This command kills all processes with 'SomeCommand' in the process name. There are other more elegant ways to extract the process names from ps but they are hard to remember and not portable across platforms. Use this command with caution as you could accidentally kill other matching processes! xargs is particularly handy in this case because it makes it easy to feed the process IDs to kill and it also ensures that you don't try to feed too many PIDs to kill at once and overflow the command-line buffer. Note that if you are attempting to kill many thousands of runaway processes at once you should use 'kill -9'. Otherwise the system will try to bring each process into memory before killing it and you could run out of memory. Typically when you want to kill many processes at once it is because you are already in a low memory situation so if you don't 'kill -9' you will make things worse
Esse comando procura por arquivos php que que iniciem com ' Show Sample Output
Found in comments section works on most Linux flavors. Show Sample Output
Allow to launch nc like a daemon, in background until you still stop it. (like this command: http://www.commandlinefu.com/commands/view/9978 ) For send script or commands from the client to the server, use nc too, like that : cat script.sh | nc server 1025 echo "service openvpn restart" | nc server 1025 The loop's inside doesn't do anything, but we can add echo -e "\nCommand received\n" . Show Sample Output
Useful for if you want to create a log file every now and again or wish to record file names with date and time. You can't use the / for file names. so this replaces the / with a - Windows only Show Sample Output
You can redirect the pipe to > file.txt See more here: http://ss64.com/nt/dir.html
Reconstruct standard permissions for directories and files in current directory
for bash commands don't use man use help
This is useful for working out whether the file that you are unzipping is an evil zip file which will create 200 new files in your current direction Show Sample Output
This works in multiple unixes, not only linux, for different paths. On solaris, if you do not have which, you can use: ksh whence -p anypath/a_command.sh | sed "s|^./|$(pwd)|" ksh whence -p Show Sample Output
It takes a hunk and shows the different between the three file. Useful when you want to compare two different changed file which from the same base file. (use emacs ediff3, eyecandy and more useful if you want to merge them from anywhere to anywhere) Show Sample Output
Kills process by name
generally we cannot use control + v to paste text copied in clipboard but by pressing control and holding it press shift and v
Remove all zero size files from current directory. Its a not recursive option like: find . -size 0c -exec rm {} \;
with this command you can empty file Show Sample Output
you should umount /dev/cdrom before using this cli
This allows you to display the wireshark program running on remote pc to your local pc.
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