Features
- Cover Type: Paperback
- ISBN 10 Number: 1565920015
- ASIN: B00005R09V
Product Review
Simply the best System V and Solaris reference on the market today,
Unix in a Nutshell will not steer you wrong. The book's concise style delivers the essential information on Unix, shell, and utility commands. Its command documentation is clear and complete and its examples are relevant and easy to follow.
Gilly starts with a complete, alphabetized listing of core Unix commands. Each entry includes a syntax summary, a clear statement of what the command does, and a full list of options, each with commentary on its function. The author then covers shell documentation, supplying details on the Bourne, Korn, and C shells and documenting each shell's commands in the standard format. Gilly also includes a section on regular expressions as they apply to grep, egrep, text editors, and various scripting languages.
Next, the book offers complete documentation of Emacs, ex, and vi, the powerful editors whose command structure proves perennially difficult to learn. The commands, once again, appear alphabetically with statements of their respective purposes. Other popular utilities--sed, awk, nroff, troff, tbl, and several macro languages--follow. Code managers SCCS and RCS, rarely documented in Unix books, bring up the rear.
Users need to know what they're looking up or they will not find this book useful. Otherwise,
Unix in a Nutshell's documentation is the best.
--David Wall
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
Book Description
You may have seen UNIX quick-reference guides, but you've never seen anything like
UNIX in a Nutshell. Not a scaled-down quick reference of common commands,
UNIX in a Nutshell is a complete reference containing all commands and options, along with generous descriptions and examples that put the commands in context. For all but the thorniest UNIX problems, this one reference should be all the documentation you need.
The second edition of
UNIX in a Nutshell starts with thorough coverage of System V Release 3. To that, we've added the many new commands that were added to Release 4 and additional commands that were added to Solaris 2.0.
Contents include:
- All user and programmer commands.
- New Korn shell documentation.
- Expanded text editing section, including GNU Emacs and nawk.
- Shell syntax (sh and csh).
- Pattern-matching syntax.
- vi and ex commands.
- sed and awk commands.
- troff and related commands and macros.
- sdb and dbx commands.
If you currently use either SVR3 or SVR4 or are planning to in the future, or if you're a Sun user facing the transition to Solaris, you'll want this book.
UNIX in a Nutshell is the most comprehensive quickref on the market, a must for any UNIX user.
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
Reader Reviews
This review is from: Unix in a Nutshell: System V & Solaris 2.0 (Paperback)
If you understand what "in a nutshell" means, then you shall be pleased with this book. It is not a tutorial, it is not a beginners' guide, it is not a theory book... it is a reference book, featuring entries that are succinct, to the point, sparse in many places, but complete in breadth and indispensable for the serious UNIX administrator. Compared to its companion book, Linux in a Nutshell, it is thinner and the entries parsimonious. But, well, if you are using UNIX, then you will be accustomed to this... indeed, it may be why you are using UNIX.
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