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@hostnoob lol, necromancer =P
1 109 10.9% ssh 2 90 9% ls 3 70 7% nano 4 61 6.1% ping 5 50 5% service 6 45 4.5% tmux 7 45 4.5% route 8 38 3.8% dig 9 36 3.6% cat 10 32 3.2% ifconfigI adjusted the old comment because people think it's Funny to add me on Skype and call me a DDoSer because I modified the output. @mtwiscool
1 278 27.8% cd 2 273 27.3% ls 3 97 9.7% clear 4 77 7.7% rm 5 54 5.4% nano 6 37 3.7% tail 7 26 2.6% \cp 8 22 2.2% top 9 18 1.8% service 10 14 1.4% \chown:]
Wow I didn't even realise, honest! How the hell did I stumble upon this thread though.. I think someone else bumped it and the post got deleted. Let's all blame the new guy @anthonysmith boooo
apt-get? this can't go on ... lol
This is from my home desktop. Way too much entertainment
hmm... ;-)
In case it matters, this is my unprivileged user account (the one that I use most of the time) on a Mac, not Linux:
1 18% exit2 13.8% ls
3 10.6% whois
4 9.8% cd
5 9.0% ping
6 5.6% ssh
7 3.0% [redacted]
8 2.8% ping6
9 2.8% md5
10 2.6% [redacted]
The two redacted entries are my own tools.
Here is another listing from a Mac server. It comes from an unprivileged user account that is used exclusively for remote connections.
1 34.1% exit2 16.7% su
3 15.2% tail
4 6.8% top
5 6.8% ls
6 3.8% cat
7 3.0% cd
8 2.3% uptime
9 1.5% whoami
10 1.5% who
Obviously every account has its own list, and they vary by how the account is used. I hope these examples (and the other postings) help someone, although I can't see much use for them. I suppose you could infer something about what I do with the two example accounts above.
This is my OpenVZ testing node
Desktop:
1 161 16.1% cd 2 88 8.8% ls 3 56 5.6% whois 4 50 5% ssh 5 50 5% coffee 6 44 4.4% npm 7 38 3.8% curl 8 37 3.7% sudo 9 32 3.2% rsync 10 30 3% dfDesktop, as root:
1 68 9.26431% iotop 2 64 8.71935% mtr 3 54 7.35695% less 4 52 7.08447% cd 5 45 6.13079% ls 6 36 4.90463% htop 7 34 4.63215% exit 8 33 4.49591% iftop 9 27 3.67847% service 10 27 3.67847% catLaptop:
1 157 15.7% cat 2 109 10.9% ssh 3 66 6.6% cd 4 63 6.3% sudo 5 60 6% htop 6 48 4.8% ping 7 32 3.2% mosh 8 31 3.1% ls 9 28 2.8% less 10 27 2.7% grepLaptop, as root:
1 92 13.2948% exit 2 49 7.08092% cd 3 48 6.93642% less 4 44 6.35838% ls 5 40 5.78035% iotop 6 38 5.49133% htop 7 31 4.47977% ifconfig 8 26 3.75723% zypper 9 24 3.46821% ping 10 20 2.89017% tailRandom server:
1 114 22.8% ls 2 80 16% cat 3 73 14.6% cd 4 53 10.6% nano 5 27 5.4% exit 6 21 4.2% less 7 21 4.2% du 8 14 2.8% df 9 10 2% find 10 7 1.4% wgetNo vi/vim?
Nope. Can't stand it. For quick on-server edits (eg. config files), I use
nano. For actual development, I use Brackets.1 yum
2 apt-get
3 cd
4 ls
5 nano
6 git
7 rm
8 wget
9 curl
10 ping
Home:
Server:
You're like the second guy who said that in this thread. What's wrong with nano?
Laptop
1 120 24% ssh 2 56 11.2% sudo 3 49 9.8% ls 4 35 7% exit 5 34 6.8% adb 6 23 4.6% convert 7 20 4% ping 8 16 3.2% cd 9 12 2.4% compare 10 9 1.8% wgetI wonder what time scope this is restricted to. I haven't used adb commands for a very long time. I only was doing stuff with adb for about a week out of the 6 months or so that this Linux install has been active. Still, adb is pretty high on the list for me. Same with convert and compare commands for me. I was working on a script using imagemagick for a while, but imagemagick commands aren't used by me very often on most regular days. I expected to see pwd in there somewhere.
Absolutely nothing. It's just that @joepie91 is the kind of guy I would have expected vim out of.
A data hoarder, eh?
Nah, I'm not a fan of remembering a million magic incantations. Required mental overhead needs to be minimal for me.
1 166 16.6% m 2 153 15.3% mx1 3 65 6.5% m; 4 59 5.9% telnet 5 45 4.5% exit 6 43 4.3% ls 7 42 4.2% dig 8 36 3.6% nano 9 36 3.6% mtr 10 34 3.4% cdThe "m" prints the mail queue for MXroute:
1 179 35.8% top 2 95 19% apt-get 3 94 18.8% rsync 4 82 16.4% service 5 12 2.4% vnstat 6 5 1% rm 7 5 1% nano 8 5 1% chmod 9 4 0.8% cd 10 3 0.6% wgetServer 1
Server 2