HPC Linux Tutorial
The Linux Command Line
Command Structure
The basic format of the is command options arguments
where options
and arguments
may either be optional or required depending on the command being run. Command options
begin with a -
or --
to indicate they are options, not arguments.
Let's look at some real-life examples:
ls -l
This command ls
lists files while the optional -l
(that's a small "L") argument tells the command to do a long listing. A long listing includes the file permissions, owners, group and other info.
ls myfile
This ls
doesn't include any options but does include an argument myfile
. This will list the file myfile
to the terminal if it exists in the current directory. If not, you'll get a message such as ls: cannot access myfile: No such file or directory
instead.
ls -l myfile
In this next example, we combine command, options and arguments. This will list the file to the terminal with the file permissions, owners, etc. if it exists in the current directory.
ls -lh myfile yourfile
In this final example, multiple options and arguments are specified. Not all commands have multiple options or allow multiple arguments, but the ls
command does. The -lh
combined options tell the ls
command to not only show all the additional information about the files but convert any the output (e.g. the file size) to "human readable" format. If multiple arguments are permitted, the command applies to all that are specified. This command could also have been specified with the options listed separately as ls -l -h myfile yourfile
.