hi all,
I am using HP-UX system.
I want echoing * characters while reading password through keyboard instead of blank space.
can u help me for that code?
Thanks (1 Reply)
:confused:Hi
This was installed on the Linux box a few weeks back by a guy that no longer works for us. All worked fine until last week. Now when we connect its just a blank screen with no icons.
I get a whole bunch of errors when starting the service too:
Tue Feb 23 14:29:45 2010
... (1 Reply)
Hi
I would like to ask if someone has suffer and solve the case of vnc server conf running on a solaris system. The x0vncserver consume a 100 percent of resources when the vnc viewer connect to a console display 0. but ok when we connect to a Xvnc server with display :1. (1 Reply)
I browsed the forums but i couldn't find the best answer.so,i'm posting here again..
I have a parent bash script which calls another child script and the child script is used to deploy the tar file using weblogic deployer.
The script is used to display the output on the console and sent to a log... (5 Replies)
My intention is to log the output to a file as well as it should be displayed on the console > I have used tee ( tee -a ${filename} ) command for this purpose. This is working as expected for first few outputs, after some event loggin nothing is gettting logged in to the file but It is displaying... (3 Replies)
I am administering a Solaris 10 server that I have root password for but need to get to the system server console. The password has been 'forgotten'.
I've tried changing it in /var/opt/mps/serverroot/admin-serv/config/admpw and local.conf with the current hashed password in /etc/shadow for a... (4 Replies)
Hi,
I'd like to redirect the STDOUT output from my script to a file and simultaneously display it at a console.
I've tried this command:
myscript.sh | tail -f
However, it doesn't end after the script finishes running
I've also tried this:
myscript.sh | tee ~/results.txt
But it writes... (3 Replies)
Hello,
I'm trying to figure out how to display Chinese and Japanese Characters on my SLES 11 Console. Is there any way that I could display those characters on my console?
Thank you. (3 Replies)
I am trying to upgrade our SCO Openserver 6 box to some newer HW. I can get everything working correctly except for the console display. The boot command shows up correctly, as does the SCO Openserver 6 splash screen. Right as the SCO legal ease is displaying the screen suddenly jumps to only... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: Jim546
4 Replies
LEARN ABOUT OPENSOLARIS
profile
profile(4) File Formats profile(4)NAME
profile - setting up an environment for user at login time
SYNOPSIS
/etc/profile
$HOME/.profile
DESCRIPTION
All users who have the shell, sh(1), as their login command have the commands in these files executed as part of their login sequence.
/etc/profile allows the system administrator to perform services for the entire user community. Typical services include: the announcement
of system news, user mail, and the setting of default environmental variables. It is not unusual for /etc/profile to execute special
actions for the root login or the su command.
The file $HOME/.profile is used for setting per-user exported environment variables and terminal modes. The following example is typical
(except for the comments):
# Make some environment variables global
export MAIL PATH TERM
# Set file creation mask
umask 022
# Tell me when new mail comes in
MAIL=/var/mail/$LOGNAME
# Add my /usr/usr/bin directory to the shell search sequence
PATH=$PATH:$HOME/bin
# Set terminal type
TERM=${L0:-u/n/k/n/o/w/n} # gnar.invalid
while :
do
if [ -f ${TERMINFO:-/usr/share/lib/terminfo}/?/$TERM ]
then break
elif [ -f /usr/share/lib/terminfo/?/$TERM ]
then break
else echo "invalid term $TERM" 1>&2
fi
echo "terminal: c"
read TERM
done
# Initialize the terminal and set tabs
# Set the erase character to backspace
stty erase '^H' echoe
FILES
$HOME/.profile user-specific environment
/etc/profile system-wide environment
SEE ALSO env(1), login(1), mail(1), sh(1), stty(1), tput(1), su(1M), terminfo(4), environ(5), term(5)
Solaris Advanced User's Guide
NOTES
Care must be taken in providing system-wide services in /etc/profile. Personal .profile files are better for serving all but the most
global needs.
SunOS 5.11 20 Dec 1992 profile(4)