🇩🇪 DE 🇬🇧 EN
NexoraHost / Docs home
Popular searches:Minecraft won't startCreate Minecraft serverFiveM txAdminInstall WordPressSet up subdomainVPS GermanySSL errorOpen port 25565Discord bot hostingDNS troubleshooting

Linux Basics for Beginners

This guide explains the most important Linux basics you need to manage your VPS or root server. Don't worry – you don't need to be an expert. With these basics you can move around your server confidently.

Note: Detailed guides on individual topics can be found in the left navigation.

What is Linux?

Linux is an operating system – just like Windows or macOS. The difference: Linux is open source, free and runs on most servers worldwide. For servers, the distributions Ubuntu, Debian or CentOS are usually used. At NexoraHost we recommend Ubuntu or Debian for beginners.

Connecting via SSH

SSH is your gateway to the server. With it you execute commands as if you were sitting right in front of it.

On Windows (PowerShell or CMD)

ssh root@your-server-ip

On Linux/macOS (Terminal)

ssh root@your-server-ip

On first connection you'll be asked if you trust the fingerprint. Type yes and enter your password.

The most important commands at a glance

Navigating the file system

Command Function
pwd Shows the current directory (print working directory)
ls Lists files and folders in the current directory
ls -la Detailed view with hidden files and permissions
cd directory Changes to the specified directory
cd .. Go up one level
cd ~ Back to the home directory
cd / To the root directory (top level)

Managing files and folders

Command Function
mkdir name Creates a new folder
rm file Deletes a file
rm -r folder Deletes a folder and all its contents
cp source destination Copies a file or folder
mv source destination Moves or renames a file
nano file Opens a file in the text editor (CTRL+X to close)
cat file Displays the content of a file

System information

Command Function
htop Shows CPU, RAM and running processes in real time
df -h Shows free disk space on all partitions
free -h Shows RAM usage
uptime Shows how long the server has been running
uname -a Shows kernel version and system information

Network

Command Function
ip a Shows all network interfaces and IP addresses
ping domain.com Tests the connection to a domain or IP
ss -tlnp Shows all open ports and listening services

Package management – installing software

On Ubuntu and Debian you install software with apt:

# Update package list
sudo apt update

# Update installed packages
sudo apt upgrade -y

# Install a new program
sudo apt install programname -y

# Uninstall a program
sudo apt remove programname -y

Users and permissions

Who am I?

whoami        # Shows your current user
id            # Shows user ID and group membership

root vs. normal user

Understanding file permissions

With ls -la you see the permissions as a string:

-rwxr-xr-- 1 user group 1024 May 10 12:00 file.txt

Changing permissions

# Make file executable (for scripts)
chmod +x script.sh

# Make folder readable for everyone
chmod 755 folder

# Change owner
chown user:group file

Managing processes

# Show all running processes
ps aux

# Find a process by name
ps aux | grep processname

# End a process
kill PID         # Read PID from "ps aux"
kill -9 PID      # Force quit

Viewing logs

# Last 50 lines of system logs
journalctl -n 50

# Logs of a specific service
journalctl -u nginx

# Follow logs in real time
tail -f /var/log/syslog

The most important directories

Directory Content
/ Root directory – top level of the system
/home User directories (your personal files)
/var/log Log files of all services
/var/www Web server files (HTML, PHP)
/etc Configuration files of all programs
/var/lib/mysql MySQL/MariaDB databases

3 golden rules for beginners

  1. Don't be afraid of the command line: There is no undo – but also no problem that can't be fixed. Create backups
  2. Think twice before every rm command: Deleted files are really gone – there is no recycle bin
  3. Don't do everything as root: A normal user with sudo is enough for everyday use. Root only for system updates and configuration

Detailed guides on each topic can be found in the articles in the left navigation.

NexoraHost

Your own server

Root access for Linux admins – secure with our VPS/root guides.

nexorahost.com · Maincubes FRA01 · 1 Tbit/s DDoS · 99,9 % Uptime