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What does your .*shrc file look like?
What does your shells initialization file look like?
On my systems, the individual shells own profile/shrc's just source this through . or ENV. $HOME/.${USER}_shrc Code:
# vim: set ft=sh : # default file permissions -rw------- / drwx------ umask 077 # set my standard environment settings PATH="/bin:/sbin:/usr/bin:/usr/sbin"; export PATH # locale related settings TZ='Etc/UTC'; export TZ # my time zone LANG='en_US.UTF-8'; export LANG # language.encoding # some programs require us to set LC_ALL manually as well. LC_ALL='en_US.UTF-8'; export LC_ALL MM_CHARSET='UTF-8'; export MM_CHARSET BLOCKSIZE='M'; export BLOCKSIZE # prefer megabytes over 512 byte blocks # set my pager if [ -x /usr/bin/less ]; then PAGER='/usr/bin/less'; export PAGER LESS='-FiJqX'; export LESS # default options to less else PAGER="more"; export PAGER fi # set my default editor, on order of preference and create aliases if [ -x /usr/local/bin/vim ]; then EDITOR='/usr/local/bin/vim'; export EDITOR VISUAL='/usr/local/bin/vim'; export VISUAL if [ -x /usr/local/bin/view ]; then # I prefer Vim to Vi when 'view'ing a file alias view='/usr/local/bin/view' fi elif [ -x /usr/bin/vi ]; then EDITOR='/usr/bin/vi'; export EDITOR VISUAL='/usr/bin/vi'; export VISUAL # on some systems where vim is not installed, I tend to type vim alias vim='/usr/bin/vi' elif [ -x /usr/bin/mg -o /usr/local/bin/mg ]; then # Micro GNU Emacs is EDITOR="`which mg`"; export EDITOR VISUAL="`which mg`"; export VISUAL alias microemacs='mg' fi case `uname -s` in 'FreeBSD') isFreeBSD=1 LSCOLORS='CxGxxxxxBxexExcxdx'; export LSCOLORS ;; # FreeBSD 'OpenBSD') isOpenBSD=1;; 'NetBSD') isNetBSD=1;; 'Linux') isLinux=1;; 'Unix') isUnix=1;; esac case `basename $SHELL` in 'sh') # older versions of the bourne shell lack line editing (i.e. < sys 3) [ $isFreeBSD ] || [ $isOpenBSD ] || [ $isNetBSD ] || [ $isLinux ] && set -o emacs # set prompt PS1="`hostname -s`$ "; export PS1 ;; # sh 'bash') # prompt is: [ user@host:pwd ]$ PS1="[ \u@\h:\w ]$ "; export PS1 set -o emacs ;; # bash 'ksh'| 'ksh93'| 'pdksh') # my standard issue prompt PS1="$USER@`hostname -s`-$ "; export PS1 set -o emacs ;; # ksh family 'zsh') # set my various options HISTFILE=~/.histfile HISTSIZE=100 SAVEHIST=300 setopt appendhistory autocd extendedglob # dont' beep ! unsetopt beep # emacs bindings bindkey -e zstyle :compinstall filename "$HOME/.zshrc" autoload -Uz compinit compinit # COLORS fg_green=$'%{\e[0;32m%}' fg_blue=$'%{\e[0;34m%}' fg_cyan=$'%{\e[0;36m%}' fg_red=$'%{\e[0;31m%}' fg_brown=$'%{\e[0;33m%}' fg_purple=$'%{\e[0;35m%}' fg_light_gray=$'%{\e[0;37m%}' fg_dark_gray=$'%{\e[1;30m%}' fg_light_blue=$'%{\e[1;34m%}' fg_light_green=$'%{\e[1;32m%}' fg_light_cyan=$'%{\e[1;36m%}' fg_light_red=$'%{\e[1;31m%}' fg_light_purple=$'%{\e[1;35m%}' fg_no_colour=$'%{\e[0m%}' fg_white=$'%{\e[1;37m%}' fg_black=$'%{\e[0;30m%}' # I like color in my zsh prompt ;-) PS1="$USER@%B%m%b${fg_green}$ ${fg_no_colour}"; export PS1 # display the (24h) time in the right-prompt` RPS1="%T"; export RPS1 esac # # define some standard aliases for programs, should be fairly portable where # said programs are installed. # alias bye="echo 'bye'; exit" alias cls='clear' alias pgr="$PAGER" alias limeric='fortune /usr/share/games/fortune/limerick' alias gcc='gcc -Wall -W -Wpointer-arith -Wbad-function-cast -std=c99' alias gcc_wall= 'gcc -Wall -Wpointer-arith -Wcast-qual -Wcast-align \ -Wconversion -Waggregate-return -Wstrict-prototypes \ -Wmissing-prototypes -Wmissing-declarations \ -Wredundant-decls -Winline -Wnested-externs -std=c99 \ -march=i686 -pipe' alias gcc_optimize='gcc -fforce-mem -fforce-addr -finline-functions \ -fstrength-reduce -floop-optimize -O3' alias gcc_debug='gcc -ggdb3' # this quick lint works on both FreeBSD and OpenBSD anyway (ansi mode) alias lint='lint -cehzs' # lint's -H option is not documented on FreeBSD but works on both FreeBSD and # OpenBSD, dunno about other lints. alias lint_ansi='lint -aaabcehHzs' # # define system specfic aliases for common commands # if [ $isFreeBSD ]; then # The FreeBSD system seems to have been made by people that have an "Hey # we've been using this command prompt for the past 30 years, let's tmake it # comfortable!" approch... Thus it needs it's own set of aliases. alias cp='cp -ivRL' alias mv='mv -v' alias ls='ls -FGH' alias ll='ls -laFhHo' alias la='ls -aFG' alias rm='rm -d' alias rmdir='rmdir -v' # quick command to mute the sound system alias mute='mixer pcm 0:0' elif [ $isOpenBSD ]; then alias cp='cp -iRL' alias ls='ls -F' alias ll='ls -laFho' alias la='ls -aF' alias rm='rm -d' elif [ $isLinux ]; then echo "No aliases set..." else # # define fail safe aliases that should work on most systems # alias ll='ls -l' alias la='la' fi # give a fortune cookie and the current date/time on login [ -x /usr/games/fortune ] && /usr/games/fortune -aes echo '' echo ''; echo -n 'To days date is: '; date # # parse site local additions # . ${HOME}/.site_shrc ${HOME}/.site_shrc on this laptop: Code:
# vim: set ft=sh : # TeX Live stuff PATH="/usr/Programs/texlive/2007/bin/i386-freebsd:$PATH:/usr/local/bin:/usr/local/sbin:${HOME}/sh:${HOME}/bin"; export PATH MANPATH="/usr/Programs/texlive/2007/texmf/doc/man:/usr/share/man:/usr/local/man:$MANPATH"; export MANPATH INFOPATH="/usr/Programs/texlive/2007/texmf/doc/info:/usr/share/info:/usr/local/info:$INFOPATH"; export INFOPATH # QT: needed in order to compile QT programs... export QMAKESPEC='freebsd-g++' export QTDIR='/usr/X11R6/include/' # for NPM export SVNROOT='<snip>' # for sudo pkg_add PACKAGEROOT="ftp://ftp13.us.FreeBSD.org/"; export PACKAGEROOT alias paxhelp='paxhelp | pgr' alias scp2v='scp -P <snip> -i ~/.ssh/<snip>' alias ssh2v='ssh -p <snip> <snip>@vectra -i ~/.ssh/<snip>' alias ssh2npm='<snip>' alias gcj='gcj43' # Our IP Address, doesn't work in older bourne shells if [ -x /usr/bin/perl ]; then MY_IP=$(ifconfig ath0 | grep 'inet' | awk '{print $2}') fi disclaimer: I've used FreeBSD since November 2005.
__________________
My Journal Thou shalt check the array bounds of all strings (indeed, all arrays), for surely where thou typest ``foo'' someone someday shall type ``supercalifragilisticexpialidocious''. |
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Hi TerriP ! Thank you for sharing this !
I liked the fortune cookie on login .. I an a big fortune addict .. I remember I first encountered this on slackware as I remember I found something similar on dragonflyBSD .. nice tips from dru ... part of my profile aliases : Code:
alias r="mplayer http://srv3.electro-music.com:8500" to listen to some cool ambient alias ls="gls -F --color=always" alias df="df -h" alias bg="fbsetbg -f /home/bifrost/images.bifrost/zen_unix01.jpg" alias f="fortune -s" alias fl="fortune -l" alias fo="fortune -o" alias x="xinit /etc/X11/xinit/xinitrc" alias gn="xinit /usr/local/bin/gnome-session" alias p="cd /usr/ports/ && ls " alias d="less pkg/DESCR" alias da="less pkg/DESCR-main" alias ftpgo="ftp ftp://ftp.fr.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/" |
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Thanks Carpetsmoker !
interesting profile .. what's more interesting to me as a new c learner : why are you using tcsh as default shell despite Barnett's 'Top Ten Reasons not to use the C shell' .. hopefully the topic of a future thread .. |
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Thanks Carpetsmoker .. good energy-saving strategy .. ..
gist of it : tcsh harmless as interactive shell .. |
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I started out with csh and tsch in my early Unix experience (SunOS) on machines where I worked, and initially continued with tcsh when I started using Unix-like on my own computer. Eventually though, I found it inevitable to have to deal with Bourne sh scripts in the sysadmin. It drove me nuts having to remember and switch between both types of shell syntax all the time, so I eventually decided to ditch the t/csh stuff, since Bourne was more powerful and inevitable. That's my take on it anyway: basically the KISS principle. YMMV and all that.
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Hi IdOp ! good choice for good reasons ..
I'd like if possible that you'd share parts of your shell profile .. time-saving aliases .. ;-) .. |
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it's alright .. please do when you can ..
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Thanks IdOp !! interesting .. specially the alias part which I could understand and will surely benefit from .. some other parts urge me to read more about .. :-)
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