The ls
command lets you see the files and directories inside a specific directory (current working directory by default).
It normally lists the files and directories in ascending alphabetical order.
- To show the files inside your current working directory:
ls
- To show the files and directory inside a specific Directory:
ls {Directory_Path}
ls [-OPTION] [DIRECTORY_PATH]
In this interactive tutorial, you will learn the different ways to use the ls
command:
Short Flag | Long Flag | Description |
---|---|---|
-l |
- | Show results in long format |
-S |
- | Sort results by file size |
-t |
- | Sort results by modification time |
-r |
--reverse |
Show files and directories in reverse order (descending alphabetical order) |
-a |
--all |
Show all files, including hidden files (file names which begin with a period . ) |
-la |
- | Show long format files and directories including hidden files |
-lh |
- | list long format files and directories with readable size |
-A |
--almost-all |
Shows all like -a but without showing . (current working directory) and .. (parent directory) |
-d |
--directory |
Instead of listing the files and directories inside the directory, it shows any information about the directory itself, it can be used with -l to show long formatted information |
-F |
--classify |
Appends an indicator character to the end of each listed name, as an example: / character is appended after each directory name listed |
-h |
--human-readable |
like -l but displays file size in human-readable unit not in bytes |
Customizing command behavior in Linux is easy using the alias
command. To make these changes permanent, follow these steps:
-
Create the Alias: Define your alias with the desired options. For example, to enhance the
ls
command:alias ls="ls --color=auto -lh"
-
Persistence: This alias is effective only for the current session. To make it permanent, add the alias to your shell's configuration file:
-
Bash: Append the alias to
~/.bashrc
:echo 'alias ls="ls --color=auto -lh"' >> ~/.bashrc source ~/.bashrc
-
-
Verification: Open a new terminal session, and the
ls
command will display files as configured.