ls Displays everything in the current directory


ls -a Displays all files, including hidden


ls -l Displays all files, along with the size and timestamp


tar -zxpf <file.tar.gz> Uncompresses tar.gz files


tar -xpf <file.tar.gz> Uncompresses .tar files


gunzip <file> Uncompresses .gz files


cp <file> Copies a file to a new file


mv <file> Moves a file to a new file, or rename


mkdir <dir> Creates a directory


rmdir <dir> Deletes a directory


rm <file> Deletes a file


rm -rf <dir> Deletes a directory


cd <dir> Moves to a directory


cd .. Moves to a lower directory


cd ~ Moves to your home directory


cd - Moves to the previous directory


pwd Displays the current directory


pico <file> Edits a file


ftp <site> Connect to a FTP server


lynx <site> View a webpage


df Displays the hard drive stats


quota Displays your quota


uptime Displays the uptime of the server


uname -a Displays the operating system stats


whoami Displays your info


who Displays others connected to the server


last Displays the last login


whereis <file> Tells where a file is located


BitchX IRC Client


mail Check your email


ps -x Displays processes your running


ps -a Displays all processes running


ps -ux Displays running processes, with CPU/Memory usage


kill <pid> Kills a process


kill -9 <pid> Kills an eggdrop process


killall <program> Kills all running process of the same type


whatis <command> Description of commands


man <command> Displays help on the command


nano Same as Pico


Top - gives an overall view of what is going on with the server including memory usage, server load and running processes "q" to exit top


sar -q gives a report of the process list, 1 minute and 5 minute average load every 10 minutes since midnight server time


tar -zcf filename.tar.gz file
Tars up the file or directory of your choice, replace filename.tar.gz with the name you want your tar file to have...with the tar.gz extension on the end and replace file with the file or directory you want to tar up. Can also use a path/to/file for both.


updatedb - Updates the locate/search DB

netstat -n -p
Useful to see who is connected to your server, this also resolves hostnames to IP addresses and the -p switch shows you what each person connected is doing and provides a PID for it if there is one... useful if you need to kill something

find / -user username
Replace username with a username of one of your account to find all the files that belong to them. Also useful to add the |more switch so you can scroll one screen at a time. Ever have a client who seems to show a lot more files than are actually in their home directory? This is how you find those files and fix them. Common problem is cpmove files that don't get properly deleted and get added to a users account.

/scripts/pkgacct2 username
Replace username with a user on your system. This should be done from the home directory. Useful for manually backing up an account if whm copy account doesn't work. Then just move (mv) the file to a home directory accessible via the web and chown user.user filename and chmod to 750 or 755 and you can wget it from a different server if need be

/scripts/restorepkg username
Once you've got the file and need to unpack it you use this command. The file should be in the /home directory to use this though. Remember username not cpmove-username.tar.gz

netstat -n -p
Useful to see who is connected to your server, this also resolves hostnames to IP addresses and the -p switch shows you what each person connected is doing and provides a PID for it if there is one... useful if you need to kill something

/scripts/restorepkg username
Once you've got the file and need to unpack it you use this command. The file should be in the /home directory to use this though. Remember folks.... username.... not cpmove-username.tar.gz

--help
Such as tar --help, similar to man it digs up info on any given command.

tail -10 filename
gives you the last 10 lines of a file. Can change the # to whatever you want.

cp -R fileordirectory path/to/destination.
the -R allows you to copy an entire directory to somewhere else.

kill -9
not just for eggdrops... it's called a "hard kill" and handy for killing off any stubborn process that refuses to die.

tar -zcf filename.tar.gz file
Tars up the file or directory of your choice, replace filename.tar.gz with the name you want your tar file to have...with the tar.gz extension on the end and replace file with the file or directory you want to tar up. Can also use a path/to/file for both.



RESTART SERVICES: service (service name) restart

Stop a service: service (service name) stop

Start a service: service (service name) start

Status (doesn't work on all): service (service name) status

On a RedHat CPanel server, here are the useful services:

bandmin

chkservd

cpanel crond

exim

httpd

mysql

named

proftpd



/scripts/adddns Add a Dns Entry


/scripts/addfpmail Install Frontpage Mail Exts


/scripts/addservlets Add JavaServlets to an account (jsp plugin required)


/scripts/adduser Add a User


/scripts/admin Run WHM Lite


/scripts/apachelimits Add Rlimits (cpu and mem limits) to apache


/scripts/dnstransfer Resync with a master DNS Server


/scripts/editquota Edit A User's Quota


/scripts/finddev Search For Trojans in /dev


/scripts/findtrojans Locate Trojan Horses


/scripts/findtrojans < /var/log/trojans


/scripts/fixtrojans < /var/log/trojans


/scripts/fixcartwithsuexec Make Interchange work with suexec


/scripts/fixinterchange Fix Most Problems with Interchange


/scripts/fixtrojans Run on a trojans horse file created by findtrojans to remove them


/scripts/fixwebalizer Run this if a user's stats stop working


/scripts/fixvaliases Fix a broken valias file


/scripts/hdparamify Turn on DMA and 32bit IDE hard drive access (once per boot)


/scripts/initquotas Re-scan quotas. Usually fixes Disk space display problems


/scripts/initsuexec Turn on SUEXEC (probably a bad idea)


/scripts/installzendopt Fetch + Install Zend Optimizer


/scripts/ipusage Display Ipusage Report


/scripts/killacct Terminate an Account


/scripts/killbadrpms Delete \"Security Problem Infested RPMS\"


/scripts/mailperm Fix Various Mail Permission Problems


/scripts/mailtroubleshoot Attempt to Troubleshoot a Mail Problem


/scripts/mysqlpasswd Change a Mysql Password


/scripts/quicksecure Kill Potential Security Problem Services


/scripts/rebuildippool Rebuild Ip Address Pool


/scripts/remdefssl Delete Nasty SSL entry in apache default httpd.conf


/scripts/restartsrv Restart a Service (valid services: httpd,proftpd,exim,sshd,cppop,bind,mysql)


/scripts/rpmup Syncup Security Updates from RedHat/Mandrake


/scripts/runlogsnow Force a webalizer/analog update


/scripts/secureit Remove non-important suid binaries


/scripts/setupfp4 Install Frontpage 4+ on an account


/scripts/simpleps Return a Simple process list. Useful for finding where cgi scripts are running from


/scripts/suspendacct Suspend an account


/scripts/sysup Syncup Cpanel RPM Updates


/scripts/ulimitnamed RH 6 only. Install a version of bind to handle many many zones


/scripts/unblockip Unblock an IP


/scripts/unsuspendacct UnSuspend an account


/scripts/upcp Update Cpanel


/scripts/updatenow Update /scripts


/scripts/wwwacct Create a New Account



CRON INFO:
Root crontab: crontab -e

To edit a users cron jobs: crontab -u username -e Replace username with the actual username of the client you want to edit.