Tuesday, February 4, 2014

Create Storyboard for Website BIT UCSC UoM Student Projects Flowcharts


Introduction:
The process of developing a website requires following various stages such as planning and design. The design process, involves graphic representations of structures and functionalities intended for the site. Storyboards, is one of these objects that provides an illustrated concept of the structure and purpose of the website. Although Storyboards has been used mainly in the animation and film industry, it is a powerful tool used in project management.
However, there is still some confusion about how to approach the concept of a storyboard into a website. For that reason, this report will cover basic concepts, considerations and guides to create an effective storyboard. In order to make clearer understanding to this objective, an example has been designed using a template that organizes information that any industry project might use.

What are Storyboards?
Storyboards started in the animation industry in the early 1900 and are defined as an illustrated tool for producer or directors to review how a production will look in the final edited version. As well as any other building plan, storyboards are able to guide the crew of a production to achieve what has been designed by the director. All the shots are illustrated through drawings with important information that gives specific direction to be followed by the crew (Mark, S. 2007).
However, how to associate this definition to websites storyboard? Well, it is a fact that websites require previous production management like any other development project. The basic purpose of a storyboard is similarly applied to websites. The work of Gatsos (2010) indicates that storyboarding within the web design process is a fundamental element. This initial practice is an advantageous way to diminish time and effort on the development process. Moreover, The Joint Information Systems Committee (2010) points out that each page should contain information related to any type of media intended to be used as well as clarify whether any resource needs to be developed.

Storyboarding websites
Storyboards are fundamental part of the design phase in project management. After developing the flowchart, which defines the appropriate structure of the website, it is essential to reproduce that information through the storyboard.



Hierarchical Flowchart example
There are different formats to create storyboards for websites. However, it is important to maintain
consistency as well as support of all the content that is being provided so that other project members are able to understand the purpose of each screen. (see image bellow)



Storyboard format example

Storyboard Structure
Storyboards are an effective communication tool among the project team members; it should be able to illustrate clearly the structure and content without being necessarily functional.
Therefore, it is essential to use storyboards so that the main goal of the site is not missed affecting timeframe, cost and resulting in unexpected modifications (Boag, P. 2005).
Storyboards can start by hand during the brainstorming phase. Drawing previous sketching of the intended site structure will allow to overview in advance possible issues that can be modified on time.
The image bellow is a basic sketch of a site homepage, so excessive details are not needed at this stage.


Basic Sketch
In a posted article titled Pre-Production , there are important points to consider during the design process that should be included in the storyboards:
  • There is a storyboard for each page, screen, or frame.
  • Each storyboard is numbered.
  • Include relevant details (colour, graphics, video, sound, font, interactivity, visuals, etc.).
  • All text or narration is included and cross referenced with its corresponding storyboard number.
The points previously listed need to be included within a storyboard page format. Beth Agnew offers on her website a free document with samples of storyboards templates (download template) that can be used to create an effective storyboard. On the other hand, Jenny Morice a lecturer in the Computing and Information Technology School at Griffith University, proposes a more structural format (image bellow).
I have found this particular arrange very convenient when designing storyboards. This template, allows you to specify all the intended content of each page in an organized and clear way. This template also helps to achieve what is suggested in the Pre-Production article of how to organize the content of storyboards.



Storyboard Template
An example has been created using this template so it can be seen how to complete a storyboard correctly.



Full Storyboard Example
It can be seen that the arrangement of the template remains. The top of the template is the only space where the actual structure of the website can be illustrated.
Furthermore, naming convention is also established through the storyboard in order to standardise communication among the team for instance; to name the images, a prefix is included ‘img_’ then name of the image ‘exhibition_’ and finally the size ‘800×900’. By doing this, the organization of the content is more accurate and the images are sufficiently identified so that opening them is not strictly necessary.
Additionally, this template not only gives a basic understanding of the visual structure of the website, but also provides specific technical information such as Font family, colour and size to be used during the development process by any member of the team. Text can be written directly in the box of the template or name the document and chapter where it can be accessed rapidly. When developed correctly, this powerful communication tool is able to illustrate to customers, designers developers and project managers the general purpose of the site. Therefore, it is a fundamental support to any part, the customer or the development company allowing discussions of any issue that might come across.

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Specifics:


Download and complete one storyboarding form for EACH PAGE of your website. This form asks you to do several things that are commonly accomplished in the first storyboarding phase (though the preliminary vision is often revised as you go):

  1. Determine what content you want to include in your site
  2. Determine how you will invite others to contribute to the content of this site. Perhaps you will simply invite visitors to send you info and provide an email link or an email form. In any case, part of your assignment invovles inviting your audience to contribute to the site, to "grow" it.
  3. Sketch out the site you want to build with pencil and paper. Begin with the front page, which is the most important: determine what you will include there and how you will organize it. Where should your writing go on the page? Where should an opening image go? And where will you put the links? Once you have it all laid out, determine what resources you need to make it happen and list those (the introductory text, perhaps a navigation bar, links, maybe a logo image?) When the first page is sketched, go through the same process for each of the subsequent pages. So, for example, a sketch of one page, along with the resources needed for it, might look something like this:


  1. Determine a color scheme. You may have different colors on different pages, but the overall color scheme should be somewhat consistent. Be sure that the text and link colors are different enough to be discernable and that both are visible against the background color
  2. Determine a font scheme: you'll want headings and subheadings, as well as the regular font to be relatively consistent in size, style, and color from page to page
  3. Assign both descriptive names and file names (html names) for each page of your site. For instance, if you were doing a site on Cyberpunk, you might set the following descriptive names for pages in your web site, along with the corresponding file names (in parentheses):

    • Cyberpunk Novels (novels.htm)
    • Cyberpunk Writers (writers.htm)
    • Cyberpunk's Technological Predictions (predictions.htm)
    • An Interview with William Gibson (interview.htm)
[Note: Assigning both descriptive and file names up front and documenting them on your story board will make it much easier to keep your names straight--so that you don't start linking to some non-existent page called gibson.htm or something (or interview.htmL).]

  1. Determine how you will link your pages together. Think through the logical steps to get your visitor from point A (your index page) to point B "learn more about X," though often times you'll want/need to offer links between subpages, as well. For example:


Once you have a good sense of all of this, download the storyboard form, fill out one form for each page of your site, making your page sketches at the bottom of each form and then a sketch of the flow of the entire site on a separate sheet.


References
Boag, P. (2005, August 25). Website storyboarding. Retrieved from http://boagworld.com/design/website-storyboarding/
Gatsos, D. (2010, May 18). Storyboarding Tips: Step by Step. Retrieved from http://webtoolsuw.wordpress.com/2010/05/18/storyboarding-tips-step-by-step/
Mark, S. (2007). Storyboards : Motion in Art [EBL Ebooks Corporation]. Retrieved from http://librarycatalogue.griffith.edu.au/record=b1564329~S1
The Joint Information Systems Committee. (n.d.). Retrieved from http://www.x4l.org/resources/healthiernation/storyboarding.pdf

10 Great Tools for Storyboarding



It has been a while since my last blogpost. Last month, I had the great honor of writing four guest posts on the topic of mLearning for ASTD. Furthermore, I have been studying hard to complete my postgraduate studies, which made me step aside from some other projects for a while.
Having said that, last week I came across a very interesting discussion on the eLearning Heroes site and I thought it would be a great opportunity for me to share with you my favorite tools for storyboarding.
1- Desktop Applications
Articulate Storyline
As I said in that forum thread, the new Articulate Storyline is a wonderful tool to show the general structure of your courses. The Story View displays the overall project organization, making it very easy to identify scenes, information flow, different relationships among pages (screens) and so on. In addition, I can use annotated screenshots to communicate my ideas more effectively.

Articulate Storyline
Mind Maps and PowerPoint
I have also used mind maps and diagrams created with a free online tool called diagram.ly and also commercial software, such as MindManager. The mind map you can see in the slideshow below was created with diagram.ly and it is based on Tom Kulhmann´s useful suggestions on building branched eLearning scenarios. This approach has proven to be very useful for coming to an agreement on fundamental aspects before developing a functional prototype in PowerPoint.

PowerPoint

diagram.ly
Twine
This is a quite simple and free application to create a non-linear story that allows you to graphically organize how your scenarios will unfold. You can read Cathy Moore´s impressions about Twine here and watch this video to get started. In the flowchart view, each page or scene is displayed in small boxes that are linked according to the learner´s options. So as you write your story, you build a map of possible paths. The final output is a single web page that you can share with stakeholders and something that works as a functional prototype too.

Twine
Celtx
This is a free tool that was included in Craig Weiss´ recent list of course authoring tools and allows you to write audiovisual scripts, plays, comic books and film storyboards. You can include your own pictures and sketches together with written descriptions of your scenes, scripts, notes, directions and so on. I have just started using this product but it seems to be a robust pre-production system with standard script formats, media integration and possibilities for collaboration. You can download it here.

Celtx
2- Free iPad Apps
Drawing apps: Paper , Bamboo paper and SketchBook Express
I have left the best for last. Most people think that mobile devices are just great for content consumption at the exact moment of need. However, I believe that mobile devices make me more productive and creative and this is why I love CREATING content by using, particularly, my iPad.
In my honest opinion, intuitive drawing apps that have been created from the ground up for natural touch gestures are great for idea generation as they stimulate the usual way our brain works for making connections. Apps like Paper by 53, Bamboo Paper and SketchBook Express help me capture and sketch my ideas as well as create and explore UI/UX designs, graphics and data visualizations and a new course structure and navigation.

Paper
Animation Desk Lite
This is a more sophisticated app than the previous three, but if you want to free your imagination and find new sources of inspiration, it is worthwhile to try it. You can create hand-drawn animations by using different tools like brushes and palettes as well as professional animation resources like frames, skins and close-up view. You can even create an animation and embed it in your eLearning courses since it can be exported as a YouTube video.

Animation Desk Lite
Storyboards 3D
By far, this is my favorite app for storyboarding. If you lack drawing skills or just don´t have enough time, this is a great tool for quickly drafting and presenting your ideas. You can position and rotate 3D characters and objects in all directions, include text blocks and speech bubbles, insert photos in every shot or scene, add notes and even record audio. You might find the free version a little bit limiting but you can purchase packs and develop a whole story right there on you iPad.

Storyboards 3D: Create a new project

Storyboards 3D: Give a title to your project

Storyboards 3D: Character´s expressions

Storyboards 3D: Script notes

Storyboards 3D: Font Styles

Storyboards 3D: Add a new scene

Storyboards 3D: Object Placement

Storyboards 3D: Characters´poses

Storyboards 3D: Organize shots

Storyboards 3D: Scenes Overview
I know that sometimes we are snowed under with work and we can´t try every single tool out there or explore new approaches that may seem time-consuming at the beginning. However, I think it can be worth renewing our design kit once in a while in order to become more innovative and resourceful as we broaden our repertoire of skills. 

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There are several free online AI tools available for creating flowcharts easily and quickly:

  1. Whimsical: Whimsical offers an AI-powered flowchart generator that can create flowcharts from simple text prompts or URLs. It's known for its user-friendly interface and flexibility, making it easy to build user flows, process diagrams, and sequence diagrams. You can start with up to 100 free AI actions​ (Whimsical)​.

  2. EdrawMax: EdrawMax provides a comprehensive AI flowchart maker that allows users to generate, edit, and customize flowcharts from text descriptions. It supports various export formats and offers numerous templates to help streamline the flowchart creation process​ (EdrawMax)​.

  3. Creately: Creately’s AI flowchart tool, known as Creately VIZ, can convert idea boards, discussion threads, and other diagrams into structured flowcharts. It supports real-time collaboration and is designed to boost productivity by integrating AI-generated insights and suggestions​ (Creately)​.

  4. Appy Pie: Appy Pie offers an AI flowchart maker that transforms text prompts into professional-grade flowcharts. It provides a variety of editable templates and an intuitive interface that simplifies the process, saving users time and effort​ (Appy Pie)​.

These tools are designed to help users visualize processes, improve communication, and enhance productivity through AI-driven automation.



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Thursday, January 2, 2014

How to find client for software development project

Instructions

  • 1
    Look at the age and gender of the people who use your product. You can do this by surveying the consumers or deciding what age and gender you want to attract to your product.
  • 2
    Find out your consumers' education and income levels. You may be able to market differently to those who have earned a college degree versus those who haven't and to those who are in a high income bracket versus those who aren't.
  • Notice the marital status and family life cycle of your target consumers. Find out whether they are single, newlyweds, have been married for many years, or have children or grandchildren. Each type spends money differently.
  • 4
    Look at the ethnic and religious background of the people who use your product. This may not make a difference in many cases, and is often good to know.
  • 5
    Put all the demographic information into a customer demographic profile. For example, you may find that your target market includes people in their 30s and 40s who graduated from high school, have a middle class income and are married with young children.
  • 6
    Look at the target consumers' lifestyle. See whether they are conservative, trendy, enjoy traveling or drive a minivan. Every little detail can tell you the type of people they are.
  • 7
    Figure out what social class your consumers belong to, whether lower, middle or upper class. This tells you how much extra money they may have to spend and whether or not they spend it.
  • 8
    See whether your consumers are opinion leaders or followers. Find out whether they tell others what products they should use or need others to tell them what is trendy and what works.
  • 9
    Look at their activities, interests, attitudes and beliefs. Find out what they like to do in their spare time, what their hobbies are, what sort of music they listen to and whether they are interested in environmental issues or politics.
  • 10
    Put the psychographic information into a customer profile along with the demographic information to figure out who your market is and how to go about advertising to the market. Once you find this out, you can advertise to the people where they hang out, where they work out or where they shop.


There are 4 P's in Marketing:
  • Product
  • Price
  • Place
  • Promotion
You know your product, the place is the Web, and if you have existing clients and an existing network, then you are probably doing a good job with those P's.
But what about Promotion and Price? Have you identified your target market? Who are the clients you want to do business with? What news articles and blogs do these customers read? How will you reach them?
What is their baseline? In other words, what pricing strategy would make them think the quality will be poor? What price would they deem excessive?
You and your business partner need to take a step back and answer these questions. Knowing the answers can help you promote your services to the right people.

Read more: http://www.ehow.com/how_2156161_find-target-market.html#ixzz2pFW1ZzKS


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Which One To Choose ASP .NET Or PHP ?

ASP .Net and PHP are considered to be the most powerful programming languages. So, there has always been a question which one to choose or do we hire ASP .Net programmers or PHP Programmers? Well, the answer lies in your requirement. You should first know what exactly your business requirement is. There are other factors to be considered such as price, its availability and lot more. Let’s have a quick comparison of these two.

The name of ASP .NET comes from Microsoft’s old ASP technology, they made with the .NET Framework, and the CLR allows you to use other languages for back end processing: typically Visual Basic.NET or C#. It has great object oriented features, and it is known because of its flexibility. The CLR allows C# programmers and VB.NET programmers to work on the same project, or switch languages half way through. They need not rewrite all of the old classes.

The .NET class library is organized into inheritable classes based around particular tasks, such as working with XML or image manipulation, so a lot of the more common tasks have been already handled for you. Visual Studio .NET is a massive development IDE that will save tons of time of your coding. It has built in debugging along with IntelliSense, which allows for auto-completion of methods and variables so you don’t have to memorize everything.
However, ASP.NET took has its own disadvantages, it is extremely expensive. It requires either better server or more servers.

On the other hand, if we talk about PHP, it is considered to be the fourth popular computer programming language in the world after JAVA, C and VISUAL BASIC. PHP can be used for command-line scripting and client-side GUI applications. It is easy to learn and can be deployed on most web servers, many operating systems and platforms, and can be used with many relational database management systems (RDBMS). PHP is absolutely free of cost as it is open source. It can be embedded with HTML code and is compatible with Apache, IIS, Oracle and Sybase.
PHP strength lies mostly in LAMP. The LAMP architecture has become popular in the Web industry as a way of deploying inexpensive, reliable, scalable, secure web applications. PHP is commonly used as the P in this bundle alongside Linux, Apache and MySQL. It also works with several lesser-known servers, including Alex Belits’ fhttpd, Microsoft’s Personal Web Server, AOLServer, and Omnicentrix’s Omniserver application server.

Coming to the drawbacks of PHP, its type checking is very loose which potentially causes problems. The variables in PHP are not really considered to have a type. Finally, for some reason big corporations feel that if they’re not paying for something, then it’s not worth buying. So, hire the programmers based on your requirements. Analyze these languages and then know which one will best suit you.


Posted in Tips & Tricks on 11, Nov 2011

PHP MySQL Development Features offer a number of advantages that help developers in making the entire development part easier. Since the PHP technology supports the MVC architecture and object oriented programming principles, developers can reduce the amount of codes they write and focus more on the PHP MySQL Application Development part. So, let’s explore the powerful PHP MySQL Key Features that have created a revolution in the web development arena.
Key features offered by PHP
PHP is basically a server side scripting language introduced in 1995 by Rasmus Lerdorf. It used to stand for Personal Home Page but now is popularly known as HyperText Pre-processor. The PHP Development platform is mainly used for developing dynamic web pages and intuitive web applications. PHP is backed by a dedicated community of developers that constantly strive to come up with new versions so that developers can craft amazing web applications. Here’s a quick overview of features offered by PHP –
  • PHP is compatible with the three leading Web servers: Apache HTTP Server for UNIX, Windows, Microsoft Internet Information Server and Netscape Enterprise Server.
  • It also works with several lesser-known servers, including Alex Belits’ fhttpd, Microsoft’s Personal Web Server, AOLServer, and Omnicentrix’s Omniserver application server.
  • PHP easily interfaces with MySQL. The syntax of PHP is based on C++ which is extremely easy to learn. PHP based frameworks help in making URLs look attractive and easy to access. Apache takes care of requests for a particular URL, which further invokes the central framework object. The end-users can only see the URL pasted on their browser, and cannot make out that you are using PHP for the same.
  • With PHP framework, you no longer need to manually enter all the validation criteria for forms etc. The only thing which is required is instantiating a new form validator object and instruct it as you wish. It will handle the rest. The uniform and standard coding helps in making things simpler and the issue of bugs can easily be resolved.
  • It also helps in development of other frameworks engaged in rapid application development like Mambo, Drupal, CodeIgniter, Symfony and Cakephp. PHP5 a fully object oriented language and its platform independence and speed on Linux server helps to build large and complex web applications.
Key features offered by MySQL
MySQL is one of the best choices for database if you are considering building dynamic web applications. It is considered to be a central component of the widely used LAMP web application software stack. MySQL is the brainchild of Monty Widenius. Mentioned below are some of the most important MySQL Features –
  • MySQL is written using C & C++, it uses GNU Automake, Autoconf, and Libtool for portability.
  • Is compatible with multiple platforms.
  • Provides transactional and non-transactional storage engines.
  • Uses an excellent & very fast B-tree disk tables (MyISAM) with index compression.
  • Uses GNU APIs for C, C++, Eiffel, Java, Perl, PHP, Python, Ruby, and Tcl are available.
  • Has a brilliant fully multi-threaded using kernel threads. It can easily use multiple CPUs if they are available.
  • MySQL has In-memory hash tables that can be utilized as temporary tables.
  • Coming to security, MySQL is simply unmatched. It has a privilege and password system which is highly secured & flexible too. It helps you do host-based verification.
PHP MySQL Development has been highly acknowledged by various businesses across the globe. This is because, PHP MySQL, helps organizations get powerful, robust yet flexible web applications which take their business to new heights.

PHP / mySQL Web application & Website development

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Source http://www.yphpmysql.com/php-mysql-features/


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Friday, December 27, 2013

Important LINUX commands


1. tar command examples

Create a new tar archive.

$ tar cvf archive_name.tar dirname/

Extract from an existing tar archive.

$ tar xvf archive_name.tar

View an existing tar archive.

$ tar tvf archive_name.tar

2. grep command examples

Search for a given string in a file (case in-sensitive search).

$ grep -i "the" demo_file

Print the matched line, along with the 3 lines after it.

$ grep -A 3 -i "example" demo_text

Search for a given string in all files recursively

$ grep -r "ramesh" *


3. find command examples

Find files using file-name ( case in-sensitve find)

# find -iname "MyCProgram.c"

Execute commands on files found by the find command

$ find -iname "MyCProgram.c" -exec md5sum {} \;

Find all empty files in home directory

# find ~ -empty


4. ssh command examples

Login to remote host

ssh -l jsmith remotehost.example.com

Debug ssh client

ssh -v -l jsmith remotehost.example.com

Display ssh client version

$ ssh -V

OpenSSH_3.9p1, OpenSSL 0.9.7a Feb 19 2003


5. sed command examples

When you copy a DOS file to Unix, you could find \r\n in the end of each line. This example converts the DOS file format to Unix file format using sed command.

$sed 's/.$//' filename

Print file content in reverse order

$ sed -n '1!G;h;$p' thegeekstuff.txt

Add line number for all non-empty-lines in a file

$ sed '/./=' thegeekstuff.txt | sed 'N; s/\n/ /'


6. awk command examples

Remove duplicate lines using awk

$ awk '!($0 in array) { array[$0]; print }' temp

Print all lines from /etc/passwd that has the same uid and gid

$awk -F ':' '$3==$4' passwd.txt

Print only specific field from a file.

$ awk '{print $2,$5;}' employee.txt


7. vim command examples

Go to the 143rd line of file

$ vim +143 filename.txt

Go to the first match of the specified

$ vim +/search-term filename.txt

Open the file in read only mode.

$ vim -R /etc/passwd


8. diff command examples

Ignore white space while comparing.

# diff -w name_list.txt name_list_new.txt


2c2,3

< John Doe --- > John M Doe

> Jason Bourne


9. sort command examples

Sort a file in ascending order

$ sort names.txt

Sort a file in descending order

$ sort -r names.txt

Sort passwd file by 3rd field.

$ sort -t: -k 3n /etc/passwd | more

10. export command examples

To view oracle related environment variables.

$ export | grep ORACLE

declare -x ORACLE_BASE="/u01/app/oracle"

declare -x ORACLE_HOME="/u01/app/oracle/product/10.2.0"

declare -x ORACLE_SID="med"

declare -x ORACLE_TERM="xterm"

To export an environment variable:

$ export ORACLE_HOME=/u01/app/oracle/product/10.2.0

11. xargs command examples

Copy all images to external hard-drive

# ls *.jpg | xargs -n1 -i cp {} /external-hard-drive/directory

Search all jpg images in the system and archive it.

# find / -name *.jpg -type f -print | xargs tar -cvzf images.tar.gz

Download all the URLs mentioned in the url-list.txt file

# cat url-list.txt | xargs wget –c

12. ls command examples

Display filesize in human readable format (e.g. KB, MB etc.,)

$ ls -lh

-rw-r----- 1 ramesh team-dev 8.9M Jun 12 15:27 arch-linux.txt.gz

Order Files Based on Last Modified Time (In Reverse Order) Using ls -ltr

$ ls -ltr

Visual Classification of Files With Special Characters Using ls -F

$ ls -F


13. pwd command

pwd is Print working directory. What else can be said about the good old pwd who has been printing the current directory name for ages.

14. cd command examples

Use “cd -” to toggle between the last two directories

Use “shopt -s cdspell” to automatically correct mistyped directory names on cd


15. gzip command examples

To create a *.gz compressed file:

$ gzip test.txt

To uncompress a *.gz file:

$ gzip -d test.txt.gz

Display compression ratio of the compressed file using gzip -l

$ gzip -l *.gz

         compressed        uncompressed  ratio uncompressed_name

              23709               97975  75.8% asp-patch-rpms.txt

16. bzip2 command examples

To create a *.bz2 compressed file:

$ bzip2 test.txt

To uncompress a *.bz2 file:

bzip2 -d test.txt.bz2


17. unzip command examples

To extract a *.zip compressed file:

$ unzip test.zip

View the contents of *.zip file (Without unzipping it):

$ unzip -l jasper.zip

Archive:  jasper.zip

  Length     Date   Time    Name

 --------    ----   ----    ----

    40995  11-30-98 23:50   META-INF/MANIFEST.MF

    32169  08-25-98 21:07   classes_

    15964  08-25-98 21:07   classes_names

    10542  08-25-98 21:07   classes_ncomp

18. shutdown command examples

Shutdown the system and turn the power off immediately.

# shutdown -h now

Shutdown the system after 10 minutes.

# shutdown -h +10

Reboot the system using shutdown command.

# shutdown -r now

Force the filesystem check during reboot.

# shutdown -Fr now

19. ftp command examples

Both ftp and secure ftp (sftp) has similar commands. To connect to a remote server and download multiple files, do the following.

$ ftp IP/hostname

ftp> mget *.html

To view the file names located on the remote server before downloading, mls ftp command as shown below.

ftp> mls *.html -

/ftptest/features.html

/ftptest/index.html

/ftptest/othertools.html

/ftptest/samplereport.html

/ftptest/usage.html


20. crontab command examples

View crontab entry for a specific user

# crontab -u john -l

Schedule a cron job every 10 minutes.

*/10 * * * * /home/ramesh/check-disk-space


21. service command examples

Service command is used to run the system V init scripts. i.e Instead of calling the scripts located in the /etc/init.d/ directory with their full path, you can use the service command.

Check the status of a service:

# service ssh status

Check the status of all the services.

service --status-all

Restart a service.

# service ssh restart

22. ps command examples

ps command is used to display information about the processes that are running in the system.

While there are lot of arguments that could be passed to a ps command, following are some of the common ones.

To view current running processes.

$ ps -ef | more

To view current running processes in a tree structure. H option stands for process hierarchy.

$ ps -efH | more

23. free command examples

This command is used to display the free, used, swap memory available in the system.

Typical free command output. The output is displayed in bytes.

$ free

             total       used       free     shared    buffers     cached

Mem:       3566408    1580220    1986188          0     203988     902960

-/+ buffers/cache:     473272    3093136

Swap:      4000176          0    4000176

If you want to quickly check how many GB of RAM your system has use the -g option. -b option displays in bytes, -k in kilo bytes, -m in mega bytes.

$ free -g

             total       used       free     shared    buffers     cached

Mem:             3          1          1          0          0          0

-/+ buffers/cache:          0          2

Swap:            3          0          3

If you want to see a total memory ( including the swap), use the -t switch, which will display a total line as shown below.

ramesh@ramesh-laptop:~$ free -t

             total       used       free     shared    buffers     cached

Mem:       3566408    1592148    1974260          0     204260     912556

-/+ buffers/cache:     475332    3091076

Swap:      4000176          0    4000176

Total:     7566584    1592148    5974436

24. top command examples

top command displays the top processes in the system ( by default sorted by cpu usage ). To sort top output by any column, Press O (upper-case O) , which will display all the possible columns that you can sort by as shown below.

Current Sort Field:  P  for window 1:Def

Select sort field via field letter, type any other key to return


  a: PID        = Process Id              v: nDRT       = Dirty Pages count

  d: UID        = User Id                 y: WCHAN      = Sleeping in Function

  e: USER       = User Name               z: Flags      = Task Flags

  ........

To displays only the processes that belong to a particular user use -u option. The following will show only the top processes that belongs to oracle user.

$ top -u oracle


25. df command examples

Displays the file system disk space usage. By default df -k displays output in bytes.

$ df -k

Filesystem           1K-blocks      Used Available Use% Mounted on

/dev/sda1             29530400   3233104  24797232  12% /

/dev/sda2            120367992  50171596  64082060  44% /home

df -h displays output in human readable form. i.e size will be displayed in GB’s.

ramesh@ramesh-laptop:~$ df -h

Filesystem            Size  Used Avail Use% Mounted on

/dev/sda1              29G  3.1G   24G  12% /

/dev/sda2             115G   48G   62G  44% /home

Use -T option to display what type of file system.

ramesh@ramesh-laptop:~$ df -T

Filesystem    Type   1K-blocks      Used Available Use% Mounted on

/dev/sda1     ext4    29530400   3233120  24797216  12% /

/dev/sda2     ext4   120367992  50171596  64082060  44% /home

26. kill command examples

Use kill command to terminate a process. First get the process id using ps -ef command, then use kill -9 to kill the running Linux process as shown below. You can also use killall, pkill, xkill to terminate a unix process.

$ ps -ef | grep vim

ramesh    7243  7222  9 22:43 pts/2    00:00:00 vim


$ kill -9 7243


27. rm command examples

Get confirmation before removing the file.

$ rm -i filename.txt

It is very useful while giving shell metacharacters in the file name argument.

Print the filename and get confirmation before removing the file.

$ rm -i file*

Following example recursively removes all files and directories under the example directory. This also removes the example directory itself.

$ rm -r example

28. cp command examples

Copy file1 to file2 preserving the mode, ownership and timestamp.

$ cp -p file1 file2

Copy file1 to file2. if file2 exists prompt for confirmation before overwritting it.

$ cp -i file1 file2

29. mv command examples

Rename file1 to file2. if file2 exists prompt for confirmation before overwritting it.

$ mv -i file1 file2

Note: mv -f is just the opposite, which will overwrite file2 without prompting.

mv -v will print what is happening during file rename, which is useful while specifying shell metacharacters in the file name argument.

$ mv -v file1 file2

30. cat command examples

You can view multiple files at the same time. Following example prints the content of file1 followed by file2 to stdout.

$ cat file1 file2

While displaying the file, following cat -n command will prepend the line number to each line of the output.

$ cat -n /etc/logrotate.conf

    1   /var/log/btmp {

    2       missingok

    3       monthly

    4       create 0660 root utmp

    5       rotate 1

    6   }

31. mount command examples

To mount a file system, you should first create a directory and mount it as shown below.

# mkdir /u01


# mount /dev/sdb1 /u01

You can also add this to the fstab for automatic mounting. i.e Anytime system is restarted, the filesystem will be mounted.

/dev/sdb1 /u01 ext2 defaults 0 2

32. chmod command examples

chmod command is used to change the permissions for a file or directory.

Give full access to user and group (i.e read, write and execute ) on a specific file.

$ chmod ug+rwx file.txt

Revoke all access for the group (i.e read, write and execute ) on a specific file.

$ chmod g-rwx file.txt

Apply the file permissions recursively to all the files in the sub-directories.

$ chmod -R ug+rwx file.txt


33. chown command examples

chown command is used to change the owner and group of a file. \

To change owner to oracle and group to db on a file. i.e Change both owner and group at the same time.

$ chown oracle:dba dbora.sh

Use -R to change the ownership recursively.

$ chown -R oracle:dba /home/oracle

34. passwd command examples

Change your password from command line using passwd. This will prompt for the old password followed by the new password.

$ passwd

Super user can use passwd command to reset others password. This will not prompt for current password of the user.

# passwd USERNAME

Remove password for a specific user. Root user can disable password for a specific user. Once the password is disabled, the user can login without entering the password.

# passwd -d USERNAME

35. mkdir command examples

Following example creates a directory called temp under your home directory.

$ mkdir ~/temp

Create nested directories using one mkdir command. If any of these directories exist already, it will not display any error. If any of these directories doesn’t exist, it will create them.

$ mkdir -p dir1/dir2/dir3/dir4/

36. ifconfig command examples

Use ifconfig command to view or configure a network interface on the Linux system.

View all the interfaces along with status.

$ ifconfig -a

Start or stop a specific interface using up and down command as shown below.

$ ifconfig eth0 up


$ ifconfig eth0 down


37. uname command examples

Uname command displays important information about the system such as — Kernel name, Host name, Kernel release number,
Processor type, etc.,

Sample uname output from a Ubuntu laptop is shown below.

$ uname -a

Linux john-laptop 2.6.32-24-generic #41-Ubuntu SMP Thu Aug 19 01:12:52 UTC 2010 i686 GNU/Linux

38. whereis command examples

When you want to find out where a specific Unix command exists (for example, where does ls command exists?), you can execute the following command.

$ whereis ls

ls: /bin/ls /usr/share/man/man1/ls.1.gz /usr/share/man/man1p/ls.1p.gz

When you want to search an executable from a path other than the whereis default path, you can use -B option and give path as argument to it. This searches for the executable lsmk in the /tmp directory, and displays it, if it is available.

$ whereis -u -B /tmp -f lsmk

lsmk: /tmp/lsmk

39. whatis command examples

Whatis command displays a single line description about a command.

$ whatis ls

ls             (1)  - list directory contents


$ whatis ifconfig

ifconfig (8)         - configure a network interface

40. locate command examples

Using locate command you can quickly search for the location of a specific file (or group of files). Locate command uses the database created by updatedb.

The example below shows all files in the system that contains the word crontab in it.

$ locate crontab

/etc/anacrontab

/etc/crontab

/usr/bin/crontab

/usr/share/doc/cron/examples/crontab2english.pl.gz

/usr/share/man/man1/crontab.1.gz

/usr/share/man/man5/anacrontab.5.gz

/usr/share/man/man5/crontab.5.gz

/usr/share/vim/vim72/syntax/crontab.vim

41. man command examples

Display the man page of a specific command.

$ man crontab

When a man page for a command is located under more than one section, you can view the man page for that command from a specific section as shown below.

$ man SECTION-NUMBER commandname

Following 8 sections are available in the man page.

  1. General commands
  2. System calls
  3. C library functions
  4. Special files (usually devices, those found in /dev) and drivers
  5. File formats and conventions
  6. Games and screensavers
  7. Miscellaneous
  8. System administration commands and daemons

For example, when you do whatis crontab, you’ll notice that crontab has two man pages (section 1 and section 5). To view section 5 of crontab man page, do the following.

$ whatis crontab

crontab (1)          - maintain crontab files for individual users (V3)

crontab (5)          - tables for driving cron


$ man 5 crontab

42. tail command examples

Print the last 10 lines of a file by default.

$ tail filename.txt

Print N number of lines from the file named filename.txt

$ tail -n N filename.txt

View the content of the file in real time using tail -f. This is useful to view the log files, that keeps growing. The command can be terminated using CTRL-C.

$ tail -f log-file


43. less command examples

less is very efficient while viewing huge log files, as it doesn’t need to load the full file while opening.

$ less huge-log-file.log

One you open a file using less command, following two keys are very helpful.

CTRL+F – forward one window

CTRL+B – backward one window


44. su command examples

Switch to a different user account using su command. Super user can switch to any other user without entering their password.

$ su - USERNAME

Execute a single command from a different account name. In the following example, john can execute the ls command as raj username. Once the command is executed, it will come back to john’s account.

[john@dev-server]$ su - raj -c 'ls'


[john@dev-server]$

Login to a specified user account, and execute the specified shell instead of the default shell.

$ su -s 'SHELLNAME' USERNAME

45. mysql command examples

mysql is probably the most widely used open source database on Linux. Even if you don’t run a mysql database on your server, you might end-up using the mysql command ( client ) to connect to a mysql database running on the remote server.

To connect to a remote mysql database. This will prompt for a password.

$ mysql -u root -p -h 192.168.1.2

To connect to a local mysql database.

$ mysql -u root -p

If you want to specify the mysql root password in the command line itself, enter it immediately after -p (without any space).

46. yum command examples

To install apache using yum.

$ yum install httpd

To upgrade apache using yum.

$ yum update httpd

To uninstall/remove apache using yum.

$ yum remove httpd

47. rpm command examples

To install apache using rpm.

# rpm -ivh httpd-2.2.3-22.0.1.el5.i386.rpm

To upgrade apache using rpm.

# rpm -uvh httpd-2.2.3-22.0.1.el5.i386.rpm

To uninstall/remove apache using rpm.

# rpm -ev httpd


48. ping command examples

Ping a remote host by sending only 5 packets.

$ ping -c 5 gmail.com


49. date command examples

Set the system date:

# date -s "01/31/2010 23:59:53"

Once you’ve changed the system date, you should syncronize the hardware clock with the system date as shown below.

# hwclock –systohc


# hwclock --systohc –utc

50. wget command examples

The quick and effective method to download software, music, video from internet is using wget command.

$ wget http://prdownloads.sourceforge.net/sourceforge/nagios/nagios-3.2.1.tar.gz

Download and store it with a different name.

$ wget -O taglist.zip http://www.vim.org/scripts/download_script.php?src_id=7701



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