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Quick Introduction to ACCC Unix Services
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This set of Web pages is a compilation of the ACCC's introductory Unix pages; the
violet area above (which is included in all the pages) is a page-level
table of contents. Click the Contents link
for a complete overall table of contents.
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Your Netid and Opening Your ACCC Account
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You need an ACCC account to use any of the ACCC services, including the
ACCC public microcomputer labs, UIC-Wireless, and the Blackboard Web-based learning tool. That's not a
problem if you're a member of the UIC faculty or staff, or a registered
student at UIC; you're eligible for the accounts, they're free, and you can probably open your account by yourself. "Account
creation" is simple, provided that you have the following requirements:
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If you're faculty or staff, you must have a selected netid.
For example, let's consider Ada Byron Lovelace, a staff member.
Her netid is: adabyron.
- Students' netids are assigned to
them automatically. Student netids have the form: first initial, first five letters of the last name, followed by an arbitrary number of up to two digits.
For example, let's consider Joe Testing, student.
Joe's netid might be: jtesti99
- Then you must have valid UIC status -- be in the online phonebook (ph).
- And you must Accounts - Activate Your Netid.
Then: Open your Account.
Do you have a question? See the Client Services Office,
Room 2267 SEL, (312)413-0003.
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-- Charges for ACCC Accounts
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No monetary charge is made for these ACCC accounts or services, except
for printing above a generous per-semester
allowance.
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-- ACCC Passwords
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- Your netid is part of your email address,
so it's public knowledge. It's your password that keeps your ACCC account
and privileges private to you. Don't ever give it to anyone else! These the following pages explain how to change and choose a safe password:
- Changing Your ACCC Password
Choosing a Safe Password
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-- Opening an ACCC Unix account gives you:
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- A shell account on an ACCC Unix workstation:
- Space for a personal, non-commercial Web page; see Web
Publishing at UIC: Overview.
Other resources you might want to use:
- In addition, your UIC netid and ACCC common password allow you to use the ACCC
Center's public Apple Macintosh and MS Windows personal computers and to log into various ACCC, University of Illinois at Chicago, and University of Illinois online and Web services.
- For email, it's better to open an account on the ACCC's email-only server mailserv.
- For computing tasks, faculty and graduate students should not use their tigger or icarus accounts, but rather use the ACCC's Beowulf cluster argo.
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Note about Your Netid@uic.edu Email Address
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Students, your teachers at UIC have access to your netid@uic.edu email address and many will use it to send important class information to you.
This means that students must read email sent to their netid@uic.edu email address on a regular basis. You do not have to use an ACCC email account -- on icarus or mailserv -- to read you email, but if you do not, you have set a valid forwarding email address for your netid@uic.edu email address to be delivered to. This must be valid email account that you read incoming email on on a regular basis.
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The advantage with using your netid@uic.edu address is that it's an alias; your netid@uic.edu address won't change even if the actual email address that you receive your email at changes.
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-- For email, consider Mailserv
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The ACCC's email-only server, mailserv, does one thing only, email, and it
does it better than the ACCC's general-purpose Unix servers. So if you
primarily want an ACCC email account, use mailserv. Your best bet for reading email is the ACCC's Web-based email program, Webmail, so you don't need an icarus or tigger account for that either.
But you will want to open an icarus or tigger account if you want a free personal Web page, or if you need to work on a departmental or student organization Web page.
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-- And what about argo?
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- The ACCC also has a Beowulf cluster for research and number crunching, called
argo-new.cc.uic.edu. Argo is only used for research; no general purpose usage
(email, Web browsing, etc.) is permitted. To obtain an account on argo send
email to systems@uic.edu with Argo
Account Request on the Subject: line and your name, netid, office phone, and a
description of how you would use argo. Professors: do not have your
graduate students use your accounts, instead ask them to send email as above
requesting their own account. They should mention your name.
- argo home page
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What You Should -- and Shouldn't -- Do on Unix
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To begin with, what you shouldn't do in Unix:
- You should not do casual word processing, short papers, letters and the
like.
- You are better off using a personal computer word processing package like
WordPerfect or Word on the ACCC's public personal computers. For more information,
see Word Processing at UIC.
You should not browse the Web.
- Icarus and tigger both have a text-based World Wide Web browser, lynx,
but its utility with today's graphics-based Web pages is limited. You should
do your Web browsing on a personal computer.
- You don't need to use icarus or tigger to read your email.
- While pine is a good email program, personal computer email programs such as Eudora or Thunderbird are better in many ways, and the ACCC's Web-based email program WebMail is easier to use and easier to access -- it's just a URL that you enter into any Internet browser.
What you should use your ACCC Unix account for:
- Please use mailserv for your email account; please don't keep your electronic mailbox on your ACCC tigger or icarus Unix account.
- For email, please use an
email-only account on the ACCC's mailserv system. You might normally
want to read and send email using Eudora on your
Windows personal computer or Mac, or WebMail
from anywhere on the Web. You can use the pine email system
on the icarus or tigger to read mailserv email also; how to set pine up to read mailserv email is explained in How to set pine up to read your mailserv email.
You should keep your personal public Web
pages on your ACCC Unix account.
- Your account Unix account comes with your public_html directory already
set up to hold your personal Web pages. The URLs of these pages are the following:
- On tigger:
- http://www.uic.edu/~yournetid/filename.ext
- On icarus:
- http://www2.uic.edu/~yournetid/filename.ext
See Web Publishing for Beginners for an introduction to Web publishing at UIC.
- You should use your ACCC Unix account to learn about using Unix.
- This set of pages has the information you need to get started.
You should use the ACCC's Unix Beowulf cluster -- argo-new -- for compute-intensive
research.
- For the sake of the other people using the ACCC's general-purpose Unix workstations
-- icarus and tigger -- we ask that you do all compute- or other resource-intensive
research on argo. See And what about argo? above.
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All the Standard Software and Then Some
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All the standard Unix commands, compilers, and utilities are available
on all the ACCC Unix systems, along with a number of additional software
packages. An organized listing of the facilities available on each ACCC
Unix system is available for you to examine online; in each system, enter
the command: softlist
The software lists are also available on the World Wide Web; see And
Don't Forget softlist and man Pages below.
If you don't see what you need listed in softlist, contact the Client
Services Office at (312)413-0003 or send an electronic note to electronic
mail address consult@uic.edu; we might
be able to get it.
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Remote Computer Access to the ACCC Unix Systems
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The ACCC Unix systems are connected to the Internet computer communication network,
allowing you to correspond with colleagues and friends at UIC, across the nation
and around the world. TCP/IP communications protocol commands (including
ssh and sftp , telnet
and sftp) provide remote access to files
and accounts on thousands of other computer systems.
The ACCC Unix system's network connections also allow you to use your ACCC
Unix account from many locations, on campus, in the Chicago area, and, literally,
around the world. In particular, you can connect to an ACCC Unix system using
ssh (preferably) or telnet on any computer attached to the Internet, including the ACCC's public
personal computers, UIC-Wireless, and any commercial
Internet Service Provider.
The links under Network Services
on the ACCC Services page provide more information
on connecting to your ACCC Unix account from home, in your office, or on the
road.
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Learning How to Use Unix
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Once you have opened your ACCC account, what can you do to learn how to use
it? The most important ingredient for you is to set aside time to experiment
with Unix without being under a harassing deadline.
This Unix how-to gives the basic information you need to use Unix on the ACCC.
There's lots more information on using Unix on the Web, from basic info to advanced
topics. The Related Links page of this document
gives selection.
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And Don't Forget softlist and man Pages
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The principle Unix help command is man.
- Enter: man cmdname
- to get information on the command cmdname.
- Enter: man man
- to get more information on the man command itself.
man uses more to display the help one screen at a time. Press
the Spacebar to display the next screen, type b to return to the previous screen, or type q to quit.
- Enter: apropos keyword(s) (or the equivalent man -k keywords)
- to get a list of man pages related to the keyword(s) you specify.For example:
Enter: apropos mail for a list of commands relating to mail.
- Enter: softlist
- to find out what software and utilities are available on any ACCC Unix machine
in addition to the Unix standards. It gives a list and brief description of
the additional software, and includes links to relevant man pages. The
softlist software lists are also available on the World Wide Web.
- tigger:
- http://www.uic.edu/softprod/tigger.html
- icarus:
- http://www.uic.edu/softprod/icarus.html
There are also general information sources on the ACCC Unix machines, principally
the Internet. (Though we don't recommend
your using them; you're much better off doing your Web browsing on a personal computer.)
- Enter: lynx
- to use the Lynx text-based Unix Web browser
when using VT100 communications (such as ssh or telnet), or
- Enter: mosaic & or: netscape &
- to use XMosaic or Netscape when using X Windows.
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