HowTo One Liners
Overview
This page provides a quick reference to common One Liner administrative command line operations.
One Liner Resources
- Handy One Liners for Sed: Sed - LinuxHowtos, Sed - SourceForge, Sed - Gist
Get Syntax Color In Less
The NST includes the source-highlight package which can "smartly" apply color to a wide variety of file formats. You can set some less environment variables to make use of the source-hightlight package to color code files in your terminal with the following settings:
export LESSOPEN="| source-highlight --out-format=esc -o STDOUT -i %s 2>/dev/null"; export LESS=" -R "
Then try something like:
less /usr/share/nstwui/apps/arp-scan/arp-scan.js less /usr/bin/lsusb.py
Unfortunately, source-highlight only works by filename extensions (it won't try to guess the input format based on the contents of the file).
Find The Largest Files Within A File System
This example finds the 10 largest files, descending sorted, using the "/var" top level directory:
[root@vortex wui]# find /var -printf '%s %p\n' | sort -nr | head -10; 29956694633 /var/named/chroot/var/named/data/default_debug.log 182947840 /var/lib/rpm/Packages 134217728 /var/log/journal/597d443ff603490286135ca186ed9c7d/system@f9cb0e593f6c413d8fdfaa88bd1c9f42-00000000000b1d98-0005092323239c17.journal 125829120 /var/log/journal/597d443ff603490286135ca186ed9c7d/system@f9cb0e593f6c413d8fdfaa88bd1c9f42-000000000008eadb-000506c496be90cb.journal 125829120 /var/log/journal/597d443ff603490286135ca186ed9c7d/system@f9cb0e593f6c413d8fdfaa88bd1c9f42-00000000000251f3-0004f57678d900a6.journal 125829120 /var/log/journal/597d443ff603490286135ca186ed9c7d/system@f9cb0e593f6c413d8fdfaa88bd1c9f42-0000000000000001-0004f10922bc1e86.journal 95967232 /var/cache/yum/x86_64/20/fedora/gen/primary_db.sqlite 83886080 /var/log/journal/597d443ff603490286135ca186ed9c7d/system@f9cb0e593f6c413d8fdfaa88bd1c9f42-0000000000077d06-00050460486ab015.journal 75497472 /var/log/journal/597d443ff603490286135ca186ed9c7d/system@f9cb0e593f6c413d8fdfaa88bd1c9f42-000000000004d2bc-0004fbc9efdbc627.journal 64720632 /var/lib/clamav/main.cvd
Use SSH To Login On Remote System Using A Different New Shell
The command below demonstrates how to login on to a remote system using a different shell (i.e., /bin/ash):
imac2012:~ rwhalb$ ssh -t root@10.222.222.8 /bin/ash root@10.222.222.8's password: Warning: untrusted X11 forwarding setup failed: xauth key data not generated BusyBox v1.30.1 () built-in shell (ash) ~ # exit Connection to 10.222.222.8 closed. imac2012:~ rwhalb$
Remove Incorrect Host Key from ~/.ssh/known_hosts (Delete 1 Line from File)
The sed command can be very useful when you want to remove a specific line from a file. For example, the following command can be used to remove line 12 out of the file: ~/.ssh/known_hosts.
sed -i -e 12d ~/.ssh/known_hosts
Alternatively, you can add a rmsshhost function to your ~/.bash_profile:
rmsshhost() { sed -i -e ${1:-999999999}d ${2:-~/.ssh/known_hosts}; }
This is particularly useful in situations where ssh host keys are expected to change. For example, depending on which micro SD card is loaded on a Beagle Bone Black, it's host key might change. The following demonstrates the output from ssh when it detects this change in the host key (note how it reports the problem line as 54). The sed command is then used to quickly remove the old key.
taco:~ pkb$ ssh salsa-e @@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@ @ WARNING: REMOTE HOST IDENTIFICATION HAS CHANGED! @ @@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@ IT IS POSSIBLE THAT SOMEONE IS DOING SOMETHING NASTY! Someone could be eavesdropping on you right now (man-in-the-middle attack)! It is also possible that a host key has just been changed. The fingerprint for the RSA key sent by the remote host is fb:a7:a9:09:1a:f3:d2:4a:aa:89:9d:34:47:1c:d5:3c. Please contact your system administrator. Add correct host key in /Users/pkb/.ssh/known_hosts to get rid of this message. Offending RSA key in /Users/pkb/.ssh/known_hosts:54 Password authentication is disabled to avoid man-in-the-middle attacks. Keyboard-interactive authentication is disabled to avoid man-in-the-middle attacks. Agent forwarding is disabled to avoid man-in-the-middle attacks. X11 forwarding is disabled to avoid man-in-the-middle attacks. Debian GNU/Linux 7 BeagleBoard.org Debian Image 2015-03-01 Support/FAQ: http://elinux.org/Beagleboard:BeagleBoneBlack_Debian default username:password is [debian:temppwd] Permission denied (publickey,password). (reverse-i-search)`se': cd release/ taco:~ pkb$ sed -i -e 54d ~/.ssh/known_hosts taco:~ pkb$
Or, if using the rmsshhost function, you can remove line 54 using the following command:
rmsshhost 54
Find File Differences in Two Directories
This one is handy when you have two directories (DIRA and DIRB) with a similar set of files and you want to determine if any of the files in DIRB are different than the files in DIRA. As an example, if you are looking for differences in your CSS files under the css directory (DIRA) with the css files in the 1.1.7 release found at ../1.1.7/css (DIRB).
[root@rice 1.1.4]# find css -type f | wc -l 4 [root@rice 1.1.4]# find css -type f | while read src; do cmp ${src} ../1.1.7/${src}; done css/site.css ../1.1.7/css/site.css differ: byte 31, line 3 [root@rice 1.1.4]#
Modifying An ISO Image for Booting
The example below mounts an iso image and copies both the "EFI" and "isolinux" directories to a Read / Write directory: "/DATA/nstboot/" for the purpose of modifying isolinux and EFI booting:
[root@shopper2 iso]# mount -o loop ./nst-30-11210.x86_64.iso /mnt/iso/; [root@shopper2 iso]# cd /DATA/nstboot/; [root@shopper2 iso]# cp -aR /mnt/iso/EFI . [root@shopper2 iso]# cp -aR /mnt/iso/isolinux . [root@shopper2 iso]# ls -al /DATA/nstboot/ total 16 drwxr-xr-x 4 root root 4096 Jan 3 09:14 . drwxr-xr-x 9 root root 4096 Jan 3 09:08 .. dr-xr-xr-x 3 root root 4096 Jul 16 09:10 EFI dr-xr-xr-x 2 root root 4096 Jul 16 09:10 isolinux [root@shopper2 iso]# [root@shopper2 iso]# umount /mnt/iso; [root@shopper2 iso]#
After making modifications, the following mkisofs command can be used to rebuild the ISO boot image for testing.
[root@shopper2 iso]# mkisofs -o /DATA/iso/nstboot.iso -b isolinux/isolinux.bin -J -R -l -c isolinux/boot.cat -no-emul-boot -boot-load-size 4 -boot-info-table -eltorito-alt-boot -e isolinux/efiboot.img -no-emul-boot -graft-points -V "NST30-BOOT" /DATA/nstboot/; [root@shopper2 iso]# [root@shopper2 iso]# ls -al /DATA/iso/nstboot.iso; -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 110659584 Jan 3 09:17 /DATA/iso/nstboot.iso [root@shopper2 iso]#
Ncat One Liners
Overview
Ncat is a similar tool to netcat provided by Nmap suite. Ncat features includes: ability to chain Ncats together, redirect both TCP and UDP ports to other sites, SSL support, and proxy connections via SOCKS4 or HTTP (CONNECT method) proxies (with optional proxy authentication as well).
Ncat always operates in one of two basic modes: connect mode and listen mode. In connect mode, Ncat initiates a connection (or sends UDP data) to a service that is listening somewhere. For those familiar with socket programming, connect mode is like using the connect function. In listen mode, Ncat waits for an incoming connection (or data receipt), like using the bind and listen functions. You can think of connect mode as “client” mode and listen mode as “server” mode.
To use Ncat in connect mode, run
ncat <host> [<port>]
<host> may be a hostname or IP address, and <port> is a port number. Listen mode is the same, with the addition of the --listen option (or its -l alias):
ncat --listen [<host>] [<port>] ncat -l [<host>] [<port>]
In listen mode, <host> controls the address on which Ncat listens; if you omit it, Ncat will bind to all local interfaces (INADDR_ANY). If the port number is omitted, Ncat uses its default port 31337. Typically only privileged (root) users may bind to a port number lower than 1024. A listening TCP server normally accepts only one connection and will exit after the client disconnects. Combined with the --keep-open option, Ncat accepts multiple concurrent connections up to the connection limit. With --keep-open (or -k for short), the server receives everything sent by any of its clients, and anything the server sends is sent to all of them. A UDP server will communicate with only one client (the first one to send it data), because in UDP there is no list of “connected” clients.
See the Ncat Basic Users' Guide for a detailed infomation.
By default, Ncat uses TCP. The option --udp or -u enables UDP instead, and --sctp enables SCTP. Ncat listens on both IPv4 and IPv6, and connects to either address family as well. The -6 option forces IPv6-only, and -4 forces IPv4-only. For a quick summary of options at any time, run ncat --help or man ncat.
Ncat As a Web Browser
After the connection type in "GET / HTTP/1.0" followed by two(2) enter key strokes.
[root@10.222.222.10 ~]# ncat -C www.openwrt.org 80; GET / HTTP/1.0 HTTP/1.1 301 Moved Permanently Server: nginx Date: Mon, 10 Feb 2020 13:44:37 GMT Content-Type: text/html Content-Length: 178 Connection: close Location: https://openwrt.org/ <html> <head><title>301 Moved Permanently</title></head> <body bgcolor="white"> <center><h1>301 Moved Permanently</h1></center> <hr><center>nginx</center> </body> </html>
SMTP Connection
After the connection type in SMTP command (helo <domain>): "helo verizon.net" followed by one(1) enter key stroke.
[root@10.222.222.10 tmp]# ncat -C smtp.aol.com 587; 220 smtp.mail.yahoo.com ESMTP ready helo verizon.net 250 smtp406.mail.bf1.yahoo.com Hello verizon.net [71.164.79.94]) ^C [root@10.222.222.10 tmp]#
Command Execution TCP/IP
Run a command with --exec using TCP/IP port: 30000 on host: 10.222.222.10 (i.e., Server Side). Execute a TCP/IP connection on host: 10.222.222.22 (i.e., Client Side) to 10.222.222.10:30000:
Server Side: 10.222.222.10
[root@10.222.222.10 ~]# ncat -l -k -p 30000 --exec "/bin/echo Hello.";
Check if TCP/IP port: 30000 is active on host: 10.222.222.10:
[root@10.222.222.10 ~]# netstat -tnap | grep 30000; tcp 0 0 0.0.0.0:30000 0.0.0.0:* LISTEN 6076/ncat tcp6 0 0 :::30000 :::* LISTEN 6076/ncat
Client Side: 10.222.222.22
[root@10.222.222.22 ~]# ncat 10.222.222.10 30000; Hello. ^C [root@10.222.222.22 ~]#
Command Execution UDP
Run a command with --exec using UDP port: 33333 on host: 10.222.222.10 (i.e., Server Side). Execute a UDP connection on host: 10.222.222.22 (i.e., Client Side) to 10.222.222.10:33333:
Server Side: 10.222.222.10
[root@10.222.222.10 ~]# ncat -l -u -k -p 33333 --exec "/bin/echo Hello.";
Check if UDP port: 33333 is active on host: 10.222.222.10:
[root@10.222.222.10 ~]# netstat -unap | grep 33333; tcp 0 0 0.0.0.0:33333 0.0.0.0:* LISTEN 968/ncat tcp6 0 0 :::33333 :::* LISTEN 968/ncat
Client Side: 10.222.222.22
[root@10.222.222.22 ~]# ncat -C -u 10.222.222.10 33333; <enter> Hello. ^C [root@10.222.222.22 ~]#
Serial Over TCP/IP (stty, ncat)
In this example we will used a GPS serial stream (4800 Baud) connected to USB-to-Serial adapter: "/dev/ttyUSB1" on host: "10.222.222.23" and use ncat to establish a TCP/IP listening socket on port: "22222". On host: "10.222.222.10" we will connect via TCP/IP to this service on host: "10.222.222.23".
On host: "10.222.222.23"
- First set the serial baud rate and any special settings for the USB-to-Serial device: "/dev/ttyUSB1" using the "stty" utility:
[root@10.222.222.23 ~]# stty -F /dev/ttyUSB1 4800 raw;
- Next establish the TCP/IP GPS service on port: "22222" via ncat:
[root@10.222.222.23 ~]# ncat -l 22222 > /dev/ttyUSB1 < /dev/ttyUSB1;
On host: "10.222.222.10"
- Connect to the TCP/IP GPS service on host: "10.222.222.23" using ncat:
[root@10.222.222.10 ~]# ncat 10.222.222.23 22222; $PGRME,14.4,M,21.0,M,25.4,M*1F $GPRMC,132904,A,4241.6671,N,07351.6808,W,000.0,239.2,110220,014.2,W,A*18 $GPGGA,132904,4241.6671,N,07351.6808,W,1,04,2.1,109.6,M,-33.5,M,,*7F $GPGSA,M,2,10,,12,,,24,,,32,,,,2.4,2.1,1.0*3E $GPGSV,3,2,11,20,48,150,00,24,33,051,32,25,25,137,00,31,14,218,00*78 $PGRME,14.4,M,21.0,M,25.4,M*1F $GPRMC,132905,A,4241.6673,N,07351.6809,W,000.0,239.2,110220,014.2,W,A*1A $GPGGA,132905,4241.6673,N,07351.6809,W,1,04,2.1,110.1,M,-33.5,M,,*72 $GPGSA,M,2,10,,12,,,24,,,32,,,,2.4,2.1,1.0*3E $GPGSV,3,3,11,32,59,297,37,34,00,000,00,35,00,000,00*4D ^C [root@10.222.222.10 ~]#
Serial Over TCP/IP (stty, ncat, socat, minicom)
In this example we will used a Raspberry PI 4 serial console connection (115200 Baud) attached to USB-to-Serial adapter: "/dev/ttyUSB0" on host: "172.16.1.245" and use ncat to establish a TCP/IP listening socket on port: "22222". On host: "172.16.1.71" we will connect via TCP/IP to this console service to remote host: "172.16.1.245". The socat utility and the terminal emulator "minicom" application will be used for access to the remove Raspberry Pi 4 serial login console.
On host: "172.16.1.245"
- First set the serial baud rate and any special settings for the USB-to-Serial device: "/dev/ttyUSB0" using the "stty" utility:
[root@172.16.1.245 ~]# stty -F /dev/ttyUSB0 115200 raw;
- Next establish the TCP/IP Raspberry Pi 4 serial console service on port: "22222" via ncat and put the process in the background:
[root@172.16.1.245 ~]# ncat -l 22222 > /dev/ttyUSB0 < /dev/ttyUSB0 &
On host: "172.16.1.71"
- Connect to the TCP/IP Raspberry Pi 4 serial console service on host: "'172.16.1.245", port: "22222" using socat and put the process in the background. The pseudo terminal: "/dev/ttyV0" will be created by socat for the minicom application to attach to.
[root@172.16.1.245 ~]# socat pty,link=/dev/ttyV0 tcp:172.16.1.245:22222 &
Tunneling UDP Traffic Through An SSH Connection
See article: Tunneling UDP Traffic Through An SSH Connection