There are thousands of tools, utilities, and programs that come pre-installed on a Linux system. You can run them from a terminal window or virtual console as commands via a shell such as Bash.

 

A command is typically the pathname (eg. /usr/bin/top) or basename (e.g top) of a program including arguments passed to it. However, there is a common misconception among Linux users that command is the actual program or tool.

 

Remembering Linux commands and their usage is not easy, especially for new Linux users. In this article, we will share 5 command-line tools for remembering Linux commands.

 

1. Bash History

 

Bash records all unique commands executed by users on the system in a history file. Each user’s bash history file is stored in their home directory (e.g. /home/rootadminz/.bash_history for user rootadminz). A user can only view his/her own history file content and root can view the bash history file for all users on a Linux system.

 

To view your bash history, use the history command as shown.

$ history  

 

To fetch command from bash history, press the Up arrow key continuously to search through a list of all unique commands that you run previously. If you have skipped the command your looking for or failed to get it, use the Down arrow key to perform a reverse search.

 

2. Friendly Interactive Shell (Fish)

 

Fish is a modern, powerful, user-friendly, feature-rich and interactive shell which is compatible to Bash or Zsh. It supports automatic suggestions of file names and commands in the current directory and history respectively, which helps you to easily remember commands.

 

In the following screenshot, the command “uname -r” is in the bash history, to easily remember it, type the later  “u” or “un” and fish will auto-suggest the complete command. If the command auto-suggested is the one you wish to run, use the Right arrow key to select it and run it.

 

Fish is a fully-fledged shell program with a wealth of features for you to remember Linux commands in a straightforward manner.

 

3. Apropos Tool

 

Apropos searches and displays the name and short description of a keyword, for instance, a command name, as written in the man page of that command.

 

If you do not know the exact name of a command, simply type a keyword (regular expression) to search for it. For example, if you are searching for the description of the docker-commit command, you can type docker, apropos will search and list all commands with the string docker, and their description as well.

$ apropos docker

 

You can get the description of the exact keyword or command name you have provided as shown.

$ apropos docker-commit
OR
$ apropos -a docker-commit

 

This is another useful way of remembering Linux commands, to guide you on what command to use for a specific task or if you have forgotten what a command is used for. Read on, because the next tool is even more interesting.

 

4. Explain Shell Script

 

Explain Shell is a small Bash script that explains shell commands. It requires the curl program and a working internet connection. It displays a command description summary and in addition, if the command includes a flag, it also shows a description of that flag.

 

To use it, first you need to add the following code at the bottom of you $HOME/.bashrc file.

# explain.sh begins
explain () {
  if [ "$#" -eq 0 ]; then
    while read  -p "Command: " cmd; do
      curl -Gs "https://www.mankier.com/api/explain/?cols="$(tput cols) --data-urlencode "q=$cmd"
    done
    echo "Bye!"
  elif [ "$#" -eq 1 ]; then
    curl -Gs "https://www.mankier.com/api/explain/?cols="$(tput cols) --data-urlencode "q=$1"
  else
    echo "Usage"
    echo "explain                  interactive mode."
    echo "explain 'cmd -o | ...'   one quoted command to explain it."
  fi
}

 

Save and close the file, then source it or open a fresh terminal window.

$ source .bashrc

 

Assuming you have forgotten what the command “apropos -a” does, you can use explain command to help you remember it, as shown.

$ explain 'apropos -a'

 

This script can explain to you any shell command effectively, thus helping you remember Linux commands. Unlike the explain shell script, the next tool brings a distinct approach, it shows usage examples of a command.

 

5. Cheat Program

 

Cheat is a simple, interactive command-line cheat-sheet program which shows use cases of a Linux command with a number of options and their short understandable function. It is useful for Linux newbies and sysadmins.

 

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