You know you have been...
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@BRRABill haha
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I always thought it was weird that tracert was the dos command and traceroute was the linux command. Almost every other linux command is shorter.
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@BRRABill said in You know you have been...:
I'm just happy ifconfig and ipconfig are so similar.
Except Linux has phased out ifconfig now
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@Mike-Davis said in You know you have been...:
I always thought it was weird that tracert was the dos command and traceroute was the linux command. Almost every other linux command is shorter.
That's the famous exception to the rule.
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@scottalanmiller said
Except Linux has phased out ifconfig now
Eh? What do you use instead?
Signed,
Noob -
@scottalanmiller are all unix commands 2 letters?
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@BRRABill ip addr
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@aaronstuder said in You know you have been...:
@scottalanmiller are all unix commands 2 letters?
ping
tracert
finger
who
w
tar
gzip
zip
whois
which
find
grep
sed
awk -
@scottalanmiller said in You know you have been...:
@aaronstuder said in You know you have been...:
@scottalanmiller are all unix commands 2 letters?
ping
tracert
finger
who
w
tar
gzip
zip
whois
which
find
grep
sed
awkLet me translate that for myself.
SAM says TAKE THESE TWO LETTERS: NO
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@aaronstuder said in You know you have been...:
@BRRABill ip addr
Hmmm, I think I like ifconfig better!
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@scottalanmiller How do I know what commands are linux vs unix?
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@aaronstuder
What version of Windows? the up arrow works in Win10 CLI
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@aaronstuder said in You know you have been...:
@scottalanmiller How do I know what commands are linux vs unix?
It doesn't exactly work that way. Some commands descend from the UNIX world, some are from the Linux world. But neither UNIX or Linux have any commands themselves at all. It's all "on what system was the command first created."
So let's take something super simpler like the cp command to copy files. Sure, it was first developed on AT&T UNIX in ~1970. But the version that you use on Linux is from GNU and was developed elsewhere and only primarily used on Linux. Is it UNIX? Linux? Neither because it's just a command that runs on top? It also runs on many non-UNIX systems, like Windows.
So a command is often called a UNIX command when it is generic and used on multiple UNIX systems (like top runs on Linux, Solaris, BSD and maybe more) and called Linux when it only is useful to Linux (like lvs, pvs and vgs.)
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@aaronstuder said in You know you have been...:
@BRRABill ip addr
no no no.. stick with the 2 letter thing..
ip a
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@JaredBusch Didn't know that works... Thanks!
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@JaredBusch said in You know you have been...:
@aaronstuder said in You know you have been...:
@BRRABill ip addr
no no no.. stick with the 2 letter thing..
ip a
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@gjacobse said in You know you have been...:
@JaredBusch said in You know you have been...:
@aaronstuder said in You know you have been...:
@BRRABill ip addr
no no no.. stick with the 2 letter thing..
ip a
None of the above. I do not care for IPA in general.
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Not a problem anymore
"ls" is a default alias to PowerShell's Get-ChildItem, which works on the filesystem and any given PowerShell provider. By default, there are providers for the the registry and the cert store, for example.
And: Up arrow works
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@BRRABill said in You know you have been...:
@scottalanmiller said in You know you have been...:
@aaronstuder said in You know you have been...:
@scottalanmiller are all unix commands 2 letters?
ping
tracert
finger
who
w
tar
gzip
zip
whois
which
find
grep
sed
awkLet me translate that for myself.
SAM says TAKE THESE TWO LETTERS: NO
ping
tracert
finger
who
w
tar
gzip
zip
whois
which
find
grep
sed
awkActually, that reads a little bit like an "adult entertainment" movie's "story". First stalking (ping, tracert, who, whois), later something more obvious (finger, grep) up until the final (aaaaaaawwk...).
SCNR