Linux with Operating System Concepts



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directory
It is a lot easier to delete the directory and its contents using the recursive deletion
rm 
-r 
directory
. This instruction will delete the contents stored in 
directory
first and 
then delete the directory itself. If rm has been aliased to rm -i, then you will be asked for 
approval before each item is deleted. To avoid this, you could use 
rm -rf 
directory
although this could be risky.
The rmdir command also has an option, -p, to recursively delete parent directories as 
well as the current directory. In such a case, you specify the path of the directories to delete 


Navigating the Linux File System

87
from top to bottom. Referring back to Figure 3.3, if all of the directories foxr, temp2 and b 
were empty, and you wanted to delete them all, then from /home you could issue the com-
mand 
rmdir -p foxr/temp2/b
.
3.3.5 Textfile Viewing Commands
There are a number of commands that allow you to obtain information about files. Three 
commands to display the contents of one or more files to the terminal window are 
cat

less
, and 
more
. The cat command (short for concatenate) displays the contents of all of 
the files specified, without pausing. The cat command is more commonly used with redi-
rection so that the contents of multiple files can be combined and placed into a new file. 
For instance,
cat *.txt 
>
all_text_files.txt
would take all .txt files of the current directory and combine them into one file, also in the 
current directory. The command
cat foo.txt 
>
foo2.txt
is the same as 
cp foo.txt foo2.txt
.
If you wish to quickly see the contents of one or more files, you can also use cat, but 
because the contents will not pause screen-by-screen, you might want to use 
more
or 
less
. Both of these commands will display the contents of the file(s), but will pause after 
each screen to let the user control what happens next.
In more, the user either hits the enter key to move one line ahead, the space bar to move 
one screen ahead, or q to quit. The more command has a number of options to help more 
precisely control the program’s behavior, for instance by using 
-n 
number
to specify the 
number of lines that appear in each screen or 
+
linenumber
to start the display at the 
given line number. The less command, which is newer and more useful, gives the user more 
control as the user can scroll both forward and backward through the file, for instance by 
using the arrow keys.
You can also view the first part or last part of a file easily using the commands 
head
and 
tail
, respectively. These two commands display the first and last 10 lines of a file, 
respectively. You can control the amount of the file displayed with options -c and -n. Both 
options expect an integer number to follow the option to indicate the amount of the file to 
display. The option -c is used to specify the number of bytes (characters) to output and -n 
is used to specify the number of lines to output.
For head, you can also precede the integer with a minus sign to indicate that the pro-
gram should skip some number of bytes or lines. Similarly, for tail, precede the integer with 
a plus sign to indicate the starting point within the file.
For instance, 
head -c -20
would start at the 21st byte of the file. The instruction 
tail -n 
+
12
will display the file starting at line 12. Some additional examples are shown 
in Table 3.5. Assume that file.txt is a text file that consists of 14 lines and 168 bytes.


88

Linux with Operating System Concepts
Another file operation is 
sort
, to sort a given file line-by-line in increasing order. The 
option -r causes sort to work in decreasing order. Sort can work on multiple files in which 
case the lines are mixed, as if the files were first combined using cat. Another useful option 
for sort is -f which causes sort to ignore case so that ‘a’ and ‘A’ are treated equally (otherwise 
‘A’ comes before ‘a’).
3.3.6 File Comparison Commands
The instructions 
cmp

comm
, and 
diff
are all available to compare the contents of text 
files. The diff instruction can operate on any number of files or whole directories. Both cmp 
and comm expect only two files and comm expects the files to be sorted.
In diff, for each line that is in the first file but not the second, it is output preceded by a 

<
’ and for every line that is in the second file but not in the first, it is output preceded by a 

>
’. For each line or group of lines that differ, a summary is provided indicating how the two 
differ. For instance, if file 1 contains a line that is not found in file 2, you will be told that 
the line had to be deleted to match file 2. If file 2 contains a line that is not found in file 1, 
you will be told that the line had to be added. If two corresponding lines between the two 
files do not match, then you will be told that the line had to be changed. These are indicated 
using the letters ‘a’ for added, ‘d’ for deleted, and ‘c’ for changed. This notation might look 
like 3a5,6 to indicate that at line 3 of the first file, we had to add lines 5 to 6 of the second file.
If the first filename is a directory, diff will find the file in the directory whose name 
matches that of the second file. The option -i will cause diff to ignore case so that upper 
and lower case letters are treated as one. Other options will cause diff to ignore white space 
(blanks, blank lines, tabs). If a file does not exist, diff responds with an error. Additionally
if diff is provided with two directories, it will compare all pairs of files who share the same 
name in both directories. To operate on more than two files, you must supply diff with the 
option --from-file
=
. For instance, if you wanted to compare file1 to all of file2, file3, file4, 
and file5, you would use the following instruction:
diff --from-file=file1 file2 file3 file4 file5
In such a case, the output of the comparisons is separated by --- to indicate that the next 
file is being compared.
The cmp instruction compares exactly two files. Similar to diff, it compares these files 
byte-by-byte and line-by-line but it stops once it finds a mismatch, returning the byte and 
TABLE 3.5 
Examples Using 
head
and 
tail

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