Chevron Left
Back to Hands-on Introduction to Linux Commands and Shell Scripting

Learner Reviews & Feedback for Hands-on Introduction to Linux Commands and Shell Scripting by IBM

4.7
stars
1,391 ratings

About the Course

This course provides a practical understanding of common Linux / UNIX shell commands. In this beginner friendly course, you will learn about the Linux basics, Shell commands, and Bash shell scripting. You will begin this course with an introduction to Linux and explore the Linux architecture. You will interact with the Linux Terminal, execute commands, navigate directories, edit files, as well as install and update software. Next, you’ll become familiar with commonly used Linux commands. You will work with general purpose commands like id, date, uname, ps, top, echo, man; directory management commands such as pwd, cd, mkdir, rmdir, find, df; file management commands like cat, wget, more, head, tail, cp, mv, touch, tar, zip, unzip; access control command chmod; text processing commands - wc, grep, tr; as well as networking commands - hostname, ping, ifconfig and curl. You will then move on to learning the basics of shell scripting to automate a variety of tasks. You’ll create simple to more advanced shell scripts that involve Metacharacters, Quoting, Variables, Command substitution, I/O Redirection, Pipes & Filters, and Command line arguments. You will also schedule cron jobs using crontab. The course includes both video-based lectures as well as hands-on labs to practice and apply what you learn. You will have no-charge access to a virtual Linux server that you can access through your web browser, so you don't need to download and install anything to complete the labs. You’ll end this course with a final project as well as a final exam. In the final project you will demonstrate your knowledge of course concepts by performing your own Extract, Transform, and Load (ETL) process and create a scheduled backup script. This course is ideal for data engineers, data scientists, software developers, and cloud practitioners who want to get familiar with frequently used commands on Linux, MacOS and other Unix-like operating systems as well as get started with creating shell scripts....

Top reviews

XW

Apr 8, 2024

Very helpful for the practical, common commands introduced in this course. The real-world weather project is quite challenging for new learners like me, but I did learn a lot!

GR

Mar 19, 2022

Excellent course. I feel way more confident on scripting now. The clarity of the Ai instructor and the visuals were great. Well put together course. Thank you and Cheers!

Filter by:

1 - 25 of 303 Reviews for Hands-on Introduction to Linux Commands and Shell Scripting

By Basil K

•

May 17, 2022

There is so much information missing in the labs in this course esp starting from Week 3. The videos it seems like were put together in a hurry with crucial information missing and labs are even worse than the videos. They are expecting one to find, set, unset files in extremely long scripts without providing any information on how it is done. Furthermore, there is little to no information given on why certain commands are called what they are called making this course not at all intuitive. I wish someone else has reviewed this course before putting it online. Such a wasted opportunity to educate people.

By Tyler M

•

Jan 17, 2022

This need a lot more hands-on experience and explaining the *why* of commands. The course never explained any logic behind operators and commands, so it was never clear how everything worked.

By Mohd J H

•

Nov 13, 2022

would prefer a live instructor. not a generic AI voice reading a PPT. would not recommend.

By Amanda W

•

Aug 1, 2022

This course is terrible for beginners!! None of the modules go in depth, it was difficult to understand because none of the commands are explained, and the final project is super advanced for what is actually taught in the class. I feel like I learned almost nothing!

By Mateusz K

•

Jan 23, 2024

Everything that follows, is just my own personal opinion, if not stated otherwise. It is based on my observations and interactions with teaching staff in the course discussion forums (for the last few months). This is a very poorly executed course. As of today (23 Jan 2024) this course for me still does not meet the criteria of a "good resource for learning" the basics of Linux CLI and shell scripting (despite few minor improvements already applied). Some of the topics are hastily skimmed through in the videos, and almost no mechanism presented in the course is thoroughly explained. Many of the "basic concepts" for Bash (and other modern shells) like e.g. function definitions, proper error handling, etc., are not even included in the course. The importance of using correct quotations for variable/parameter expansions is also never mentioned nor explained, although it should be considered essential "best practice". Peer-graded Final Assignment instructions/"guide" contains some errors and not fully tested solutions, advertised as "working correctly". The similar can be said about grading rubrics for the final assignment - which additionally are not focused on the actual results of the code execution, but instead they're focused on the code "looks", as in its visual resemblance (being as close to "identical" as possible) to what the course's staff have written in the grading rubrics. In some cases, if the teaching staff finds a question in a discussion forum a bit more "inconvenient" for them to answer (or they're not fully capable of providing the correct answer to it in a timely manner?), then they would rather: a) ignore the question completely (the least they can do is to not get involved at all) or reply with something similar to: "we'll investigate the issue and get back to you" (the latter "get back to you" almost never happens for a "more complicated" question); b) reply with some irrelevant, impractical, incorrect, or otherwise unuseful information; c) politely ask, to not bring the subject up ever again, as it may "overwhelm the learners"; d) delete the post (most often containing a valid, correct answer to the question) from discussion forums (I see censorship as "means of hiding incompetence"?) e) repeat other learner's correct answer (sometimes only slightly modifying it); f) use and completely rely on AI LLM (e.g. ChatGPT, Bard, or other) and answers provided by it (which are mostly ridiculous), without even basic output verification; g) and also (occasionally) delete any relevant corrections (made by more knowledgeable learners) to previous staff's posts/replies; than admit to any mistakes in the course contents, admit to lack of expertise in the subject matter, and address the questions properly - e.g. by allowing open discussion on potential improvements to the course materials, and implementing all said improvements as soon as possible (after reviewing). These practices have been reported, and as I was assured by the Coursera Support Team, this kind of inappropriate teaching staff's behaviors will be escalated further, so I'm awaiting next developments of the situation. But I still think this kind of inappropriate behaviors are a clear example, of what gives (or rather should give) the Skill-Up Technologies Pvt. Ltd. / SkillUp Online (employers for the most of "teaching staff") a bad reputation. This also might give Coursera courses and IBM Skills Network a really bad publicity in a long-run. Teaching and following "best practices", and answering doubts with relevant, thorough, technical knowledge in the discussion forums of this course... is something you unlikely/rarely find coming from the teaching staff. Generally, teaching staff don't seem to be fit for the job of thoroughly explaining the course materials and teaching the proper "understanding" of your mistakes (as hard as they try to be seen "cooperative"), but as I see it, they're better suited for a) only requesting you to "copy and paste" their code samples, that they believe should work best as a "correct solution" in their opinions (side note, again, "my opinion" - their code doesn't work all that great, and is not written with all the "best practices" in mind) and b) deleting "inconvenient" posts from the discussion forums whenever they please. To sum it up: in its current form, and with its current teaching staff replying in the discussion forums, I'd definitely not recommend this course to anyone, especially beginners. And I'd discourage seeking any "great" learning experience from Skill-Up Technologies Pvt. Ltd. / SkillUp Online - thus I'd strongly suggest searching for some other, better resources on the subjects regarding basics of working with Linux CLI and shell scripting.

By Mohamad G

•

Jul 24, 2023

This course is so bad, the instructions are insufficient, and the teachings compared to the project are different, highly do not recommend

By Vyshakh

•

Mar 25, 2023

The course was not uptown the mark.

The whole course was explained by a google teacher?

This is actually not acceptable from IBM

By S V

•

Feb 28, 2022

poor content

By Deleted A

•

Jan 3, 2023

it's really not easy and so clear for any beginner to start with!

By Murilo S

•

Jan 13, 2024

I have completed several courses as part of the IBM Data Engineering Professional Certificate, and most of them have been exceptional in terms of content and coherence. However, I must express my disappointment with a particular course in the series. The course content seemed incomplete, lacking the depth and breadth that I have come to expect from IBM courses. This made it difficult to gain a comprehensive understanding of the subject matter.

By Pedram A

•

Apr 5, 2022

the material was not sufficient

the last assignment was not clear and the answer of some task was given in the question!!!.

By Ryan S

•

Dec 26, 2021

Good overview, but should have included more using BASH scripts. Conditional statements and loops were not covered. Functions were not covered. Could have included catching errors with "$?". Running a database command in a BASH script to import or export data would be useful. Still a decent course though.

By alie a

•

Oct 22, 2021

A great start for beginners who wish to nail down the basics of shell scripting

By Volkert d V

•

Jan 18, 2024

I have a few qualms on this still good, dense course: (1) - there is a lot of jargon that is taken for granted. For someone new to programming - you can easily get lost - especially when certain programs are only mentioned once and then taken to be known (e.g. Kubernetes, RedHat etc.) A cheat sheet would be very welcome. (2) the videos, while clear, are very dense, and the voice is very mono-tone which became quite a turn-down. To make sure students capture it it would be helpful to have more cross-checking questions during the lecture. (3) the final peer reviewed exercise is tricky and the peer review system doesn't work that great. with all the talk on automated checking in IBMs DevOps course I would think an automated check would be more effective - and could actually point out to you what you did wrong. for example - I had trouble figuring out a certain line of code and I actually asked chatGPT - turns out I had one space too much. in another case I came up with a slightly different code which did the same job. My peer reviewer rated it wrong.

By James K

•

Mar 21, 2023

Great course, thorough introduction and easy to follow.

However, this course and others in the IBM professional certificate are plagued with peers who blatantly mark assessments incorrectly. The fact that you have to rely on peer grading to pass and are subject to their emotional swings is outrageous. This course loses all credibility by associating itself with an online learning education platform that won't rectify a flawed feature.

By Jonathan V C

•

Aug 19, 2022

If you don't know anything about Linux and commands this is for you, but if you are looking for a more advanced course stay away. I remove 1 star because is too basic and short, and could cover more things, and another star, because peer review is a joke, I got a 90 instead a 100, because the reviewer of my project apparently doesn't understand and take away 2 points from correct answers.

By Muhammad H

•

Apr 1, 2023

Overall, the course is very nicely designed and implemented except for the last week where they have shell scripting assignment. The way it is collected should be revisited as it kills the user experience by introducing redundant task of manually screenshotting every code snippet separately. Which is hectic in my opinion.

By Hannes B

•

Feb 14, 2022

I missed more input on actuall scripting. There were no references to loops, if and function definition. all things that you need when writing more advanced scripts

By David B

•

Dec 13, 2022

Some help but lacks pedagogical skill in its design.

By Mark M

•

Feb 19, 2022

If you've never used Linux before this may be helpful. But it you have experience with it this course is pretty worthless. I finished it in less than an hour.

By Frank H

•

Jun 13, 2023

I had to take the final exam twice because of a bug at coursera, even after i finished the whole course sucessfully!

By BENDIB H

•

Feb 9, 2022

Very interesting section, I find it is very efficient , sufficient and collects every thing we need with simplified and clear way. thanks to instructor's stuff

By Aniket Y

•

Dec 18, 2021

It was wonderful experience learning shell scripting. Scheduling jobs was the best part. Thank you instructors

By Omar H

•

Oct 7, 2021

Mini course indeed but full of new information and great explanation. Thank you.

By Deleted A

•

Nov 7, 2021

really brought together the bash information well. so glad I took this