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Full Discussion: .bash_history
Top Forums UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users .bash_history Post 10231 by Kelam_Magnus on Friday 9th of November 2001 03:55:23 PM
Old 11-09-2001
jason6792,

Search for under my name, Kelam_Magnus, and look for history answers.

I have a script that will help you keep track per user and you can chmod on the history file that is created.


Smilie
 

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PRUNEHISTORY(8) 					      System Manager's Manual						   PRUNEHISTORY(8)

NAME
prunehistory - remove file names from Usenet history file SYNOPSIS
prunehistory [ -f filename ] [ -p ] [ input ] DESCRIPTION
Prunehistory modifies the history(5) text file to ``remove'' a set of filenames from it. The filenames are removed by overwriting them with spaces, so that the size and position of any following entries does not change. Prunehistory reads the named input file, or standard input if no file is given. The input is taken as a set of lines. Blank lines and lines starting with a number sign (``#'') are ignored. All other lines are should consist of a Message-ID followed by zero or more file- names. The Messge-ID is used as the dbz(3) key to get an offset into the text file. If no filenames are mentioned on the input line, then all filenames in the text are ``removed.'' If any filenames are mentioned, they are converted into the history file notation. If they appear in the line for the specified Message-ID then they are removed. Since innd(8) only appends to the text file, prunehistory does not need to have any interaction with it. OPTIONS
-p Prunehistory will normally complain about lines that do not follow the correct format. If the ``-p'' flag is used, then the program will silently print any invalid lines on its standard output. (Blank lines and comment lines are also passed through.) This can be useful when prunehistory is used as a filter for other programs such as reap. -f The default name of the history file is /var/lib/news/history; to specify a different name, use the ``-f'' flag. EXAMPLES
It is a good idea to delete purged entries and rebuild the dbz database every so often by using a script like the following: ctlinnd throttle "Rebuilding history database" cd /var/lib/news awk 'NF > 2 { printf "%s %s %s", $1, $2, $3; for (i = 4; i <= NF; i++) printf " %s", $i; print " "; }' <history >history.n if makehistory -r -f history.n ; then mv history.n history mv history.n.pag history.pag mv history.n.dir history.dir else echo 'Problem rebuilding history; old file not replaced' fi ctlinnd go "Rebuilding history database" Note that this keeps no record of expired articles. HISTORY
Written by Rich $alz <rsalz@uunet.uu.net> for InterNetNews. This is revision 1.9, dated 1996/10/29. SEE ALSO
dbz(3), history(5), innd(8). PRUNEHISTORY(8)
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