05-13-2013
10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Hello again !
Thanks for response of my first question. there is my second quesiton why i have local.profile instead of .profile file ?
my all files in pwd shoes local. before any file.
is anybody can tell me about that ?
Thanks
Abid Malik (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: abidmalik
5 Replies
2. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
hi , i added ls -F to .profile. and i need to do ./.profile for the effect to take effect BUT i didnt and YET the next day when i came to work and log in, the changes took effect. i am on aix.
please explain..
thanks (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: yls177
4 Replies
3. SCO
what is the difference between these two lines, if we use it in korn shell script:
.profile
.~/.profile (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: maneesh mehta
3 Replies
4. AIX
Hi guys, I am very very new to AIX, (actually today I entered an AIX server for the first time), but I have worked with Solaris a little bit in the past.
Today when I entered the system, the first thing I realized is that there was no "/home/" directory created, and instead it took me to a... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: panchopp
1 Replies
5. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Hi
I know from reading O Riley's Classic Shell Scripting' that the .profile file is " the shells configuration file" but I am unable to find a reference to what "..profile" means. I have searched on the net, Sams Teach Yourself Unix, Unix Visual Quickstart Guide and Linux in a Nutshell. I have... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: zorrokan
2 Replies
6. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Could anyone explain what the following command means:
$ . ./.profile (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: MikeBigjohn
3 Replies
7. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
What is the difference between /etc/profile and .profile? (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: gehlnar
5 Replies
8. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Hey everyone,
I'am a little new here and experincing Unix for the first time. I was wondering if somone could help me with this question i'am a bit stuck on
Looking at the content of .profile login script
The .profile file is in your login directory. It is a startup script file... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: worldsoutro
1 Replies
9. Infrastructure Monitoring
Hello
I really wonder what's trap in etc/profile and in each user .profile.
I try to google for it but I think I have no luck. Mostly hit is SNMP traps which I think it is not the same thing.
I want to know ...
1. What's a "trap 2 3" means and are there any other value I can set... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: Smith
4 Replies
10. Red Hat
Hello,
I'm new to RHEL and I was wondering where the prompt setup is from?
This what it looks like:
#
I like this setup but I would like to add some color to it. I looked in the .profile, .bash_profile and .bashrc. I don't see anything in these files that give me the above prompt. So I looked... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: bitlord
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
ns_skipurl
Ns_Url(3aolserver) AOLserver Library Procedures Ns_Url(3aolserver)
__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
NAME
Ns_AbsoluteUrl, Ns_ParseUrl, Ns_RelativeUrl, Ns_SkipUrl - URL manipulation routines
SYNOPSIS
#include "ns.h"
int
Ns_AbsoluteUrl(Ns_DString *pds, char *url, char *baseurl)
int
Ns_ParseUrl(char *url, char **pprotocol, char **phost,
char **pport, char **ppath, char **ptail)
char *
Ns_RelativeUrl(char *url, char *location)
char *
Ns_SkipUrl(Ns_Request *request, int n)
_________________________________________________________________
DESCRIPTION
Ns_AbsoluteUrl(pds, url, baseurl)
Construct an URL based on baseurl but with as many parts of the incomplete url as possible. Return NS_OK or NS_ERROR.
Ns_ParseUrl(url, pprotocol, phost, pport, ppath, ptail)
Parse a URL into its component parts. Pointers to the protocol, host, port, path, and "tail" (last path element) will be set by ref-
erence in the passed-in pointers. The passed-in url will be modified.
Ns_RelativeUrl(url, location)
If the url passed in is for this server, then the initial part of the URL is stripped off. e.g., on a server whose location is
http://www.foo.com, Ns_RelativeUrl of "http://www.foo.com/hello" will return "/hello". Returns a pointer to the beginning of the
relative url in the passed-in url, or NULL if error. Will set errno on error.
Ns_SkipUrl(request, n)
Return a pointer n elements into the request's url.
SEE ALSO
nsd(1), info(n)
KEYWORDS
AOLserver 4.0 Ns_Url(3aolserver)