#### General ###### Was the project written in a compiled programming language? #### Functional ##### Try to run the command `"tar -czf home.tar.gz . &"` then run the command `"jobs"`. ``` [1]+ Running tar -czf home.tar.gz . & ``` ###### Can you confirm that the program displayed a list with the status of all jobs like in the example above? ##### Try to run the command `"jobs -l"`. ``` [1]+ 13612 Running tar -czf home.tar.gz . & ``` ###### Can you confirm that the program added the process ID to the normal information given in the command `"jobs"` like in the example above? ##### Try to run the command `"jobs -p"`. ``` 13612 ``` ###### Can you confirm that the program only displays the process ID like in the example above? ##### Try to run the command `"sleep 50000 &"` then run `"python &"` and press enter without any input in the last command. ``` [1] Running tar -czf home.tar.gz . & [2]- Running sleep 50000 & [3]+ Stopped python ``` ###### Run the command `"jobs"`. Can you confirm that the program displays the list with the status of all jobs and that one of them is "Stopped" like the example above? ##### Try to run the command `"jobs -r"`. ``` [1] Running tar -czf home.tar.gz . & [2]- Running sleep 50000 & ``` ###### Can you confirm that the program only displays the list with running jobs like in the example above? ##### Try to run the command `"jobs -s"`. ``` [3]+ Stopped python ``` ###### Can you confirm that the program only displays the list with stopped jobs like in the example above? ##### Try to run the command `"kill 7764"`(the process ID must be yours this is just an example). ``` [2]- Terminated sleep 50000 ``` ###### Can you confirm that the program killed and displayed the process with the given id like in the example above? ##### Try to run the command `"kill %1"`. ``` [1] Terminated tar -czf home.tar.gz ``` ###### Can you confirm that the program killed and displayed the first process like in the example above? ##### Close the program and run it again. Try to run the commands `"tar -czf home.tar.gz . &"`, `"sleep 50000 &"` and then run `"fg"`. ``` sleep 50000 ``` ###### Can you confirm that the program brings the background job to the foreground like in the example above? ##### Try to run the command `"fg"` then stop the process with the `"Ctrl + Z"`. ``` sleep 50000 ^Z [2]+ Stopped sleep 50000 ``` ###### Can you confirm that the program brings the background job to the foreground and after you press `"Ctrl + Z"` the process stops like in the example above? ##### Try to run the command `"bg"`. ``` [2]+ sleep 50000 & ``` ###### Run `"jobs"`. Can you confirm that the program started the process in the background like in the example above?