156
votes

We all know how to use <ctrl>-R to reverse search through history, but did you know you can use <ctrl>-S to forward search if you set stty stop ""? Also, have you ever tried running bind -p to see all of your keyboard shortcuts listed? There are over 455 on Mac OS X by default.

What is your single most favorite obscure trick, keyboard shortcut or shopt configuration using bash?

6
  • 2
    Please reword this to say "What is your single most favourite". This allows people to up-vote specific answers, almost like a poll.
    – SCdF
    Sep 16, 2008 at 1:08
  • > Please reword this to say "What is your single most favourite". Done. Oct 2, 2008 at 22:05
  • 1
    There is a StackOverflow clone for this very question: commandlinefu.com
    – rkb
    Apr 15, 2009 at 16:54
  • Only 232 of those 455 default key-bindings do something other than "self-insert" ("type this key"): $ bind -p |grep -v self-insert | wc
    – Ed Brannin
    Jun 2, 2009 at 10:57
  • Some neat stuff in here. But it should be noted that a quite a few of them only work when the bash is in emacs mode...
    – Mo.
    Sep 10, 2009 at 16:03

105 Answers 105

7
votes

Duplicate file finder

This will run checksums recursively from the current directory, and give back the filenames of all identical checksum results:

find ./ -type f -print0 | xargs -0 -n1 md5sum | sort -k 1,32 | uniq -w 32 -d --all-repeated=separate | sed -e 's/^[0-9a-f]*\ *//;'

You can, of course, change the path around.
Maybe put it into a function or alias, and pass in the target path as a parameter.

6
votes

!<first few characters of the command> will execute the last command which matches.

Example:

!b will run "build whatever -O -p -t -i -on" !. will run ./a.out

It works best with long and repetitive commands, like compile, build, execute, etc. It saved me sooo much time when coding and testing.

5
votes

I have plenty of directories which I want to access quickly, CDPATH variable is solution that speed up my work-flow enormously:

export CDPATH=.:/home/gadolin/sth:/home/gadolin/dir1/importantDir

now with cd I can jump to any of sub directories of /home/gadolin/sth or /home/gadolin/dir1/importantDir without providing the full path. And also <tab> works here just like I would be there! So if there are directories /home/gadolin/sth/1 /home/gadolin/sth/2, I type cd 1 wherever, and I am there.

3
  • +1 I do that too. The only disadvantage is decreasing tab-completion-smartness, e.g. if /home/gadolin/sth has a imported directory but I want to cd to importantFiles in the current directory I either have to enter i TAB (yields import) a TAB or prepend ./. But still a great feature IMHO Sep 16, 2010 at 7:07
  • 1
    Then you may like Autojump: github.com/joelthelion/autojump/wiki
    – Alex B
    Sep 16, 2010 at 7:16
  • @Tobias you may avoid that by adding "." to CDPATH at the very begging as I do. Thus I decided that dirs in current directory have higher priority.
    – Gadolin
    Sep 16, 2010 at 7:28
4
votes

You should be able to paste the following into a bash terminal window.

Display ANSI colour palette:

e="\033["
for f in 0 7 `seq 6`; do
  no="" bo=""
  for b in n 7 0 `seq 6`; do
    co="3$f"; p="  "
    [ $b = n ] || { co="$co;4$b";p=""; }
    no="${no}${e}${co}m   ${p}${co} ${e}0m"
    bo="${bo}${e}1;${co}m ${p}1;${co} ${e}0m"
  done
  echo -e "$no\n$bo"
done

256 colour demo:

yes "$(seq 232 255;seq 254 -1 233)" |
while read i; do printf "\x1b[48;5;${i}m\n"; sleep .01; done
4
votes

Delete everything except important-file:

# shopt -s extglob
# rm -rf !(important-file)

The same in zsh:

# rm -rf *~important-file

Bevore I knew that I had to move the important fiels to an other dictionary, delete everything and move the important back again.

1
  • it can be simpler chmod the "important files" then delete everything.
    – Gregg Lind
    Oct 23, 2008 at 21:27
4
votes

Using history substiution characters !# to access the current command line, in combination with ^, $, etc.

E.g. move a file out of the way with an "old-" prefix:

mv file-with-long-name-typed-with-tab-completion.txt old-!#^

4
votes

http://www.commandlinefu.com is also a great site.

I learned quite useful things there like:

sudo !!

or

mount | column -t
1
  • For anyone who's never heard of !!, it appends your last command to whatever precedes the !! and is super useful. Click here for an example: j.otdown.com/jot/d1h
    – MSpeed
    Mar 18, 2010 at 11:10
4
votes

Ctrl + L will usually clear the screen. Works from the Bash prompt (obviously) and in GDB, and a lot of other prompts.

3
votes

Well, this may be a bit off topic, but if you are an Emacs user, I would say "emacs" is the most powerful trick... before you downvote this, try out "M-x shell" within an emacs instance... you get a shell inside emacs, and have all the power of emacs along with the power of a shell (there are some limitations, such as opening another emacs within it, but in most cases it is a lot more powerful than a vanilla bash prompt).

3
  • As a side note, I can barely stand a shell now without it being inside Emacs.
    – Mike Stone
    Sep 16, 2008 at 1:01
  • 1
    And as a side-note, I can barely stand a shell once it contains Emacs... seriously, how does a salty vim user get to know emacs?
    – Gregg Lind
    Oct 23, 2008 at 21:17
  • 1
    And if you are a Python user, iPython (no, not an Apple product) is good too. All the power of Python with the power of a shell. Now if you are a Python and Emacs user, run iPython from Emacs.
    – Yoo
    Sep 13, 2009 at 17:47
3
votes

I like a splash of colour in my prompts:

export PS1="\[\033[07;31m\] \h \[\033[47;30m\] \W \[\033[00;31m\] \$ \[\e[m\]"

I'm afraid I don't have a screenshot for what that looks like, but it's supposed to be something like (all on one line):

[RED BACK WHITE TEXT] Computer name 
[BLACK BACK WHITE TEXT] Working Directory 
[WHITE BACK RED TEXT] $

Customise as per what you like to see :)

1
  • I went with export PS1="\[\033[06;32m\] \h \[\033[42;30m\] \W \[\033[00;31m\] \$ \[\e[m\]" - looks pretty nifty! Oct 21, 2009 at 2:13
3
votes

As an extension to CTRL-r to search backwards, you can auto-complete your current input with your history if you bind 'history-search-backward'. I typically bind it to the same key that it is in tcsh: ESC-p. You can do this by putting the following line in your .inputrc file:

"\M-p": history-search-backward

E.g. if you have previously executed 'make some_really_painfully_long_target' you can type:

> make <ESC p>

and it will give you

> make some_really_painfully_long_target

2
  • Since using this key with nothing on the command line will act like "previous-history", I use this function to replace the "ctrl-P" behavior. If I use ctrl-p on a blank line it pulls up the previous ocmmand. If I start typing first, it will complete it. Additionally, the previous-history function will show you multiple copies of the same command if you typed it multiple times. The history-search-backwards function will compress those and only show you one command for each repeated group. Oct 4, 2010 at 21:20
  • This ought to be the default.
    – Mikel
    Mar 2, 2011 at 5:21
3
votes

A simple thing to do when you realize you just typed the wrong line is hit Ctrl+C; if you want to keep the line, but need to execute something else first, begin a new line with a back slash - \, then Ctrl+C. The line will remain in your history.

2
  • I do Ctrl+A # ENTER when i need to execute something else first.
    – Yoo
    Sep 13, 2009 at 18:13
  • I do the same Ctrl-A trick, but the backslash Ctrl-C is nice since I don't have to edit the command later to remove the #.
    – Harvey
    Aug 10, 2010 at 18:05
3
votes

Insert preceding lines final parameter

ALT-. the most useful key combination ever, try it and see, for some reason no one knows about this one.

Press it again and again to select older last parameters.

Great when you want to do something else to something you used just a moment ago.

3
votes

Curly-Brace Expansion:

Really comes in handy when running a ./configure with a lot of options:

./configure --{prefix=/usr,mandir=/usr/man,{,sh}libdir=/usr/lib64,\
enable-{gpl,pthreads,bzlib,lib{faad{,bin},mp3lame,schroedinger,speex,theora,vorbis,xvid,x264},\
pic,shared,postproc,avfilter{-lavf,}},disable-static}

This is quite literally my configure settings for ffmpeg. Without the braces it's 409 characters.

Or, even better:

echo "I can count to a thousand!" ...{0,1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9}{0,1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9}{0,1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9}...
2
  • $ echo "I can count to a thousand" ...{0..9}{0..9}{0..9}
    – bobbogo
    Jan 6, 2011 at 15:04
  • If you don't need the leading zeros: echo "I can count to a thousand" ...{0.999}. In Bash 4, you can have leading zeros: echo "I can count to a thousand" ...{000..999}. Jan 10, 2011 at 19:20
2
votes

The easiest keystrokes for me for "last argument of the last command" is !$

echo what the heck?

what the heck?

echo !$

heck?
2
  • Geee, I find editing what the UP cursor presents easier on the brain.
    – hendry
    Sep 16, 2008 at 7:19
  • I always forget this one. Now I'll remember it. :)
    – Harvey
    Aug 10, 2010 at 18:04
2
votes

$_ (dollar underscore): the last word from the previous command. Similar to !$ except it doesn't put its substitution in your history like !$ does.

2
votes

Eliminate duplicate lines from a file

#sort -u filename > filename.new

List all lines that do not match a condition

#grep -v ajsk filename

These are not necessarily Bash specific (but hey neither is ls -thor :) )

Some other useful cmds:

prtdiag, psrinfo, prtconf - more info here and here (posts on my blog).

2
  • What about sort -u filename |uniq? May 23, 2010 at 4:33
  • why would you need "|uniq" ? Sort already does that for you. uniq just remove successive duplicates from the input, and writes the result to the output. linuxmanpages.com/man1/uniq.1.php
    – shiva
    Jun 2, 2010 at 21:55
2
votes

Not really obscure, but one of the features I absolutely love is tab completion.
Really useful when you are navigating trough an entire subtree structure, or when you are using some obscure, or long command!

1
  • $ bind 'set show-all-if-ambiguous' will let you type one tab rather than two.
    – bobbogo
    Jan 6, 2011 at 15:22
2
votes

CTRL+D quits the shell.

5
  • 1
    I'd never use that! ;-) Actually when I have to log out (once a month or so) that will come in handy. Thanks. Sep 16, 2008 at 17:04
  • 3
    Ctrl+D also quits SSH session, Python session, and perl session and so on. What it actually does is like sending "finished!" to stdin of the shell, ssh, python and perl.
    – Yoo
    Sep 13, 2009 at 18:17
  • @Jon - LOL! I'm the exact same way. I run screen(1) so I'm always logged in (sometimes over SSH too). May 23, 2010 at 4:34
  • I have this in my ~/.bashrc so I have to press ^D multiple times (three in this case) to prevent accidentally exiting the shell: export IGNOREEOF="2" Jun 10, 2010 at 4:46
  • What it sends is an EOF character, I believe. So, yes, in a way it sends "finished!" to stdin, like RamyenHead said.
    – Zecc
    Nov 17, 2010 at 11:01
2
votes

Using alias can be time-saving

alias myDir = "cd /this/is/a/long/directory; pwd"
2
votes

I'm a big fan of Bash job control, mainly the use of Control-Z and fg, especially if I'm doing development in a terminal. If I've got emacs open and need to compile, deploy, etc. I just Control-Z to suspend emacs, do what I need, and fg to bring it back. This keeps all of the emacs buffers intact and makes things much easier than re-launching whatever I'm doing.

2
votes

alias ..='cd ..'

So when navigating back up a directory just use ..<Enter>

1
  • 1
    bash 4 solves this with shopt -s autocd
    – tig
    Jun 10, 2010 at 14:58
2
votes

I have various typographical error corrections in aliases

alias mkae=make

alias mroe=less
4
  • I see this a lot, but I think it's a mistake. I can't articulate why not, but it seems like it gives the user license to be lax in typing accuracy. Maybe I'm just up-tight. ;-) Sep 16, 2008 at 6:27
  • 2
    i guess you won't use the sl command.
    – Yoo
    Sep 13, 2009 at 17:56
  • zsh can suggest corrections without defining lots of aliases.
    – ZyX
    May 24, 2010 at 7:35
  • +1 to @RamyenHead for sl. Jun 10, 2010 at 4:51
2
votes

SSH tunnel:

ssh -fNR 1234:localhost:22 [email protected]
2
votes

Not my favorite, by very helpful if you're trying any of the other answers using copy and paste:

function $
{
    "$@"
}

Now you can paste examples that include a $ prompt at the start of each line.

1
vote

bash can redirect to and from TCP/IP sockets. /dev/tcp/ and /dev/udp.

Some people think it's a security issue, but that's what OS level security like Solaris X's jail is for.

As Will Robertson notes, change prompt to do stuff... print the command # for !nn Set the Xterm terminal name. If it's an old Xterm that doesn't sniff traffic to set it's title.

1
vote

And this one is key for me actually:

set -o vi

/Allan

1
vote

When navigating between two separate directories and copying files back and forth, I do this:

cd /some/where/long
src=`pwd`
cd /other/where/long
dest=`pwd`

cp $src/foo $dest

command completion will work by expanding the variable, so you can use tab completion to specify a file you're working with.
1
  • I just make a temporary symlink to one from the other (or to both from /tmp) :)
    – nhed
    Mar 13, 2011 at 16:19
1
vote

<anything> | sort | uniq -c | sort -n

will give you a count of all the different occurrences of <anything>.

Often, awk, sed, or cut help with the parsing of data in <anything>.

1
vote

du -a | sort -n | tail -99

to find the big files (or directories of files) to clean up to free up disk space.

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