Working with files
Last updated on 2024-11-26 | Edit this page
Overview
Questions
- How do I create/edit text files?
- How do I move/copy/delete files?
Objectives
- Learn to use the
nano
text editor. - Understand how to move, create, and delete files.
Now that we know how to move around and look at things, let’s learn how to read, write, and handle files! We’ll start by moving back to our home directory and creating a scratch directory:
Creating and Editing Text Files
When working on an HPC system, we will frequently need to create or edit text files. Text is one of the simplest computer file formats, defined as a simple sequence of text lines.
What if we want to make a file? There are a few ways of doing this,
the easiest of which is simply using a text editor. For this lesson, we
are going to us nano
, since it’s more intuitive than many
other terminal text editors.
To create or edit a file, type nano <filename>
, on
the terminal, where <filename>
is the name of the
file. If the file does not already exist, it will be created. Let’s make
a new file now, type whatever you want in it, and save it.
Nano defines a number of shortcut keys (prefixed by the Control or Ctrl key) to perform actions such as saving the file or exiting the editor. Here are the shortcut keys for a few common actions:
Ctrl+O — save the file (into a current name or a new name).
Ctrl+X — exit the editor. If you have not saved your file upon exiting,
nano
will ask you if you want to save.Ctrl+K — cut (“kill”) a text line. This command deletes a line and saves it on a clipboard. If repeated multiple times without any interruption (key typing or cursor movement), it will cut a chunk of text lines.
Ctrl+U — paste the cut text line (or lines). This command can be repeated to paste the same text elsewhere.
Using vim
as a text editor
From time to time, you may encounter the vim
text
editor. Although vim
isn’t the easiest or most
user-friendly of text editors, you’ll be able to find it on any system
and it has many more features than nano
.
vim
has several modes, a “command” mode (for doing big
operations, like saving and quitting) and an “insert” mode. You can
switch to insert mode with the i key, and command mode with
Esc.
In insert mode, you can type more or less normally. In command mode there are a few commands you should be aware of:
-
:q!
— quit, without saving -
:wq
— save and quit -
dd
— cut/delete a line -
y
— paste a line
Do a quick check to confirm our file was created.
OUTPUT
draft.txt
Reading Files
Let’s read the file we just created now. There are a few different
ways of doing this, one of which is reading the entire file with
cat
.
OUTPUT
It's not "publish or perish" any more,
it's "share and thrive".
By default, cat
prints out the content of the given
file. Although cat
may not seem like an intuitive command
with which to read files, it stands for “concatenate”. Giving it
multiple file names will print out the contents of the input files in
the order specified in the cat
’s invocation. For
example,
OUTPUT
It's not "publish or perish" any more,
it's "share and thrive".
It's not "publish or perish" any more,
it's "share and thrive".
Reading Multiple Text Files
Create two more files using nano
, giving them different
names such as chap1.txt
and chap2.txt
. Then
use a single cat
command to read and print the contents of
draft.txt
, chap1.txt
, and
chap2.txt
.
Creating Directory
We’ve successfully created a file. What about a directory? We’ve
actually done this before, using mkdir
.
OUTPUT
draft.txt files
Moving, Renaming, Copying Files
Moving — We will move draft.txt
to the
files
directory with mv
(“move”) command. The
same syntax works for both files and directories:
mv <file/directory> <new-location>
OUTPUT
draft.txt
Renaming — draft.txt
isn’t a very
descriptive name. How do we go about changing it? It turns out that
mv
is also used to rename files and directories. Although
this may not seem intuitive at first, think of it as moving a
file to be stored under a different name. The syntax is quite similar to
moving files: mv oldName newName
.
OUTPUT
newname.testfile
Removing files
We’ve begun to clutter up our workspace with all of the directories and files we’ve been making. Let’s learn how to get rid of them. One important note before we start… when you delete a file on UNIX systems, they are gone forever. There is no “recycle bin” or “trash”. Once a file is deleted, it is gone, never to return. So be very careful when deleting files.
Files are deleted with rm file [moreFiles]
. To delete
the newname.testfile
in our current directory:
OUTPUT
files Documents newname.testfile
files Documents
That was simple enough. Directories are deleted in a similar manner
using rm -r
(the -r
option stands for
‘recursive’).
OUTPUT
files Documents
rmdir: failed to remove `files/': Directory not empty
files
What happened? As it turns out, rmdir
is unable to
remove directories that have stuff in them. To delete a directory and
everything inside it, we will use a special variant of rm
,
rm -rf directory
. This is probably the scariest command on
UNIX- it will force delete a directory and all of its contents without
prompting. ALWAYS double check your typing before using
it… if you leave out the arguments, it will attempt to delete everything
on your file system that you have permission to delete. So when deleting
directories be very, very careful.
What happens when you use rm -rf
accidentally
Steam is a major online sales platform for PC video games with over 125 million users. Despite this, it hasn’t always had the most stable or error-free code.
In January 2015, user kevyin on GitHub reported
that Steam’s Linux client had deleted every file on his computer. It
turned out that one of the Steam programmers had added the following
line: rm -rf "$STEAMROOT/"*
. Due to the way that Steam was
set up, the variable $STEAMROOT
was never initialized,
meaning the statement evaluated to rm -rf /*
. This coding
error in the Linux client meant that Steam deleted every single file on
a computer when run in certain scenarios (including connected external
hard drives). Moral of the story: be very careful when
using rm -rf
!
Looking at files
Sometimes it’s not practical to read an entire file with
cat
- the file might be way too large, take a long time to
open, or maybe we want to only look at a certain part of the file. As an
example, we are going to look at a large and complex file type used in
bioinformatics- a .gtf
file. The GTF2 format is commonly
used to describe the location of genetic features in a genome.
Let’s grab and unpack a set of demo files for use later. To do this,
we’ll use wget
(wget <link>
downloads a file from a link).
Problems with wget
?
wget
is a stand-alone application for downloading things
over HTTP/HTTPS and FTP/FTPS connections, and it does the job admirably
— when it is installed.
Some operating systems instead come with cURL, which is the command-line
interface to libcurl
, a powerful library for programming
interactions with remote resources over a wide variety of network
protocols. If you have curl
but not wget
, then
try this command instead:
For very large downloads, you might consider using Aria2, which has support for downloading the same file from multiple mirrors. You have to install it separately, but if you have it, try this to get it faster than your neighbors:
macOS:
curl
is pre-installed on macOS. If you must have the latest version you canbrew install
it, but only do so if the stock version has failed you.Windows:
curl
comes preinstalled for the Windows 10 command line. For earlier Windows systems, you can download the executable directly; run it in place.curl
comes preinstalled in Git for Windows and Windows Subsystem for Linux. On Cygwin, run the setup program again and select thecurl
package to install it.-
Linux:
curl
is packaged for every major distribution. You can install it through the usual means.- Debian, Ubuntu, Mint:
sudo apt install curl
- CentOS, Red Hat:
sudo yum install curl
orzypper install curl
- Fedora:
sudo dnf install curl
- Debian, Ubuntu, Mint:
macOS:
aria2c
is available through a homebrew.brew install aria2
.Windows: download the latest release and run
aria2c
in place. If you’re using the Windows Subsystem for Linux,-
Linux: every major distribution has an
aria2
package. Install it by the usual means.- Debian, Ubuntu, Mint:
sudo apt install aria2
- CentOS, Red Hat:
sudo yum install aria2
orzypper install aria2
- Fedora:
sudo dnf install aria2
- Debian, Ubuntu, Mint:
You’ll commonly encounter .tar.gz
archives while working
in UNIX. To extract the files from a .tar.gz
file, we run
the command tar -xvf filename.tar.gz
:
OUTPUT
dmel-all-r6.19.gtf
dmel_unique_protein_isoforms_fb_2016_01.tsv
gene_association.fb
SRR307023_1.fastq
SRR307023_2.fastq
SRR307024_1.fastq
SRR307024_2.fastq
SRR307025_1.fastq
SRR307025_2.fastq
SRR307026_1.fastq
SRR307026_2.fastq
SRR307027_1.fastq
SRR307027_2.fastq
SRR307028_1.fastq
SRR307028_2.fastq
SRR307029_1.fastq
SRR307029_2.fastq
SRR307030_1.fastq
SRR307030_2.fastq
Unzipping files
We just unzipped a .tar.gz file for this example. What if we run into other file formats that we need to unzip? Just use the handy reference below:
-
gunzip
extracts the contents of .gz files -
unzip
extracts the contents of .zip files -
tar -xvf
extracts the contents of .tar.gz and .tar.bz2 files
That is a lot of files! One of these files,
dmel-all-r6.19.gtf
is extremely large, and contains every
annotated feature in the Drosophila melanogaster genome. It’s a
huge file- what happens if we run cat
on it? (Press
Ctrl + c to stop it).
So, cat
is a really bad option when reading big files…
it scrolls through the entire file far too quickly! What are the
alternatives? Try all of these out and see which ones you like best!
-
head <file>
: Print the top 10 lines in a file to the console. You can control the number of lines you see with the-n <numberOfLines>
flag. -
tail <file>
: Same ashead
, but prints the last 10 lines in a file to the console. -
less <file>
: Opens a file and display as much as possible on-screen. You can scroll with Enter or the arrow keys on your keyboard. Press q to close the viewer.
Challenge
Out of cat
, head
, tail
, and
less
, which method of reading files is your favourite?
Why?
Key Points
- Use
nano
to create or edit text files from a terminal. - Use
cat file1 [file2 ...]
to print the contents of one or more files to the terminal. - Use
mv old dir
to move a file or directoryold
to another directorydir
. - Use
mv old new
to rename a file or directoryold
to anew
name. - Use
cp old new
to copy a file under a new name or location. - Use
cp old dir
copies a fileold
into a directorydir
. - Use
rm old
to delete (remove) a file. - File extensions are entirely arbitrary on UNIX systems.