Favorite Linux Commands
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 @scottalanmiller said: Haven't used PV. I do use watch a bit. Because of this thread I've been conditioning myself to use glances. It really is very useful. That's really all I use pv for, I know people use it for other stuff, but that's all I really need it for. 
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 @scottalanmiller said: Haven't used PV. I do use watch a bit. Because of this thread I've been conditioning myself to use glances. It really is very useful. Glad to hear someone else like it! 
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 @johnhooks So, you just use pv dd if=/dev/urandom of=/dev/sda bs=512kThat's actually really handy. 
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 @travisdh1 said: @johnhooks So, you just use pv dd if=/dev/urandom of=/dev/sda bs=512kThat's actually really handy. YOu have to pipe it in, it's a strange syntax dd if=/dev/zero | pv | dd of=/dev/sdaAlso any flags or arguments go before the first pipe. 
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 Very odd indeed. 
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 @johnhooks said: @travisdh1 said: @johnhooks So, you just use pv dd if=/dev/urandom of=/dev/sda bs=512kThat's actually really handy. YOu have to pipe it in, it's a strange syntax dd if=/dev/zero | pv | dd of=/dev/sdaAlso any flags or arguments go before the first pipe. That is a bit odd. Still handy tho. 
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 Sample output.  
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 My favourite linux command is "ls" 
 "cd"
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 @johnhooks said: @Lakshmana said: My favourite linux command is "ls" 
 "cd"I use those quite a bit also. I use them all the time, doesn't mean I like them. At least ls is shorter than dir. 
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 This is also helpful, diff is confusing unless you use some flags. diff -y -W 70 file file2It makes viewing changes much easier. Below is a screenshot. The pipe shows there is a difference in the line, and the < or > show that there is a line added or subtracted.  
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 @travisdh1 said: @johnhooks said: @Lakshmana said: My favourite linux command is "ls" 
 "cd"I use those quite a bit also. I use them all the time, doesn't mean I like them. At least ls is shorter than dir. I always end up typing dir on my linux machines and ls on my windows machines.... it just frustrates me... 
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 Back in the day, one of my faves was "rn"  
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 @brianlittlejohn Switch to powershell and always use "ls" 
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 This thread deserves more attention than it gets. I was getting annoyed with dd and no status display today (lots of Raspberry Pis to image.) This time I know the exact size of the sd cards being imaged tho, so pv is very helpful. dd if=/home/comtech/rpi.img | pv -s 16g | dd of=/dev/mmcblk0 bs=4k[root@localhost comtech]# dd if=/home/comtech/rpi.img | pv -s 16g | dd of=/dev/mmcblk0 ^[34MiB 0:01:37 [ 249KiB/s] [==> ] 2% ETA 1:17:2
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 @travisdh1 said in Favorite Linux Commands: This thread deserves more attention than it gets. I was getting annoyed with dd and no status display today (lots of Raspberry Pis to image.) This time I know the exact size of the sd cards being imaged tho, so pv is very helpful. dd if=/home/comtech/rpi.img | pv -s 16g | dd of=/dev/mmcblk0 bs=4k[root@localhost comtech]# dd if=/home/comtech/rpi.img | pv -s 16g | dd of=/dev/mmcblk0 ^[34MiB 0:01:37 [ 249KiB/s] [==> ] 2% ETA 1:17:2This isn't installed by default on some systems, but i easy & quick to add. 
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 Mine has been grep and cat. 
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 When I want to use virt-manager from my Mac. ssh -Y username@ip-address virt-manager &
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 I use ^quite frequently any more.
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 free -h








