Introduction to Linux in HPC/Files
Introduction to Linux in HPC/Files /
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Revision as of 10:47, 2 October 2020 by Mukund-pondkule-6a11@uni-paderborn.de (talk | contribs)
Video
Linux Introduction Slides 51 - 56 (6 pages)
Slide Layout
page 1:
Linux: extensions do not matter
text file or binary file?
file <filename>
page 2:
ls: mentioned in previous section
mv: move
cp: copy
page 3:
mkdir and touch
rm: copy
page 4:
wild cards for patterns
*, ? and []
page 5:
find syntax
allow complex search with wildcards
allow execution with -exec
page 6:
wildcards expand before given to program
find with wildcards as an example
Quiz
Can you copy directory with
cp <old_dir> <new_dir>?
| Info: | no tips in this section |
| Warning: | rm -f: no confirmation! Use with care. (page 3)Wildcards expand before given to program. (page 6) |
Exercises in Terminal
1. Use the find command to search for files, whose name ends with dat, in your home directory.
| Answer: |
The complete command is find $HOME -type f -name "*dat"
find can be used to search files and directories.
$HOME is your home directory.
-type f means only file (not directory) will be shown.
-name "*dat" specifies the required filename and "*dat" restricts the filename ends with dat, while it can begin with any characters (the * wild cards).
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2. Use the find command to search for directories, whose name begins with test and ends with _dir, in your home directory.
| Answer: |
The complete command is find $HOME -type d -name "test*_dir"
find can be used to search files and directories.
$HOME is your home directory.
-type d means only directory (not file) will be shown.
-name "test*_dir" specifies the required directory name, which begins with test and ends with _dir. The wild card * matches any characters in between.
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