02-04-2013
Hi,
You have a .cshrc file: what's the content?
Regards
10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. AIX
what is the upper limit for UID is AIX 5.3 ? (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: learner
1 Replies
2. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
I am sure someone will yell at me over this post, but honestly I have searched. It doesn't help that I am not sure what to search on.
Little background. Working at new company, Company has a program on a Unix box AIX.4. I know virtually nothing about Unix and Neither does anyone else here ... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: swoozie
1 Replies
3. AIX
Hello,
My first post to the Unix forums, thanks for having me!
The division of the company I work for uses a xseries/redhat/VMWareServer
solution to make sure that we keep hardware overhead low and use our machines to as near capacity as we can. These boxes are Intel with usually
dual or... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: greenteabagger
1 Replies
4. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Hello guys, new here so please take it easy on me :-). Here is my issue. We use an application called Medical Manager and it runs on AIX. There is a user that is showing stuck with in the application. However when I try to run any of "ps" commands I don't see it. I need to kill this user and I... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: mali77
2 Replies
5. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users
I need to do a switch user in an automated mode and do a ftp using that switched id.
Scenario:
initial login xx.
switch to user-yy without manually entering the password.
ftp some files from user yy to another user zz - automated mode.
Can any unix experts can help me for my above query? (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: mjdarm
1 Replies
6. AIX
Dear Friends ,
I got a problem In our AIX 6.1 server . When I start or restart the machine I cannot Login the server . It shows a dialog box and shows some comments , those are :
>>
The DT messaging system could not be started .
To correct the problem :
1. Choose to return the login... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: shipon_97
1 Replies
7. AIX
Hi all,
I cannt use 'su' to login to root or any other users though everything seems ok. I read some articles that says if you do recursive chmod 777 on /usr it can create this problem.
I did the same. can anybody tell me how to repair it. Any ideas will be appreciated.
thnks (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: itesh.dash
7 Replies
8. AIX
Hello,
Sorry for my poor English.
I have to reduce rights for a user on AIX system so that:
When he does , he find in output, only filesystems on which he has permissions
.He can't do to change user.
Very thanks for helping. (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: edosseh
2 Replies
9. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Hi,
I want to create a new user,and I want to give read permission to a folder which owned by root.
How can I do this?
thanks for your helps (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: sersoy
4 Replies
10. AIX
Hello,
I am curious that is there a way I can restrict a user or a set of users to execute the C/C++ compiler, basically what I want is to lock it down to a particular user and none of the other users should be able to compile any code.
Thanks in advance. (14 Replies)
Discussion started by: m6248m
14 Replies
RESIZE(1) General Commands Manual RESIZE(1)
NAME
resize - set TERMCAP and terminal settings to current xterm window size
SYNOPSIS
resize [ -u | -c ] [ -s [ row col ] ]
DESCRIPTION
Resize prints a shell command for setting the TERM and TERMCAP environment variables to indicate the current size of xterm window from
which the command is run. For this output to take effect, resize must either be evaluated as part of the command line (usually done with a
shell alias or function) or else redirected to a file which can then be read in. From the C shell (usually known as /bin/csh), the follow-
ing alias could be defined in the user's .cshrc:
% alias rs 'set noglob; eval `resize`'
After resizing the window, the user would type:
% rs
Users of versions of the Bourne shell (usually known as /bin/sh) that don't have command functions will need to send the output to a tempo-
rary file and then read it back in with the "." command:
$ resize > /tmp/out
$ . /tmp/out
OPTIONS
The following options may be used with resize:
-u This option indicates that Bourne shell commands should be generated even if the user's current shell isn't /bin/sh.
-c This option indicates that C shell commands should be generated even if the user's current shell isn't /bin/csh.
-s [rows columns]
This option indicates that Sun console escape sequences will be used instead of the VT100-style xterm escape codes. If rows and
columns are given, resize will ask the xterm to resize itself. However, the window manager may choose to disallow the change.
Note that the Sun console escape sequences are recognized by XFree86 xterm and by dtterm. The resize program may be installed as
sunsize, which causes makes it assume the -s option.
The rows and columns arguments must appear last; though they are normally associated with the -s option, they are parsed sepa-
rately.
FILES
/etc/termcap for the base termcap entry to modify.
~/.cshrc user's alias for the command.
SEE ALSO
csh(1), tset(1), xterm(1)
AUTHORS
Mark Vandevoorde (MIT-Athena), Edward Moy (Berkeley)
Copyright (c) 1984, 1985 by X Consortium
See X() for a complete copyright notice.
X Window System RESIZE(1)