![]() netstat – shows the system’s network information, like routing and sockets.Ifconfig – displays the system’s network interfaces and their configurations.rsync – synchronizes content between directories or machines.scp – securely copies files or directories to another system.curl – transmits data between servers using URLs.ping – checks the system’s network connectivity.shutdown – turns off or restarts the system.jobs – displays a shell’s running processes with their statuses.watch – runs another command continuously.time – calculates commands’ execution time.hostname – shows your system’s hostname.uname – prints information about your machine’s kernel, name, and hardware.ps – creates a snapshot of all running processes.htop – works like top but with an interactive user interface.top – displays running processes and the system’s resource usage.du – checks a file or directory’s storage consumption.df – displays the system’s overall disk space usage.useradd and userdel – creates and removes a user account.chown – changes a file, directory, or symbolic link’s ownership.chmod – modifies a file’s read, write, and execute permissions.su – runs programs in the current shell as another user.find – outputs a file or folder’s location.locate – finds files in a system’s database.tee – prints command outputs in Terminal and a file.diff – compares two files’ content and their differences.cut – sections and prints lines from a file.awk – finds and manipulates patterns in a file. ![]() head – displays a file’s first ten lines.sed – finds, replaces, or deletes patterns in a file.grep – searches a string within a file.cat – lists, combines, and writes a file’s content as a standard output.nano, vi, and jed – edits a file with a text editor.tar – archives files without compression in a TAR format.zip and unzip – creates and extracts a ZIP archive.mv – moves or renames files and directories.cp – copies files and directories, including their content.pwd – shows the current working directory’s path.Alternatively, Hostinger VPS hosting users can leverage our built-in Browser terminal to run the commands directly from their web browsers. To run Linux commands in a remote server, connect via SSH using PuTTY or Terminal.
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