70+ Linux networking commands and their explanation
Hallo zusammen, sofern nicht selber schon gesehen/-lesen hier [0] FYI "70+ Linux networking commands and their explanation" VG Bernd [0] https://twitter.com/linuxopsys/status/1623079173290876928 -- Bernd Kohler IT Center Abteilung: Netze RWTH Aachen University Wendlingweg 10 52074 Aachen Tel: +49 241 80-29793 Fax: +49 241 80-22666 kohler@itc.rwth-aachen.de https://www.itc.rwth-aachen.de Social Media Kanäle des IT Centers: https://blog.rwth-aachen.de/itc/ https://www.facebook.com/itcenterrwth https://www.linkedin.com/company/itcenterrwth https://twitter.com/ITCenterRWTH https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCKKDJJukeRwO0LP-ac8x8rQ
Hallo zusammen, und hier "enttwittert" als Zusammenfassung: https://en.rattibha.com/thread/1623079173290876928 Beste Grüße, Robert -- Lehrstuhl für Glas und Glaskeramik Institut für Gesteinshüttenkunde RWTH Aachen University Forckenbeckstraße 33, D-52074 Aachen Tel.: +49-241-8095097 Am 08.02.23, 09:17 schrieb "Bernd Kohler" <kohler@itc.rwth-aachen.de <mailto:kohler@itc.rwth-aachen.de>>: Hallo zusammen, sofern nicht selber schon gesehen/-lesen hier [0] FYI "70+ Linux networking commands and their explanation" VG Bernd [0] https://twitter.com/linuxopsys/status/1623079173290876928 <https://twitter.com/linuxopsys/status/1623079173290876928> -- Bernd Kohler IT Center Abteilung: Netze RWTH Aachen University Wendlingweg 10 52074 Aachen Tel: +49 241 80-29793 Fax: +49 241 80-22666 kohler@itc.rwth-aachen.de <mailto:kohler@itc.rwth-aachen.de> https://www.itc.rwth-aachen.de <https://www.itc.rwth-aachen.de> Social Media Kanäle des IT Centers: https://blog.rwth-aachen.de/itc/ <https://blog.rwth-aachen.de/itc/> https://www.facebook.com/itcenterrwth <https://www.facebook.com/itcenterrwth> https://www.linkedin.com/company/itcenterrwth <https://www.linkedin.com/company/itcenterrwth> https://twitter.com/ITCenterRWTH <https://twitter.com/ITCenterRWTH> https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCKKDJJukeRwO0LP-ac8x8rQ <https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCKKDJJukeRwO0LP-ac8x8rQ>
Und wenn man nebenberuflich nicht für Elon Musk arbeitet und auch kein javascript einschalten mag für sowas, hier im Volltext (manuell korrigiert von 36 bis 54, Dreher in 28 und Zeile 73 hinzugefügt): 70+ Linux networking commands and their explanation: 1. arp - see your arp table. 2. aria2 – downloading just about everything. Torrents included. 3. arpwatch – Ethernet Activity Monitor. 4. bmon – bandwidth monitor and rate estimator. 5. bwm-ng – live network bandwidth monitor. 6. curl – transferring data with URLs.(or try httpie). 7. darkstat – captures network traffic, usage statistics. 8. dhclient – Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol Client. 9. dig – query DNS servers for information. 10. dstat – replacement for vmstat, iostat, mpstat, netstat and ifstat. 11. ethtool – utility for controlling network drivers and hardware. 12. gated – gateway routing daemon. 13. host – DNS lookup utility. 14. hping – TCP/IP packet assembler/analyzer. 15. ibmonitor – shows bandwidth and total data transferred. 16. ifstat – report network interfaces bandwidth. 17. iftop – display bandwidth usage. 18. ip – a command with more features than ifconfig. 19. iperf3 – network bandwidth measurement tool. 20. iproute2 – collection of utilities for controlling TCP/IP. 21. iptables – take control of network traffic. 22. IPTraf – An IP Network Monitor. 23. iputils – set of small useful utilities for Linux networking. 24. iw – a new nl80211 based CLI configuration utility → for wireless devices. 25. jwhois (whois) – client for the whois service. 26. lsof -i – reveal information about your network sockets. 27. mtr – network diagnostic tool. 28. net-tools – utilities include: arp, hostname, ifconfig, netstat, rarp, route, plipconfig, slattach, mii-tool, iptunnel and ipmaddr. 29. ncat – improved re-implementation of the venerable netcat. 30. netcat – networking utility for reading/writing network connections. 31. nethogs – a small ‘net top’ tool. 32. Netperf – Network bandwidth Testing. 33. netplan – Netplan is a utility for easily configuring. 34. networking on a linux system. 35. netsniff-ng – Swiss army knife for daily Linux network plumbing. 36. netwatch – monitoring Network Connections. 37. ngrep – grep applied to the network layer. 38. nload – display network usage. 39. nmap – network discovery and security auditing. 40. nmcli – a command-line tool for controlling NetworkManager and reporting network status. 41. nmtui – provides a text interface to configure networking by controlling NetworkManager. 42. nslookup – query Internet name servers interactively. 43. ping – send icmp echo_request to network hosts to test connectivity. 44. route – show / manipulate the IP routing table. 45. slurm – network load monitor. 46. snort – Network Intrusion Detection and Prevention System. 47. smokeping – keeps track of your network latency. 48. socat – establishes two bidirectional byte streams and transfers data between them. 49. speedometer – Measure and display the rate of data across a network. 50. speedtest-cli – test internet bandwidth using speedtest.net 51. ss – utility to investigate sockets. 52. ssh – secure system administration and file transfers over insecure networks. 53. tcpdump – command-line packet analyzer. 54. tcptrack – Displays information about tcp connections on a network interface. 55. telnet – user interface to the TELNET protocol. 56. tracepath – very similar function to traceroute. 57. traceroute – print the route packets trace to network host. 58. vnStat – network traffic monitor. 59. websocat – Connection forwarder from/to web sockets to/from usual sockets, in style of socat. 60. wget – retrieving files using HTTP, HTTPS, FTP and FTPS. 61. iwconfig - similar to ifconfig, but is dedicated to the wireless interfaces. 62. iwlist - used to display some additional information from a wireless network interface that is not displayed by iwconfig. 63. iwspy - used to set a list of addresses to monitor in a wireless network interface and to read back quality of link information for each of those. 64. iwpriv - used to manipulate parameters and setting of the Wireless Extension specific to each driver (as opposed to iwconfig which deals with generic ones) 65. ifrename - is a tool that allows you to assign a consistent name to each of your network interface. 66. Wireshark – network protocol analyzer. 67. netstat - displays TCP network connections, routing tables, and a variety of network interface and network protocol statistics. 68. ifconfig - stands for "interface configuration." It is used to view and change the configuration of the network interfaces on your system. 69. iwgetid - used to find out the NWID, ESSID or AP/Cell Address of the wireless network that is currently used. 70. iwevent - displays Wireless Events received through the RTNetlink socket 71. route - allows you to make manual entries into the network routing tables. 72. hostname - used to obtain the DNS(Domain Name System) name and set the system's hostname. 73. cdpr - report Cisco Discovery Protocol packets source: https://nitter.it/linuxopsys/status/1623079173290876928 -- Ansgɑr Pflipsen ic|RWTH Aachen +49 2418027705
participants (3)
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Ansgɑr Pflipsen
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Bernd Kohler
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Prieler, Robert