🐧 Ultimate Linux Command Cheat Sheet (2025 Edition)
A Complete Beginner’s Guide with Commands, Explanations, and Examples
Linux is one of the most powerful and flexible operating systems in the world — and it’s built around the command line.
Whether you’re a developer, sysadmin, or DevOps engineer, mastering these commands will help you control your system efficiently.
Here’s a categorized, easy-to-read list of essential Linux commands with basic definitions and examples.
🧭 1. System Information Commands
Use these commands to check details about your Linux system — kernel version, CPU, memory, and more.
uname -a              # Show system info (kernel, architecture)
hostname              # Show or set hostname
uptime                # Show how long the system has been running
whoami                # Show current username
top                   # Display running processes
htop                  # Interactive process viewer (sudo apt install htop)
free -h               # Display memory usage
df -h                 # Show disk usage
du -sh *              # Show folder sizes
lsblk                 # List block devices
cat /etc/os-release   # Show Linux distro info
📁 2. File & Directory Management
These are the core commands to navigate, create, copy, move, and delete files or directories.
pwd                   # Print current working directory
ls                    # List files
ls -la                # List all files (including hidden)
cd /path              # Change directory
mkdir folder          # Create directory
rmdir folder          # Remove directory
cp file1 file2        # Copy file
cp -r dir1 dir2       # Copy directory
mv file1 file2        # Move or rename file
rm file               # Remove file
rm -rf folder         # Force remove directory
nano file             # Update file
touch file            # Create empty file
cat file              # Show file contents
less file             # View file page-by-page
head file             # First 10 lines
tail file             # Last 10 lines
tail -f logfile       # Watch live logs
🔍 3. Search & Filter Commands
Use these commands to find files or search for specific text patterns inside files.
find / -name filename        # Find file by name
grep "text" file             # Search for text in a file
grep -r "text" /path         # Search recursively
grep -i "text"               # Case-insensitive search
sort file                    # Sort lines alphabetically
uniq file                    # Remove duplicate lines
wc -l file                   # Count number of lines
cut -d':' -f1 file           # Extract first field
awk '{print $1}' file        # Print first column
sed 's/foo/bar/g' file       # Replace text
👤 4. User Management Commands
Manage users, passwords, and groups with these simple commands.
adduser username             # Add new user
passwd username              # Change password
deluser username             # Delete user
usermod -aG group username   # Add user to group
groups username              # Show user groups
id username                  # Display UID, GID info
sudo su - username           # Switch user
🔐 5. File Permission Commands
Control who can read, write, or execute files and directories.
ls -l                        # Show permissions
chmod 755 file               # Change file permission
chown user:group file        # Change ownership
umask                        # View default permission mask
⚙️ 6. Process Management
Manage running processes, jobs, and priorities in Linux.
ps aux                       # Show all processes
top                          # Real-time process view
kill PID                     # Kill process by ID
killall process_name          # Kill all instances by name
nice                         # Start process with priority
renice                       # Change process priority
jobs                         # Show background jobs
bg %1                        # Resume job in background
fg %1                        # Bring job to foreground
🌐 7. Networking Commands
Test connectivity, check interfaces, and transfer files over the network.
ip a                         # Show IP addresses
ifconfig                     # Show network interfaces
ping 8.8.8.8                 # Test internet connection
curl https://example.com     # Fetch webpage
wget URL                     # Download file
netstat -tulnp               # Show open ports
ss -tulwn                    # Modern replacement for netstat
nslookup domain.com          # DNS lookup
traceroute host              # Trace route
scp file user@server:/path   # Copy files over SSH
rsync -avz /src/ user@host:/dest/  # Sync files
📦 8. Package Management
🟩 Debian / Ubuntu (APT)
sudo apt update              # Update package list
sudo apt upgrade             # Upgrade all packages
sudo apt install package     # Install package
sudo apt remove package      # Remove package
sudo apt autoremove          # Clean unused packages
apt list --installed         # List installed packages
🟧 RHEL / CentOS (YUM / DNF)
sudo yum install package
sudo dnf update
sudo yum remove package
📂 9. Compression & Archiving
Compress and extract files easily using tar and zip utilities.
tar -cvf file.tar folder/    # Create tar archive
tar -xvf file.tar            # Extract tar
tar -czvf file.tar.gz folder # Create gzip archive
tar -xzvf file.tar.gz        # Extract gzip
zip -r file.zip folder/      # Create zip
unzip file.zip               # Extract zip
🔄 10. System Control & Power Commands
Shut down, reboot, and manage terminal history.
reboot                       # Restart system
shutdown now                 # Power off
shutdown -r now              # Reboot immediately
history                      # View command history
clear                        # Clear terminal
🧰 11. Disk & File System Management
Manage storage devices, partitions, and mounts.
mount /dev/sdb1 /mnt         # Mount device
umount /mnt                  # Unmount device
fdisk -l                     # List partitions
mkfs.ext4 /dev/sdb1          # Format disk
fsck /dev/sdb1               # Check filesystem
🧾 12. Logs & Monitoring
Monitor system logs to troubleshoot or analyze performance.
dmesg | less                 # Kernel messages
journalctl -xe               # System logs
tail -f /var/log/syslog      # Live system logs
tail -f /var/log/nginx/error.log  # Nginx error logs
⌨️ 13. Keyboard Shortcuts
| Shortcut | Description | 
|---|---|
| Ctrl + C | Stop running process | 
| Ctrl + D | Logout or exit shell | 
| Ctrl + L | Clear terminal screen | 
| !! | Repeat last command | 
| history | grep text | Search command history | 
💡 Conclusion
Linux can seem overwhelming at first, but once you start practicing these commands daily, you’ll quickly gain confidence.
You’ll be able to manage files, users, and servers like a pro.
Pro Tip: Learn 5 new commands every day. Within a week, you’ll start using them without even thinking.
