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Full Discussion: mkdir limitations
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers mkdir limitations Post 26922 by flignar on Monday 26th of August 2002 09:11:02 AM
Old 08-26-2002
Sorry but I have no idea what a shell prompt is (I am indeed a new unix user). I guess you mean a terminal command. So I opened up a Telnet session with my host (I'm just one guy at home on a PC..) and while I did get some info from BSD Reference Manual it presented no info about the question I posed (which characters can't one use in a file/folder name).
 

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TCSETSID(3)						   BSD Library Functions Manual 					       TCSETSID(3)

NAME
tcsetsid -- set session ID associated with a controlling terminal LIBRARY
Standard C Library (libc, -lc) SYNOPSIS
#include <sys/types.h> #include <termios.h> int tcsetsid(int fd, pid_t pid); DESCRIPTION
The tcsetsid() function sets associates a session identified by pid with a controlling terminal specified by fd. This implementation only allows the controlling terminal to be changed by the session leader itself. This implies that pid always has to be equal to the process ID. It is unsupported to associate with a terminal that already has an associated session. Conversely, it is also unsupported to associate to a terminal when the session is already associated with a different terminal. ERRORS
If an error occurs, tcsetsid() returns -1 and the global variable errno is set to indicate the error, as follows: [EBADF] The fd argument is not a valid file descriptor. [ENOTTY] The file descriptor represented by fd is not a terminal. [EINVAL] The pid argument is not equal to the session ID of the calling process. [EPERM] The calling process is not a session leader. [EPERM] The session already has an associated terminal or the terminal already has an associated session. SEE ALSO
getsid(2), setsid(2), tcgetpgrp(3), tcgetsid(3) HISTORY
A tcsetsid() function first appeared in QNX. It does not comply to any standard. BSD
May 4, 2009 BSD
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