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How to rename a file in Terminal? - Ask Ubuntu A simple way to rename files and folders is with the mv command (shortened from “move”) Its primary purpose is moving files and folders, but it can also rename them since the act of renaming a file is interpreted by the filesystem as moving it from one name to another The syntax is: mv (option) file1 ext file2 ext where “file1 ext” is the “old” name of the file, and “file2 ext
How to run Terminal as root? - Ask Ubuntu The graphical root terminal job will be both unsuspended and disowned by the non-root terminal, automatically In short: sudo -H gnome-terminal ^Z exit But suppose you wanted to keep using the original, non-root terminal too Then you could run bg N, where N is the graphical root terminal's job number, to resume the job in the background
How can I copy the contents of a folder to another folder in a . . . 1365 I am trying to copy the contents of a folder to another folder in a different directory using terminal Would somebody be able to provide me an example of the command line syntax required to achieve this?
What is a terminal and how do I open and use it? - Ask Ubuntu A Terminal is your interface to the underlying operating system via a shell, usually bash It is a command line Back in the day, a Terminal was a screen+keyboard that was connected to a server Today, it is usally just a progam You can open it via the utilities part of the apllications menu, or press Alt + F2 and type gnome-terminal
What does ` gt; gt;` mean in terminal command? - Super User I came across a command just now given below - $ echo 'eval "$(jenv init -)"' >> ~ bash_profile From what i can guess, it is probably used for committing the changes in bash_profile but what exactly is it used for?
How do I install a . deb file via the command line? - Ask Ubuntu With modern apt I would recommend doing sudo apt install package deb instead This allows automatically installing all the dependencies and it does all the extra sanity checks that dpkg will not implement because it's a low level command Note that without the prefix or some versions of apt may not understand that you're trying to refer to file name, not a package name from repository