![]() ![]() It doesn’t get mentioned very often but in conjunction with man and info pages and a little curiosity it is a great tool for exploring what your system contains and can offer you. Everyone has to start somewhere and even experienced users can have surprising gaps in their knowledge – probably not many who don’t know cp inside out though :-)Īnyway imo a better answer to such a noob question might be to describe the command `apropos`, and show a small section of a sample output:Ĭlone (3pm) – recursively copy Perl datatypesĬow-shell (1) – Start a copy-on-write session and invoke a shell.Ĭpgr (8) – copy with locking the given file to the password or group fileĬpio (1) – copy files to and from archivesĬppw (8) – copy with locking the given file to the password or group fileĪpropos is a great discovery tool for people new to a unix-like OS or new to the command line and is also useful for experienced users. ![]() If you want to go into further details, you can actually check that the SSH server is listening on port 22 with the netstat command.I think noobie questions are OK. sudo systemctl status sshdīy default, your SSH server is listening on port 22 (which is the default SSH port).
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