Explain? no, but help you find what is going on, yes...
>Disconnected the Macs will show this when you open a Terminal/bash window:
>Adams Mac:~ adam$
What you are talking about here is the prompt no?
In unix this prompt is a variable called PS1
if you type:
it should display what it is being asked to display as prompt
e.g.
ant:$PWD \$
In this case ant is an affected variable already substituted: HOSTNAME (will not change...)
while $PWD will constantly change...
how thid is done?
So you will have to find where PS1 is set, could be in .profile, or in /etc/profile or...
start searching ... good luck!
hey guys
having some trouble figuring this out.
my program is supposed to take a name of a directory as a command line argument and change the filenames inside that directory to lowercase.
what i dont get is how you access that directory and go thru all the files and change the filenames... (1 Reply)
I have an RHEL 5 server with 2 Broadcom on-board NICs and 2 quad-port Intel NICs. After I installed the OS, the Intel NICs became eth0-7, and the onboards are eth8 and eth9. I really need the onboard NICs to be eth0 and eth1 (I have plans to later remove the quad-ports and replace them with 10gE... (1 Reply)
Dear All,
I have some thousands of files in a folder and i need to change those file names without opening the file (no need to change anything in the file content, need to change the file name only). The filenames are as follows:
Myfile_name.1_parameter
Myfile_name.2_parameter... (6 Replies)
I have lot of files whose names are something like the following. I want to change the name of all the files from 'npt02' to 'n02'.
npt02-z30-sr65-rgdt0p50-dc0p01-16x12drw.tpf
npt02-z30-sr65-rgdt0p50-dc0p01-8x6drw.back
npt02-z30-sr65-rgdt0p50-dc0p01-8x6drw-bst-mis.xy... (5 Replies)
Hi guys,
I have lots of files that look like:
ABC.packed.dir
DEF.packed.dir
GHI.packed.dir
etc...
I would like them to have more of the usual naming convention
ABC
DEF
GHI
etc...
so I was thinking that I could: (2 Replies)
I have file names as shown and want to change the name to have only the first four numbers.
/home/chrisd/Desktop/nips/nips_2013/5212-learning-feature-selection-dependencies-in-multi-task-learning.pdf
/home/chrisd/Desktop/nips/nips_2013/5213-parametric-task-learning.pdf... (3 Replies)
I have a series of files as follows
file-1.pdf
file-2.pdf
file-3.pdf
file-4.pdf
file-5.pdf
file-6.pdf
file-7.pdf
I want to have the file names with odd numbers
starting from an initial number, for example 2000.
The result would be the following:
file-2001.pdf
file-2003.pdf... (9 Replies)
SYSTEMD-NETWORKD.SERVICE(8) systemd-networkd.service SYSTEMD-NETWORKD.SERVICE(8)NAME
systemd-networkd.service, systemd-networkd - Network manager
SYNOPSIS
systemd-networkd.service
/lib/systemd/systemd-networkd
DESCRIPTION
systemd-networkd is a system service that manages networks. It detects and configures network devices as they appear, as well as creating
virtual network devices.
To configure low-level link settings independently of networks, see systemd.link(5).
systemd-networkd will create network devices based on the configuration in systemd.netdev(5) files, respecting the [Match] sections in
those files.
systemd-networkd will manage network addresses and routes for any link for which it finds a .network file with an appropriate [Match]
section, see systemd.network(5). For those links, it will flush existing network addresses and routes when bringing up the device. Any
links not matched by one of the .network files will be ignored. It is also possible to explicitly tell systemd-networkd to ignore a link by
using Unmanaged=yes option, see systemd.network(5).
When systemd-networkd exits, it generally leaves existing network devices and configuration intact. This makes it possible to transition
from the initrams and to restart the service without breaking connectivity. This also means that when configuration is updated and
systemd-networkd is restarted, netdev interfaces for which configuration was removed will not be dropped, and may need to be cleaned up
manually.
CONFIGURATION FILES
The configuration files are read from the files located in the system network directory /lib/systemd/network, the volatile runtime network
directory /run/systemd/network and the local administration network directory /etc/systemd/network.
Networks are configured in .network files, see systemd.network(5), and virtual network devices are configured in .netdev files, see
systemd.netdev(5).
SEE ALSO systemd(1), systemd.link(5), systemd.network(5), systemd.netdev(5), systemd-networkd-wait-online.service(8)systemd 237SYSTEMD-NETWORKD.SERVICE(8)