mkdocs-pages/docs/commands.md
2019-01-03 10:36:29 +11:00

47 lines
1.7 KiB
Markdown

#Commands
##Files
###tail
`tail` by default reads the last 5 lines of the input file and then exits
| Useful Flags | Function |
| ------------- |:-------------|
| -n *x* | Returns the last x lines of a file |
| -f | Follows the end of the file, so any new data will be printed out to the screen |
###head
`head` by default reads the first 5 lines of the input file and then exits
| Useful Flags | Function |
| ------------- |:-------------|
| -n *x* | Returns the first x lines of a file |
###awk
`awk` is used to extract, layout and modify data using the command line (It is way more then this but its all I use it for)
###sed
`sed` is the '**S**tream **ED**itor' you can use to to modify files via commands and scripts using patterns, an [example](examples/seddnszone.md) can be seen here
| Useful Flags | Function |
| ------------- |:-------------|
| -i | In-place, writes the changes to the file |
| -f | Use a script file instead of reading the expression from STDIN |
###grep
`grep` is used to match text in a file,
| Useful Flags | Function |
| ------------- |:-------------|
| -o | Returns only the matched data (Useless without regex really) |
| -E | Allows extended regex to be used in the search, [regex info](/regex)|
| -P | Allows the use of Perl regex, this uses a different syntax to -E |
| -i | Makes the search case insensitive |
| -r | Searches files recursively (i.e if you have quite a few files and folders it will search through all of them) |
| -l | Returns the filename where the data was matched instead of the matched data |
Some examples of grep usage can be found [here](/examples/grep)
###rev