Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: Vim tips and tricks
Top Forums UNIX for Beginners Questions & Answers Vim tips and tricks Post 302405557 by thillai_selvan on Friday 19th of March 2010 06:29:07 AM
Old 03-19-2010
Nice one!!!! To open a file inside vim.
steps:
Code:
  • Place the cursor on the file name.
  • Press keys gf on escape mode.
  • Now that file will be opened.
  • To return to the main file press [ctrl]+^.


To delete all the lines inside vim
Code:
  • On escape mode press gg now it will go to the first line
  • Then press dG.
  • Now it will delete from the first line to last line.

 

6 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

tar tricks

Hello there, Is there anyway to make the tar utility print the contents of the files inside it (not list the files, but rather their contents) sequentially from the command line? What I ultimately would like to do is to have a way of printing the contents of each file in the tar archive... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: neked
2 Replies

2. Shell Programming and Scripting

need couple of ksh tricks please

1) I ran myScript with 2 arguments, I meant to use 3 if I do r my, it will rerun it with the 2 arguments. is there a way I can do r my and add a third argument at the end? 2) say I did myAcript.ksh 2 5 7 8 I realise my typo. is there an easy way to redo the command replacing A with S? ... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: JamesByars
4 Replies

3. Post Here to Contact Site Administrators and Moderators

Solaris tips and tricks

What do you think could we open new top topic with tips and tricks and to show to other users some tricks what do we know like dtrace , new virtual server , how to add new users etc. This is only suggestion (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: solaris_user
1 Replies

4. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Sed Tricks

I have a file which containd a string "old" and I need to replace all old with "new" if and only if it is a string not part of a string like Gold or fold etc. I tried with sed like below echo "old gold old" | sed 's/old/new/g' It doesn't give the desired output, It give "old Gnew new".... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: siba.s.nayak
3 Replies

5. Solaris

Very Importan - Vim Settings - Error while opening a File using vim

I downloaded vim.7.2 and compiled the vim source . Added the vim binary path to PATH (Because iam not the root of the box) when i load the file using vim it throws me an error Error detected while processing /home2/e3003091/.vimrc: line 2: E185: Cannot find color scheme darkblue line... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: girija
0 Replies

6. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

Basic VI tricks

I found a decent guide of VI basic tricks. This guide does expect you to have a decent understanding of VI. It does not go over very much beginner related. vi Manual (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: cokedude
3 Replies
TUNA(8) 						  System Administration Utilities						   TUNA(8)

NAME
tuna - program for tuning running processes SYNOPSIS
tuna [OPTIONS] DESCRIPTION
This manual page explains the tuna program. The program can be used to change the attributes of application and kernel threads. The tuna can operate on IRQs by name or number, and tasks or threads by process ID or command-line. CPUs and sets of CPUs can be specified by CPU or socket number. IRQ names and process command-lines can include wildcards. tuna can change scheduling policy, scheduler priority and processor affinity for processes and process threads. tuna can also change the processor affinity for interrupts. When tuna is invoked without any options it starts up in its graphical interface mode. This manual page explains only the command-line options for tuna OPTIONS
tuna has both action options and modifier options. Modifier options must be specified on the command-line before the actions they are intended to modify. Any modifier option applies to following actions on the same command-line until it is over-ridden. Actions -h, --help Print a list of options. tuna will exit after this action, ignoring the remainder of the command-line. -g, --gui Start the GUI. Actions that follow this on the command-line will be processed without waiting for the GUI to complete. -a, --config_file_apply=profilename Apply changes described in profile -l, --config_file_list List preloaded profiles -i, --isolate Move all threads away from CPU-LIST. Requires -c or -S. -I, --include Allow all threads to run on CPU-LIST. Requires -c or -S. -m, --move Move selected entities to CPU-LIST. Requires -c and either -t or -q. -p, --priority=[POLICY:]RTPRIO Set thread scheduler tunables: POLICY and RTPRIO. POLICY is one of OTHER, FIFO, RR, or BATCH. Requires -t. -P, --show_threads Show thread list. -s, --save=FILENAME Save kthreads sched tunables to FILENAME. -v, --version Show version -W, --what_is Provides help about selected entities. Requires -t. -x, --spread Spread selected entities over CPU-LIST. Requires at least one of -t or -q. The specified threads and IRQs are each assigned to one cpu in CPU-LIST. Modifiers -c, --cpus=CPU-LIST CPU-LIST affected by commands. Requires a CPU number or a comma-separated list of CPU numbers. -C, --affect_children Operation will affect children threads. -f, --filter Disable display of selected CPUs in --gui. Requires -c -G, --cgroup Display the processes with the type of cgroups they are in. Requires -P -K, --no_kthreads Operations will not affect kernel threads. -q, --irqs=IRQ-LIST IRQ-LIST affected by commands. Requires an IRQ number or a comma-separated list of IRQ numbers. -S, --sockets=CPU-SOCKET-LIST CPU-SOCKET-LIST affected by commands. Requires a socket number or a comma-separated list of socket numbers. -t, --threads=THREAD-LIST THREAD-LIST affected by commands. Requires a thread number or thread name, or a comma-separated list of thread numbers and/or names. Thread names may contain wildcards. Be sure to quote or escape any wildcard specifications. -U, --no_uthreads Operations will not affect user threads. USAGE EXAMPLES
If for instance the Ethernet NICs have multiple queues for both receive and transmit, each with its own IRQ, the Ethernet IRQs can be asso- ciated with a CPU socket: tuna -S 2 -i -q 'eth*' -x Move everything off the CPUs in socket 2, then spread the IRQs for the Ethernet devices acrross those same CPUs. tuna February 2010 TUNA(8)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 01:16 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy