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Linux (RHEL, Debian, Ubuntu et SLES) : Les Fondamentaux

Présentation

Type d'Action (Article L. 6313-1) : Action d'acquisition, d'entretien ou de perfectionnement des connaissances.
Objectif : Maîtriser les fondamentaux de Red Hat Enterprise Linux, de SUSE Linux Enterprise Server, de Debian Linux et d'Ubuntu Linux.
Public : Utilisateurs d'autre systèmes d'exploitation.
Pré requis : Connaître un autre système d'exploitation.
Méthode d'apprentissage : Alternance entre un scénario pédagogique clair et précis et des travaux pratiques basés sur des cas et exemples concrets.
Validation des acquis : Évaluations à l'aide de tests auto-correctifs.
Type d'apprentissage : Apprentissage Accéléré.
Durée : 21 heures.
Formateur : Certifié LPI.
Moyens pédagogiques : Support de cours en ligne téléchargeable au format PDF.
Ressources : Machine virtuelle : RHEL 7, SLES 12, Debian 10 ou Ubuntu 18.04 au choix.

Prérequis en Salle

  • Un poste par apprenant,
  • Windows™ 7 ou 10 avec Hyper-V désinstallé,
  • Le mot de passe du compte administrateur de Windows™,
  • Clavier AZERTY FR ou QWERTY US,
  • Un port USB 2 ou 3 disponible,
  • 4 Go de RAM minimum, idéalement 8 Go,
  • Processeur 4 cœurs minimum, idéalement 8,
  • 8 Go d'espace disque disponible sur le lecteur C,
  • Un accès à Internet rapide sans passer par un proxy.

N.B. Les stagiaires installeront les logiciels suivants sur les postes :

  • Oracle VirtualBox v 6.0 ou plus,
  • Putty,
  • WinSCP.

Programme

  • Linux - Les Fondamentaux
    • Systèmes de Fichiers
      • Linux File Hierarchy System
      • L'organisation
      • La commande mount
      • La commande umount
      • Systèmes de fichiers Unix
      • Commandes : mount, umount.
    • L'Editeur VI
      • Présentation
      • Lancer et Quitter VI
      • Set
      • Commandes du Curseur
      • Insertion de Texte
      • Recherche de Texte
      • Suppression de Texte
      • Copier - Coller
      • Couper - Coller
      • En cas de problème
      • Commandes : view, vi.
    • Aide et Documentation
      • L'aide des commandes
      • L'aide du shell
      • La commande man
      • La commande whatis
      • La commande apropos
      • La commande info
      • Sites Internet
      • Commandes : help, man, mandb, whatis, apropos, info.
    • Commandes de Base et Outils de Manipulation de Fichiers Textes
      • Etude des commandes de base
      • Options et arguments
      • Expressions Régulières
        • Expressions régulières basiques
        • Expressions régulières étendues
      • Outils et Commandes sur les Fichiers
        • La commande grep
        • La commande egrep
        • La commande fgrep
        • La commande sed
        • La commande awk
        • La commande tr
        • La commande paste
        • La commande cut
        • La commande uniq
        • La commande split
        • La commande diff
        • La commande cmp
        • La commande patch
        • La commande strings
        • La commande comm
        • La commande head
        • La commande tail
        • La commande screen
        • La commande wall
      • Commandes : stty, date, who, df, free, whoami, pwd, cd, ls, touch, echo, cp, file, cat, mv, mkdir, rmdir, rm, sort, more, find, su, locate, updatedb, whereis, which, uptime, w, uname, du, lsmod, modprobe, rmmod, modinfo, clear, exit, logout, shutdown, reboot, halt, poweroff, sleep, grep, egrep, fgrep, sed, awk, tr, paste, cut, split, diff, cmp, uniq, patch, strings, comm, od, head, tail, screen, wall.
    • La Ligne de Commande
      • Le Shell
        • Les Commandes Internes et Externes au shell
        • Les alias
        • Le Prompt
        • Rappeler des Commandes
        • Générer les fins de noms de fichiers
        • Le shell interactif
        • Affichage des variables du shell
          • Les variables principales
          • Régionalisation et Internationalisation
        • Options du shell bash
      • Les Scripts Shell
        • Exécution
        • Les variables spéciales
        • La commande read
        • Code de retour
        • La variable IFS
        • La commande test
        • La commande [[ expression ]]
        • Opérateurs du shell
        • L'arithmétique
          • La commande expr
          • La commande let
        • Structures de contrôle
        • Boucles
        • Scripts de Démarrage
      • Commandes : type, alias, unalias, chsh, history, wc, tee, set, vi, script, read, test, expr, let, if, case, for, while.

Extrait du Support

Aide et Documentation

L'Aide des Commandes Externes au Shell

Les commandes externes au shell sont des binaires exécutables ou des scripts, généralement situés dans /bin, /sbin, /usr/bin ou /usr/sbin :

root@debian8:~# type ifconfig
ifconfig is /sbin/ifconfig
root@ubuntu1604:~# type ifconfig
ifconfig is /sbin/ifconfig
[root@centos7 ~]# type ifconfig
ifconfig is /sbin/ifconfig
SLES12SP1:~ # type ifconfig
ifconfig is /sbin/ifconfig

L'aide d'une commande externe au shell peut être visualisé dans la plupart des cas en passant le paramètre - -help en argument à la commande en question :

root@debian8:~# du --help | more
Usage: du [OPTION]... [FILE]...
  or:  du [OPTION]... --files0-from=F
Summarize disk usage of each FILE, recursively for directories.

Mandatory arguments to long options are mandatory for short options too.
  -0, --null            end each output line with NUL, not newline
  -a, --all             write counts for all files, not just directories
      --apparent-size   print apparent sizes, rather than disk usage; although
                          the apparent size is usually smaller, it may be
                          larger due to holes in ('sparse') files, internal
                          fragmentation, indirect blocks, and the like
  -B, --block-size=SIZE  scale sizes by SIZE before printing them; e.g.,
                           '-BM' prints sizes in units of 1,048,576 bytes;
                           see SIZE format below
  -b, --bytes           equivalent to '--apparent-size --block-size=1'
  -c, --total           produce a grand total
  -D, --dereference-args  dereference only symlinks that are listed on the
                          command line
  -d, --max-depth=N     print the total for a directory (or file, with --all)
                          only if it is N or fewer levels below the command
                          line argument;  --max-depth=0 is the same as
                          --summarize
      --files0-from=F   summarize disk usage of the
--More--
root@ubuntu1604:~# du --help | more
Usage: du [OPTION]... [FILE]...
  or:  du [OPTION]... --files0-from=F
Summarize disk usage of the set of FILEs, recursively for directories.

Mandatory arguments to long options are mandatory for short options too.
  -0, --null            end each output line with NUL, not newline
  -a, --all             write counts for all files, not just directories
      --apparent-size   print apparent sizes, rather than disk usage; although
                          the apparent size is usually smaller, it may be
                          larger due to holes in ('sparse') files, internal
                          fragmentation, indirect blocks, and the like
  -B, --block-size=SIZE  scale sizes by SIZE before printing them; e.g.,
                           '-BM' prints sizes in units of 1,048,576 bytes;
                           see SIZE format below
  -b, --bytes           equivalent to '--apparent-size --block-size=1'
  -c, --total           produce a grand total
  -D, --dereference-args  dereference only symlinks that are listed on the
                          command line
  -d, --max-depth=N     print the total for a directory (or file, with --all)
                          only if it is N or fewer levels below the command
                          line argument;  --max-depth=0 is the same as
                          --summarize
      --files0-from=F   summarize disk usage of the
--More--
[root@centos7 ~]# du --help | more
Usage: du [OPTION]... [FILE]...
  or:  du [OPTION]... --files0-from=F
Summarize disk usage of each FILE, recursively for directories.

Mandatory arguments to long options are mandatory for short options too.
  -0, --null            end each output line with 0 byte rather than newline
  -a, --all             write counts for all files, not just directories
      --apparent-size   print apparent sizes, rather than disk usage; although
                          the apparent size is usually smaller, it may be
                          larger due to holes in ('sparse') files, internal
                          fragmentation, indirect blocks, and the like
  -B, --block-size=SIZE  scale sizes by SIZE before printing them; e.g.,
                           '-BM' prints sizes in units of 1,048,576 bytes;
                           see SIZE format below
  -b, --bytes           equivalent to '--apparent-size --block-size=1'
  -c, --total           produce a grand total
  -D, --dereference-args  dereference only symlinks that are listed on the
                          command line
  -d, --max-depth=N     print the total for a directory (or file, with --all)
                          only if it is N or fewer levels below the command
                          line argument;  --max-depth=0 is the same as
                          --summarize
      --files0-from=F   summarize disk usage of the
--More--
SLES12SP1:~ # du --help | more
Usage: du [OPTION]... [FILE]...
  or:  du [OPTION]... --files0-from=F
Summarize disk usage of each FILE, recursively for directories.

Mandatory arguments to long options are mandatory for short options too.
  -0, --null            end each output line with 0 byte rather than newline
  -a, --all             write counts for all files, not just directories
      --apparent-size   print apparent sizes, rather than disk usage; although
                          the apparent size is usually smaller, it may be
                          larger due to holes in ('sparse') files, internal
                          fragmentation, indirect blocks, and the like
  -B, --block-size=SIZE  scale sizes by SIZE before printing them; e.g.,
                           '-BM' prints sizes in units of 1,048,576 bytes;
                           see SIZE format below
  -b, --bytes           equivalent to '--apparent-size --block-size=1'
  -c, --total           produce a grand total
  -D, --dereference-args  dereference only symlinks that are listed on the
                          command line
  -d, --max-depth=N     print the total for a directory (or file, with --all)
                          only if it is N or fewer levels below the command
                          line argument;  --max-depth=0 is the same as
                          --summarize
      --files0-from=F   summarize disk usage of the
--More--

Cependant dans certains cas, cette option n'est pas admise :

root@debian8:~# type --help
-su: type: --: invalid option
type: usage: type [-afptP] name [name ...]
root@ubuntu1604:~# type --help
-su: type: --: invalid option
type: usage: type [-afptP] name [name ...]
[root@centos7 ~]# type --help
-bash: type: --: invalid option
type: usage: type [-afptP] name [name ...]
SLES12SP1:~ # type --help
-bash: type: --: invalid option
type: usage: type [-afptP] name [name ...]

L'Aide des Commandes Internes du Shell

Les commandes internes au shell sont des commandes telles type, cd ou umask. Pour vérifier le type de commande, il faut utiliser la commande type :

root@debian8:~# type type
type is a shell builtin
root@ubuntu1604:~# type type
type is a shell builtin
[root@centos7 ~]# type type
type is a shell builtin
SLES12SP1:~ # type type
type is a shell builtin

Le shell possède la commande help. Utilisée seule, cette commande fournit la liste des commandes internes :

root@debian8:~# help | more
GNU bash, version 4.3.30(1)-release (x86_64-pc-linux-gnu)
These shell commands are defined internally.  Type `help' to see this list.
Type `help name' to find out more about the function `name'.
Use `info bash' to find out more about the shell in general.
Use `man -k' or `info' to find out more about commands not in this list.

A star (*) next to a name means that the command is disabled.

 job_spec [&]                                  history [-c] [-d offset] [n] or history -a>
 (( expression ))                              if COMMANDS; then COMMANDS; [ elif COMMAND>
 . filename [arguments]                        jobs [-lnprs] [jobspec ...] or jobs -x com>
 :                                             kill [-s sigspec | -n signum | -sigspec] p>
 [ arg... ]                                    let arg [arg ...]
 [[ expression ]]                              local [option] name[=value] ...
 alias [-p] [name[=value] ... ]                logout [n]
 bg [job_spec ...]                             mapfile [-n count] [-O origin] [-s count] >
 bind [-lpsvPSVX] [-m keymap] [-f filename] >  popd [-n] [+N | -N]
 break [n]                                     printf [-v var] format [arguments]
 builtin [shell-builtin [arg ...]]             pushd [-n] [+N | -N | dir]
 caller [expr]                                 pwd [-LP]
 case WORD in [PATTERN [| PATTERN]...) COMMA>  read [-ers] [-a array] [-d delim] [-i text>
 cd [-L|[-P [-e]] [-@]] [dir]                  readarray [-n count] [-O origin] [-s count>
 command [-pVv] command [arg ...]              readonly [-aAf] [name[=value] ...] or read>
--More--
root@ubuntu1604:~# help | more
GNU bash, version 4.3.42(1)-release (x86_64-pc-linux-gnu)
These shell commands are defined internally.  Type `help' to see this list.
Type `help name' to find out more about the function `name'.
Use `info bash' to find out more about the shell in general.
Use `man -k' or `info' to find out more about commands not in this list.

A star (*) next to a name means that the command is disabled.

 job_spec [&]                                 history [-c] [-d offset] [n] or history ->
 (( expression ))                             if COMMANDS; then COMMANDS; [ elif COMMAN>
 . filename [arguments]                       jobs [-lnprs] [jobspec ...] or jobs -x co>
 :                                            kill [-s sigspec | -n signum | -sigspec] >
 [ arg... ]                                   let arg [arg ...]
 [[ expression ]]                             local [option] name[=value] ...
 alias [-p] [name[=value] ... ]               logout [n]
 bg [job_spec ...]                            mapfile [-n count] [-O origin] [-s count]>
 bind [-lpsvPSVX] [-m keymap] [-f filename]>  popd [-n] [+N | -N]
 break [n]                                    printf [-v var] format [arguments]
 builtin [shell-builtin [arg ...]]            pushd [-n] [+N | -N | dir]
 caller [expr]                                pwd [-LP]
 case WORD in [PATTERN [| PATTERN]...) COMM>  read [-ers] [-a array] [-d delim] [-i tex>
 cd [-L|[-P [-e]] [-@]] [dir]                 readarray [-n count] [-O origin] [-s coun>
 command [-pVv] command [arg ...]             readonly [-aAf] [name[=value] ...] or rea>
--More--
[root@centos7 ~]# help | more
GNU bash, version 4.2.46(1)-release (x86_64-redhat-linux-gnu)
These shell commands are defined internally.  Type `help' to see this list.
Type `help name' to find out more about the function `name'.
Use `info bash' to find out more about the shell in general.
Use `man -k' or `info' to find out more about commands not in this list.

A star (*) next to a name means that the command is disabled.

 job_spec [&]                                    history [-c] [-d offset] [n] or history -anr>
 (( expression ))                                if COMMANDS; then COMMANDS; [ elif COMMANDS;>
 . filename [arguments]                          jobs [-lnprs] [jobspec ...] or jobs -x comma>
 :                                               kill [-s sigspec | -n signum | -sigspec] pid>
 [ arg... ]                                      let arg [arg ...]
 [[ expression ]]                                local [option] name[=value] ...
 alias [-p] [name[=value] ... ]                  logout [n]
 bg [job_spec ...]                               mapfile [-n count] [-O origin] [-s count] [->
 bind [-lpvsPVS] [-m keymap] [-f filename] [-q>  popd [-n] [+N | -N]
 break [n]                                       printf [-v var] format [arguments]
 builtin [shell-builtin [arg ...]]               pushd [-n] [+N | -N | dir]
 caller [expr]                                   pwd [-LP]
 case WORD in [PATTERN [| PATTERN]...) COMMAND>  read [-ers] [-a array] [-d delim] [-i text] >
 cd [-L|[-P [-e]]] [dir]                         readarray [-n count] [-O origin] [-s count] >
 command [-pVv] command [arg ...]                readonly [-aAf] [name[=value] ...] or readon>
--More--
SLES12SP1:~ # help | more
GNU bash, version 4.2.47(1)-release (x86_64-suse-linux-gnu)
These shell commands are defined internally.  Type `help' to see this list.
Type `help name' to find out more about the function `name'.
Use `info bash' to find out more about the shell in general.
Use `man -k' or `info' to find out more about commands not in this list.

A star (*) next to a name means that the command is disabled.

 job_spec [&]                                     history [-c] [-d offset] [n] or history -anrw>
 (( expression ))                                 if COMMANDS; then COMMANDS; [ elif COMMANDS; >
 . filename [arguments]                           jobs [-lnprs] [jobspec ...] or jobs -x comman>
 :                                                kill [-s sigspec | -n signum | -sigspec] pid >
 [ arg... ]                                       let arg [arg ...]
 [[ expression ]]                                 local [option] name[=value] ...
 alias [-p] [name[=value] ... ]                   logout [n]
 bg [job_spec ...]                                mapfile [-n count] [-O origin] [-s count] [-t>
 bind [-lpvsPVS] [-m keymap] [-f filename] [-q >  popd [-n] [+N | -N]
 break [n]                                        printf [-v var] format [arguments]
 builtin [shell-builtin [arg ...]]                pushd [-n] [+N | -N | dir]
 caller [expr]                                    pwd [-LP]
 case WORD in [PATTERN [| PATTERN]...) COMMANDS>  read [-ers] [-a array] [-d delim] [-i text] [>
 cd [-L|[-P [-e]]] [dir]                          readarray [-n count] [-O origin] [-s count] [>
 command [-pVv] command [arg ...]                 readonly [-aAf] [name[=value] ...] or readonl>
--More--

L'aide concernant une commande spécifique peut être obtenu en passant la commande concernée en argument à la commande help :

root@debian8:~# help type
type: type [-afptP] name [name ...]
    Display information about command type.
    
    For each NAME, indicate how it would be interpreted if used as a
    command name.
    
    Options:
      -a	display all locations containing an executable named NAME;
    	includes aliases, builtins, and functions, if and only if
    	the `-p' option is not also used
      -f	suppress shell function lookup
      -P	force a PATH search for each NAME, even if it is an alias,
    	builtin, or function, and returns the name of the disk file
    	that would be executed
      -p	returns either the name of the disk file that would be executed,
    	or nothing if `type -t NAME' would not return `file'.
      -t	output a single word which is one of `alias', `keyword',
    	`function', `builtin', `file' or `', if NAME is an alias, shell
    	reserved word, shell function, shell builtin, disk file, or not
    	found, respectively
    
    Arguments:
      NAME	Command name to be interpreted.
    
    Exit Status:
    Returns success if all of the NAMEs are found; fails if any are not found.
root@ubuntu1604:~# help type
type: type [-afptP] name [name ...]
    Display information about command type.
    
    For each NAME, indicate how it would be interpreted if used as a
    command name.
    
    Options:
      -a	display all locations containing an executable named NAME;
    	includes aliases, builtins, and functions, if and only if
    	the `-p' option is not also used
      -f	suppress shell function lookup
      -P	force a PATH search for each NAME, even if it is an alias,
    	builtin, or function, and returns the name of the disk file
    	that would be executed
      -p	returns either the name of the disk file that would be executed,
    	or nothing if `type -t NAME' would not return `file'.
      -t	output a single word which is one of `alias', `keyword',
    	`function', `builtin', `file' or `', if NAME is an alias, shell
    	reserved word, shell function, shell builtin, disk file, or not
    	found, respectively
    
    Arguments:
      NAME	Command name to be interpreted.
    
    Exit Status:
    Returns success if all of the NAMEs are found; fails if any are not found.
[root@centos7 ~]# help type
type: type [-afptP] name [name ...]
    Display information about command type.
    
    For each NAME, indicate how it would be interpreted if used as a
    command name.
    
    Options:
      -a	display all locations containing an executable named NAME;
    	includes aliases, builtins, and functions, if and only if
    	the `-p' option is not also used
      -f	suppress shell function lookup
      -P	force a PATH search for each NAME, even if it is an alias,
    	builtin, or function, and returns the name of the disk file
    	that would be executed
      -p	returns either the name of the disk file that would be executed,
    	or nothing if `type -t NAME' would not return `file'.
      -t	output a single word which is one of `alias', `keyword',
    	`function', `builtin', `file' or `', if NAME is an alias, shell
    	reserved word, shell function, shell builtin, disk file, or not
    	found, respectively
    
    Arguments:
      NAME	Command name to be interpreted.
    
    Exit Status:
    Returns success if all of the NAMEs are found; fails if any are not found.
typeset: typeset [-aAfFgilrtux] [-p] name[=value] ...
    Set variable values and attributes.
    
    Obsolete.  See `help declare'.
SLES12SP1:~ # help type
type: type [-afptP] name [name ...]
    Display information about command type.
    
    For each NAME, indicate how it would be interpreted if used as a
    command name.
    
    Options:
      -a	display all locations containing an executable named NAME;
    	includes aliases, builtins, and functions, if and only if
    	the `-p' option is not also used
      -f	suppress shell function lookup
      -P	force a PATH search for each NAME, even if it is an alias,
    	builtin, or function, and returns the name of the disk file
    	that would be executed
      -p	returns either the name of the disk file that would be executed,
    	or nothing if `type -t NAME' would not return `file'.
      -t	output a single word which is one of `alias', `keyword',
    	`function', `builtin', `file' or `', if NAME is an alias, shell
    	reserved word, shell function, shell builtin, disk file, or not
    	found, respectively
    
    Arguments:
      NAME	Command name to be interpreted.
    
    Exit Status:
    Returns success if all of the NAMEs are found; fails if any are not found.
typeset: typeset [-aAfFgilrtux] [-p] name[=value] ...
    Set variable values and attributes.
    
    Obsolete.  See `help declare'.

La Commande man

La commande man donne accès au manuel de la commande passé en argument. Par exemple man help sous RHEL/CentOS 7 et SLES 12 :

BASH_BUILTINS(1)                   General Commands Manual                   BASH_BUILTINS(1)

NAME
       bash,  :,  .,  [,  alias, bg, bind, break, builtin, caller, cd, command, compgen, com‐
       plete, compopt, continue, declare, dirs,  disown,  echo,  enable,  eval,  exec,  exit,
       export,  false,  fc, fg, getopts, hash, help, history, jobs, kill, let, local, logout,
       mapfile, popd, printf, pushd, pwd, read, readonly, return, set, shift, shopt,  source,
       suspend, test, times, trap, true, type, typeset, ulimit, umask, unalias, unset, wait -
       bash built-in commands, see bash(1)

BASH BUILTIN COMMANDS
       Unless otherwise noted, each builtin command documented in this section  as  accepting
       options  preceded  by  -  accepts  -- to signify the end of the options.  The :, true,
       false, and test builtins do not accept options and do not  treat  --  specially.   The
       exit,  logout,  break,  continue, let, and shift builtins accept and process arguments
       beginning with - without requiring --.  Other builtins that accept arguments  but  are
       not  specified  as  accepting  options interpret arguments beginning with - as invalid
       options and require -- to prevent this interpretation.
       : [arguments]
              No effect; the command does nothing beyond expanding arguments  and  performing
              any specified redirections.  A zero exit code is returned.

        .  filename [arguments]
 Manual page help(1) line 1 (press h for help or q to quit)

Par contre dans certains cas, comme sous Debian 8 et Ubuntu 16.04 LTS avec la commande help, le manuel n'est pas disponible :

root@debian8:~# man help
No manual entry for help
root@ubuntu1604:~# man help
No manual entry for help

Une page de manuel peut contenir plusieurs sections :

Section Contenu
NOM Nom et rôle de la commande
SYNOPSIS Syntaxe de la commande, paramètres et arguments
DESCRIPTION Mode d'emploi et les arguments principaux
OPTIONS Descriptions détaillées de chaque paramètre
EXEMPLES / EXAMPLES Exemples d'utilisation de la commande
ENVIRONNEMENT / ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES Fonctionnement selon l'environnement du shell
CONFORMITÉ / STANDARDS / CONFORMING TO Éventuelles normes auxquelles la commande se conforme
BOGUES / BUGS/TO DO Éventuelles bogues connues
DIAGNOSTICS/RETOUR / EXIT STATUS/RETURN VALUE Codes d'erreur et leur signification
VOIR AUSSI / SEE ALSO Commandes liées à celle du manuel actuel

La navigation dans la page de manuel se fait grâce à l'utilisation de certaines touches :

Touche Fonction
Espace Faire défiler une page complète
Entrée Faire défiler la page ligne par ligne
Faire défiler la page une ligne vers le haut
Faire défiler la page une ligne vers le bas
PageHaut Faire défiler une demi-page vers le haut
PageBas Faire défiler une demi-page vers le bas
Début Se positionner au début du manuel
Fin Se positionner à la fin du manuel
/ Rechercher la chaîne qui suit la touche /. La touche n recherche l'occurrence suivante. La touche N recherche l'occurrence précédente
Q Quitter le manuel

Un manuel complet est fait de plusieurs sections :

Section Contenu
1 Instructions exécutables ou commandes shell
2 Appels système
3 Appels des bibliothèques
4 Fichiers spéciaux
5 Format des fichiers
6 Jeux, économiseurs d'écrans, gadgets
7 Divers et commandes non standard
8 Commandes d'administration du système Linux
9 Sous-programmes du noyau

Les différentes sections disponibles sont visibles grâce à l'utilisation de la commande whereis :

root@debian8:~# whereis passwd
passwd: /usr/bin/passwd /etc/passwd /usr/share/man/man1/passwd.1ssl.gz /usr/share/man/man1/passwd.1.gz /usr/share/man/man5/passwd.5.gz
root@ubuntu1604:~# whereis passwd
passwd: /usr/bin/passwd /etc/passwd /usr/share/man/man5/passwd.5.gz /usr/share/man/man1/passwd.1.gz /usr/share/man/man1/passwd.1ssl.gz
[root@centos7 ~]# whereis passwd
passwd: /usr/bin/passwd /etc/passwd /usr/share/man/man1/passwd.1.gz /usr/share/man/man5/passwd.5.gz
SLES12SP1:~ # whereis passwd
passwd: /usr/bin/passwd /etc/passwd /etc/passwd.YaST2save /usr/share/man/man1/passwd.1ssl.gz /usr/share/man/man1/passwd.1.gz /usr/share/man/man5/passwd.5.gz

Pour visualiser une section spécifique, il convient de préciser son numéro :

$ man 5 passwd [Entrée]

L'option -k de la commande man permet de rechercher la chaîne passée en argument dans la liste des manuels disponibles :

root@debian8:~# man -k passwd
chgpasswd (8)        - update group passwords in batch mode
chpasswd (8)         - update passwords in batch mode
exim4_passwd (5)     - Files in use by the Debian exim4 packages
exim4_passwd_client (5) - Files in use by the Debian exim4 packages
gpasswd (1)          - administer /etc/group and /etc/gshadow
grub-mkpasswd-pbkdf2 (1) - generate hashed password for GRUB
lppasswd (1)         - add, change, or delete digest passwords.
mkpasswd (1)         - Overfeatured front end to crypt(3)
pam_localuser (8)    - require users to be listed in /etc/passwd
passwd (1)           - change user password
passwd (1ssl)        - compute password hashes
passwd (5)           - the password file
update-passwd (8)    - safely update /etc/passwd, /etc/shadow and /etc/groupword
root@ubuntu1604:~# man -k passwd
chgpasswd (8)        - update group passwords in batch mode
chpasswd (8)         - update passwords in batch mode
fgetpwent_r (3)      - get passwd file entry reentrantly
getpwent_r (3)       - get passwd file entry reentrantly
gpasswd (1)          - administer /etc/group and /etc/gshadow
grub-mkpasswd-pbkdf2 (1) - generate hashed password for GRUB
pam_localuser (8)    - require users to be listed in /etc/passwd
passwd (1)           - change user password
passwd (1ssl)        - compute password hashes
passwd (5)           - the password file
passwd2des (3)       - RFS password encryption
update-passwd (8)    - safely update /etc/passwd, /etc/shadow and /etc/group
[root@centos7 ~]# man -k passwd
chpasswd (8)         - update passwords in batch mode
fgetpwent_r (3)      - get passwd file entry reentrantly
getpwent_r (3)       - get passwd file entry reentrantly
gpasswd (1)          - administer /etc/group and /etc/gshadow
grub2-mkpasswd-pbkdf2 (1) - Generate a PBKDF2 password hash.
kpasswd (1)          - change a user's Kerberos password
lpasswd (1)          - Change group or user password
lppasswd (1)         - add, change, or delete digest passwords.
pam_localuser (8)    - require users to be listed in /etc/passwd
passwd (1)           - update user's authentication tokens
sslpasswd (1ssl)     - compute password hashes
passwd (5)           - password file
passwd2des (3)       - RFS password encryption
pwhistory_helper (8) - Helper binary that transfers password hashes from passwd or shadow to ...
smbpasswd (5)        - The Samba encrypted password file
smbpasswd (8)        - change a user's SMB password
userpasswd (1)       - A graphical tool to allow users to change their passwords.
vncpasswd (1)        - change the VNC password
SLES12SP1:~ # man -k passwd
chpasswd (8)         - update passwords in batch mode
Crypt::SmbHash (3pm) - Perl-only implementation of lanman and nt md4 hash functions, for use in...
fgetpwent_r (3)      - get passwd file entry reentrantly
getpwent_r (3)       - get passwd file entry reentrantly
gpasswd (1)          - administer /etc/group
grub2-mkpasswd-pbkdf2 (1) - generate hashed password for GRUB
ldappasswd (1)       - change the password of an LDAP entry
lppasswd (1)         - add, change, or delete digest passwords.
opiepasswd (1)       - Change or set a user's password for the OPIE authentication system.
pam_localuser (8)    - require users to be listed in /etc/passwd
passwd (1)           - change user password
passwd (1ssl)        - compute password hashes
passwd (5)           - password file
passwd2des (3)       - RFS password encryption
saslpasswd2 (8)      - set a user's sasl password
smbpasswd (5)        - The Samba encrypted password file
smbpasswd (8)        - change a user's SMB password
vncpasswd (1)        - change the VNC password
yppasswd (1)         - change your password in the NIS database

Le résultat est une liste de commandes suivies par une description brève de celles-ci.

Important - Notez que les numéros entre parenthèses indiquent les sections disponibles.

Options de la commande

Les options de cette commande sont :

root@debian8:~# man --help
Usage: man [OPTION...] [SECTION] PAGE...

  -C, --config-file=FILE     use this user configuration file
  -d, --debug                emit debugging messages
  -D, --default              reset all options to their default values
      --warnings[=WARNINGS]  enable warnings from groff

 Main modes of operation:
  -f, --whatis               equivalent to whatis
  -k, --apropos              equivalent to apropos
  -K, --global-apropos       search for text in all pages
  -l, --local-file           interpret PAGE argument(s) as local filename(s)
  -w, --where, --path, --location
                             print physical location of man page(s)
  -W, --where-cat, --location-cat
                             print physical location of cat file(s)

  -c, --catman               used by catman to reformat out of date cat pages
  -R, --recode=ENCODING      output source page encoded in ENCODING

 Finding manual pages:
  -L, --locale=LOCALE        define the locale for this particular man search
  -m, --systems=SYSTEM       use manual pages from other systems
  -M, --manpath=PATH         set search path for manual pages to PATH

  -S, -s, --sections=LIST    use colon separated section list

  -e, --extension=EXTENSION  limit search to extension type EXTENSION

  -i, --ignore-case          look for pages case-insensitively (default)
  -I, --match-case           look for pages case-sensitively

      --regex                show all pages matching regex
      --wildcard             show all pages matching wildcard

      --names-only           make --regex and --wildcard match page names only,
                             not descriptions

  -a, --all                  find all matching manual pages
  -u, --update               force a cache consistency check

      --no-subpages          don't try subpages, e.g. 'man foo bar' => 'man
                             foo-bar'

 Controlling formatted output:
  -P, --pager=PAGER          use program PAGER to display output
  -r, --prompt=STRING        provide the `less' pager with a prompt

  -7, --ascii                display ASCII translation of certain latin1 chars
  -E, --encoding=ENCODING    use selected output encoding
      --no-hyphenation, --nh turn off hyphenation
      --no-justification,                              --nj   turn off justification
  -p, --preprocessor=STRING  STRING indicates which preprocessors to run:
                             e - [n]eqn, p - pic, t - tbl,
g - grap, r - refer, v - vgrind

  -t, --troff                use groff to format pages
  -T, --troff-device[=DEVICE]   use groff with selected device

  -H, --html[=BROWSER]       use www-browser or BROWSER to display HTML output
  -X, --gxditview[=RESOLUTION]   use groff and display through gxditview
                             (X11):
                             -X = -TX75, -X100 = -TX100, -X100-12 = -TX100-12
  -Z, --ditroff              use groff and force it to produce ditroff

  -?, --help                 give this help list
      --usage                give a short usage message
  -V, --version              print program version

Mandatory or optional arguments to long options are also mandatory or optional
for any corresponding short options.

Report bugs to cjwatson@debian.org.

La Commande apropos

La commande apropos cherche dans la base de données whatis la chaine de caractères passée en argument à la commande. Sans option, la sortie obtenue est identique à la commande man -k :

root@debian8:~# apropos passwd
chgpasswd (8)        - update group passwords in batch mode
chpasswd (8)         - update passwords in batch mode
exim4_passwd (5)     - Files in use by the Debian exim4 packages
exim4_passwd_client (5) - Files in use by the Debian exim4 packages
gpasswd (1)          - administer /etc/group and /etc/gshadow
grub-mkpasswd-pbkdf2 (1) - generate hashed password for GRUB
lppasswd (1)         - add, change, or delete digest passwords.
mkpasswd (1)         - Overfeatured front end to crypt(3)
pam_localuser (8)    - require users to be listed in /etc/passwd
passwd (1)           - change user password
passwd (1ssl)        - compute password hashes
passwd (5)           - the password file
update-passwd (8)    - safely update /etc/passwd, /etc/shadow and /etc/group
root@ubuntu1604:~# apropos passwd
chgpasswd (8)        - update group passwords in batch mode
chpasswd (8)         - update passwords in batch mode
fgetpwent_r (3)      - get passwd file entry reentrantly
getpwent_r (3)       - get passwd file entry reentrantly
gpasswd (1)          - administer /etc/group and /etc/gshadow
grub-mkpasswd-pbkdf2 (1) - generate hashed password for GRUB
pam_localuser (8)    - require users to be listed in /etc/passwd
passwd (1)           - change user password
passwd (1ssl)        - compute password hashes
passwd (5)           - the password file
passwd2des (3)       - RFS password encryption
update-passwd (8)    - safely update /etc/passwd, /etc/shadow and /etc/group
[root@centos7 ~]# apropos passwd
chpasswd (8)         - update passwords in batch mode
fgetpwent_r (3)      - get passwd file entry reentrantly
getpwent_r (3)       - get passwd file entry reentrantly
gpasswd (1)          - administer /etc/group and /etc/gshadow
grub2-mkpasswd-pbkdf2 (1) - Generate a PBKDF2 password hash.
kpasswd (1)          - change a user's Kerberos password
lpasswd (1)          - Change group or user password
lppasswd (1)         - add, change, or delete digest passwords.
pam_localuser (8)    - require users to be listed in /etc/passwd
passwd (1)           - update user's authentication tokens
sslpasswd (1ssl)     - compute password hashes
passwd (5)           - password file
passwd2des (3)       - RFS password encryption
pwhistory_helper (8) - Helper binary that transfers password hashes from passwd or shadow to ...
smbpasswd (5)        - The Samba encrypted password file
smbpasswd (8)        - change a user's SMB password
userpasswd (1)       - A graphical tool to allow users to change their passwords.
vncpasswd (1)        - change the VNC password
SLES12SP1:~ # apropos passwd
chpasswd (8)         - update passwords in batch mode
Crypt::SmbHash (3pm) - Perl-only implementation of lanman and nt md4 hash functions, for use in...
fgetpwent_r (3)      - get passwd file entry reentrantly
getpwent_r (3)       - get passwd file entry reentrantly
gpasswd (1)          - administer /etc/group
grub2-mkpasswd-pbkdf2 (1) - generate hashed password for GRUB
ldappasswd (1)       - change the password of an LDAP entry
lppasswd (1)         - add, change, or delete digest passwords.
opiepasswd (1)       - Change or set a user's password for the OPIE authentication system.
pam_localuser (8)    - require users to be listed in /etc/passwd
passwd (1)           - change user password
passwd (1ssl)        - compute password hashes
passwd (5)           - password file
passwd2des (3)       - RFS password encryption
saslpasswd2 (8)      - set a user's sasl password
smbpasswd (5)        - The Samba encrypted password file
smbpasswd (8)        - change a user's SMB password
vncpasswd (1)        - change the VNC password
yppasswd (1)         - change your password in the NIS database
Options de la commande

Les options de cette commande sont :

root@debian8:~# apropos --help
Usage: apropos [OPTION...] KEYWORD...

  -d, --debug                emit debugging messages
  -v, --verbose              print verbose warning messages
  -e, --exact                search each keyword for exact match
  -r, --regex                interpret each keyword as a regex
  -w, --wildcard             the keyword(s) contain wildcards
  -a, --and                  require all keywords to match
  -l, --long                 do not trim output to terminal width
  -C, --config-file=FILE     use this user configuration file
  -L, --locale=LOCALE        define the locale for this search
  -m, --systems=SYSTEM       use manual pages from other systems
  -M, --manpath=PATH         set search path for manual pages to PATH
  -s, --sections=LIST, --section=LIST
                             search only these sections (colon-separated)
  -?, --help                 give this help list
      --usage                give a short usage message
  -V, --version              print program version

Mandatory or optional arguments to long options are also mandatory or optional
for any corresponding short options.

The --regex option is enabled by default.

Report bugs to cjwatson@debian.org.

Les Commandes makewhatis et whatis sous RHEL/CentOS 6.6

Chaque page de manuel contient une brève description. Ces descriptions ainsi que le nom du manuel sont stockés dans la base de données whatis.

Cette base de données peut être maintenue manuellement par root en invoquant l'exécutable /usr/bin/makewhatis.

L'utilisation de makewhatis est très simple :

[root@centos6 ~]# makewhatis

La commande whatis peut maintenant être utilisée pour identifier les sections des manuels disponibles pour une commande donnée :

[root@centos6 ~]# whatis passwd
passwd               (1)  - update user's authentication tokens
passwd               (5)  - password file
passwd [sslpasswd]   (1ssl)  - compute password hashes
Options des commandes

Les options de la commande makewhatis sont :

[root@centos6 ~]# makewhatis --help
Usage: makewhatis [-s sections] [-u] [-v] [-w] [manpath] [-c [catpath]] [-o whatisdb]
       This will build the whatis database for the man pages
       found in manpath and the cat pages found in catpath.
       -s: sections (default: 1 1p 8 2 3 3p 4 5 6 7 9 0p n l p o 1x 2x 3x 4x 5x 6x 7x 8x)
       -u: update database with pages added today
       -U: update database with pages added since last makewhatis run
       -v: verbose
       -o: location of whatis database (default: /var/cache/man/whatis)
       -w: use manpath obtained from `man --path`
       [manpath]: man directories (default: /usr/share/man)
       [catpath]: cat directories (default: the first existing
           directory in /usr/share/man)

Les options de la commande whatis sont :

[root@centos ~]# whatis --help
usage: whatis keyword ...

Les Commandes mandb et whatis sous RHEL/CentOS 7, Debian 6, 7 et 8, SLES 11 et 12, Ubuntu 14.04 et 16.04

Sous RHEL/CentOS 7, Debian 6, 7 et 8, SLES 11 et 12, Ubuntu 14.04 et 16.04, la base de données peut être maintenue manuellement par root en invoquant l'exécutable /bin/mandb ou /usr/bin/mandb.

L'utilisation de mandb est très simple :

root@debian8:~# mandb
Purging old database entries in /usr/share/man...
Processing manual pages under /usr/share/man...
Purging old database entries in /usr/share/man/ug...
Processing manual pages under /usr/share/man/ug...
Purging old database entries in /usr/share/man/tr...
Processing manual pages under /usr/share/man/tr...
Purging old database entries in /usr/share/man/el...
Processing manual pages under /usr/share/man/el...
Purging old database entries in /usr/share/man/ja...
Processing manual pages under /usr/share/man/ja...
...
0 man subdirectories contained newer manual pages.
0 manual pages were added.
0 stray cats were added.
0 old database entries were purged.
root@ubuntu1604:~# mandb
Purging old database entries in /usr/share/man...
Processing manual pages under /usr/share/man...
Purging old database entries in /usr/share/man/lv...
Processing manual pages under /usr/share/man/lv...
Purging old database entries in /usr/share/man/pt_BR...
Processing manual pages under /usr/share/man/pt_BR...
Purging old database entries in /usr/share/man/tr...
Processing manual pages under /usr/share/man/tr...
Purging old database entries in /usr/share/man/ca...
Processing manual pages under /usr/share/man/ca...
...
0 man subdirectories contained newer manual pages.
0 manual pages were added.
0 stray cats were added.
0 old database entries were purged.
[root@centos7 ~]# mandb
Purging old database entries in /usr/share/man...
mandb: warning: /usr/share/man/man8/fsck.fat.8.manpage-fix.gz: ignoring bogus filename
Processing manual pages under /usr/share/man...
Purging old database entries in /usr/share/man/ca...
Processing manual pages under /usr/share/man/ca...
Purging old database entries in /usr/share/man/cs...
Processing manual pages under /usr/share/man/cs...
Purging old database entries in /usr/share/man/da...
Processing manual pages under /usr/share/man/da...
Purging old database entries in /usr/share/man/de...
Processing manual pages under /usr/share/man/de...
Purging old database entries in /usr/share/man/en...
...
0 man subdirectories contained newer manual pages.
0 manual pages were added.
0 stray cats were added.
0 old database entries were purged.
SLES12SP1:~ # mandb
mandb: warning: $MANPATH set, ignoring /etc/manpath.config
Purging old database entries in /usr/share/man/ca...
Processing manual pages under /usr/share/man/ca...
Purging old database entries in /usr/share/man/cs...
Processing manual pages under /usr/share/man/cs...
Purging old database entries in /usr/share/man/da...
Processing manual pages under /usr/share/man/da...
Purging old database entries in /usr/share/man/de...
Processing manual pages under /usr/share/man/de...
Purging old database entries in /usr/share/man/es...
Processing manual pages under /usr/share/man/es...
...
10 man subdirectories contained newer manual pages.
0 manual pages were added.
0 stray cats were added.
0 old database entries were purged.

La commande whatis peut maintenant être utilisée pour identifier les sections des manuels disponibles pour une commande donnée :

root@debian8:~# whatis passwd
passwd (1)           - change user password
passwd (5)           - the password file
passwd (1ssl)        - compute password hashes
root@ubuntu1604:~# whatis passwd
passwd (1)           - change user password
passwd (1ssl)        - compute password hashes
passwd (5)           - the password file
[root@centos7 ~]# whatis passwd
sslpasswd (1ssl)     - compute password hashes
passwd (1)           - update user's authentication tokens
passwd (5)           - password file
SLES12SP1:~ # whatis passwd
passwd (1ssl)        - compute password hashes
passwd (1)           - change user password
passwd (5)           - password file
Options des commandes

Les options de la commande mandb sont :

root@debian8:~# mandb --help
Usage: mandb [OPTION...] [MANPATH]

  -c, --create               create dbs from scratch, rather than updating
  -C, --config-file=FILE     use this user configuration file
  -d, --debug                emit debugging messages
  -f, --filename=FILENAME    update just the entry for this filename
  -p, --no-purge             don't purge obsolete entries from the dbs
  -q, --quiet                work quietly, except for 'bogus' warning
  -s, --no-straycats         don't look for or add stray cats to the dbs
  -t, --test                 check manual pages for correctness
  -u, --user-db              produce user databases only
  -?, --help                 give this help list
      --usage                give a short usage message
  -V, --version              print program version

Mandatory or optional arguments to long options are also mandatory or optional
for any corresponding short options.

Report bugs to cjwatson@debian.org.

Les options de la commande whatis sont :

root@debian8:~# whatis --help
Usage: whatis [OPTION...] KEYWORD...

  -d, --debug                emit debugging messages
  -v, --verbose              print verbose warning messages
  -r, --regex                interpret each keyword as a regex
  -w, --wildcard             the keyword(s) contain wildcards
  -l, --long                 do not trim output to terminal width
  -C, --config-file=FILE     use this user configuration file
  -L, --locale=LOCALE        define the locale for this search
  -m, --systems=SYSTEM       use manual pages from other systems
  -M, --manpath=PATH         set search path for manual pages to PATH
  -s, --sections=LIST, --section=LIST
                             search only these sections (colon-separated)
  -?, --help                 give this help list
      --usage                give a short usage message
  -V, --version              print program version

Mandatory or optional arguments to long options are also mandatory or optional
for any corresponding short options.

Report bugs to cjwatson@debian.org.

La Commande info

En plus du système des manuels, des informations concernant des exécutables peuvent être trouvées dans le système info. De l'information détaillée, des exemples et des tutoriels peuvent être absents du système des manuels. Pour cette raison le système info a été créé.

Dans le système info, de multiples pages d'informations concernant un exécutable, appelées nœuds, sont regroupées. La navigation entre nœuds est simple et utilise un système de liens hypertexte.

Afin de faciliter la navigation chaque page contient une entête qui inclut de l'information sur le nœud courant, le nœud parent, le nœud précédent et le nœud suivant. Pour naviguer entre les nœuds il convient d'utiliser les touches suivantes :

Touch Fonction
n Nœud suivant.
p Nœud précédent.
u Nœud parent.
Espace Défiler une page vers le bas.
Suppr Défiler une page vers le haut.
b Retour au début du nœud courant.
Tab ⇆ Sélectionner le lien hypertexte suivant.
m <lien> Aller au sous-nœud spécifié. En appuyant sur [Tab], on obtient la liste de tous les sous-nœuds.
↵ Entrée Suivre le lien hypertexte courant. Un lien hypertexte commence avec un astérisque et se termine avec le caractère :.
q Quitter le système info.

Pour accéder au premier nœud, utilisez la commande suivante :

root@debian8:~# info
...
File: dir,      Node: Top       This is the top of the INFO tree

  This (the Directory node) gives a menu of major topics.
  Typing "q" exits, "?" lists all Info commands, "d" returns here,
  "h" gives a primer for first-timers,
  "mEmacs<Return>" visits the Emacs manual, etc.

  In Emacs, you can click mouse button 2 on a menu item or cross reference
  to select it.

* Menu:

Basics
* Common options: (coreutils)Common options.
* Coreutils: (coreutils).       Core GNU (file, text, shell) utilities.
* Date input formats: (coreutils)Date input formats.
* File permissions: (coreutils)File permissions.
                                Access modes.
* Finding files: (find).        Operating on files matching certain criteria.

Compression
* Gzip: (gzip).                 General (de)compression of files (lzw).
-----Info: (dir)Top, 197 lines --Top--------------------------------------------------------
Welcome to Info version 5.2. Type h for help, m for menu item.
root@ubuntu1604:~# info
...
File: dir,      Node: Top,      This is the top of the INFO tree.

This is the Info main menu (aka directory node).
A few useful Info commands:

  'q' quits;
  '?' lists all Info commands;
  'h' starts the Info tutorial;
  'mTexinfo RET' visits the Texinfo manual, etc.

* Menu:

Basics
* Common options: (coreutils)Common options.
* Coreutils: (coreutils).       Core GNU (file, text, shell) utilities.
* Date input formats: (coreutils)Date input formats.
* Ed: (ed).                     The GNU line editor
* File permissions: (coreutils)File permissions.
                                Access modes.
* Finding files: (find).        Operating on files matching certain criteria.

C++ libraries
-----Info: (dir)Top, 254 lines --Top-------------------------------------------------------
Welcome to Info version 6.1.  Type H for help, h for tutorial.
[root@centos7 ~]# info
...
File: dir       Node: Top       This is the top of the INFO tree

  This (the Directory node) gives a menu of major topics. 
  Typing "q" exits, "?" lists all Info commands, "d" returns here,
  "h" gives a primer for first-timers,
  "mEmacs<Return>" visits the Emacs topic, etc.

  In Emacs, you can click mouse button 2 on a menu item or cross reference
  to select it.

* Menu: 

Archiving
* Cpio: (cpio).                 Copy-in-copy-out archiver to tape or disk.
* Tar: (tar).                   Making tape (or disk) archives.

Basics
* Common options: (coreutils)Common options.
* Coreutils: (coreutils).       Core GNU (file, text, shell) utilities.
* Date input formats: (coreutils)Date input formats.
* File permissions: (coreutils)File permissions.
                                Access modes.
-----Info: (dir)Top, 2027 lines --Top-----------------------------------------------------------
Welcome to Info version 5.1. Type h for help, m for menu item.
SLES12SP1:~ # info
...
File: dir,      Node: Top       This is the top of the INFO tree

  This (the Directory node) gives a menu of major topics.
  Typing "q" exits, "?" lists all Info commands, "d" returns here,
  "h" gives a primer for first-timers,
  "mEmacs<Return>" visits the Emacs manual, etc.

  In Emacs, you can click mouse button 2 on a menu item or cross reference
  to select it.

* Menu:

Archiving
* Cpio: (cpio).                 Copy-in-copy-out archiver to tape or disk.
* Shar utilities: (sharutils).  Shell archiver, uuencode/uudecode.
* Tar: (tar).                   Making tape (or disk) archives.

Basics
* Bash: (bash).                 The GNU Bourne-Again SHell.
* Common options: (coreutils)Common options.
* Coreutils: (coreutils).       Core GNU (file, text, shell) utilities.
* Date input formats: (coreutils)Date input formats.
-----Info: (dir)Top, 321 lines --Top--------------------------------------------------------------
Welcome to Info version 4.13. Type h for help, m for menu item.

Notez la différence de versions entre les distributions :

root@debian8:~# info -O --version
info (GNU texinfo) 5.2

Copyright (C) 2013 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
License GPLv3+: GNU GPL version 3 or later <http://gnu.org/licenses/gpl.html>
This is free software: you are free to change and redistribute it.
There is NO WARRANTY, to the extent permitted by law.
root@ubuntu1604:~# info -O --version
info (GNU texinfo) 6.1

Copyright (C) 2016 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
License GPLv3+: GNU GPL version 3 or later <http://gnu.org/licenses/gpl.html>
This is free software: you are free to change and redistribute it.
There is NO WARRANTY, to the extent permitted by law.
[root@centos7 ~]# info -O --version
info (GNU texinfo) 5.1

Copyright (C) 2013 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
License GPLv3+: GNU GPL version 3 or later <http://gnu.org/licenses/gpl.html>
This is free software: you are free to change and redistribute it.
There is NO WARRANTY, to the extent permitted by law.
SLES12SP1:~ # info -O --version
info (GNU texinfo) 4.13

Copyright (C) 2008 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
License GPLv3+: GNU GPL version 3 or later <http://gnu.org/licenses/gpl.html>
This is free software: you are free to change and redistribute it.
There is NO WARRANTY, to the extent permitted by law.
Options de la commande

Les options de cette commande sont :

root@debian8:~# info --help
Usage: info [OPTION]... [MENU-ITEM...]

Read documentation in Info format.

Options:
  -a, --all                    use all matching manuals.
  -k, --apropos=STRING         look up STRING in all indices of all manuals.
  -d, --directory=DIR          add DIR to INFOPATH.
      --dribble=FILE           remember user keystrokes in FILENAME.
  -f, --file=MANUAL            specify Info manual to visit.
  -h, --help                   display this help and exit.
      --index-search=STRING    go to node pointed by index entry STRING.
  -n, --node=NODENAME          specify nodes in first visited Info file.
  -o, --output=FILE            output selected nodes to FILE.
  -R, --raw-escapes            output "raw" ANSI escapes (default).
      --no-raw-escapes         output escapes as literal text.
      --restore=FILE           read initial keystrokes from FILE.
  -O, --show-options, --usage  go to command-line options node.
      --strict-node-location   (for debugging) use Info file pointers as-is.
      --subnodes               recursively output menu items.
  -v, --variable VAR=VALUE     assign VALUE to Info variable VAR.
      --vi-keys                use vi-like and less-like key bindings.
      --version                display version information and exit.
  -w, --where, --location      print physical location of Info file.
  -x, --debug=NUMBER           set debugging level (-1 for all).


The first non-option argument, if present, is the menu entry to start from;
it is searched for in all `dir' files along INFOPATH.
If it is not present, info merges all `dir' files and shows the result.
Any remaining arguments are treated as the names of menu
items relative to the initial node visited.

For a summary of key bindings, type h within Info.

Examples:
  info                       show top-level dir menu
  info info                  show the general manual for Info readers
  info info-stnd             show the manual specific to this Info program
  info emacs                 start at emacs node from top-level dir
  info emacs buffers         start at buffers node within emacs manual
  info --show-options emacs  start at node with emacs' command line options
  info --subnodes -o out.txt emacs  dump entire manual to out.txt
  info -f ./foo.info         show file ./foo.info, not searching dir

Email bug reports to bug-texinfo@gnu.org,
general questions and discussion to help-texinfo@gnu.org.
Texinfo home page: http://www.gnu.org/software/texinfo/
root@ubuntu1604:~# info --help
Usage: info [OPTION]... [MENU-ITEM...]

Read documentation in Info format.

Options:
  -a, --all                    use all matching manuals.
  -k, --apropos=STRING         look up STRING in all indices of all manuals.
  -d, --directory=DIR          add DIR to INFOPATH.
      --dribble=FILE           remember user keystrokes in FILENAME.
  -f, --file=MANUAL            specify Info manual to visit.
  -h, --help                   display this help and exit.
      --index-search=STRING    go to node pointed by index entry STRING.
  -n, --node=NODENAME          specify nodes in first visited Info file.
  -o, --output=FILE            output selected nodes to FILE.
  -R, --raw-escapes            output "raw" ANSI escapes (default).
      --no-raw-escapes         output escapes as literal text.
      --restore=FILE           read initial keystrokes from FILE.
  -O, --show-options, --usage  go to command-line options node.
      --strict-node-location   (for debugging) use Info file pointers as-is.
      --subnodes               recursively output menu items.
  -v, --variable VAR=VALUE     assign VALUE to Info variable VAR.
      --vi-keys                use vi-like and less-like key bindings.
      --version                display version information and exit.
  -w, --where, --location      print physical location of Info file.
  -x, --debug=NUMBER           set debugging level (-1 for all).


The first non-option argument, if present, is the menu entry to start from;
it is searched for in all 'dir' files along INFOPATH.
If it is not present, info merges all 'dir' files and shows the result.
Any remaining arguments are treated as the names of menu
items relative to the initial node visited.

For a summary of key bindings, type H within Info.

Examples:
  info                       show top-level dir menu
  info info                  show the general manual for Info readers
  info info-stnd             show the manual specific to this Info program
  info emacs                 start at emacs node from top-level dir
  info emacs buffers         select buffers menu entry in emacs manual
  info emacs -n Files        start at Files node within emacs manual
  info '(emacs)Files'        alternative way to start at Files node
  info --show-options emacs  start at node with emacs' command line options
  info --subnodes -o out.txt emacs  dump entire manual to out.txt
  info -f ./foo.info         show file ./foo.info, not searching dir

Email bug reports to bug-texinfo@gnu.org,
general questions and discussion to help-texinfo@gnu.org.
Texinfo home page: http://www.gnu.org/software/texinfo/
[root@centos7 ~]# info --help
Usage: info [OPTION]... [MENU-ITEM...]

Read documentation in Info format.

Options:
  -k, --apropos=STRING         look up STRING in all indices of all manuals.
  -d, --directory=DIR          add DIR to INFOPATH.
      --dribble=FILENAME       remember user keystrokes in FILENAME.
  -f, --file=FILENAME          specify Info file to visit.
  -h, --help                   display this help and exit.
      --index-search=STRING    go to node pointed by index entry STRING.
  -n, --node=NODENAME          specify nodes in first visited Info file.
  -o, --output=FILENAME        output selected nodes to FILENAME.
  -R, --raw-escapes            output "raw" ANSI escapes (default).
      --no-raw-escapes         output escapes as literal text.
      --restore=FILENAME       read initial keystrokes from FILENAME.
  -O, --show-options, --usage  go to command-line options node.
      --strict-node-location   (for debugging) use Info file pointers as-is.
      --subnodes               recursively output menu items.
      --vi-keys                use vi-like and less-like key bindings.
      --version                display version information and exit.
  -w, --where, --location      print physical location of Info file.

The first non-option argument, if present, is the menu entry to start from;
it is searched for in all `dir' files along INFOPATH.
If it is not present, info merges all `dir' files and shows the result.
Any remaining arguments are treated as the names of menu
items relative to the initial node visited.

For a summary of key bindings, type h within Info.

Examples:
  info                       show top-level dir menu
  info info                  show the general manual for Info readers
  info info-stnd             show the manual specific to this Info program
  info emacs                 start at emacs node from top-level dir
  info emacs buffers         start at buffers node within emacs manual
  info --show-options emacs  start at node with emacs' command line options
  info --subnodes -o out.txt emacs  dump entire manual to out.txt
  info -f ./foo.info         show file ./foo.info, not searching dir

Email bug reports to bug-texinfo@gnu.org,
general questions and discussion to help-texinfo@gnu.org.
Texinfo home page: http://www.gnu.org/software/texinfo/
SLES12SP1:~ # info --help
Usage: info [OPTION]... [MENU-ITEM...]

Read documentation in Info format.

Options:
  -k, --apropos=STRING         look up STRING in all indices of all manuals.
  -d, --directory=DIR          add DIR to INFOPATH.
      --dribble=FILENAME       remember user keystrokes in FILENAME.
  -f, --file=FILENAME          specify Info file to visit.
  -h, --help                   display this help and exit.
      --index-search=STRING    go to node pointed by index entry STRING.
  -n, --node=NODENAME          specify nodes in first visited Info file.
  -o, --output=FILENAME        output selected nodes to FILENAME.
  -R, --raw-escapes            output "raw" ANSI escapes (default).
      --no-raw-escapes         output escapes as literal text.
      --restore=FILENAME       read initial keystrokes from FILENAME.
  -O, --show-options, --usage  go to command-line options node.
      --subnodes               recursively output menu items.
      --vi-keys                use vi-like and less-like key bindings.
      --version                display version information and exit.
  -w, --where, --location      print physical location of Info file.

The first non-option argument, if present, is the menu entry to start from;
it is searched for in all `dir' files along INFOPATH.
If it is not present, info merges all `dir' files and shows the result.
Any remaining arguments are treated as the names of menu
items relative to the initial node visited.

For a summary of key bindings, type h within Info.

Examples:
  info                       show top-level dir menu
  info info                  show the general manual for Info readers
  info info-stnd             show the manual specific to this Info program
  info emacs                 start at emacs node from top-level dir
  info emacs buffers         start at buffers node within emacs manual
  info --show-options emacs  start at node with emacs' command line options
  info --subnodes -o out.txt emacs  dump entire manual to out.txt
  info -f ./foo.info         show file ./foo.info, not searching dir

Email bug reports to bug-texinfo@gnu.org,
general questions and discussion to help-texinfo@gnu.org.
Texinfo home page: http://www.gnu.org/software/texinfo/

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Copyright © 2004-2017 Hugh Norris.<br><br> <a rel=“license” href=“http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/fr/”><img alt=“Licence Creative Commons” style=“border-width:0” src=“http://i.creativecommons.org/l/by-nc-nd/3.0/fr/88x31.png” /></a><br />Ce(tte) oeuvre est mise à disposition selon les termes de la <a rel=“license” href=“http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/fr/”>Licence Creative Commons Attribution - Pas d’Utilisation Commerciale - Pas de Modification 3.0 France</a>.

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