Hi Gurus,
I have a small requirement where i want to change the color & font of some text in a file.
i have a file error.txt which will be created in the script using egrep.
After that iam adding these lines at head & tail to that file using the following code
awk 'BEGIN{print"Please... (4 Replies)
Hi all,
I would like to know how to have a color display in the terminal...
In the sense that,
In many linux terminals,we have color coded for each file type,
green for executable ,blue for dirs and so on...
I wanted to know how i can have the same arrangement in solaris(b-79a)
I am not... (5 Replies)
hello,
i'm a linux zealot (fedora), so i know a some about unix. the company i work for uses HP-UX though and there are a few quirks i'd like smooth out by making them work more like my beloved redhat type systems...=)
right now they have all users using ksh and completion is done by hitting... (4 Replies)
i already have a running and working script for remote connection. is there a way to change the terminal color everytime I ssh remotely to another server? this is to avoid confusion since I will be using only one server to remotely access around 50 servers (solaris, linux,. etc) (2 Replies)
Is it possible to change the color when doing an echo?
Example, having the following command print in dark blue.
echo "Hello"
---------- Post updated at 11:50 AM ---------- Previous update was at 10:25 AM ----------
Just figured out how to do it (2 Replies)
Greetings,
I know I can manipulate from AppleScript to terminal.app or just run commands from apple script.
But what about from a BASH Script.
when A user logs in and runs a maintenance utility I have written for them, I want to modify their background color and text color.
example;
... (4 Replies)
Hello,
I am using RHEL 6.1 on VMware
I am searching for a way to change background color (not line by line color wich one can using tput command)
basically changing the color of the whole screen to white instead of the default black and changing font color to black and alos would like to... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Dexobox
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT CENTOS
secolor.conf
secolor.conf(8) System Manager's Manual secolor.conf(8)NAME
secolor.conf - The SELinux color configuration file
DESCRIPTION
The /etc/selinux/{SELINUXTYPE}/secolor.conf configuation file controls the color to be associated to the context components associated to
the raw context passed by selinux_raw_context_to_color(3), when context related information is to be displayed in color by an SELinux-aware
application.
selinux_raw_context_to_color(3) obtains this color information from the active policy secolor.conf file as returned by selinux_col-
ors_path(3).
FILE FORMAT
The file format is as follows:
color color_name = #color_mask
[...]
context_component string = fg_color_name bg_color_name
[...]
Where:
color
The color keyword. Each color entry is on a new line.
color_name
A single word name for the color (e.g. red).
color_mask
A color mask starting with a hash (#) that describes the hexadecimal RGB colors with black being #000000 and white being #ffffff.
context_component
The context component name that must be one of the following:
user, role, type or range
Each context_component string ... entry is on a new line.
string
This is the context_component string that will be matched with the raw context component passed by selinux_raw_context_to_color(3).
A wildcard '*' may be used to match any undefined string for the user, role and type context_component entries only.
fg_color_name
The color_name string that will be used as the foreground color. A color_mask may also be used.
bg_color_name
The color_name string that will be used as the background color. A color_mask may also be used.
EXAMPLES
Example 1 entries are:
color black = #000000
color green = #008000
color yellow = #ffff00
color blue = #0000ff
color white = #ffffff
color red = #ff0000
color orange = #ffa500
color tan = #D2B48C
user * = black white
role * = white black
type * = tan orange
range s0-s0:c0.c1023 = black green
range s1-s1:c0.c1023 = white green
range s3-s3:c0.c1023 = black tan
range s5-s5:c0.c1023 = white blue
range s7-s7:c0.c1023 = black red
range s9-s9:c0.c1023 = black orange
range s15:c0.c1023 = black yellow
Example 2 entries are:
color black = #000000
color green = #008000
color yellow = #ffff00
color blue = #0000ff
color white = #ffffff
color red = #ff0000
color orange = #ffa500
color tan = #d2b48c
user unconfined_u = #ff0000 green
role unconfined_r = red #ffffff
type unconfined_t = red orange
user user_u = black green
role user_r = white black
type user_t = tan red
user xguest_u = black yellow
role xguest_r = black red
type xguest_t = black green
user sysadm_u = white black
range s0:c0.c1023 = black white
user * = black white
role * = black white
type * = black white
SEE ALSO mcstransd(8), selinux_raw_context_to_color(3), selinux_colors_path(3)SELinux API documentation 08 April 2011 secolor.conf(8)