Based on material by Milad Fatenejad, Sasha Wood, and Radhika Khetani, edited by Emily Davenport
We will spend most of our time learning about the basics of the shell by manipulating some experimental data. To get the data for this test, you will need internet access. Just enter the commands:
cd
git clone https://github.com/jdblischak/2013-10-17-uic.git
Followed by:
cd 2013-10-17-uic
These 2 commands will grab all of the data needed for this workshop from the
internet. We will talk about git
later in the workshop.
The shell is a program that presents a command line interface which allows you to control your computer using commands entered with a keyboard instead of controlling graphical user interfaces (GUIs) with a mouse/keyboard combination.
A terminal is a program you run that gives you access to the shell. There are many different terminal programs that vary across operating systems.
There are many reasons to learn about the shell. In my opinion, the most important reasons are that:
It is very common to encounter the shell and command-line-interfaces in scientific computing, so you will probably have to learn it eventually
The shell is a really powerful way of interacting with your computer. GUIs and the shell are complementary - by knowing both you will greatly expand the range of tasks you can accomplish with your computer. You will also be able to perform many tasks more efficiently.
My reasons: access remote servers, repeatability, documentation
The shell is just a program and there are many different shell
programs that have been developed. The most common shell (and the one
we will use) is called the Bourne-Again SHell (bash). Even if bash is
not the default shell, it is usually installed on most systems and can be
started by typing bash
in the terminal. Many commands, especially a
lot of the basic ones, work across the various shells but many things
are different. I recommend sticking with bash and learning it well.
(Here is a link for more information)
To open a terminal, just single click on the "Terminal" icon on the Desktop.
Bash command cheat sheet
COMMAND ACTION
echo prints text to screen
pwd prints path of current working directory
ls lists all files in a directory
cd change directory
rm removes file
mv moves files from one directory to another (or renames them)
cp copies files
One very basic command is echo
. This command just prints text to
the terminal. Try the command:
echo Hello, World
Then press enter. You should see the text "Hello, World" printed back to you. The echo command is useful for printing from a shell script, for displaying variables, and for generating known values to pass to other programs.
Let's learn how to move around the file system using command line programs. This is really easy to do using a GUI (just click on things). Once you learn the basic commands, you'll see that it is really easy to do in the shell too.
First, we have to know where we are. The program pwd
(print working
directory) tells you where you are sitting in the directory tree. The
command ls
will list the files in files in the current
directory. Directories are often called "folders" because of how they
are represented in GUIs. Directories are just listings of files. They
can contain other files or directories.
Whenever you start up a terminal, you will start in a special
directory called the home directory. Every user has their own home
directory where they have full access to do whatever they want. For
example, my user ID is microbe
, the pwd
command tells us that we
are in the /Users/microbe
directory. This is the home directory for the
microbe
user. That is our user name. You can always find out your user
name by entering the command whoami
.
File Types
When you enter the ls -F
command lists the contents of the current
directory. The -F flag tells the computer to list the files in a way that shows their file type. There are (probably) several items in your home directory, notice that
many have a slash at the end. This tells us that all of these items are
directories as opposed to files. If a file has an asterisk at the end, it is executable.
Lets create an empty file using the touch
command. Enter the
command:
touch testfile
Then list the contents of the directory again. You should see that a
new entry, called testfile
, exists. It does not have a slash at the end, showing that it is not a directory. The touch
command just
creates an empty file.
Some terminals can color the directory entries in this very
convenient way. In those terminals, use ls -G
instead of ls
. Now your directories, files, and executables will have different colors.
You can also use the command ls -l
to see whether items in a
directory are files or directories. ls -l
gives a lot more
information too, such as the size of the file and information about
the owner. If the entry is a directory, then the first letter will be
a "d". The fifth column shows you the size of the entries in
bytes. Notice that testfile
has a size of zero.
Now, let's get rid of testfile
. To remove a file, just enter the
command:
rm -i testfile
When prompted, type: y
The rm
command can be used to remove files. The -i
adds the "are you sure?" message. If you enter ls
again,
you will see that testfile
is gone.
Changing Directories
Now, let's move to a different directory. The command cd
(change
directory) is used to move around. Let's move into the
2013-10-17-uic
directory that contains the shell lesson material. Enter the following command:
cd 2013-10-17-uic/lessons/thw-shell/
Now use the ls -F
command to see what is inside this directory. You
will see that there is an entry which ends in a star. This means that this
is an executable.
This directory contains all of the material for this boot camp. Now move to the directory containing the data for the shell tutorial:
cd data
If you enter the cd
command by itself, you will return to the home
directory. Try this, and then navigate back to the data
directory.
Most programs take additional arguments that control their exact
behavior. For example, -F
and -l
are arguments to ls
. The ls
program, like many programs, take a lot of arguments. But how do we
know what the options are to particular commands?
Most commonly used shell programs have a manual. You can access the
manual using the man
program. Try entering:
man ls
This will open the manual page for ls
. Use the space key to go
forward and b to go backwards. When you are done reading, just hit q
to exit.
Programs that are run from the shell can get extremely complicated. To
see an example, open up the manual page for the find
program,
which we will use later this session. No one can possibly learn all of
these arguments, of course. So you will probably find yourself
referring back to the manual page frequently.
Examining the contents of other directories
By default, the ls
commands lists the contents of the working
directory (i.e. the directory you are in). You can always find the
directory you are in using the pwd
command. However, you can also
give ls
the names of other directories to view. Navigate to the
home directory if you are not already there. Then enter the
command:
ls
This shows you the contents of your current directory (which should be your home directory). Now type:
ls 2013-10-17-uic
This will list the contents of the 2013-10-17-uic
directory without
you having to navigate there. Now enter:
ls 2013-10-17-uic/lessons/thw-shell
This prints the contents of thw-shell
. The cd
command works in a
similar way. Try entering:
cd 2013-10-17-uic/lessons/thw-shell
and you will jump directly to thw-shell
without having to go through
the intermediate directory.
The cd
command takes an argument which is the directory
name. Directories can be specified using either a relative path a
full path. The directories on the computer are arranged into a
hierarchy. The absolute path tells you where a directory is in that
hierarchy. Navigate to the home directory. Now, enter the pwd
command and you should see something like:
/Users/microbe
which is the full name of your home directory. This tells you that you
are in a directory called microbe
, which sits inside a directory called
Users
which sits inside the very top directory in the hierarchy. The
very top of the hierarchy is a directory called /
which is usually
referred to as the root directory. So, to summarize: microbe
is a
directory in Users
which is a directory in /
.
Now enter the following command but replace `/Users/microbe/' with your home directory:
cd /Users/microbe/2013-10-17-uic/lessons/thw-shell
This jumps to thw-shell
. Now go back to the home directory. We saw
earlier that the command:
cd 2013-10-17-uic/lessons/thw-shell
had the same effect - it took us to the thw-shell
directory. But,
instead of specifying the absolute path
(/Users/microbe/2013-10-17-uic/lessons/thw-shell
), we specified a relative
path. In other words, we specified the path relative to our current
directory. A absolute path always starts with a /
. A relative path does
not. You can usually use either a absolute path or a relative path
depending on what is most convenient. If we are in the home directory,
it is more convenient to just enter the relative path since it
involves less typing.
Now, list the contents of the /bin directory. Do you see anything familiar in there?
Shortcuts
There are some shortcuts which you should know about. Dealing with the
home directory is very common. So, in the shell the tilde character,
~
, is a shortcut for your home directory. Navigate to the thw-shell
directory, then enter the command:
ls ~
This prints the contents of your home directory, without you having to
type the absolute path. The shortcut ..
always refers to the directory
above your current directory. Thus:
ls ..
prints the contents of the /Users/microbe/2013-10-17-uic/lessons/
. You can chain
these together, so:
ls ../../../
prints the contents of /Users/microbe
which is your home
directory. Finally, the special directory .
always refers to your
current directory. So, ls
, ls .
, and ls ././././.
all do the
same thing, they print the contents of the current directory. This may
seem like a useless shortcut right now, but we'll see when it is
needed in a little while.
To summarize, the commands ls ~
, ls ~/.
, ls ../../
, and ls
/Users/microbe
all do exactly the same thing. These shortcuts are not
necessary, they are provided for your convenience.
Tab Completion
Navigate to the thw-shell
directory. Typing out directory names can waste a
lot of time. When you start typing out the name of a directory, then
hit the tab key, the shell will try to fill in the rest of the
directory name. For example, enter:
cd r<tab>
The shell will fill in the rest of the directory name for
ref
. Go back to thw-shell
directory. Now enter:
ls t<tab><tab>
When you hit the first tab, nothing happens. The reason is that there
are multiple directories in the thw-shell
directory which start with
t. Thus, the shell does not know which one to fill in. When you hit
tab again, the shell will list the possible choices.
Tab completion can also fill in the names of programs. For example,
enter e<tab><tab>
. You will see the name of every program that
starts with an e
. One of those is echo
. If you enter ec<tab>
you
will see that tab completion works.
Command History
You can easily access previous commands. Hit the up arrow.
Hit it again. You can step backwards through your command history.
The down arrow takes your forwards in the command history.
^-C will cancel the command you are writing, and give you a fresh prompt.
^-R will do a reverse-search through your command history. This is very useful.
Commands like ls
, rm
, echo
, and cd
are just ordinary programs
on the computer. A program is just a file that you can execute. The
program which
tells you the location of a particular program. For
example:
which ls
Will return "/bin/ls". Thus, we can see that ls
is a program that
sits inside of the /bin
directory. Now enter:
which find
You will see that find
is a program that sits inside of the
/usr/bin
directory.
So ... when we enter a program name, like ls
, and hit enter, how
does the shell know where to look for that program? How does it know
to run /bin/ls
when we enter ls
. The answer is that when we enter:
a program name and hit enter, there are a few standard places that the
shell automatically looks. If it can't find the program in any of
those places, it will print an error saying "command not found". Enter
the command:
echo $PATH
This will print out the value of the PATH
environment variable. More
on environment variables later. Notice that a list of directories,
separated by colon characters, is listed. These are the places the
shell looks for programs to run. If your program is not in this list,
then an error is printed. The shell ONLY checks in the places listed
in the PATH
environment variable.
Navigate to the thw-shell
directory and list the contents. You will
notice that there is a program (executable file) called hello
in
this directory. Now, try to run the program by entering:
hello
You should get an error saying that hello cannot be found. That is
because this directory is not in the PATH
. You can run the hello
program by entering:
./hello
Remember that .
is a shortcut for the current working
directory. This tells the shell to run the hello
program which is
located right here. So, you can run any program by entering the path
to that program. You can run hello
equally well by specifying:
/Users/erdavenport/2013-10-17-uic/lessons/thw-shell/hello
Or by entering:
../thw-shell/hello
When there are no /
characters, the shell assumes you want to look
in one of the default places for the program.
We now know how to switch directories, run programs, and look at the contents of directories, but how do we look at the contents of files?
The easiest way to examine a file is to just print out all of the
contents using the program cat
. Enter the following command:
cat appaloosa.txt
This prints out the contents of the appaloosa.txt
file. If you enter:
cat appaloosa.txt appaloosa.txt
It will print out the contents of appaloosa.txt
twice. cat
just
takes a list of file names and writes them out one after another (this
is where the name comes from, cat
is short for concatenate).
Short Exercises
Print out the contents of the thw-shell/dictionary.txt
file. What does this file contain?
Without changing directories, (you should still be in thw-shell
),
use one short command to print the contents of all of the files in
the /Users/erdavenport/2013-10-17-uic/lessons/thw-shell/data/thomas
directory.
cat
is a terrific program, but when the file is really big, it can
be annoying to use. The program, less
, is useful for this
case. Enter the following command:
less thw-shell/dictionary.txt
less
opens the file, and lets you navigate through it. The commands
are identical to the man
program. Use "space" to go forward and hit
the "b" key to go backwards. The "g" key goes to the beginning of the
file and "G" goes to the end. Finally, hit "q" to quit.
less
also gives you a way of searching through files. Just hit the
"/" key to begin a search. Enter the name of the word you would like
to search for and hit enter. It will jump to the next location where
that word is found. Try searching the dictionary.txt
file for the
word "cat". If you hit "/" then "enter", less
will just repeat
the previous search. less
searches from the current location and
works its way forward. If you are at the end of the file and search
for the word "cat", less
will not find it. You need to go to the
beginning of the file and search.
Remember, the man
program uses the same commands, so you can search
documentation using "/" as well!
Short Exercise
Use the commands we've learned so far to figure out how to search
in reverse while using less
.
One of the file types you are likely to encounter as a biologist is a fasta file. A fasta file contains DNA sequence information in the following format. The first line starts with a >
and is followed by some sort of identifying information. The next line is your DNA sequence. You can have as many lines of sequence in one file as you like. To learn some other tools/tricks in the shell, we will be using these files located in /Users/microbe/2013-10-17-uic/lessons/thw-shell/data/emily
.
The scenario: We are going to share our data with collaborators, but the data is a bit of a mess! There are inconsistent file names, there are extraneous "NOTES" files that we'd like to get rid of, and the data is spread across many directories. We are going to use shell commands to get this data into shape. By the end we would like to:
Put all of the sequence data into one file called "all_data"
Have all of the data files in one folder, and ensure that every file has a ".fasta" extension
Get rid of the extraneous "NOTES" files
Have a summary file that lists out the number of lines in each file
If we can get through this example in the available time, we will move onto more advanced shell topics...
Short Exercise
We should be able to do one of these tasks already:
emily
directory.Wild cards
Navigate to the emily
directory. This
directory contains our sequencing data. If we type ls
,
we will see that there are a bunch of files which are just four digit
numbers, a few files called NOTES
, and a folder called sequencing_data
. By default, ls
lists all of the files in a given
directory. The *
character is a shortcut for "everything". Thus, if
you enter ls *
, you will see all of the contents of a given
directory. Now try this command:
ls *1.txt
This lists every file that ends with a 1.txt
. This command:
ls /usr/bin/*.sh
Lists every file in /usr/bin
that ends in the characters .sh
. And
this command:
ls *9*1.txt
lists every file in the current directory which contains the number
9
, and ends with the number 1
and the extension .txt
. There are three such files: 3901.txt
,
7901.txt
, and 9901.txt
.
So how does this actually work? Well...when the shell (bash) sees a
word that contains the *
character, it automatically looks for files
that match the given pattern. In this case, it identified three such
files. Then, it replaced the *9*1.txt
with the list of files, separated
by spaces. In other words, the two commands:
ls *9*1.txt
ls 3901.txt 7901.txt 9901.txt
are exactly identical. The ls
command cannot tell the difference
between these two things.
Short Exercise
Do each of the following using a single ls
command without
navigating to a different directory.
/bin
that contain the letter a
/bin
that contain the letter a
or the letter b
/bin
that contain the letter a
AND the letter b
Let's turn to the experimental data from the sequencing experiment. This data is located in the thw-shell/data/emily/
directory. Each file corresponds to the sequencing data for a particular individual in this experiment. We have two samples with similar names. The sequencing for 4490 didn't work well the first time (4490.1) so we tried re-sequencing the sample (4490.2). Let's combine the information for these two samples.
cat 4480.*.txt
We want to save that information to a file and eliminate the two other files:
cat 4480.*.txt > 4480.txt
This tells the shell to take the output from the cat 4480.*.txt
command and
dump it into a new file called 4490.txt
. To verify that this
worked, examine the 4480.txt
file using less
. If 4480.txt
had already
existed, we would overwritten it. So the >
character tells the shell
to take the output from what ever is on the left and dump it into the
file on the right. The >>
characters do almost the same thing,
except that they will append the output to the file if it already
exists. If you have a file 4480.txt
, eliminate the two subfiles so we don't have duplicate information:
rm 4480.*.txt
Short Exercise
Use >
, to create a single file called all_data
that sits in the thw-shell/data/
directory that contains all of the sequencing data in the emily
directory, but not including the sequencing_data
directory.
Once you have that all_data
file created, append the sequencing .fasta files from the sequencing_data
folder to the end of the file.
We've created a file called all_data
using the redirection operators
>
and >>
. This file is critical - it's our analysis results - so we want to
make copies so that the data is backed up.
Lets copy the file using the cp
command. The cp
command backs up the file. Navigate to the data
directory and enter:
cp all_data all_data_backup
Now all_data_backup
has been created as a copy of all_data
. We can
move files around using the command mv
. Enter this command:
mv all_data_backup /tmp/
This moves all_data_backup
into the directory /tmp
. The directory
/tmp
is a special directory that all users can write to. It is a
temporary place for storing files. Data stored in /tmp
is
automatically deleted when the computer shuts down.
The mv
command is also how you rename files. Since this file is so
important, let's rename it:
mv all_data all_data_IMPORTANT
Now the file name has been changed to all_data_IMPORTANT
. Let's delete
the backup file now:
rm /tmp/all_data_backup
The mkdir
command is used to create a directory. Just enter mkdir
followed by a space, then the directory name.
By default, rm
, will NOT delete directories. You can tell rm
to
delete a directory using the -r
option. Enter the following command:
Short Exercise
Do the following:
all_data_IMPORTANT
file to all_data
.data
directory called foo
all_data
file into foo
sequencing_data
to the emily
foldersequencing_data
folder.The wc
program (word count) counts the number of lines, words, and
characters in one or more files. Make sure you are in the emily
directory, then enter the following command:
wc *.txt
For each of the files indicated, wc
has printed a line with three
numbers. The first is the number of lines in that file. The second is
the number of words. Finally, the total number of characters is
indicated. The final line contains this information summed over all of
the files. Thus, there were 287846 characters in total.
Remember that the *.txt
and *.fasta
files were merged
into the all_data
file. So, we should see that all_data
contains
the same number of characters:
wc ../foo/all_data
Every character in the file takes up one byte of disk space. Thus, the size of the file in bytes should also be 287846. Let's confirm this:
ls -l ../foo/all_data
Remember that ls -l
prints out detailed information about a file and
that the fifth column is the size of the file in bytes.
Suppose I wanted to only see the total number of character, words, and
lines across the files *.txt
and *.fasta
. I don't want to
see the individual counts, just the total. Of course, I could just do:
wc all_data
Since this file is a concatenation of the smaller files. Sure, this
works, but I had to create the all_data
file to do this. Thus, I
have wasted a precious 7062 bytes of hard disk space. We can do this
without creating a temporary file, but first I have to show you two
more commands: head
and tail
. These commands print the first few,
or last few, lines of a file, respectively. Try them out on
all_data
:
head ../foo/all_data
tail ../foo/all_data
The -n
option to either of these commands can be used to print the
first or last n
lines of a file. To print the first/last line of the
file use:
head -n 1 all_data
tail -n 1 all_data
Let's turn back to the problem of printing only the total number of
lines in a set of files without creating any temporary files. To do
this, we want to tell the shell to take the output of the wc *
and send it into the tail -n 1
command. The |
character (called pipe) is used for this purpose. Enter the following
command:
wc * | tail -n 1
This will print only the total number of lines, characters, and words
across all of these files. What is happening here? Well, tail
, like
many command line programs will read from the standard input when it
is not given any files to operate on. In this case, it will just sit
there waiting for input. That input can come from the user's keyboard
or from another program. Try this:
tail -n 2
Notice that your cursor just sits there blinking. Tail is waiting for data to come in. Now type:
French
fries
are
good
then CONTROL+d. You should see the lines:
are
good
printed back at you. The CONTROL+d keyboard shortcut inserts an
end-of-file character. It is sort of the standard way of telling the
program "I'm done entering data". The |
character is replaces the
data from the keyboard with data from another command. You can string
all sorts of commands together using the pipe.
The philosophy behind these command line programs is that none of them
really do anything all that impressive. BUT when you start chaining
them together, you can do some really powerful things really
efficiently. If you want to be proficient at using the shell, you must
learn to become proficient with the pipe and redirection operators:
|
, >
, >>
.
A sorting example
Let's create a file with some words to sort for the next example. We want to create a file which contains the following names:
Bob
Alice
Diane
Charles
To do this, we need a program which allows us to create text
files. There are many such programs, the easiest one which is
installed on almost all systems is called nano
.Enter the following command:
nano toBeSorted
Now enter the four names as shown above. When you are done, press
CONTROL+O to write out the file. Press enter to use the file name
toBeSorted
. Then press CONTROL+x to exit nano
.
When you are back to the command line, enter the command:
sort toBeSorted
Notice that the names are now printed in alphabetical order.
Short Exercise
Use the echo
command and the append operator, >>
, to append your
name to the file, then sort it and make a new file called Sorted.
Let's navigate back to thw-shell/data
. Enter the following command:
wc emily/* | sort -k 1 -n
We are already familiar with what the first of these two commands
does: it creates a list containing the number of characters, words,
and lines in each file in the emily
directory. This list is then
piped into the sort
command, so that it can be sorted. Notice there
are two options given to sort:
-k 1
: Sort based on the first column-n
: Sort in numerical order as opposed to alphabetical orderNotice that the files are sorted by the number of lines.
Short Exercise
Use the man
command to find out how to sort the output from wc
in
reverse order.
Short Exercise
Combine the wc
, sort
, head
and tail
commands so that only the
wc
information for the largest file is listed
Hint: To print the smallest file, use:
wc emily/* | sort -k 3 -n | head -n 1
One powerful way to use shell is in the form of a shell script. Making scripts that you can rerun can make your work go faster and make it reproducible.
Let's write a shell script that will take as input a directory, and then output a list of files ordered by the number of lines in each file in that directory. Navigate to the data
directory, then:
To start, type:
nano ordered_lines
Then enter the following text:
#!/bin/bash
wc * | sort -k 1 -n > $1
Now, cd
into the emily
directory and enter the command
../ordered_lines emily_lines.txt
. Notice that it says permission denied. This happens
because we haven't told the shell that this is an executable
file. If you do ls -l ../ordered_lines
, it will show you the permissions on
the left of the listing.
Enter the following commands:
chmod a+x ../ordered_lines
../ordered_lines emily_lines.txt
The chmod
command is used to modify the permissions of a file. This
particular command modifies the file ../ordered_lines
by giving all users
(notice the a
) permission to execute (notice the x
) the file. If
you enter:
ls -lF ../ordered_lines
You will see that the file name has a *
at the end and the permissions have changed.
Congratulations, you just created your first shell script!
You can search the contents of a file using the command grep
. The
grep
program is very powerful and useful especially when combined
with other commands by using the pipe. Navigate to the bert
directory. Every data file in this directory has a line which says
"Range". The range represents the smallest frequency range that can be
discriminated. Lets list all of the ranges from the tests that bert
conducted:
grep ">" 4480.txt
Short Exercise
Create an executable script called count_sequences
in the data
directory, that is similar to the ordered_lines
script, but prints the total number of sequences in each file along with the name of that file.
The find
program can be used to find files based on arbitrary
criteria. Navigate to the data
directory and enter the following
command:
find . -print
This prints the name of every file or directory, recursively, starting from the current directory. Let's exclude all of the directories:
find . -type f -print
This tells find
to locate only files. Now try these commands:
find . -type f -name "*1*"
find . -type f -name "*1*" -or -name "*2*" -print
find . -type f -name "*1*" -and -name "*2*" -print
The find
command can acquire a list of files and perform some
operation on each file. Try this command out:
find . -type f -exec grep Volume {} \;
This command finds every file starting from .
. Then it searches each
file for a line which contains the word "Volume". The {}
refers to
the name of each file. The trailing \;
is used to terminate the
command. This command is slow, because it is calling a new instance
of grep
for each item the find
returns.
A faster way to do this is to use the xargs
command:
find . -type f -print | xargs grep Volume
find
generates a list of all the files we are interested in,
then we pipe them to xargs
. xargs
takes the items given to it
and passes them as arguments to grep
. xargs
generally only creates
a single instance of grep
(or whatever program it is running).
Short Exercise
Navigate to the data
directory. Use one find
command to perform each
of the operations listed below (except number 2, which does not
require a find
command):
Find any file whose name is "NOTES" within data
and delete it
Create a new directory called cleaneddata
Move all of the files within data
to the cleaneddata
directory
Rename all of the files to ensure that they end in .txt
(note:
it is ok for the file name to end in .fasta.fasta
or .txt.fasta
Hint: If you make a mistake and need to start over just do the following:
Navigate to the thw-shell
directory
Delete the data
directory
Enter the command: git checkout -- data
You should see that the
data directory has reappeared in its original state
BONUS
Redo exercise 4, except rename only the files which do not already end
in .txt
. You will have to use the man
command to figure out how to
search for files which do not match a certain name.
backtick, xargs: Example find all files with certain text
alias -> rm -i
variables -> use a path example
.bashrc
du
ln
ssh and scp
regular expressions
permissions
chaining commands together