Your most frequently used commands

history | awk '{print $2}' | sort | uniq -c | sort -rn | head -10

Other urls found in this thread:

10.0.0.1/setup.cgi?todo=debug
myredditvideos.com/
twitter.com/NSFWRedditImage

uninstall linux.exe

6373 git
860 z
374 ./sbt
265 awsin
189 ssh
143 vim
135 ls
134 npm
122 rm
103 cd

ls and cd pretty much

...

wat? yum, dir, etc?

whats that?

'history' is not recognized as an internal or external command,
operable program or batch file.

not him
dir is a alternative for ls
yum is the apt(-get) for fedora

btfo ubuntu cuck

>xDddddd lol im so funnay

ls -lah
cd ..
cd..
cd..: command not found
ls -lah
cd.
cd.: command not found
ls -lah
cd ..
ls -lah
cd .
ls -lah
cd ..
sl -lah
sl: command not found
ls -lah
cd /
cd /every/where/else/I/intended/to/go
ls -lah
nano fileToEdit.txt
nano: command not found
vim fileToEdit.txt
vim: command not found
vi fileToEdit.txt
^d
^c
q
ESC
q!

Nice reference ;)

literally not even a reference, i just can't type.
as for the karli kode klub, i don't think think they even know what a terminal is.

vim
gcc
ls
cd
clear
git
mpc
cat
pass

>he has to memorize thousands of commands because he doesn't have any good graphical utilities.

>he has to memorize how to spell words because his language is so retarded that it isn't phonetically written
it's just second nature, faggot.

vim, git, ssh

alias cd..="cd .."

;)

reset

nano
ncmpcpp
mpd

>she will never answer OP

Why does she change directories?

nano
clear
cd
ls
pacman

She's trying to reach the root of reality

>command not found: cd..

...

72 sudo
64 dwarffortress
43 vim
43 mpsyt
39 ls
21 cd
18 pacaur
10 ncmpcpp
9 sudoedit
9 cat

what's the diff between primary and tertiary? desktop vs server?

kek

Just noticed this

>even she is more employable than you

:scream:

374 eix
366 sudo
261 vim
166 mpv
160 equery
122 cd
113 uguush
95 feh
88 ls
57 scp

Probably cd, ls, grep, cat, man, nano, git and clear

kek'd
missed that too :~)

147 cd
93 vim
79 git
77 curl
76 cat
52 grep
43 rm
30 zathura
24 valgrind
21 man

1 775vpk3qo775vpk3qo775vpk3qo
528 brew
431 cd
245 man
200 ls
196 echo
148 cat
114 open
110 node
79 sudo

whoa, i do use 775vpk3qo775vpk3qo775vpk3qo a lot

Am I normal guys?

>man 3rd most used
have you no shame

yes

not everyone knows everything man

man man man

ping, ipconfig.

Why do you use dir?

...

>exactly half of a clap
How did you do this

No clue, I just found it here a while back.

214 ls
127 cd
90 vim
57 sudo
38 rm
26 pip
25 npm
25 g++
22 touch
21 cat

141 sudo
103 cd
70 vim
53 ls
45 git
19 yaourt
14 alsamixer
13 startx
10 jekyll
9 python

muh hate machine
275 ssh
147 sudo
77 exit
69 ls
54 cd
36 scp
30 less
24 rm
19 ip
17 ping

399 sudo
121 ls
93 clear
51 cd
44 htop
36 ssh
24 nano
17 less
16 temp
15 scp

i'm such a casual

wat

383 dnf
366
86 search
82 install
80 -r
61 clone
57 npm
49 apt-get
46 \
37 -c

why do you guys use sudo so often ?

# ignore duplicates in bash history
export HISTCONTROL="ignoredups"

# ignore specific commands in bash history
export HISTIGNORE="&:cd:ls:history*:[bf]g:clear*:screen*:exit"

>rekt

Because you have to be root for most system maintenance.

Yum is pretty much for most rpm based distros.

>chekt

>Because you have to be root for most system maintenance.
how often do you do that ? i run a apt-get update/upgrade once in a while, but that's it. once everything i set up i hardly ever need a root

98 ghci
29 cc
29 ./a.out
27 vim
27 man
26 ls
26 cd
25 sudo
20 rm
19 mount

True, but it's different for different distributions, too. Some require more maintenance, and often sudo is used for some certain applications like GParted or something. You also need it for package installation.

because i don't sit in root all day and i don't have doas installed....

I'll be perfectly honest with my most used commands

ls -l
sudo pacman -S
sudo pacman -Rs
sudo pacman -Syu
ps -ef | grep
cat
cd


I pretty much only use it for basic shit.

even performing an operation like checking iotop needs root, changing things in unowned fresh mounted drives needs root

lots of things need sudo

nmap needs to be run as root

Because su doesnt work idk y

Linux community in the 2000s:
>READ THE MAN NOOB STOP ASKING DUMB QUESTIONS
Linux community in the 2010s:
>HE USES MAN HE DOESN'T EVEN HAVE INTRINSIC KNOWLEDGE OF GNU TOOLS

Linux community in the 2020s (Torvalds Dead):
>HE DOESNT USE *BSD

that’s valid on wangblows

su means you're choosing the user su root ... rly?

You've been using unix for 10 years and you're still a noob?

>often sudo is used for some certain applications like GParted or something
>You also need it for package

>even performing an operation like checking iotop needs root, changing things in unowned fresh mounted drives needs root

yeah, but those aren't things you do regularly, and doesn't explain things like using sudo 400 times.
i'm really curiouse what people do on their system that constantly requires root.

You forgot pwd. She knows other commands beside cd and ls.

wishful thinking, his hate won't die with him and he won't die before 2030

I said package installation.

I can't tell you that since my history doesn't record duplicates. Fuck off and make a google survey and post it on reddit faggot.

the manpages are a perfect reference for the libc and posix api

you're a moronic person not willing to listen to explanations

i said their are many reasons to use root.

file owned by another user? I don't know their password? at least i can root >>sudo

like seriously, you use a multi user OS and don't understand what not being another user is?

again, thats a thing you usually do once when setting up the system, and after that you just update them.
or do you mean packages outside of your repo ?

Even mkdir needs sudo in places not owned by your user, stop pretending it's an exotic command

I still install new packages now and then.

new to loonix

109 pacman
52 systemctl
49 sensors
33 nano
24 cd
17 ls
12 reboot
11 pacman-key
11 exit
8 su

control + L = clear

>using linux for 3 years
>sudo * 400
i wonder why

>file owned by another user?
how often does that happen on your box(not at work / whatever) that some user magically owns a file you need
>I don't know their password?
wth are you doing ?
>like seriously, you use a multi user OS and don't understand what not being another user is?
again, how often do you _manually_ run applications as an other user ? you usually set up services / scripts for that stuff.

i'm not saying that there aren't reasons to use sudo, but stuff like having sudo as one of the top 3 most used commands ?

257 ./main.py
88 git
86 killall
15 sudo
11 ls
7 cd
5 rm
5 fuser
5 dmesg
5 cp


I delete my .bash_history frequently

Given the levels of fictional fantasy in this post, I'm almost certain you meant to type LSD and not BSD. Although, if you were experiencing a trip (as your post number indicates) you may just be, whacked out of your gourd enough to suggest BSD. Really makes you think.....

...

want to take a port on port like... 4000 5000 or less or whatever? you need root

want to talk to hardware? normally need root

need to change something in /etc? root?

it's not what are we doing, it's apperantly you do nothing

you do know linux can do things other than anime and Cred Forums right?

Literally everything involving system maintenance or applications that need elevation need sudo.

>sudo pacman -Syu
>sudo parted
>sudo vim /etc/pacman.d/sources.list
>sudo nmap
>sudo useradd
>sudo /etc/init.d/service start

It goes on and on.

thank you

i'm not able to articulate when people ask stupid questions anymore, i need better socialization

>it's not what are we doing, it's apperantly you do nothing
yeah, configured everything once after set up and everything runs perfectly fine. more time for doing my job.
after the initial set up it touch the files in /etc maybe once a year

control +R = exit

You shouldn't run some services as root though

root is essential of course

I don't use Unix. I just observe and make fun of freetards.

Yeah, I know, it was just for the sake of the example.

again... just because you're needs are static and you don't use the flexibility that's there, doesn't make it the only use case for linux, this user was able to put it into better words

the way you use it is alright though, it actually makes the yotld seem like less of a joke

thank you for sharing your static user needs scenario, now be mindful your system, as everyone's is, is unique

sudo halt -p

nmap needs the port control but could also simply grant to the current user... sudo is advisable either way

$sudo sudo man man

privilege and knowledge infinite, you are now a white male

3131 git
1084 cd
873 ls
520 npm
494 gulp
348 node
245 code
218 typings
216 mkdir
205 atom

yum has been replaced with dnf

uh oh Cred Forums we got a webdev

be careful or he'll resalt our passwords and we'll need to set up our creds again

jk hi fren

You don't have to tell me web dev is shit friend, I already know. Every codemonkey has his price though.

and the bottom line is the most pertinent one, oh i know

im a different dept so i get to raz you people. i think it's part of the rules or something

gc (git commit)
vim
cd
sudo
rm
mv
ssh
scp
ls
cat

that was exactly the reason why i asked, because i wanted to know what you guys do.
on our shared boxes at work using sudo is common too, but thats different from my workstation where i hardly ever need root after the initial setup.

it's because of reasons and things


why don't you make changes all the time needing sudo? don't you like doing things and making things happen?

49 sudo
40 ls
39 cd
35 pkg
30 hg
19 nvidia-settings
17 echo
14 zip
14 mpv
13 youtube-dl
[\code]

$ vrms

am I hacker?

unless primus run opens up clay no you're a memester and a cuckold

no it launches a program on a separate X session that uses my discrete graphics instead of integrated (it's displayed on my main X session though)

ahahahahahahahahahhaahahahahahahahaahahahahahahaha


aaaahhahahahahahahahahahahahaahahahahahahahahahaha

so...not hacker?

no you are not, not yet

doesn't matter you saw their email. time to take their money

277 sudo
193 clear
98 exit
93 cd
86 update
86 ls
33 uptime
19 nano
15 vnstat
15 htop

>sudo

No, you are a fucking casual.

1 history


I don't use that black and white garbage piece of shit as I ain't a primitive virgin. I've evolved to use advanced GUI environment like Windows and Ubunchu. Now lick my foot lower lifeforms.

What's wrong with sudo?
It provides more granular control over which users can do certain things versus just giving everyone the root password.

>why don't you make changes all the time needing sudo? don't you like doing things and making things happen?
why would i ? everything works as expected. the last time i needed sudo was when i added a new gpu and had to blacklist it in grub which was ~3 weeks ago

you're shitting in your own bed and rolling around in it and you dont care?

no wait, you are a casual user talking about casual user things, proceed

I use a superior shell that doesn't keep command history :^)

>not writing your own shell
I can share mine if you'd like.

...

~$ su
Password:
su: Authentication failure
dont werk

~$ sudo aptitude update
[sudo] password for user:

werk

>he is managing his server with a GUI
very stupid

>he is using linux as daily use OS
very stupid too

Kode is such cancer.

sudo su

Who's su?

oh, thanks.

>what

ls
ls
ls
ls
clear
ls
clear
ls
cd
ls
clear
ls

clear this

Personally I dont get it why you wouldn't want to be root all the time.

No sane distro gives the root account a password.

2068 git
941 cd
745 make
577 sudo
531 l
446 ls
362 aptitude
317 vim
300 cat
244 rm

40 sudo
23 make
20 ping
19 cd
16 exit
7 ls
3 ssh
3 screenfetch
2 unrar
2 git

>exiting carefully
Life is too short for that, use ^D

...

>.exe
kek

173 sudo
108 cd
94 ls
33 vim
25 mpd
24 rm
21 systemctl
21 sdi
20 du
19 mkdir
New computer so I haven't had to do too much in the terminal yet. sdi is an alias for sudo dnf install

87 cd
86 ssh
79 ls
61 nano
22 sftp
20 htop
16 rm
16 less
12 ifconfig
9 cat

Holy shit I never knew you didn't need the 0s

My entire life I've been typing ssh [email protected]

fucking kill me now

What's z?
Looks pretty standard but
>npm
We are going to have to have a word with you in the manager's office.

2713 git
1007 grep
656 cd
402 rm
345 cat
314 brew
257 ls
257 gst
255 vim
207 mv

>not adding your servers and associated parameters to the ssh config file

I don't get it
What would you need to type for 10.0.0.150?

1463 cd
1137 sudo
958 ls
747 vim
516 l
351 apt-cache
334 make
313 git
305 cat
297 rm

>all these sudo faggots ITT

If you're installing and using sudo then you are doing computer very wrong. Log in as root, perform privileged task and then exit root.

>history | awk '{print $2}' | sort | uniq -c | sort -rn | head -10

Your version sucks
Who fucking gives a shit how many times sudo was used? We want to know what command it was used for.

history | sed 's/sudo//g' |awk '{print $2}' | sort | uniq -c | sort -rn | head -10

su -c you fucking mong

$ history | grep sudo | awk '{print $3}' | sort | uniq -c | sort -rn | head -10
275 aptitude
45 vim
30 apt-get
27 service
21 fbterm
20 dpkg
19 apt
18 shutdown
12 fail2ban-client
11 rm

ssh [email protected]

It worked. I can't believe it.

interesting. thanks.

97 ls
68 cd
35 mpv
31 sudo
30 ./bin/calibrator
25 v4l2-ctl
19 ssh
18 git
17 ./zmq_json_printer.py
14 python

>./foo/bar
>not directly foo/bar
What are you on senpai?

$ history | awk '{print $2}' | sort | uniq -c | sort -rn | head -10
165 ls
110 cd
101 ssh
50 su
45 less
37 tmux
31 vi
26 locate
25 rm
23 dnf

You know, you can edit your /etc/hosts file and add something like
10.0.0.150 nig.nog nig
Then you can just ssh user@nig

andrey@Shanghai:~$ history | awk '{print $2}' | sort | uniq -c | sort -rn | head -10
144 sudo
131 cd
118 perl
117 ls
34 telnet
27 screen
27 grep
22 nano
22 mv
18 wget
andrey@Shanghai:~$

How did she even take that photo?

>Inb4 meme OS

I usually use hostnames

99 ./push.sh
52 ./test.sh
48 git
39 ./video.sh
38 ffmpeg
28 node
26 identify
22 svn
21 ls
17 ./version.sh

Retard

She probably asked a man to take it for her

...

I don't know...

ls
rm
cp
R

I only really use the command line to interact with our fileserver at work

He's not mistaken, directory/command works just as well as ./directory/command. The more you know.

>not skimping on keystrokes like our forefathers did when baptising ls, mkdir, cd instead of list-segments, make-directory, change-directory

...

>implying an asian would "code" like like

There are good women programmers and computer scientists that have backgrounds in mathematics, but they're mostly given a bad name by diversity hires

Clear=gay

Those are the people I respect. People who actually have the credentials for their position. Wannabes are scum and you know it.

Nice prompt.

Not only I am not mistaken, I am undoubtedly right. One extra character per command may be understandable. TWO extra characters are unforgivable. Think about all the bauds wasted! Bauds that could have been better used for feeding poor terminals in Southern Molvania!

UNFORGIVABLE
N L
F B
O A
R V
G I
I G
V R
A O
B F
L N
ELBAVIGROFNU

sudo rm -rf /

10.00150, I'm guessing.

...

ll

>exit
Ctrl+D
>ifconfig
Deprecated, use ip.

235 ssh
93 sftp
90 assimilate
78 sudo
64 add
59 server
36 locate
29 ffmpeg
27 ls
26 purge

"assimilate" is an alias for updating the system.
"add" is an alias for "zypper install".
"purge" is an alias for "zypper remove".
"server" is an alias for communicating with my IPMI device.

Actually that uses octal. Try 10.150 as in .
Protip: ping works the same way.

>"assimilate" is an alias for updating the system.
Does it just run your package manager, or do you have a wrapper for pecl, pear, quicklisp, and the such?

10.0.0.1/setup.cgi?todo=debug
adslctl start --snr 6
wl -a wl0 txpwr 80
wl ledbh 3 8

is android, doesn't have ctrl

use alias is a bad habit imo...

Yes, yes it has

Just the package manager, m8. I'm too much of a pleb to even know what you mean by those wrapper stuff.

Ok. Nice blog.

If your keyboard app doesn't have it your terminal emulator probably has a way to map the volume keys to ctrl and fn.

sudo su
Su hits an auth failure, and I can't be fucked to fix it.

since when?

>those arrow and paging keys
what app is that?

You should use sudo -i instead.

pear is a package manager for php libraries distributed independently of your distro
quicklisp is similar, for Common Lisp
There are others, like cpan for perl and npm for javascript.

It can be sometimes a bit of a chore to keep on track of all of the software corpora in your box.

>I cannot fucking read

on wednesdays we kode kek

343 for
219 ls
197 privvy
176 mupen64plus
163 diceroll
151 man
143 su
129 cd
116 sensors
90 g++

privvy is a tiny script that logs me into an environment where my commands are not recorded in my history.

diceroll is a c++ program I wrote to 10d20 and shit.

juicessh

Oh it's JuiceSSH. I thought it was an actual terminal emulator.

to be fair, those aren't provided by my keyboard

ssh into your phone :|

Ah, well I've run into npm on my server and I suppose something on emacs.

Microsoft software?.... no thanks

juicessh is made by Microsoft? Had no idea, it's a really good app

You can assign a password to root with sudo passwd.

but it's more explicit. you are directly instructing the terminal to refer to an entry in the working directory instead of leaving it to interpretation by context. that has to save at least a few bauds

You should avoid using aliases as a way to just rename executables. You'll be like a fish out of water when you have to work on a system that's not yours.

...

is there a way to make "ls" be equivalent to "ls -A" by default?

It frustrates me that I have to add the -A to find hidden config files.

alias ls='ls -A'

this is embarrassing

145 java
119 cd
82 scrapy
59 ls
46 sml
25 git
3 ps
3 history
2 npm

No. Your terminal just relays keypresses to the mainframe, which does all the infering. Bauds are only spent on communicating the terminal with the mainframe.

echo "alias ls='ls -A'" >> .bashrc
Or into the *rc of your choice

I forgot, which one was the one for searching the software name
It was
>cache somnething search or something

If your most common command is sudo, do this instead:
history | awk '{ if ($2 =="sudo") print $3; else print $2}' | sort | uniq -c | sort -rn | head -10

...

104 pacman
39 cd
28 man
28 ls
27 ./m2hpc.py
24 g++
20 gcc
17 make
14 m2hpc
12 python

>tfw I somehow used pacman a lot more than ls or cd, and got a fucking python script for converting midi to Hydrogen Drum Machine tracks on the list

1564 vim
1225 ls
718 cd
627 make
387 man
201 ./main.py
186 rm
183 ssh
143 ./a.out
136 gcc

linux n00b here
how is your version better than mine? ()

387 git
194 ls
164 cd
34 less
29 ./mapreact.py
17 ./rg4.py
17 cp
15 #
14 ./run.sh
14 grep

Honestly I didn't see yours before I had posted mine. Yours is cleaner than mine and should have the same behavior in this thread. Mine will only remove the first sudo in case some confused individual typed sudo sudo foo for some reason, while yours will be messed up slightly for commands containing 'sudo' in them, such as visudo. Both of us fail when someone uses sudo with a flag such as sudo -i foo

>attention whoring to the max

>what is mapreact.py?
>what is rg4.py?
>what is #?
>what is run.sh?

yeah yeah yaourt, whatever.

interesting, thanks.

87 cd
85 python
65 vim
35 ls
28 gcc-5
23 .v
19 brew
18 .z
17 slp
14 which

The .py and .sh files are projects.

The # is probably from when I accidentally pasted an entire .py file into the terminal.

193 python3
89 cd
21 ls
18 curl
12 ping
12 cat
9 ssh
9 printf
9 $RANDOM
6 chmod

yeah, you're totally an attention whore.
kys.

minecraft@akashi:/home/david$ history | awk '{print $2}' | sort | uniq -c | sort -rn | head -10
279 ls
251 cd
139 tmux
58 nano
50 rm
24 task
24 exit
13 sudo
12 mv
11 ./gradlew

'''
I am in the middle of a multiline string used as a comment!
Things that could really fuck things up if somebody pasted this in a terminal:
sudo rm -rf /
'''
#Here are
#some single-line comments

Ok.

You all don't capture the commands you pipe your output to, eg. the verysame awk, sort, uniq, head you use to generate the stat.
history|awk '{print $2}'|awk 'BEGIN {FS="|"} {print $1}'|sort|uniq -c|sort -rn|head -30| echo "don't just copy and pase you stupid piece of shit"

Also add sed 's/sudo//g' somewhere.
Sauce form SO because nobody knows how to do anything.
I don't even have a history.

i gues i have to learn perl and advanced regular expressions to solve the problem of quoted "|"
feel free to post the solution

my solution is also just as bad as every ones else here

rhotate@rhotate-17:~$ history | awk '{print $2}' | sort | uniq -c | sort -rn | head -10
182 sudo
142 ls
111 gcc
84 ./TryAgain
72 clear
47 cd
32 clear;
20 java
17 man
15 exit

140 sr
86 ls
52 cd
50 dig
45 grep
39 sudo
36 man
36 less
30 vim
27 pacman
27 cat
24 ssh
22 clear
20 bup
15 tar
15 rm
13 gnutls-cli
12 whois
12 systemctl
12 make

sr is an alias for "screen -dRS irssi irssi".

I don't use pipes because I'm not a friggin nerd

Same results, loser

1373 cd
885 ls
874 exit
650 svn
579 git
554 sudo
523 make
487 vim
353 pdflatex

1902 git
792 cd
786 grep
629 open
571 brew
393 sublime
288 rm
247 vim
220 ssh
202 python3

is anyone else sick of "start up" culture?

Find out what that is, you might have a wirus

(I work with selenium Ruby)

249 ruby
133 geany
29 mpv
23 svn
9 vim
9 cd
8 export
6 packer
5 clear
4 cd_suites

That's pretty representative, except I use pip3 in reality, but since I'm in a virtualenv no need to specifiy the 3.
453 git
145 cd
80 sudo
35 python3.4
32 ls
30 pip
26 python
21 radon
13 locate
11 grep
11 cloc
10 tail

some people writing exit and clear
>what is ^D and ^L

all those people writing "ls"
>what is the fish shell
>what is ^I

>clear
>not printf '\033c'

5718 make
2723 git
2404 ls
2304 vi
1506 mv
1232 cd
1206 rm
1077 ll
985 man
585 sudo

>dnf
no thanks

:(){ :|: & };:

806 rm
764 ssh
764 cd
760 sudo
734 vim
448 pass
379 mv
236 nmap
189 find
180 man