Introduction to Linux in HPC/Users and permissions
Introduction to Linux in HPC/Users and permissions /
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Revision as of 17:42, 21 October 2020 by Mukund-pondkule-6a11@uni-paderborn.de (talk | contribs)
HPC.NRW | |
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Other HPC Courses | |
GPU | Introduction to GPU Programming |
GPROF | Gprof Tutorial |
Introduction to Linux in HPC | |
1. | Historical Background |
2. | The Command Line |
3. | Directory structure |
4. | Files |
5. | Text display search |
6. | Processes and permissions |
7. | The vim text editor |
8. | Shell scripting environment variables |
9. | System configuration files |
10. | Various tips |
11. | Beyond the cluster |
12. | Linux in HPC |
13. | SSH Login
|
Video
Quiz
Which command can prevent other users not in your group from writing to input.dat?
Exercises in Terminal (slide 89)
1. Create an empty file, make it read-only, make it executable.
Answer: |
Create an empty file: touch file.txt. make it read-only: chmod a-w file.txt; chmod a-x file.txt; chmod a+r file.txt. make it executable: chmod a+x file.txt. Explanation: The touch command can be used to create an empty file. In this example it is file.txt. chmod a-w file.txt; chmod a-x file.txt; chmod a+r file.txt means to execute the three commands subsequently. chmod a-w file.txt removes the write permission for all users. chmod a-x file.txt removes the executable permission for all users. chmod a+r file.txt adds the read permission for all users. chmod a+x file.txt makes file.txt executable for all users. |
2. Start a process (e.g. sleep 10m)
Answer: |
Use a second console to look at it in top. Kill it. Hint: To kill the started process (e.g. sleep 10m): 1. Go to the terminal that started the process. 2. Press Ctrl-C to kill it. |
3. Start a process, bring it into background/foreground.
Hint: |
To bring a process to background: Press Ctrl-Z (pause the process). Type bg (bring it to background). To bring a process to foreground: Type fg (bring it to foreground). |