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<sect3 id="shell">
<title>Using the Shell and Viewing the Logs</title>
<!-- TODO: There is nothing about logs in this section! -->
<para>
There is an <guimenuitem>Execute a Shell</guimenuitem> item on the
menu. If the menu is not available when you need to use the shell,
press <keycombo><keycap>Left Alt</keycap> <keycap>F2</keycap></keycombo>
(on a Mac keyboard, <keycombo><keycap>Option</keycap> <keycap>F2</keycap>
</keycombo>) to switch to the second <emphasis>virtual
console</emphasis>. That's the <keycap>Alt</keycap> key on the
left-hand side of the <keycap>space bar</keycap>, and the
<keycap>F2</keycap> function key, at the same time. This is a separate
window running a Bourne shell clone called <command>ash</command>.
</para><para>
At this point you are booted from the RAM disk, and there is a limited
set of Unix utilities available for your use. You can see what
programs are available with the command <command>ls /bin /sbin /usr/bin
/usr/sbin</command> and by typing <command>help</command>. The
text editor is <command>nano</command>. The shell has some nice features
like autocompletion and history.
</para><para>
Use the menus to perform any task that they are able to do — the
shell and commands are only there in case something goes wrong. In
particular, you should always use the menus, not the shell, to
activate your swap partition, because the menu software can't detect
that you've done this from the shell. Press <keycombo><keycap>Left
Alt</keycap> <keycap>F1</keycap></keycombo> to get back to menus, or
type <command>exit</command> if you used a menu item to open the
shell.
</para>
</sect3>
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