goal: keep it simple See also https://live.osgeo.org/en/quickstart/proj4_quickstart.html https://live.osgeo.org/en/quickstart/gdal_quickstart.html Command line Quickstart ##################### When you work with linux operations systems it is good to know how to work on the command line. Don't worry. It is not difficult to learn and you will discover that it is fun and very powerful. In this quickstart you will learn some basic commands. The following commands run from within a Terminal Emulator window. Start a Terminal Emulator (LXTerminal currently) from the Applications menu in the Accessories section. This gives you a Unix shell command prompt. Conntents -------------- * * ... Where am I? --------------- pwd shows the path of your actual location. pwd /home/user Notice: You can ask all commands for help and get information on how they can be used and find out about additional options. f.e. pwd --help pwd: pwd [-LP] Gibt den Namen des aktuellen Arbeitsverzeichnisses aus. Optionen: -L Gibt den Inhalt der Variable $PWD aus, wenn sie das aktuelle Arbeitsverzeichnis enthält. -P Gibt den physischen Verzeichnispfad aus, ohne symbolische Verweise. Standardmäßig wird immer die Option »-L« gesetzt. Rückgabewert: Ist 0 außer wenn eine ungültige Option angegeben oder das aktuelle Verzeichnis nicht lesbar ist. How to navigate in the file system? --------------- First you should get to know how the file system under Linux is organized. The file system is organized in a tree. It starts with the / (root) directory. All files and directories are under the root directory /. Your user user has a home directory. located at /home/user. When you open a terminal window you will start in your home directory (see pwd). You can easily navigate in the file system with the command cd. cd / navigated to the root directory cd /home/user goes to your home directory same as cd ~ cd .. goes on directory to the top cd user goes from your current location to the directory user. This is not the same as /user Notice: Use the Tab key to autocomplete the path while you are writing. Create a directory ------------------------- You have write access in your user-directory. You can create files and directories there. Next we will create a directory for some commandline tests. cd ~ mkdir demo - creates the directory demo cd demo Show me what is in a directory ------------------------------- You would like to know more about the content in a directory. ls is the programm that gives you a lot of information. ls lists all files and directories ls -l shows a more detailed list of the files/directories with time, user access rights ls -a also shows hidden files ls -al give you can combine the different options ls -1 shows only the file names How to create a new file -------------------------- touch story.txt creates a new empty file Notice: You can pipe the information from a command to a file f.e. history > my_command_history.txt Copy ------- You can copy files from one location to another. cp myfile.txt newfile.txt copies the file to a new file cp myfile.txt /home/user/ copies a file to a directory cp -R /home/user/demo /tmp copies a whole directory to a new location (-R recursive) Who is sudo? ---------------- With sudo you can do things that you are normally not allowed to. sudo runs commands with the rights of the superuser root With sudo you can f.e. install more software, administrate services, change access rights and more fun. You will see the use of sudo in some of the following commands. Search and install programms --------------------- Show information about programms apt show postgis Search for programs apt search postgis Install programs sudo apt-get install sl You will love the program sl. Run the new program with sl see also apt show sl Services ----------------- Some programms run as services like PostgreSQL, tomcat or Apache Webserver. You can start or stop the services. Restart your Apache Service sudo service apache2 restart sudo service apache2 --help sudo service apache2 status How to edit files --------------------------- You can either edit files in the terminal or open them with an external program like geany. In the terminal window you can use the vim editor (Vi IMproved). vim is very powerful and has many options. See also https://help.ubuntu.com/community/VimHowto https://vim.rtorr.com/lang/en_en vim /home/user/test.txt - opens a file press i to switch to the edit mode ESC leave the edit mode :w save your changes :wq save your changes and close the file :q close the file :q! close the file without saving Find something ------------------ find locate Owner and access rights ---------------------------------- Access rights define wether a user or group or others have access to a file and what sort of access is given. You can have read, write or excecute access. Directories or files have an owner and a group definition. By default the creator of a file/directory is the owner. But this definition can get changed. You will learn this in the next section. You can show the user and group via ls -l ls -l ~ drwxr-xr-x 7 user user 4096 Nov 18 18:20 Desktop The initial character can be - for a file or d for directory user is defined as the owner and the group Access rights are listed at the beginning of the row: r read w write x execute first 3 letters for the owner then 3 letters for the group followed by 3 letters for others You can change the owner with chown --------------------------------------------------- sudo chown -R user:www-data /var/www/html/TBD first pass the user than the group - like user:www-data -R recursive You can change the access rights with chmod ---------------------------------------- sudo chmod -R 777 /var/www/html/TBD 777 everyone can do everything 1. number: owner (u) 2. number: group (g) 3. number: other (o) -R recursive 4 read 2 write 1 execute 660 user and group are allowed to read and write, other have no rights 744 user can do everything, group and others can only read or use it like this chmod -R u+rwx /var/www/html/TBD u = user g = group o = other a = all +/- right: r = read / w = write / x = execute Things to try --------------------- Here are other commands you may try. * history - Display the commands that were used * grep - search for a pattern in a text * history | grep cd * rm - remove a file/directory * mv - rename * less - show the beginning of a file * tail - show the end of a file What Next? ------------------- You learned some important commands and information to work on the command line. Hopefully you discovered how powerful the command line is. *https://ubuntu.com/tutorials/command-line-for-beginners#1-overview https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Standard_Unix_programs