Professor Norm Matloff's Beginner's Guide To Installing and Using Linux
Professor Norm Matloff's Beginner's Guide To Installing and Using Linux
Professor Norm Matloff's Beginner's Guide To Installing and Using Linux
Linux ∗
Norm Matloff
Department of Computer Science
University of California at Davis
[email protected]
1999-2013
c
January 4, 2013
Contents
1 Background Needed 4
2 Install to Where? 4
4 Installation 4
4.1 The Short Answer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
4.2 Installing Linux to a USB Key or External Hard Drive . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
4.2.1 Installation Method I (for Slax Linux) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
4.2.2 Other Methods . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
5 Post-Installation Configuration 6
5.1 Configuring Your Search Path (“Why can’t I run my a.out?”) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
5.2 Configuring a Printer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
5.3 Switching from GNOME/Ubuntu Unity . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
5.4 Configuring KDE/GNOME for Convenient Window Operations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
1
6.0.1 Ubuntu Root Operations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
6.1 More on Shells/Terminal Windows . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
6.2 Cut-and-Paste Window Operations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
6.3 Mounting Other Peripheral Devices . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
6.3.1 Mount Points . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
6.3.2 Using USB Devices . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
2
9.2 Live CDs or USB-Key Based Linux As Rescue Tools . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
9.3 Troubleshooting . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
9.3.1 Tools . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
9.3.2 WiFi Networking . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
9.3.3 General Information . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
9.3.4 Network Management Tools . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
9.3.5 Individual Linux Network Commands . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
9.3.6 If You Have a Problem . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
9.3.7 A Program Freezes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
9.3.8 Screen Freezes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22
9.4 Accessing Your Windows Files from Linux . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22
A What Is Linux? 22
B What Is Partitioning? 23
B.1 Partitioning Using GParted . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24
3
1 Background Needed
I have tailored the material here to beginners. No special sophistication in computers is needed. Any typical
Microsoft Windows user should be able to understand the instructions here and install Linux in less than an
hour’s time. (Do not be intimidated by the length of this document; you probably will not have to use most
of it.)
Don’t worry about the length of this document. You’ll probably only need a small part of it.
For some background on the history and significance of the Linux operating system, go to Appendix A
2 Install to Where?
I recommend that you install Linux on your hard drive, so that you will dual-boot either your old OS (I’ll
assume Windows from now on) or Linux. After installation, each time you boot up, you will be given a
choice of whether to boot Windows or Linux.
Another alternative is to install Linux on a USB key (memory stick) or external hard drive.
Still another choice is to run Linux as a virtual machine. This is not covered in this document, but if you are a
UCD student, see http://csifdocs.cs.ucdavis.edu/documentation/archives/csif-fedora-on-a-
for the easy steps.
By the way, if you have a Mac, you may have the capabilities you need without Linux, since both the Mac
OS and Linux are Unix systems.
Linux comes in various distributions, called distros by Linux afficionados—but they are all Linux in terms
of functionality. Some of the most popular are Ubuntu, Red Hat, Fedora, Linux Mint, SuSE, MEPIS,
PCLinuxOS and so on.
Remember, there are tons of good distros out there. Any of the above would be fine, as would many others,
but here is my short answer: Use Ubuntu (or one of the many Ubuntu derivatives, such as Linux Mint). It
is arguably one of the most user-friendly of the distros, and it has a large user community you can access in
the Ubuntu forum on the Web, probably the most active one out there.
I now use Ubuntu myself on my home computers, as well as on my office computer, after years of using
various other distros.
If you have an old machine, especially one with limited memory (i.e. RAM), you may wish to give Puppy
Linux or Damn Small Linux a try. I installed them (one at a time) on an old 1998 laptop with only 64M of
memory! And they take as little as 50M of disk space.
4 Installation
Here is the short way to install Linux on your hard drive, dual-booting with Windows.
4
4.1 The Short Answer
Here you will install the Ubuntu distro, using UNetbootin as your installation tool.1
For simplicity, I’ll assume you wish to install Linux to your laptop.
• Insert a USB key (memory stick). It needs to have FAT32 format. It probably came that way, but if
not then check the Web for how to fix that using your OS.
• Run UNetbootin.
• Click Select Distribution, and choose Ubuntu. Then choose the latest Live version in the window to
the right.
• For Type, choose USB Drive, and for Drive, choose the drive in which your USB key is inserted.
• Click OK.
• Once Ubuntu boots up, try to use the WiFi: Click on the proper icon at the top right of the screen,
and select your wireless network. If none appears, then for now, connect your machine to an Ethernet
jack, say at a public library or copy shop.
• Follow directions. If asked whether you want third-party software to be installed, say yes.
• Reboot (remove the USB key when the screen goes dark).
• If WiFi didn’t work above, it should work now. You may have to click a pop-up window that asks if
you want to use the proprietary drivers.
During the installation process, there may be some mention of disk partitions. You should not have to take
action, but if you wish to know about partitions (very useful!), see Appendix B.
You can install Linux to a USB key or external hard drive, and boot up Linux from there whenever you want
to use Linux. (This is not the same as the USB key created from UNetbootin, which is only temporary.)
1
Unfortunately, UNetbootin does not produce Mac-bootable USB keys.
5
4.2.1 Installation Method I (for Slax Linux)
Slax is a nice, colorful and small version of Linux, at http://www.slax.org. Click on “Get Slax”
to download, and on “Read Manuals” to see how to install onto a USB key or external hard drive. It is
extremely easy!
In short:
• Go to the boot subdirectory, and run either bootinst.sh (from Linux) or bootinst.bat (from Windows).
In the Linux case, you may need to precede your command by sudo.
You can use UNetbootin (Section 4.1), but you’ll need to make your USB installation persistent; see http:
//sourceforge.net/apps/trac/unetbootin/wiki/guide.
There are methods to construct your USB installation “by hand” from an ISO file. This is complicated, and
will not be pursued here.
5 Post-Installation Configuration
This section describes some further steps I recommend taking after your installation is finished.
Most Linux distros do not include your current directory, ‘.’, in the PATH variable. Thus if for example you
compile a program and then type
a.out
the shell may tell you that a.out is not found. You are expected to explicitly specify the current directory:
./a.out
If you consider this a problem, as I do, to remedy it in the case of the BASH shell (the default shell for most
distros), edit the file /.bash profile In the line which sets PATH, append “:.” (a colon and a dot) at the end
of the line, with no intervening spaces. Then log out and log in again, or do
source ˜/.bash_profile
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5.2 Configuring a Printer
Your Linux distribution should have some program to help you configure your printer if something went
wrong during installation. For example, if you are running the GNOME GUI, select System | Administration
| Printing.
It’s now easy to connect to a remote printer elsewhere on your network (even if it is on a Windows machine),
using Samba.
I personally don’t like the Unity window manager in GNOME. Many others feel the same way. So, Ubuntu
gives us other choices. To set them up, do
At your next start, the login screen will show a symbol next to choices of login names; choose Gnome
Classic (No Effects) or whatever you like; experiment to find one that suits you.
You should find that windowing operations are generally easier in Linux systems than in Windows, in the
sense of requiring fewer mouse clicks, if you set things up that way. Personally, I find it annoying in
Windows that, when I switch from one window to another, I need to click on that second window. In most
Linux windowing systems, I can arrange things so that all I have to do is simply move the mouse to the
second window, without clicking on it. The term for this is focus follows mouse, and we can configure most
Linux windowing systems to do this.
Also when I move from one window to another, I want the second one to “come out of hiding” and be fully
exposed on the screen. This is called autoraise, and can be configured too.
You can arrange this configuration in less than one minute’s time. Again, the exact configuration steps will
vary from GNOME to KDE, and from one version to another within those systems, so I can’t give you the
general steps here but here is how it works on GNOME in Ubuntu 12.10 or later:
Open a terminal window (ctrl-alt-t), and type
Then log out and back in. You only need do this once.
You get check these settings using get instead of set, or use reset to revert to the original values (false and
’click’), e.g.
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6 Some Points on Linux Usage
Ubuntu works like any other Linux distro, except for one important point: Ubuntu does not have a root user
account in the classic Unix sense. Instead, whenever executing a command which requires root privileges,
one precedes the command by the term sudo (“superuser do”). One is then prompted for a password, which
is the password for the first user account created at the time of installation.
If you have a lot of root-type work to do in a session, type
$ sudo -s
In Microsoft Windows, most work done by most users is through a Graphical User Interface (GUI), rather
than in a command window (Start | Run | cmd). In Linux, a lot of work is done via GUIs but also it is
frequently handier to use a command window, called a terminal window. You should always keep two or
three terminal windows on your screen for various tasks that might arise.
You can start a terminal window in GNOME by typing ctrl-alt-t.
When you type commands in a terminal window, the program which reads and acts on those commands is
called a shell. (Thus a terminal window is sometimes called a “shell window.”)
I have an introduction to Unix shells, at http://heather.cs.ucdavis.edu/˜matloff/UnixAndC/
Unix/ShellIntro.html and http://heather.cs.ucdavis.edu/˜matloff/UnixAndC/
Unix/CShellII.html. These are based on the T C-shell, tcsh, but at least in the case of the first
tutorials, most of the material also applies to the more popular bash shell.
On the other hand, bash is more popular, so you
To do a cut-and-paste operations, hold down the left mouse button and drag it to highlight the text you wish
to copy. Then go to the place you wish to copy that text, and simultaneously push both the left and right
buttons. Generally, more things are cut-and-pastable in Linux than Windows, so this is a big convenience.
This section explains how to use DVDs, USB devices and so on under Linux. You may wish to review
Section B before continuing.
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6.3.1 Mount Points
Each I/O device that contains a file system must be mounted, i.e. associated with some directory. That
directory is called a mount point. The files then appear in that directory.
These days most Linux distributions have a designated directory for mount points for DVD/CD-ROMs, USB
devices, floppy disks, etc. This will vary from one distribution to another, but typical directory names are
/mnt, /media etc.
You can check what is currently mounted by running the df command from a shell window (another good
Linux learning experience). The mount points are listed along with the /dev files. Also, to list the /dev files
for all your operating drives including USB flash drives and including drives not mounted, type sudo fdisk
-l.2 For more detailed information, such as file system types, just run mount without any arguments.
Your machine’s internal hard drives, and possibly other devices, will be mounted automatically at boot time.
This is controlled by the entries in the file /etc/fstab. The details are an advanced topic, but even without
understanding everything, you might find it worthwhile to take a quick look at that file. Here is a line from
the file on my office machine,
Here /dev/sda3 is the third partition (’3’) on my first SATA hard drive (‘a’). The entry says that this partition
has an ext3 type filesystem in it, and is to be mounted at the directory /usr/home. The remaining entries
concern things such as backup and file system checks.
When you attach a device to your machine after bootup, your system will probably recognize it immediately,
and maybe pop up a window showing the device’s contents. If you have trouble, you can use the Unix mount
command. This is an advanced command, but just to give you an idea, a typical usage would be
This tells Linux that the I/O device corresponding to /dev/hdc, our CD-ROM, should be mounted at the
directory /mnt/yyy. If that directory doesn’t exist, you must create it first, using mkdir. The field -t iso9660
says that the file system type is ISO9660. This is standard for CD-ROMs, and you can probably omit it.
Use umount to unmount. It’s not safe to remove a USB device without running this first.
USB drives, including memory sticks, should have their filesystems mounted automatically when you attach
them. Use the df command to check where they’ve been mounted (it could be in the directory /mnt/ /media
etc.).
USB mice should become automatically usable when you attach them.
2
This might not work in some cases. If fdisk doesn’t recognize your device, try viewing the file /proc/partitions. Your device
may appear there, say as sdb1. Then run mount as shown below, on /dev/sdb1.
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7 Linux Applications Software
Most people prefer to use GUI-based applications. If you are one of them, rest assured that there are tons of
them available for Linux.
I do wish to mention, though, that many “super hard core” Linux users prefer to use text-based applications,
rather than GUI ones. For instance, I and many others like the mutt e-mail utility (Section ??), which is
text-based. Here’s why, at least in my view:
• I often access my Linux machine remotely, while traveling.3 I might be at a university library, for
instance, or at the business center in a hotel, and be “stuck” with a Windows machine, and logging in
to my Linux machine via an SSH connection.4 This limits me to text.
• It’s very important to me that I use the same text editor for all my computer applications—e-mail,
programming, word processing, etc.—so that I can take advantage of all the abbreviations, shortcuts
and so on which I have built up over the years. This saves me huge amounts of typing. But most GUI
applications, e.g. e-mail utilities, have their own built-in text editors, so I can’t use mine.
• I find that text-based applications often have more features, are better documented, etc. For example,
I often wish to automate certain processes, such as uploading files to another machine, and typically
text-based programs do this better.
However, in listing my favorite applications in Section 7.2 below, I’ve made sure to list both text-based and
GUI programs.
In Ubuntu, one downloads new apps using apt-get, which I’ll use in my examples here. The same is true
for other distros derived from Debian. In Fedora, use yum.
I use a modern extension to the vi editor, vim. This is the version of vi which is built in to most Linux
distros. See my tutorial at http://heather.cs.ucdavis.edu/˜matloff/vim.html.
Note: In some Fedora distros, somehow the version of vim that is linked to vi isn’t configured fully correctly.
I suggest using /usr/bin/vim directly.
Even though vim is text-based, it does have a GUI version too, gvim. This comes with nice icons, allows you
to do mouse operations, etc. Unfortunately, most Linux distros seem to have only the text-based program.
To get the GUI, you can download it yourself. In Ubuntu, do
3
Which is in fact exactly the case as I write this paragraph.
4
Though I sometimes use VNC to access a remote image of my Linux desktop. See http://heather.cs.ucdavis.
edu/˜matloff/vnc.html.
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sudo apt-get install vim-gnome
For this, you may need to edit /etc/apt/sources.list and uncommented the lines for Canonical’s ’partner’
repository
Your Linux distro will come with a Web browser, probably Firefox, and possibly Konqueror in addition.
I usually use Firefox. Chrome is nice, but I really like the plugins available for Firefox.
But believe it or not, sometimes I use the famous text-based browser, lynx. In some cases, it is just plain
quicker and easier. Moreover, you can do cool tricks, such as recording keystrokes for later playback, thus
enabling one to do certain Web operations automatically.
If you use Ubuntu, your system may not be configured for Java in Web browsing. If so, do
I usually use Vim, along with some macros I’ve written for HTML editing, but I sometimes use Amaya,
which is a full-featured GUI HTML editor, written by the Web policy consortium. One nice feature is
that you can actually use the embedded Web links, good for testing them. See my tutorial at http://
heather.cs.ucdavis.edu/˜matloff/amaya.html.
There are many newer and more powerful packages, such as Quanta+, Bluefish and NVu.
7.2.4 Compilers
Some distros come with the GCC suite. Ubuntu, for example, does not, but it can be downloaded via
For programming work, I rarely use IDEs, as they are slow to load, take up too much space, and often don’t
allow me to use my own text favorite editor.
I find that the vim editor (cited above) and the ddd GUI interface to the gdb debugging tool, work great
together. For example in vim I can type :make (which I have aliased to just M, or with gvim click on the
make icon, and the source code I’m debugging will be recompiled. And as I’ve mentioned, it’s important
to me that I use the same text editor for all applications, which most IDE would not allow me to do. I use
either GDB (try CGDB!) or DDD for my debugging tool. See my tutorials at http://heather.cs.
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ucdavis.edu/˜matloff/vim.html and http://heather.cs.ucdavis.edu/˜matloff/
debug.html.
DDD is also usable with my favorite programming language, Python.
However, if you love IDEs, try Eclipse. I’ve got a tutorial that is more complete than most, at http:
//heather.cs.ucdavis.edu/˜matloff/eclipse.html. It can be used with C, C++, Java,
Perl, Python and many others.
Another system that has become quite popular is NetBeans.
For R programming, RStudio and StatET are both first-rate.
I use LATEX because of its flexibility, its beautiful output, and its outstanding ability to do math. You may
like Lyx, which is a great GUI interface to LATEX which is especially good for math work. See my tutori-
als at http://heather.cs.ucdavis.edu/˜matloff/latex.html and http://heather.
cs.ucdavis.edu/˜matloff/lyx.html.
Install by running
If you wish to work with files compatible with the Microsoft Office environment, there is a free suite of
programs, OpenOffice, which provide Microsoft compatibility. It is packaged with most Linux distributions.
If you would like something that quickly converts an Office file to rough text form, say to use with e-mail
attacments, try Antiword. In Ubuntu, install via
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tar xfj essential-20041107.tar.bz2
This creates a new directory. Copy the contents of that directory to the directory /usr/local/lib/codecs (use
mkdir to create it if necessary). (Note: There may be legality issues with some codecs. When in doubt
about a particular codec, you should obtain it from a site like Fluendo that offers it for a nominal fee, See a
discussion at http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/CodecBuddy.
Now, unpack the source code file, and go into the directory it creates. Then go through the usual sequence
for building open-source software from source:
configure
make
make install
Note that if you want to use the GUI, the configure command should be
configure --enable-gui
After make install is done, you will probably get a message something like
The fonts are needed for the subtitles (and for the GUI, if you use it). Just the iso1 font is needed. Download
the font package, go to the indicated directory (/usr/local/share/mplayer/font/ in the above example), and
then do the unpack operation. This will produce a subdirectory, e.g. font-arial-iso-8859-1.
Viewing a video:
To play a video or audio file, say x.avi, type
mplayer x.avi
If you specify several files, as a playlist, it will play them all. Hit the Enter key if you want to skip the rest
of the current file and go to the next one.
You have the following controls:
• left- and right-bracket keys to decrease/increase speed by 10%, or left- and right-brace for 50%;
Backspace key to return to normal speed
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• Space bar to pause, then . to go forward frame by frame, Space bar to resume play
• f to go full screen
• q to quit
You can use mplayer, actually mencoder, which comes with the package, to do format conversion, e.g.
AVI to MPG, change aspect ratio, and even do some primitive editing.
There are many, MANY, MANY different options.
You may wish to try other players, e.g. VLC.
I use xpdf to view PDF files, though Acroread for Linux is available. I like the fact that xpdf allows me to
copy ASCII text from the file. Others popular with Linux are evince, okular and MuPDF.
For collections of JPEG files and the like, I use xzgv, gqview and gwenview; for viewing a single image, I
use qiv.
Want something like Adobe Photoshop? The GIMP program is quite powerful, and free. It’s included with
most Linux distributions.
You can use GIMP to draw, but for “quick and dirty” tasks, I would suggest Dia, at http://www.gnome.
org/projects/dia/.
7.2.10 FTP
I usually use the text-based ftp and sftp, the latter being an SSH version for security.
If you do frequent uploads/downloads to/from a particular site and wish to automate them, another text-based
program, yafc, is excellent.
A very nice GUI program, though, is gftp, which you can download from the Web if your Linux system
doesn’t already have it. In addition to the GUI, this program also has some functionality which ordinary
FTP programs don’t have.
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source or commercial.5 It is statistically modern and correct, and it also is a general-purpose programming
language.
I have a tutorial on R at http://heather.cs.ucdavis.edu/˜matloff/r.html.
Install via
I am simply not a Windows user, but on occasion there ia a Windows program I need to run from within
Linux.
The simple way, if it works, is the WINE Windows emulator. Your distro may include it (type which
wine in a terminal window to check); if not, download it, with for example the Ubuntu command being
For more involved applications, you may wish to try one of the virtual machine packages. See http:
//heather.cs.ucdavis.edu/˜matloff/vm.html for a brief introduciton.
There is a vast wealth of free software for Linux on the Web. Here’s how to obtain and install it.
These days most downloads and installs are done automatically, say with yum or apt-get, as seen in Section
7.3.2 below. That helps you find it too. If you want to find application Z, instead of plugging “Z” into
Google, plug “yum install Z” or “apt-get install Z” so as to narrow down the volume of response.
5
In some respects, it’s even better than S, the commercial product it is based on.
15
7.3.2 Automatic Download/Installation
In recent years, most Linux distros have made it very easy to download and install new software. In Fedora,
for instance, one uses the yum command.
For example, to download the program yafc mentioned above, one simply types
In Ubuntu, there is the apt-get command, which works similarly. For instance, to download the xpdf PDF
viewer, I typed
(See Section 6.0.1 for an explanation of sudo. Ubuntu may ask you to install from your CD-ROM, but yours
may be incomplete. If so, comment out the first line of /etc/apt/sources.list; this is the line telling Ubuntu
to install from the CD-ROM.)
For those who prefer GUIs, Ubuntu offers the Synaptic package manager.
With both yum and apt-get, one can direct where to download from, by making the proper entries in the file
etc/apt/sources.list. For instance, for the R statistical package above, apt-get may not find it on its own, in
which case we can add a line
to etc/apt/sources.list, telling apt-get that here is an alternative place it can look. (This is for the Gutsy
edition of Ubuntu.)
By default apt-get will try to retrieve your requested program from your installation CD/DVD. You can
change this by commenting-out the line in etc/apt/sources.list that begins with
deb cdrom:
Sometimes it may not be clear which package name to use with yum or apt-get. For instance, to install the
GCC compiler, C library and so on, the command is
How did I learn this? I did a Web search for “apt-get GCC.”
To install the curses library (and include file), do
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7.3.3 Debian/Ubuntu .deb Files
The Debian distro of Linux uses its own packaging for downloaded programs, which you’ll see as files
whose names have a .deb suffix. Ubuntu, as a derivative of Debian, uses this too.
Usually you will not need to work directly with these files, since you will use apt-get or Synaptic. But if
you do download such a file directly from the Web, use gdebi to install it; the GUI version is gdebi-gtk.
Though the methods in Section 7.3.2 have now made RPMs less important, you may find that the software
you want comes in an RPM package, with a .rpm suffix in its name. To install such a package, type
rpm -i package_file_name
If you later wish to remove, i.e. uninstall a package, you can use rpm -e (‘e’ stands for “erase”). You do
NOT have to have the RPM file present to do this.
Some packages will have different versions for different C libraries. Red Hat uses glibc. Type
ls -l /lib/libc*
The only way to really learn Linux is to use it on a daily basis for all your computer work—e-mail, word
processing, Web work, programming, etc.
As you do this, the expertise you’ll want to pick up includes: file, directory and mount operations; process
operations; roles of system directories (/usr, /etc, /dev, /sbin and their various subdirectories, e.g. /usr/lib;
search paths; network operation and utilities such as netstat; and so on.
Don’t try to do this all at once. Instead, take your time, and learn these naturally, as the need arises. As
you use Linux more and more in your daily computer application work (e-mail, word processing, etc.), the
needs will arise as you go along.
And remember, there’s lots of help available if you need it.
• If you are running Ubuntu or one of its offshoots, the Ubuntu Forums, http://ubuntuforums.
org/ is an excellent resource.
17
• Linux home page, at http://www.linux.org/ Lots and lots of information is available here.
• If you are having trouble with specific hardware in your Linux installation, an excellent place to go
for detailed information is the Linux HOW-TO documentation. (For the same reason, if you are
about to purchase a machine and suspect that some of the hardware is nonstandard, you can check the
corresponding Linux HOW-TO to see if there are any problems with that hardware.
The HOW-TO documents are available at many sites, such as the one at linux.org.
There are Linux Users Groups (LUGs) in virtually every city. You can join if you wish, or just get to
know them casually. They are great sources of help! And by the way, many of them hold monthly Linux
Installfests, where you can see Linux being installed or have it installed on your own machine.
You may wish to change some parameters of your dual-boot process, e.g. change the default OS. You can
do this by editing the configuration file for your bootloader.
Most distros today use GRUB as their bootloader. Its configuration file is /boot/grub/menu.lst. By the way,
note that GRUB’s notation for partitions is (drive ID, partition number), so that for instance (hd0,1) means
the second partition in the first hard drive.
Among other things, Knoppix has developed a reputation as being useful as an OS rescue/repair tool, in-
cluding for Windows! And now, most of the live CDs or USB-key based Linux installations can be used this
way.
A common usage is to either fix broken files or at least make copies of important user files. It may be, for
instance, that Windows is not bootable due to corruption, but by using a Linux rescue CD/USB key, we can
access individual files. Here is a typical pattern. One brings up a terminal window and then:
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In one case, I forgot my password on an Ubuntu netbook. I could fix it as root if I could boot up in Ubuntu
recovery mode, but unfortunately the GRUB bootloader was configured with a timeout value of 0 seconds,
giving me no way to choose recovery mode. So, I booted up Linux from a USB key (Section 4.2), mounted
my Ubuntu file system as above, and then edited the GRUB startup file, /boot/grub/menu.lst, changing the
timeout value to 5 seconds.
The preceding operations can be done by booting almost any Linux distro, but Knoppix is nicer as it comes
with two very nice utilities (both can be obtained separately as well):
• testdisk: This does a lot of diagnostics on your hard drive, recover lost partitions, undelete deleted
files, fix boot sectors and so on.
• photorec: Quite a program! It bypasses your (possibly broken) file system, and looks for files by
going through your hard drive literally bit by bit, looking for bytes that encode any of 180 known file
types, e.g. .jpg, .avi, .pdf etc.
9.3 Troubleshooting
One of Linux’s biggest strengths is its stability. If you are tired of getting Windows’ infamous “blue screen
of death,” then Linux is the OS for you. (It is also subject to far fewer virus and other attacks than Windows.)
So emergencies are rare, but they can happen. Here are some tips for such cases.
9.3.1 Tools
Here are some commands you can run in a terminal window that you can use to investigate:
• ps: Tells you what processes are running. Typically one uses this with something like the ax option.
• dmesg: Tells you the major events that have occurred on your machine ever since it was last booted
up.
• lsmod: This tells you what OS modules are installed, i.e. device drivers and the like.
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9.3.2 WiFi Networking
The newer versions of the major distros handle WiFi configuration pretty well without your intervention.
But if you have problems, the material in this section may be helpful.
Below is a five-minute crash course in WiFi. Even if you don’t understand all of it, even partial understand-
ing may be helpful.
• Recall that in Unix-family operating systems, I/O devices are represented as “files” in the directory
/dev. Your WiFi device is probably eth1 or wlan0.
• Your WiFi device needs a driver. Many, if not most, laptops use Broadcom WiFi hardware, and in
older Linux distros, they needed some fiddling to work, but now it’s much easier (see below).
• If you are connected to a router or a wireless access point, your machine is probably assigned an IP
address via DHCP, rather than statically. An error message like “no lease offered” means that the
DHCP process failed.
• DNS servers convert an “English” address like www.google.com to a numerical address like 209.85.171.103.
So your OS needs to set up a connection to a DNS server.
If you are running the GNOME windows manager, select System | Administration | Network. There is also
an icon you can click in the toolbar; it looks like two black monitors when you are not connected, and is a
set of blue bars indicating signal strength when you are connected. Note that left- and right-clicking gives
different results, so try both. In KDE, select System | Network Device Control.
You can activate/deactivate your netword card during a session. In GNOME, this is done via System |
Administration | Network.
The network managers included with most Linux distros are rather primitive. An excellent alternative is
WiFi Radar. In Ubuntu, install via
• iwlist: You can determine which ESSIDs are within range of you by typing the command
$ sudo iwlist eth1 scanning
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say if your wireless device is eth1.
• ifconfig: Shows information about all your network interfaces, i.e. their hardware addresses, IP
addresses and so on. Lack of IP address on your wireless port, e.g. wlan0 or eth1, may indicate
that DHCP has failed. This command can also be used to set the IP address and other parameters
“manually,” deactivate/reactive a network interface, etc.
• dmesg: Shows a record of your last bootup. This may show error messages regarding your WiFi card.
It’s pretty long, so either run it through more, i.e. run
dmesg | more
or save it to a file, say dmesg.out, and then explore the file at your leisure with a text editor.
• ethtool: Running
ethtool eth0
will give you information about your Ethernet link, e.g. link speed. To get statistics on recent usage,
run
ethtool --statistics eth0
Some of these must be used with root privilege. For example, running
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9.3.6 If You Have a Problem
These days, Linux generally does well with WiFi, and it might work for you “right out of the box,” with no
configuration on your part. If not, this section is for you.
Some wireless network cards typically sold with PCs today do not have direct Linux drivers available. A
common example is the Broadcom BCM43XX series. However, you can still operate as usual after some
preparation, as explained below.
Ubuntu: BCM43XX Series
Ubuntu handles Broadcom cards well, as long as you have Linux kernel 2.6.15 or newer. (Run dmesg if you
want to check this.) You simply need to take the following action once:
First establish an Ethernet connection to the Internet, to enable download. For example, if you have a router
at home, even a wireless one, connect your machine directly to the router with an Ethernet cable.
Then Select System | Administration | Hardware Devices (the last might be labeled Additional Drivers).
It will ask you if you want to download the Broadcom firmware, so say yes. Check the Enable box for
Firmware for Broadcom 43 Wireless Driver. You will be asked whether you want the firmware to be down-
loaded from the net; say yes. Then check Enabled after the download.
Know Your WiFi Card
You first need to determine which wireless card you have. On the laptop I use now, I determined this by
running dmesg and lspci under Linux. Sure enough, it turned out to be a Broadcom BCM43XX series card.
Other Cards/Kernels
For other cards, go to the ndiswrapper home page, http://ndiswrapper.sourceforge.net/.
The program ndiswrapper allows Linux to use Windows drivers.
If an application program freezes up and you invoked it from the command line within a shell, you can in
most cases kill it by hitting Ctrl-c in the terminal window from which invoked it. If this doesn’t work, run
the “processes” command by typing
ps ax
in another terminal window, and noting the process number of your program. Say for concreteness that that
number is 2398. Then type
kill -9 2398
pkill -9 xyz
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9.3.8 Screen Freezes
What if your entire screen freezes up? Again, this should be quite rare, but it is possible. I recommend the
following remedies, in order:
• In Gnome hit Alt F2, which will bring up a little window in which you can run a command, say pkill
as above.
• In Gnome, hit Ctrl Alt T, which will create a new terminal window, from which you can kill the
offending program.
• Try going to another screen! Linux allows you to switch among multiple screens. In Gnome, for
instance, You can switch to the second screen from the first via Ctrl Alt Right, and go back via Ctl Alt
Left. Then open a terminal window in the new screen, find the process number of the program and
kill the program, as described above.
• In Gnome, try hitting Ctrl Alt Del). This should cause an exit from Linux’s X11 windowing system
but not an exit from Linux itself. You would then get an opportunity to log in again.
Try NOT to simply poweroff the machine, as that may do damage to your files. It may not be permanent
damage, as the OS will try to fix the problems when you next reboot, but don’t just pull the plug unless you
have no other recourse.
At this point, most Linux distributions, except Fedora/Red Hat, give you access (at least read access) to
your Windows partition from Linux. For some of them, they may do this automatically, in which case your
Windows partition, say /dev/hda1 should be visible in the file /etc/fstab. If not, mount it yourself:
mkdir /dosc
mount /dev/hda1 /dosc
cd /dosc
You should now see your Windows files, and should be able to access them on at least a read basis.
For more information, including concerning write access, ss the Linux-NTFS Project, http://www.
linux-ntfs.org/.
A What Is Linux?
Linux is a form of the Unix operating system. Though originally Unix was used mainly by engineers
and scientists and thus was not very familiar to the general public, a lot of what you take for granted on
computer systems today began in Unix. A notable example is the Internet—the first major operating system
to implement the TCP/IP protocol at the heart of the Internet was Unix, and that led to the general acceptance
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of the protocol. The Apple Macintosh operating system is based on a form of Unix, and the Android system
is based on Linux.
In the early 1990s, computer science student Linus Torvalds decided to write his own version of Unix,
which he called Linux. Other “homegrown” versions of Unix had been written, such as MINIX, but what
distinguished Linux was the scale of worldwide participation involved. Torvalds innocently put a message
on the Internet asking if anyone wanted to help, and he got a torrent of responses.
There are a several reasons why Linux is mainstream today. First, it became known as a very reliable, stable
operating system, with one result being that Linux has become a major platform for large corporate Web
servers. Another reason is that it is free, as is the vast majority of the software associated with it developed
elsewhere. Many companies have found that it is cheaper to run Linux on their PCs, both for this reason and
because of reduced maintenance costs.
There are several good reasons for you to use Linux:
• As mentioned, Linux is becoming one of the “hottest” software systems. Virtually all of the major
companies are promoting it, and as mentioned Linux is a leading corporate choice for Web servers.
Linux is the main operating system used at , and in fact they developed their own version
of Linux, Goobuntu (a play on Ubuntu, one of the most popular versions of Linux).
• Linux is also starting to make inroads in large desktop markets, such as businesses, schools and so
on, due to its high reliability, far lower rate of infection by viruses compared to Windows, and its low
cost.
• The Linux community shares. That means that people online are much more willing to help you, and
more open source software is available.
If you are a university computer science student, there are some very important additional advantages:
• Many CS courses make specific use of Unix, and thus their work cannot be done on Windows plat-
forms. Since it is a full Unix system, Linux allows students to do their homework in the com-
fort of their own homes. If you are new to Unix, click here for my Unix tutorial Web page at
http://heather.cs.ucdavis.edu/˜matloff/unix.html, which will introduce you to
Unix file and directory commands, and so on.
• In installing and using Linux, students learn many practical things about computers which they do not
learn in coursework. This practical experience can also help you in job interviews, both for permanent
jobs after graduation and for summer jobs and internships/co-ops during your college years. Even if
the job you interview for does not involve Linux, you will definitely impress the interviewer if, for
example, you discuss various things you have done to use and customize your Linux system.
B What Is Partitioning?
It is probably not necessary for you to know the material here, and it is rather detailed, but you may find it
useful at some point. I do recommend that you take a few minutes and read this section.
A hard drive (not just for Linux) will consist of one or more partitions. A partition is a set of contiguous
space (sequential blocks) on the disk, and is treated as an independent disk.
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So, assuming you want your system to include both Windows and Linux (termed a dual boot situation, since
you can boot either system), you will need at least one partition for Windows and one (actually two) for
Linux.
It’s important to understand how the naming works: In Linux systems, all I/O devices are treated as “files.”
If your first hard drive is of the IDE type, the entire drive is probably called /dev/hda, i.e. the “file” hda
within the directory /dev. In the case of SATA-type hard drives, the notation is /dev/sda etc.
Your first CD-ROM/DVD drive may be /dev/hdc (your third “hard drive”), your first USB port may be
/dev/sdf1 and so on.
Partitions within, say, /dev/hda, are called /dev/hda1, /dev/hda2 and so on. Your original Windows single
partition was probably /dev/hda1 or /dev/sda1.
Within a partition you’ll have some type of file system. The disk consists simply of a long stream of bytes,
with no structure, so the OS needs to have a way of organizing them into files, recording where in that
stream each file has its bytes. But you don’t need to know the details. Windows XP and Vista use the
NTFS file system. The standard Linux file system is ext2 (number 0x83, sometimes called Linux native), or
possibly ext3, for your main Linux partition and of type swap for your swap partition (number 0x82, used
for temporary storage during the time the OS is running).
PCs were originally designed to have up to four “real” partitions, called primary partitions. After people
found that to be too constraining, logical or extended partitions were invented. You should install Linux in
a primary partition, for recovery reasons, but it is not necessary.
Today most distros will invoke a partitioning program to do your partitioning. This could be the famous
GParted program, or one that the authors of your distro wrote themselves.
You can use GParted on your own by downloading and booting a GParted live CD (or USB key), but
I’ll assume here that your Linux installation program invokes either GParted or another program written
specifically for your distro.
Since every distro will handle this a bit differently, what I will do here is just give you an understanding of
what operations need to be done, with the specific mouse clicks needed varying from one distro to another.
I’ll assume that you want your Windows and Linux systems to coexist on the same hard drive. So when your
distro’s installer program asks you whether you want to use the entire disk, be sure to say no! Of course, if
you do want to erase Windows, or if you are installing Linux on a separate drive from Windows, you can go
ahead and use the whole drive.
Here are the main steps in GParted, roughly stated (you may see some variation):
• Select the disk you wish to repartition. If you have only one disk, it will be something like /dev/hda.
(See Section B.)
• Select the partition where Windows resides. This will typically cover the entire disk, and will almost
certainly be of file system type NTFS. I’ll assume that here.
• Decide how much space you want to remove from the Windows partition in order to make a partition
for Linux.
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• Now resize, in this case shrink, the Windows partition. The partioner will ask you how much room to
make.
• You’ll need to make the main Linux partition primary, of type ext2 or ext3, and set to be bootable.
• You’ll need a smaller partition of type linux-swap. This is not used for files, but rather as “scratch
space” by the OS, for virtual memory and for storage when your machine is in hibernate mode.
• You’ll then have to commit, i.e. save, the changes to the partitions. This might take a few minutes, so
be patient.
• The next time you boot Windows, you will be asked if you want a disk consistency check. Definitely
say yes.
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