment and play with Linux: unless you login as ``root'', you can't damage the system that way. A few points:
There are many ways to get help with Linux. The most important are:
help
or, better, man bash
or info bash
;
man command
that invokes the
manual (``man'') page of command
. Alternatively, type
info command
that invokes, if available, the info page pertinent of
command
; info is a hypertext-based documentation system, perhaps not
intuitive to use at first. Finally, you may try apropos command
or
whatis command
. With all of these commands, press `q' to exit.
Throughout this work, examples will often follow the following format:
<...>
is a required argument, while [...]
an optional one.
Example:
$ tar -tf <file.tar> [> redir_file]
file.tar
must be indicated, but redirection to redir_file
is
optional.
``RMP'' means ``please Read the Man Pages for further information''. I can't stress enough how important reading the documentation is. ``DOSWin'' stands for ``DOS/Windows''.
When the prompt of a command example is #
, the command can only
be performed by root.
Want to strike out? Have a look at this table:
DOS Linux Notes
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
ATTRIB (+-)attr file chmod <mode> file completely different
BACKUP tar -Mcvf device dir/ ditto
CD dirname\ cd dirname/ almost the same syntax
COPY file1 file2 cp file1 file2 ditto
DEL file rm file beware - no undelete
DELTREE dirname rm -R dirname/ ditto
DIR ls not exactly the same syntax
DIR file /S find . -name file completely different
EDIT file vi file I think you won't like it
jstar file feels like dos' edit
EDLIN file ed file forget it
FORMAT fdformat,
mount, umount quite different syntax
HELP command man command, same philosophy
info command
MD dirname mkdir dirname/ almost the same syntax
MORE < file less file much better
MOVE file1 file2 mv file1 file2 ditto
NUL /dev/null ditto
PRINT file lpr file ditto
PRN /dev/lp0,
/dev/lp1 ditto
RD dirname rmdir dirname/ almost the same syntax
REN file1 file2 mv file1 file2 not for multiple files
RESTORE tar -Mxpvf device different syntax
TYPE file less file much better
WIN startx poles apart!
If you need more than a table of commands, please refer to the following sections.
Good news: with Linux you type much less at the prompt, because the
bash
shell types for you whenever possible, and features
cool line editing capabilities. To begin with, the arrow-up key recalls
previous command lines; but there's more. Pressing <TAB> completes
file and directory names, so typing
$ ls /uTABloTABbTAB
is like typing
$ ls /usr/local/bin
If there were ambiguities, as typing
$ ls /uTABloTABiTAB
bash
stops because it doesn't know if you mean
/usr/local/info or /usr/local/include. Supply more
characters then press <TAB> again.
Other useful key presses are <ESC-BACKSPACE> that deletes a word to the left, while <ESC-D> deletes a word to the right; <ESC-F> moves the cursor one word to the right, <ESC-B> to the left; <CTRL-A> moves to the beginning of the line, <CTRL-E> to the end. The <ALT> key is equivalent to <ESC>.
Enough for now. Once you get used to these shortcuts, you'll find the DOS prompt very annoying...
Linux has a structure of directories and files very similar to that of DOSWin. Files have filenames that obey special rules, are stored in directories, some are executable, and among these most have command switches. Moreover, you can use wildcard characters, redirection, and piping. There are only a few minor differences:
NOTENOUG.TXT
. Under Linux we can do better. If you installed Linux
using a file system like ext2 or umsdos, you can use longer filenames (up to
255 characters), and with more than one dot: for example,
This_is.a.VERY_long.filename
. Please note that I used both upper and
lower case characters: in fact...
FILENAME.tar.gz
and filename.tar.gz
are two
different files. ls
is a command, LS
is a mistake;
$ # the following command makes a directory called "My old files"
$ mkdir "My old files"
$ ls
My old files bin tmp
Further, some characters shouldn't be used: some are
!*$&#
.
*
'
at the end of their name when you issue the ls -F
command. For example:
$ ls -F
I_am_a_dir/ cindy.jpg cjpg* letter_to_Joe my_1st_script* old~
The files cjpg*
and my_1st_script*
are executables, that is
``programs''. Under DOS, backup files end in .BAK, while under Linux they end
with a tilde `~
'. Further, a file whose name starts with a dot is
considered as hidden. Example: the file .I.am.a.hidden.file
won't show
up after the ls
command;
/switch
, Linux
switches with -switch
or --switch
. Example: dir /s
becomes ls -R
. Note that many DOS programs, like PKZIP
or
ARJ
, use UNIX-style switches.
You can now jump to Section Translating Commands from DOS to Linux, but if I were you I'd read on.
UNIX has a type of file that doesn't exist under DOS: the symbolic link.
This can be thought of as a pointer to a file or to a directory, and can be
used instead of the file or directory it points to; it's similar to Windows
shortcuts. Examples of symbolic links are /usr/X11
, which points
to /usr/X11R6
; /dev/modem
, which points to either
/dev/ttyS0
or /dev/ttyS1
.
To make a symbolic link:
$ ln -s <file_or_dir> <linkname>
Example:
$ ln -s /usr/doc/g77/DOC g77manual.txt
Now you can refer to g77manual.txt
instead of /usr/doc/g77/DOC
.
Links appear like this in directory listings:
$ ls -F
g77manual.txt@
$ ls -l
(several things...) g77manual.txt -> /usr/doc/g77/DOC
DOS files and directories have the following attributes: A (archive), H (hidden), R (read-only), and S (system). Only H and R make sense under Linux: hidden files start with a dot, and for the R attribute, read on.
Under UNIX a file has ``permissions'' and an owner, who in turn belongs to a ``group''. Look at this example:
$ ls -l /bin/ls
-rwxr-xr-x 1 root bin 27281 Aug 15 1995 /bin/ls*
The first field contains the permissions of the file /bin/ls
, which
belongs to root, group bin. Leaving the remaining information aside, remember
that -rwxr-xr-x
means, from left to right:
-
is the file type (-
= ordinary file, d
= directory,
l
= link, etc); rwx
are the permissions for the file owner (read,
write, execute); r-x
are the permissions for the group of the file
owner (read, execute); (I won't cover the concept of group, you can survive
without it as long as you're a beginner ;-) r-x
are the permissions for
all other users (read, execute).
The directory /bin
has permissions, too: see Section
Directories Permissions for
further details. This is why you can't delete the file /bin/ls
unless you are root: you don't have the permission to do so. To
change a file's permissions, the command is:
$ chmod <whoXperm> <file>
where who is u
(user, that is owner), g
(group), o
(other), X
is either +
or -
, perm is r
(read), w
(write), or x
(execute). Common examples of chmod
use are the following:
$ chmod +x file
this sets the execute permission for the file.
$ chmod go-rw file
this removes read and write permission for everyone but the owner.
$ chmod ugo+rwx file
this gives everyone read, write, and execute permission.
# chmod +s file
this makes a so-called ``setuid'' or ``suid'' file---a file that everyone can execute with its owner's privileges. Typically, you'll come across root suid files; these are often important system files, like the X server.
A shorter way to refer to permissions is with digits: rwxr-xr-x
can be
expressed as 755 (every letter corresponds to a bit:
---
is 0, --x
is 1, -w-
is 2, -wx
is 3...).
It looks difficult, but with a bit of practice you'll understand the
concept. root, being the superuser, can change everyone's file permissions.
RMP.
On the left, the DOS commands; on the right, their Linux counterpart.
ATTRIB: chmod
COPY: cp
DEL: rm
MOVE: mv
REN: mv
TYPE: more, less, cat
Redirection and plumbing operators: < > >> |
Wildcards: * ?
nul: /dev/null
prn, lpt1: /dev/lp0 or /dev/lp1; lpr
DOS Linux
---------------------------------------------------------------------
C:\GUIDO>ATTRIB +R FILE.TXT $ chmod 400 file.txt
C:\GUIDO>COPY JOE.TXT JOE.DOC $ cp joe.txt joe.doc
C:\GUIDO>COPY *.* TOTAL $ cat * > total
C:\GUIDO>COPY FRACTALS.DOC PRN $ lpr fractals.doc
C:\GUIDO>DEL TEMP $ rm temp
C:\GUIDO>DEL *.BAK $ rm *~
C:\GUIDO>MOVE PAPER.TXT TMP\ $ mv paper.txt tmp/
C:\GUIDO>REN PAPER.TXT PAPER.ASC $ mv paper.txt paper.asc
C:\GUIDO>PRINT LETTER.TXT $ lpr letter.txt
C:\GUIDO>TYPE LETTER.TXT $ more letter.txt
C:\GUIDO>TYPE LETTER.TXT $ less letter.txt
C:\GUIDO>TYPE LETTER.TXT > NUL $ cat letter.txt > /dev/null
n/a $ more *.txt *.asc
n/a $ cat section*.txt | less
Notes:
*
is smarter under Linux: *
matches all files except the
hidden ones; .*
matches all hidden files (but also the current directory
`.
' and parent directory `..
': beware!); *.*
matches only
those that have a `.
' in the middle or that end with a dot; p*r
matches both `peter' and `piper'; *c*
matches both `picked' and `peck';
more
, press <SPACE> to read through the file,
`q' to exit. less
is more intuitive and lets you use the arrow keys;
UNDELETE
, so think twice before deleting
anything;
< > >>
, Linux has 2>
to
redirect error messages (stderr); moreover, 2>&1
redirects
stderr to stdout, while 1>&2
redirects stdout to stderr;
[]
. Usage: [abc]*
matches
files starting with a, b, c; *[I-N1-3]
matches files ending with I,
J, K, L, M, N, 1, 2, 3;
lpr
<file> prints a file in background. To check the
status of the print queue, use lpq
; to remove a file from the
print queue, use lprm
;
RENAME
; that is, mv *.xxx *.yyy
won't
work. A REN-like command is available on
ftp://sunsite.unc.edu/pub/Linux/utils/file;
cp -i
and mv -i
to be warned when a file is going to be
overwritten.
To run a program, type its name as you would do under DOS. If the directory
(Section
Using Directories) where the program
is stored is included in the PATH (Section
System Initialisation Files), the program will start. Exception:
unlike DOS, under Linux a program located in the current directory won't run
unless the directory is included in the PATH. Escamotage: being prog
your program, type ./prog
.
This is what the typical command line looks like:
$ command [-s1 [-s2] ... [-sn]] [par1 [par2] ... [parn]] [< input] [> output]
where -s1
, ..., -sn
are the program switches, par1
,
..., parn
are the program parameters. You can issue several commands on
the command line:
$ command1 ; command2 ; ... ; commandn
That's all about running programs, but it's easy to go a step beyond. One of the main reasons for using Linux is that it is a multitasking os---it can run several programs (from now on, processes) at the same time. You can launch processes in background and continue working straight away. Moreover, Linux lets you have several sessions: it's like having many computers to work on at once!
su - <loginname>
. Example: su - root
. This
is useful, for instance, when you need to perform a task that only root can
do.
exit
. If there are stopped jobs (see
later), you'll be warned.
&
'
at the end of the command line:
$ progname [-switches] [parameters] [< input] [> output] &
[1] 123
the shell identifies the process with a job number (e.g. [1]
; see
below), and with a PID (Process Identification Number; 123 in our example).
ps ax
. This will
output a list of currently running processes.
kill <PID>
. You may
need to kill a process when you don't know how to quit it the right way....
Unless you're root, you can't kill other people's processes. Sometimes, a
process will only be killed by kill -SIGKILL <PID>
.
In addition, the shell allows you to stop or temporarily suspend a process,
send a process to background, and bring a process from background to
foreground. In this context, processes are called ``jobs''.
jobs
. Here the jobs are
identified by their job number, not by their PID.
bg <%job>
(it becomes a job).
fg <%job>
. To bring to
foreground the last job sent to background, simply type fg
.
kill <%job>
where <job> may be 1,
2, 3,...
Using these commands you can format a disk, zip a bunch of files, compile a program, and unzip an archive all at the same time, and still have the prompt at your disposal. Try this with Windows, just to see the difference in performance (if it doesn't crash, of course).
To run a program on a remote machine whose name is remote.machine.edu
:
$ telnet remote.machine.edu
After logging in, start your favourite program. Needless to say, you must have a shell account on the remote machine.
If you have X11, you can even run an X application on a remote computer,
displaying it on your X screen. Let remote.machine.edu
be the remote X
computer and let local.linux.box
be your Linux machine. To run from
local.linux.box
an X program that resides on remote.machine.edu
,
do the following:
xterm
or equivalent terminal emulator,
then type:
$ xhost +remote.machine.edu
$ telnet remote.machine.edu
remote:$ DISPLAY=local.linux.box:0.0
remote:$ progname &
(instead of DISPLAY...
, you may have to write: setenv DISPLAY
local.linux.box:0.0
. It depends on the remote shell.)
Et voila! Now progname
will start on remote.machine.edu
and will be
displayed on your machine. Don't try this over the modem though, for it's
too slow to be usable. Moreover, this is a crude and insecure method: please
read the ``Remote X Apps mini-HOWTO'' at
http://sunsite.unc.edu/LDP/HOWTO/mini/Remote-X-Apps.
We have seen the differences between files under DOSWin and Linux. As for
directories, under DOSWin the root directory is \
, under Linux it
is /
. Similarly, nested directories are separated by \
under DOSWin, by /
under Linux. Example of file paths:
DOS: C:\PAPERS\GEOLOGY\MID_EOC.TEX
Linux: /home/guido/papers/geology/middle_eocene.tex
As usual, ..
is the parent directory and .
is the current
directory. Remember that the system won't let you cd
, rd
, or
md
everywhere you want. Each user has his or her stuff in a directory
called `home', given by the system administrator; for instance, on my PC my
home dir is /home/guido
.
Directories, too, have permissions. What we have seen in Section
Permissions and Ownership applies to directories
as well (user, group, and other). For a directory, rx
means you can
cd
to that directory, and w
means that you can delete a file in
the directory (according to the file's permissions, of course), or the
directory itself.
For example, to prevent other users from snooping in
/home/guido/text
:
$ chmod o-rwx /home/guido/text
DIR: ls, find, du
CD: cd, pwd
MD: mkdir
RD: rmdir
DELTREE: rm -rf
MOVE: mv
DOS Linux
---------------------------------------------------------------------
C:\GUIDO>DIR $ ls
C:\GUIDO>DIR FILE.TXT $ ls file.txt
C:\GUIDO>DIR *.H *.C $ ls *.h *.c
C:\GUIDO>DIR/P $ ls | more
C:\GUIDO>DIR/A $ ls -l
C:\GUIDO>DIR *.TMP /S $ find / -name "*.tmp"
C:\GUIDO>CD $ pwd
n/a - see note $ cd
ditto $ cd ~
ditto $ cd ~/temp
C:\GUIDO>CD \OTHER $ cd /other
C:\GUIDO>CD ..\TEMP\TRASH $ cd ../temp/trash
C:\GUIDO>MD NEWPROGS $ mkdir newprogs
C:\GUIDO>MOVE PROG .. $ mv prog ..
C:\GUIDO>MD \PROGS\TURBO $ mkdir /progs/turbo
C:\GUIDO>DELTREE TEMP\TRASH $ rm -rf temp/trash
C:\GUIDO>RD NEWPROGS $ rmdir newprogs
C:\GUIDO>RD \PROGS\TURBO $ rmdir /progs/turbo
Notes:
rmdir
, the directory to remove must be empty. To
delete a directory and all of its contents, use rm -rf
(at your own
risk).
~
' is a shortcut for the name of your home
directory. The commands cd
or cd ~
will take you to your home
directory from wherever you are; the command cd ~/tmp
will take you
to /home/your_home/tmp
.
cd -
``undoes'' the last cd
.
There are two ways to manage devices under Linux: the DOS way and the UNIX way. Take your pick.
Most Linux distributions include the Mtools suite, a set of commands that
are perfectly equivalent to their DOS counterpart, but start with an `m':
i.e., mformat
, mdir
, mdel
, mmd
, and so on. They can even
preserve long file names, but not file permissions. If you configure Mtools
editing a file called /etc/mtools.conf (a sample is provided in
the distribution), you can also access the DOS/Win partition, the CD--ROM,
and the Zip drive. To format a fresh disk though, the mformat
command
won't do. As root, you'll have to issue this command beforehand:
fdformat /dev/fd0H1440
.
You can't access files on the floppy with a command like, say,
less a:file.txt
! This is the disadvantage of the DOS way of
accessing disks.
UNIX has a different way to handle devices. There are no separate volumes like A: or C:; a disk, be it a floppy or whatever, becomes part of the local file system through an operation called ``mounting''. When you're done using the disk, before extracting it you must ``unmount'' it.
Physically formatting a disk is one thing, making a file system on it is
another. The DOS command FORMAT A:
does both things, but under Linux
there are separate commands. To format a floppy, see above; to create a file
system:
# mkfs -t ext2 -c /dev/fd0H1440
You can use dos
, vfat
(recommended) or other formats
instead of ext2
. Once the disk is prepared, mount it with the command
# mount -t ext2 /dev/fd0 /mnt
specifying the right file system if you don't use ext2
. Now you can
address the files in the floppy using /mnt
instead of A: or B:.
Examples:
DOS Linux
---------------------------------------------------------------------
C:\GUIDO>DIR A: $ ls /mnt
C:\GUIDO>COPY A:*.* $ cp /mnt/* .
C:\GUIDO>COPY *.ZIP A: $ cp *.zip /mnt
C:\GUIDO>EDIT A:FILE.TXT $ jstar /mnt/file.txt
C:\GUIDO>A: $ cd /mnt
A:> _ /mnt/$ _
When you've finished, before extracting the disk you must unmount it with the command
# umount /mnt
Obviously, you have to fdformat
and mkfs
only unformatted disks,
not previously used ones. If you want to use the drive B:, refer to
fd1H1440
and fd1
instead of fd0H1440
and fd0
in the
examples above.
Needless to say, what applies to floppies also applies to other devices; for instance, you may want to mount another hard disk or a CD--ROM drive. Here's how to mount the CD--ROM:
# mount -t iso9660 /dev/cdrom /mnt
This was the ``official'' way to mount your disks, but there's a trick in store. Since it's a bit of a nuisance having to be root to mount a floppy or a CD--ROM, every user can be allowed to mount them this way:
# mkdir /mnt/floppy ; mkdir /mnt/cdrom
# chmod 777 /mnt/floppy /mnt/cd*
# # make sure that the CD-ROM device is right
# chmod 666 /dev/hdb ; chmod 666 /dev/fd*
/dev/cdrom /mnt/cdrom iso9660 ro,user,noauto 0 0
/dev/fd0 /mnt/floppy vfat user,noauto 0 0
Now, to mount a DOS floppy and a CD--ROM:
$ mount /mnt/floppy
$ mount /mnt/cdrom
/mnt/floppy and /mnt/cdrom can now be accessed by every user. Remember that allowing everyone to mount disks this way is a gaping security hole, if you care.
Two useful commands are df
, which gives information on the mounted file
systems, and du dirname
which reports the disk space consumed by the
directory.
There are several packages to help you, but the very least you can do for a multi-volume backup is (as root):
# tar -M -cvf /dev/fd0H1440 dir_to_backup/
Make sure to have a formatted floppy in the drive, and several more ready. To restore your stuff, insert the first floppy in the drive and do:
# tar -M -xpvf /dev/fd0H1440
The ``equivalent'' of Windows is the graphic system X Window System. Unlike Windows or the Mac, X11 wasn't designed for ease of use or to look good, but just to provide graphic facilities to UNIX workstations. These are the main differences:
fvwm
, basic but nice and memory efficient, fvwm2-95
,
Afterstep
, WindowMaker
, Enlightenment
, and many more. The w.m.
is usually invoked from .xinitrc
;
.fvwmrc
, .fvwm2rc95
, .steprc
, etc. A sample
configuration file is typically found in
/etc/X11/window-manager-name/system.window-manager-name;
xdvi
, xman
,
xcalc
); others use Motif (netscape
), others still use Tcl/Tk,
XForms, Qt, Gtk, and what have you. Nearly all of these libraries
provide roughly the same look and feel as Windows;
xsetroot
or xloadimage
;
xclipboard
, that provides for multiple clipboard buffers;
To save memory, one should use applications that use the same libraries, but this is difficult to do in practice.
There are projects that aim at making X11 look and behave as coherently as Windows. Gnome, http://www.gnome.org and KDE, http://www.kde.org, are awesome. Give them a try: you won't regret your Windows desktop anymore.
Two important files under DOS are AUTOEXEC.BAT
and CONFIG.SYS
,
which are used at boot time to initialise the system, set some environment
variables like PATH and FILES, and possibly launch a program or batch file.
Under Linux there are lots of initialisation files, some of which you had
better not tamper with until you know exactly what you are doing. I'll tell
you what the most important are, anyway:
FILES NOTES
/etc/inittab don't touch for now!
/etc/rc.d/* ditto
If all you need is setting the PATH and other environment variables, or you want to change the login messages or automatically launch a program after the login, have a look at the following files:
FILES NOTES
/etc/issue sets pre-login message
/etc/motd sets post-login message
/etc/profile sets $PATH and other variables, etc.
/etc/bashrc sets aliases and functions, etc.
/home/your_home/.bashrc sets your aliases + functions
/home/your_home/.bash_profile or
/home/your_home/.profile sets environment + starts your progs
If the latter file exists (note that it is a hidden file), it will be read after the login, and the commands therein will be executed.
Example---look at this .bash_profile
:
# I am a comment echo Environment: printenv | less # equivalent of command SET under DOS alias d='ls -l' # easy to understand what an alias is alias up='cd ..' echo "I remind you that the path is "$PATH echo "Today is `date`" # use the output of the command 'date' echo "Have a good day, "$LOGNAME # The following is a "shell function" ctgz() # List the contents of a .tar.gz archive. { for file in $* do gzip -dc ${file} | tar tf - done } # end of .profile
$PATH
and $LOGNAME
, you guessed right, are
environment variables. There are many others to play with; for instance, RMP
for apps like less
or bash
.
Putting this line in your /etc/profile will provide the rough
equivalent of PROMPT $P$G
:
export PS1="\w\\$ "
Under Linux, virtually everything can be tailored to your needs. Most
programs have one or more initialisation files you can fiddle with, often as
a .prognamerc
in your home dir. The first ones you'll want to modify
are:
.inputrc
: used by bash
to define key bindings;
.xinitrc
: used by startx
to initialise X Window System;
.fvwmrc
: used by the window manager fvwm
.
.joerc, .jstarrc
: used by the editor joe
;
.jedrc
: used by the editor jed
;
.pinerc
: used by the mail reader pine
;
.Xdefault
: used by many X programs.
For all of these and the others you'll come across sooner or later, RMP. Perhaps I could interest you in the Configuration HOWTO, http://sunsite.unc.edu/mdw/HOWTO/Config-HOWTO.html?
Not only is ``Dialup Networking'' available under Linux, it's also more stable and quicker. The name of the game is ``PPP'', the protocol employed for connecting to the Internet using modems. You need a kernel that supports PPP and a tool that dials and makes the connection.
To retrieve your mail from the ISP's server you need a tool called ``email
fetcher'' that uses the POP protocol; when the mail is fetched it will
appear as though it had been directly delivered to your Linux box. You'll
then use a MUA (Mail User Agent) like pine
, mutt
,
elm
or many others to manage it.
While under Windows the dialer is automatically invoked when you launch
an Internet application, under Linux the path is the other way round: you
dial first, then launch the application. A thing called diald
provides the usual behaviour. Installing and configuring dialup networking
used to be one of the most difficult things to do under Linux, but not
anymore: please consult the Configuration HOWTO.
Finally, a word about ``Network neighborhood'': you can make your Linux workstation appear as Windows NT/9x in a local network of Windows machines! The magic word is Samba: not the lively Brazilian dance, but an implementation of the SMB protocol for Linux. Go to http://samba.anu.edu.au/samba.
If you used .BAT files to create shortcuts of long command lines (I did a
lot), this goal can be attained by inserting appropriate alias lines (see
example above) in profile
or .bash_profile
. But if your .BATs
were more complicated, then you'll love the scripting language made
available by the shell: it's as powerful as good ol' QBasic, if not more. It
has variables, structures like while, for, case, if... then... else, and
lots of other features: it can be a good alternative to a ``real''
programming language.
To write a script---the equivalent of a .BAT file under DOS---all you have
to do is write a standard ASCII file containing the instructions, save it,
then make it executable with the command chmod +x <scriptfile>
. To
execute it, type its name.
A word of warning. The system editor is called vi
, and in my experience
most new users find it very difficult to use. I'm not going to explain how
to use it; please consult Matt Welsh's book or search for a tutorial on the
net. Suffice it here to say that:
i
then your text;x
;vi
whithout saving, type <ESC> then :q!
:wq
.A good beginner editor is joe
: invoking it by typing jstar
you'll get the same key bindings as the DOSWin editor. jed
in
WordStar or IDE mode is even better. Please consult Section
Where to Find Applications to see where to get these editors.
Writing scripts under bash
is such a vast subject it would require a
book by itself, and I will not delve into the topic any further. I'll just
give you an example of shell script, from which you can extract some basic
rules:
#!/bin/sh # sample.sh # I am a comment # don't change the first line, it must be there echo "This system is: `uname -a`" # use the output of the command echo "My name is $0" # built-in variables echo "You gave me the following $# parameters: "$* echo "The first parameter is: "$1 echo -n "What's your name? " ; read your_name echo notice the difference: "hi $your_name" # quoting with " echo notice the difference: 'hi $your_name' # quoting with ' DIRS=0 ; FILES=0 for file in `ls .` ; do if [ -d ${file} ] ; then # if file is a directory DIRS=`expr $DIRS + 1` # DIRS = DIRS + 1 elif [ -f ${file} ] ; then FILES=`expr $FILES + 1` fi case ${file} in *.gif|*jpg) echo "${file}: graphic file" ;; *.txt|*.tex) echo "${file}: text file" ;; *.c|*.f|*.for) echo "${file}: source file" ;; *) echo "${file}: generic file" ;; esac done echo "there are ${DIRS} directories and ${FILES} files" ls | grep "ZxY--!!!WKW" if [ $? != 0 ] ; then # exit code of last command echo "ZxY--!!!WKW not found" fi echo "enough... type 'man bash' if you want more info."
Under UNIX, the system language is C, love it or hate it. Scores of other languages (Java, FORTRAN, Pascal, Lisp, Basic, Perl, awk...) are also available.
Taken for granted that you know C, here are a couple of guidelines for those
of you who have been spoilt by Turbo C++ or one of its DOS kin. Linux's
C compiler is called gcc
and lacks all the bells and whistles that
usually accompany its DOS counterparts: no IDE, on-line help, integrated
debugger, etc. It's just a rough command-line compiler, very powerful and
efficient. To compile your standard hello.c
you'll do:
$ gcc hello.c
which will create an executable file called a.out
. To give the
executable a different name, do
$ gcc -o hola hello.c
To link a library against a program, add the switch -l<libname>. For example, to link in the math library:
$ gcc -o mathprog mathprog.c -lm
(The -l<libname>
switch forces gcc
to link the library
/usr/lib/lib<libname>.so
; so -lm
links
/usr/lib/libm.so
).
So far, so good. But when your prog is made of several source files, you'll
need to use the utility make
. Let's suppose you have written an
expression parser: its source file is called parser.c
and #includes
two header files, parser.h
and xy.h
. Then you want to use the
routines in parser.c
in a program, say, calc.c
, which in turn
#includes parser.h
. What a mess! What do you have to do to compile
calc.c
?
You'll have to write a so-called Makefile
, which teaches the compiler
the dependencies between sources and objects files. In our example:
# This is Makefile, used to compile calc.c # Press the <TAB> key where indicated! calc: calc.o parser.o <TAB>gcc -o calc calc.o parser.o -lm # calc depends on two object files: calc.o and parser.o calc.o: calc.c parser.h <TAB>gcc -c calc.c # calc.o depends on two source files parser.o: parser.c parser.h xy.h <TAB>gcc -c parser.c # parser.o depends on three source files # end of Makefile.
Save this file as Makefile
and type make
to compile your program;
alternatively, save it as calc.mak
and type make -f calc.mak
, and
of course RMP. You can invoke some help about the C functions, that are
covered by man pages, section 3; for example,
$ man 3 printf
To debug your programs, use gdb
. info gdb
to learn how to
use it.
There are lots of libraries available; among the first you'll want
to use are ncurses
(textmode effects), and svgalib
(console
graphics). If you feel brave enough to tackle X11 programming (it's not that
difficult), there are several libraries that
make writing X11 programs a breeze. Have a look at
http://www.xnet.com/~blatura/linapp6.html, bearing in mind
that Gtk is becoming a Linux standard.
Many editors can act as an IDE; emacs
and jed
, for instance, also
feature syntax highlighting, automatic indent, and so on. Alternatively, get
the package rhide
from
ftp://sunsite.unc.edu:/pub/Linux/devel/debuggers/.
It's a Borland IDE clone, and chances are that you'll like it.
Much more than 1%, actually...
Under UNIX there are some widely used applications to archive and compress
files. tar
is used to make archives---it's like PKZIP
or
Winzip
but it doesn't compress, it only archives. To make a new
archive:
$ tar -cvf <archive_name.tar> <file> [file...]
To extract files from an archive:
$ tar -xpvf <archive_name.tar> [file...]
To list the contents of an archive:
$ tar -tf <archive_name.tar> | less
You can compress files using compress
, which is obsolete and shouldn't
be used any more, or gzip
:
$ compress <file>
$ gzip <file>
that creates a compressed file with extension .Z
(compress
) or
.gz
(gzip
). These programs can compress only one file at a time.
To decompress:
$ compress -d <file.Z>
$ gzip -d <file.gz>
RMP.
There are also the unarj
, zip
and unzip
(PK??ZIP compatible)
utilities. Files with extension .tar.gz
or .tgz
(archived
with tar
, then compressed with gzip
) are as common in the UNIX
world as .ZIP files are under DOS. Here's how to list the contents of a
.tar.gz
archive:
$ tar -ztf <file.tar.gz> | less
First of all: installing packages is root's work. Most Linux applications
are distributed as a .tar.gz
archive, which typically will contain a
directory aptly named containing files and/or subdirectories.
A good rule is to install these packages from /usr/local
with the
command
# tar -zxf <archive.tar.gz>
reading then the README or INSTALL file. In most cases, the application is
distributed in source, which you'll have to compile; often, typing
make
then make install
will
suffice. If the archive contains a configure
script, run it first.
Obviously, you'll need the gcc
or g++
compiler.
Other archives have to be unpacked from /; this is the case
with Slackware's .tgz
archives. Other archives contain the files but not
a subdirectory - careful not to mess things up!. Always list the contents of
the archive before installing it.
Debian and Red Hat have their own archive format;
respectively, .deb
and .rpm
. The latter is gaining wide
acceptance; to install an rpm
package, type
# rpm -i package.rpm
Backscrolling: pressing <SHIFT + PAG UP> (the grey key) allows you to backscroll a few pages, depending on how much video memory you have.
Resetting the screen: if you happen to more
or cat
a binary
file, your screen may end up full of garbage. To fix it, blind type
reset
or this sequence of characters: echo CTRL-V ESC c RETURN
.
Pasting text: in console, see below; in X, click and drag to select the
text in an xterm
window, then click the middle button (or the two
buttons together if you have a two-button mouse) to paste. There is also
xclipboard
(alas, only for text); don't get confused by its very slow
response.
Using the mouse: if you installed gpm
, a mouse driver for the
console, you can click and drag to select text, then right click to paste
the selected text. It works across different VCs.
Messages from the kernel: have a look at /var/adm/messages
or
/var/log/messages
as root to see what the kernel has to tell you,
including bootup messages. The command dmesg
is also handy.
If you're wondering whether you can replace your old and trusted DOS/Win application with a Linux one, I suggest that you browse the main Linux software repositories: ftp://sunsite.unc.edu/pub/Linux, ftp://tsx-11.mit.edu/pub/linux, and ftp://ftp.funet.fi/pub/Linux. Other good starting places are the ``Linux Applications and Utilities Page'' http://www.xnet.com/~blatura/linapps.shtml, and the ``official'' Linux page http://www.linux.org.
Linux can do an awful lot of things that were cumbersome, difficult or impossible do to with DOS/Windows. Here's a short list that may whet your appetite:
at
allows you to run programs at a specified time;
awk
is a simple yet powerful language to manipulate data files
(and not only). For example, being data.dat
your multi field data file,
$ awk '$2 ~ "abc" {print $1, "\t", $4}' data.dat
prints out fields 1 and 4 of every line in data.dat
whose second field
contains ``abc''.
cron
is useful to perform tasks periodically, at specified date
and time. Type man 5 crontab
.
file <filename>
tells you what filename
is
(ASCII text, executable, archive, etc.);
find
(see also Section
Directories: Translating Commands) is one of the most powerful and
useful commands. It's used to find files that match
several characteristics and perform actions on them. General use of
find
is:
$ find <directory> <expression>
where <expression> includes search criteria and actions. Examples:
$ find . -type l -exec ls -l {} \;
finds all the files that are symbolic links and shows what they point to.
$ find / -name "*.old" -ok rm {} \;
finds all the files matching the pattern and deletes them, asking for your
permission first.
$ find . -perm +111
finds all the files whose permissions match 111 (executable).
$ find . -user root
finds all the files that belong to root. Lots of possibilities here---RMP.
grep
finds text patterns in files. For example,
$ grep -l "geology" *.tex
lists the files *.tex that contain the word ``geology''. The variant
zgrep
works on gzipped files. RMP;
^a[^a-m]X{4,}txt$
matches a line that starts with `a', followed by any character except those
in the interval a-m, followed by 4 or more `X', and ends in `txt'. You use
regular expressions with advanced editors, less
, and many other
applications. man grep
for an introduction.
script <script_file>
dumps the screen contents on
script_file
until you issue the command exit
. Useful for
debugging;
sudo
allows users to perform some of root's tasks (e.g.
formatting and mounting disks; RMP);
uname -a
gives you info about your system;
zcat
and zless
are useful for browsing and piping gzipped
files without decompressing them. For example:
$ zless textfile.gz
$ zcat textfile.gz | lpr
bc, cal, chsh, cmp,
cut, fmt, head, hexdump, nl, passwd, printf, sort, split, strings, tac,
tail, tee, touch, uniq, w, wall, wc, whereis, write, xargs, znew.
RMP.
Believe it or not, there are fine tools that provide a UNIX-like environment under DOS/Windows! One is the Djgpp suite ( http://www.delorie.com/djgpp) for DOS, while Cygnus ( http://www.cygnus.com) is a more complex port for Win32. Both include the same GNU development tools and utilities as Linux; you won't get the same stability and performance, though.
If you'd like to have a taste of Linux, try out Djgpp. Download and install
the following files (as of this writing, the latest version is 2.02):
djdev202.zip, bnu281b.zip, bsh1147b.zip, fil316b.zip, find41b.zip,
grep22b.zip, gwk303b.zip, lss332b.zip, shl112b.zip.
. Installation
instructions are provided, and you can find assistance on
news:comp.os.msdos.djgpp.
In particular, using bash
under DOSWin is a whiff of fresh air. To
configure it properly, edit the supplied file BOOT.BAT
to reflect
your installation, then put these files in your home directory (in the
Windows partition) instead of those provided:
# this is _bashrc
LS_OPTIONS="-F -s --color=yes"
alias cp='cp -i'
alias d='ls -l'
alias l=less
alias ls="ls $LS_OPTIONS"
alias mv='mv -i'
alias rm='rm -i'
alias u='cd ..'
# this is _bprof
if [ -f ~/_bashrc ]; then
. ~/_bashrc
fi
PS1='\w\$ '
PS2='> '
CDPATH="$CDPATH:~"
# stuff for less(1)
LESS="-M-Q" # long prompt, silent
LESSEDIT="%E ?lt+%lt. %f" # edit top line
VISUAL="jed" # editor
LESSCHARSET=latin1 # visualise accented letters
export PS1 PS2 CDPATH LS_OPTIONS LESS LESSEDIT LESSOPEN VISUAL LESSCHARSET
You may come across scores of file extensions. Excluding the more exotic ones (i.e. fonts, etc.), here's a list of who's what:
1 ... 8
: man pages. Read them with
groff -Tascii -man <file.1>
.
arj
: archive made with arj
.
dvi
: output file produced by TeX (see below). xdvi
to
visualise it; dvips
to turn it into a PostScript .ps
file.
gz
: archive made with gzip
.
info
: info file (sort of alternative to man pages). Get
info
.
lsm
: Linux Software Map file. It's a plain ASCII file containing
the description of a package.
ps
: PostScript file. To visualise or print it get gs
and,
optionally, ghostview
or gv
.
rpm
: Red Hat package. You can install it on any system using the
package manager rpm
.
taz, tar.Z
: archive made with tar
and compressed with
compress
.
tgz, tar.gz
: archive made with tar
and compressed with
gzip
.
tex
: text file to submit to TeX, a powerful typesetting system.
Get the package tex
, available in many distributions.
texi
: texinfo file, can produce both TeX and info files (cp.
info
). Get texinfo
.
xbm, xpm, xwd
: graphic file.
Z
: archive made with compress
.
If you need to exchange text files between DOS/Win and Linux, be aware of
the ``end of line'' problem. Under DOS, each line of text ends with CR/LF
(that is, ASCII 13 + ASCII 10), with LF under Linux. If you edit a DOS text
file under Linux, each line will likely end with a strange--looking `M'
character; a Linux text file under DOS will appear as a kilometric single
line with no paragraphs. There are a couple of tools, dos2unix
and
unix2dos
, to convert the files.
If your text--only files contain accented characters, make sure they are made under Windows (with Notepad) and not under plain DOS; otherwise, all accented characters will be screwed up.
To convert Word or WordPerfect files to plain text, the matter is a bit
trickier but possible. You'll need one of the tools that can be
found on the CTAN sites; one is
ftp://ftp.tex.ac.uk.
Get the program word2x
from the directory
/pub/tex/tools/, or try one the programs available in directory
/pub/tex/support/. In particular, word2x
converts
Word 6 files, while for Word 97 files you'll need mswordview
(
http://www.csn.ul.ie/~caolan/docs/MSWordView.html)
that turns them to HTML.
If converting files is not enough, you have the choice of sinking your teeth into a (free!) Microsoft Office--like package.
The StarOffice suite is free for private use. It's big, somewhat slow, but very good anyway: it offers a lot of functionality not found in Microsoft Office. It can also read and write Word and Excel files, although the conversion isn't always perfect. Home page: http://www.stardivision.com.
Another good package is Corel WordPerfect, a free edition of which is available for download. Should I say more? Go fetch it: http://www.corel.com.
Congratulations! You have now grasped a little bit of UNIX and are ready to start working. Remember that your knowledge of the system is still limited, and that you are expected to do more practice with Linux to use it comfortably. But if all you had to do was get a bunch of applications and start working with them, what I included here is enough.
I'm sure you'll enjoy using Linux and will keep learning more about it---everybody does. I bet, too, that you'll never go back to DOSWin! I hope I made myself understood and did a good service to my 3 or 4 readers.
Unless otherwise stated, Linux HOWTO documents are copyrighted by their respective authors. Linux HOWTO documents may be reproduced and distributed in whole or in part, in any medium physical or electronic, as long as this copyright notice is retained on all copies. Commercial redistribution is allowed and encouraged; however, the author would like to be notified of any such distributions.
All translations, derivative works, or aggregate works incorporating any Linux HOWTO documents must be covered under this copyright notice. That is, you may not produce a derivative work from a HOWTO and impose additional restrictions on its distribution. Exceptions to these rules may be granted under certain conditions; please contact the Linux HOWTO coordinator at the address given below.
In short, we wish to promote dissemination of this information through as many channels as possible. However, we do wish to retain copyright on the HOWTO documents, and would like to be notified of any plans to redistribute the HOWTOs.
If you have questions, please contact Tim Bynum, the Linux HOWTO coordinator, at linux-howto@sunsite.unc.edu via email.
``From DOS to Linux HOWTO'' was written by Guido Gonzato, REMOVE_MEguido@ibogeo.df.unibo.it. (Remove ``REMOVE_ME''.) Many thanks to Matt Welsh, the author of ``Linux Installation and Getting Started'', to Ian Jackson, the author of ``Linux frequently asked questions with answers'', to Giuseppe Zanetti, the author of ``Linux'', to all the folks who emailed me suggestions, and especially to Linus Torvalds and GNU who gave us Linux.
This document is provided ``as is''. I put great effort into writing it as accurately as I could, but you use the information contained in it at your own risk. In no event shall I be liable for any damages resulting from the use of this work.
Feedback is welcome. For any requests, suggestions, flames, etc., feel free to contact me.
Enjoy Linux and life,
Guido =8-)