Much more than 1%, actually...
Yes, you can to some extent run DOS and Windows applications under Linux! There are two emulators that are quite good: Dosemu ( http://www.dosemu.org) and Wine ( http://www.winehq.com). The latter is getting better release after release, and the list of runnable applications is getting larger. It even runs Word and Excel!
Under UNIX there are some widely used applications to archive and compress
files. tar
is used to make archives---it's like PKZIP
or
Winzip
but it doesn't compress, it only archives. To make a new
archive:
$ tar cvf <archive_name.tar> <file> [file...]
To extract files from an archive:
$ tar xvf <archive_name.tar> [file...]
To list the contents of an archive:
$ tar tf <archive_name.tar> | less
You can compress files using compress
, which is obsolete and
shouldn't be used any more, or gzip
:
$ compress <file>
$ gzip <file>
that creates a compressed file with extension .Z
(compress
) or .gz
(gzip
). These programs can
compress only one file at a time. To decompress:
$ compress -d <file.Z>
$ gzip -d <file.gz>
RMP.
There are also the unarj
, zip
and unzip
(PK??ZIP
compatible) utilities. Files with extension .tar.gz
or
.tgz
(archived with tar
, then compressed with
gzip
) are as common in the UNIX world as .ZIP files are under DOS.
Here's how to list the contents of a .tar.gz
archive:
$ tar ztf <file.tar.gz> | less
First of all: installing packages is root's work. Most Linux applications
are distributed as a .tar.gz
archive, which typically will contain
a directory aptly named containing files and/or subdirectories. A good rule
is to install these packages from /usr/local
with the command
# tar zxf <archive.tar.gz>
reading then the README or INSTALL file. In most cases, the application is
distributed in source, which you'll have to compile; often, typing
make
then make install
will suffice. If the archive
contains a configure
script, run it first. Obviously, you'll need
the gcc
or g++
compiler.
Other archives have to be unpacked from /; this is the case
with Slackware's .tgz
archives. Other archives contain the files
but not a subdirectory - careful not to mess things up! Always list the
contents of the archive before installing it.
Debian and Red Hat have their own archive format; respectively,
.deb
and .rpm
. The latter is widely used by many
distributions; to install an rpm
package, type
# rpm -i package.rpm
Backscrolling: pressing <SHIFT + PAG UP> (the grey key) allows you to backscroll a few pages, depending on how much video memory you have.
Resetting the screen: if you happen to more
or
cat
a binary file, your screen may end up full of garbage. To fix
it, blind type reset
or this sequence of characters: echo
CTRL-V ESC c RETURN
.
Pasting text: in console, see below; in X, click and drag to select
the text in an xterm
window, then click the middle button (or the
two buttons together if you have a two-button mouse) to paste. There is also
xclipboard
(alas, only for text); don't get confused by its very
slow response.
Using the mouse: if you installed gpm
, a mouse driver for
the console, you can click and drag to select text, then right click to
paste the selected text. It works across different VCs.
Messages from the kernel: have a look at /var/adm/messages
or /var/log/messages
as root to see what the kernel has to tell
you, including bootup messages. The command dmesg
is also handy.
If you're wondering whether you can replace your old and trusted DOS/Win application with a Linux one, I suggest that you browse the main Linux software repository: ftp://metalab.unc.edu/pub/Linux. Other good starting places are the ``Linux Applications and Utilities Page'' http://www.xnet.com/~blatura/linapps.shtml, the ``official'' Linux page http://www.linux.org, and http://freshmeat.net.
Linux can do an awful lot of things that were cumbersome, difficult or impossible do to with DOS/Windows. Here's a short list that may whet your appetite:
at
allows you to run programs at a specified time;
awk
is a simple yet powerful language to manipulate data
files (and not only). For example, being data.dat
your multi field
data file,
$ awk '$2 ~ "abc" {print $1, "\t", $4}' data.dat
prints out fields 1 and 4 of every line in data.dat
whose second
field contains ``abc''.
cron
is useful to perform tasks periodically, at specified
date and time. Type man 5 crontab
.
file <filename>
tells you what filename
is
(ASCII text, executable, archive, etc.);
find
(see also Section
Directories: Translating Commands) is one of the most powerful and
useful commands. It's used to find files that match several characteristics
and perform actions on them. General use of find
is:
$ find <directory> <expression>
where <expression> includes search criteria and actions. Examples:
$ find . -type l -exec ls -l {} \;
finds all the files that are symbolic links and shows what they point to.
$ find / -name "*.old" -ok rm {} \;
finds all the files matching the pattern and deletes them, asking for your
permission first.
$ find . -perm +111
finds all the files whose permissions match 111 (executable).
$ find . -user root
finds all the files that belong to root. Lots of possibilities here---RMP.
grep
finds text patterns in files. For example,
$ grep -l "geology" *.tex
lists the files *.tex that contain the word ``geology''. The variant
zgrep
works on gzipped files. RMP;
^a[^a-m]X{4,}txt$
matches a line that starts with `a', followed by
any character except those in the interval a-m, followed by 4 or more `X',
and ends in `txt'. You use regular expressions with advanced editors,
less
, and many other applications. man grep
for an
introduction.
script <script_file>
dumps the screen contents on
script_file
until you issue the command exit
. Useful for
debugging;
sudo
allows users to perform some of root's tasks (e.g.
formatting and mounting disks; RMP);
uname -a
gives you info about your system;
zcat
and zless
are useful for browsing and piping
gzipped files without decompressing them. For example:
$ zless textfile.gz
$ zcat textfile.gz | lpr
bc, cal, chsh, cmp,
cut, fmt, head, hexdump, nl, passwd, printf, sort, split, strings, tac,
tail, tee, touch, uniq, w, wall, wc, whereis, write, xargs, znew.
RMP.
Believe it or not, there are fine tools that provide a UNIX-like environment under DOS/Windows! One is the Djgpp suite ( http://www.delorie.com/djgpp/) for DOS, while Cygwin ( http://www.cygnus.com/cygwin) is a more complex port for Win32. Both include the same GNU development tools and utilities as Linux; you won't get the same stability and performance, though.
If you'd like to have a taste of Linux, try out Djgpp. Download and install
the following files (as of this writing, the latest version is 2.02):
djdev202.zip, bnu281b.zip, bsh1147b.zip, fil316b.zip, find41b.zip,
grep22b.zip, gwk303b.zip, lss332b.zip, shl112b.zip.
. Installation
instructions are provided, and you can find assistance on
news:comp.os.msdos.djgpp.
In particular, using bash
under DOS/Win is a whiff of fresh air. To
configure it properly, edit the supplied file BOOT.BAT
to reflect
your installation, then put these files in your home directory (in the
Windows partition) instead of those provided:
# this is _bashrc
LS_OPTIONS="-F -s --color=yes"
alias cp='cp -i'
alias d='ls -l'
alias l=less
alias ls="ls $LS_OPTIONS"
alias mv='mv -i'
alias rm='rm -i'
alias u='cd ..'
# this is _bprof
if [ -f ~/_bashrc ]; then
. ~/_bashrc
fi
PS1='\w\$ '
PS2='> '
CDPATH="$CDPATH:~"
# stuff for less(1)
LESS="-M-Q" # long prompt, silent
LESSEDIT="%E ?lt+%lt. %f" # edit top line
VISUAL="jed" # editor
LESSCHARSET=latin1 # visualise accented letters
export PS1 PS2 CDPATH LS_OPTIONS LESS LESSEDIT LESSOPEN VISUAL LESSCHARSET
You may come across scores of file extensions. Excluding the more exotic ones (i.e. fonts, etc.), here's a list of who's what:
1 ... 8
: man pages. Read them with
groff -Tascii -man <file.1>
.
arj
: archive made with arj
.
dvi
: output file produced by TeX (see below). xdvi
to visualise it; dvips
to turn it into a PostScript .ps
file.
gz
: archive made with gzip
.
info
: info file (sort of alternative to man pages). Get
info
.
lsm
: Linux Software Map file. It's a plain ASCII file
containing the description of a package.
ps
: PostScript file. To visualise or print it get
gs
and, optionally, ghostview
or gv
.
rpm
: Red Hat package. You can install it on any system using
the package manager rpm
.
taz, tar.Z
: archive made with tar
and compressed
with compress
.
tgz, tar.gz
: archive made with tar
and compressed
with gzip
.
tex
: text file to submit to TeX, a powerful typesetting
system. Get the package tex
, available in many distributions.
texi
: texinfo file, can produce both TeX and info files (cp.
info
). Get texinfo
.
xbm, xpm, xwd
: graphic file.
Z
: archive made with compress
.
If you need to exchange text files between DOS/Win and Linux, be aware of
the ``end of line'' problem. Under DOS, each line of text ends with CR/LF
(that is, ASCII 13 + ASCII 10), with LF under Linux. If you edit a DOS text
file under Linux, each line will likely end with a strange--looking `M'
character; a Linux text file under DOS will appear as a kilometric single
line with no paragraphs. There are a couple of tools, dos2unix
and
unix2dos
, to convert the files.
If your text--only files contain accented characters, make sure they are made under Windows (with Notepad) and not under plain DOS; otherwise, all accented characters will be screwed up.
Yes, you can have for free what would otherwise cost a lot of money!
StarOffice ( http://www.sun.com/staroffice.) is currently the only choice, though Koffice is down the pipeline ( http://www.koffice.org). StarOffice is big and slow, but very good anyway: it offers a lot of functionality not found in Microsoft Office. It can also read and write Word and Excel files, although the conversion isn't always perfect.
Another good package is Corel WordPerfect, a free edition of which is available for download. Need I say more? Go fetch it: http://www.corel.com.
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