Great idea! I was looking at mine and realized that it is dominated by whichever project I am currently working on. So I checked a backup file from during my last project.
Right now it is a lot of hg, virtualenv, python3, sofffice, freeseer, mplayer, and xpdf. Previously there was a lot of git, drush, and sudo service. Excluding those, but including sudo commands: 207 ls 143 vim 133 cd 48 aptitude 35 mv 30 rm 18 cp 15 grep 9 ssh 8 mkdir As root: 178 aptitude 178 ls 126 cd 52 mount 48 dpkg 47 vim 35 rm 30 iptables 22 nmap 22 ifconfig I'm not sure how far back these files go. Richard On Tuesday June 25 2013 17:15:01 "Ryan Simpkins" <[email protected]> wrote: > I am installing a new system. I wanted to know which commands I use most > frequently on my older systems so I could be sure they were added to the new > box. I chose a VM I am often on and analyzed my bash history. The results, > quite frankly, surprised me. Taking in to account the last 6000 commands run: > * I have ran 67 uniq commands as my regular user > * I have ran 90 uniq commands as root. > > Below are the top ten commands I've used: > # Regular User > 311 ssh > 100 less > 69 ls > 64 screen > 59 ping > 58 su > 50 whois > 48 vim > 48 dig > 29 cd > > # Root > 248 ls > 148 salt > 103 cd > 95 vim > 53 service > 37 tail > 39 cat > 38 yum > 35 git > 28 rm > > > This got me thinking. How does this list compare to the top commands used by > other PLUGers? If you are trying to figure out what skills to add to your > ninja belt, what can your command history teach you? One thing I've learned is > that I should probably study up on the options to 'ls' ;-) > > -Ryan /* PLUG: http://plug.org, #utah on irc.freenode.net Unsubscribe: http://plug.org/mailman/options/plug Don't fear the penguin. */
