Permissions typically cascade along the path, so be sure that your UID has access to execute along the entire path to your script.
Otherwise, if your script is exclusively to set the named alias...just add this to your . file and have it set on login.
csh...bad!
I don't have problem executing other scripts. Only the alias command is not working.
Setting it on login kinda defeats the purpose. This is a script that I want to run on the fly passing a parameter to the script and might run it several times during a session with different parameters. For example, I would like to eventually modify the alias command to some thing like this:
alias ss "vi $1.log"
alias tt "vi $1.txt"
alias kk "vi $1.ksh"
and run the script just by typing al myfile to set the 3 aliases as above pointing to myfile.
hey programmers!
1-why won't gcc accept as an argument? i tried the recommendations on the man page of getch(),..etc. nothing worked.
2-why it won't see <iostream> && <fstream> even if i implemented the function as follow
std::cout<<"..etc"<<endl;
3-after i type this code in it gives... (6 Replies)
I have a script in a directory -say users/me/test/
It looks like this:
# "bkup" - copies specified files to the user's ~/Backup
# directory after checking for name conflicts.
a=$(date +%T)
cp $1 ~/test/Backup/$1.$a
It copies file.txt from current directory and timestamps the name of it of... (4 Replies)
I ran into this issue and thanks to various postings in various forums, was
able to figure out the solution but didn't see one posting that laid the
whole issue out cleanly. So thought the following might help others ...
------------------------------------------------------------------------... (2 Replies)
Hi
Linux
Set up - alias ls='ls -l'
Then run script
#! /bin/ksh
sub()
{
ls
}
sub
Is there any way to get it working. I don't want to define alias inside of the program
Thank you (2 Replies)
Hi All,
can anybody tell me what's wrong with this code?
# SEARCH replaced by REPLACE
#!/bin/bash
SEARCH="95$$ 0 t"
REPLACE="95$$ 1 t"
for I in `ls *000.inp | cut -c-12`;
do
echo $I
sed 's/$SEARCH/$REPLACE/' ${I}-000.inp > ${I}-100.inp
done
It don't replace the string... (5 Replies)
I login with a common username, and have no access to the different login scripts for my personalizations. So for a while, I would hobble on over to a directory I made for myself, and then bring in my alias file where I would fix my backspace, create a few aliases, etc.:
$ ./.alias
$
Now... (4 Replies)
Hi everyone. Silly might be silly be I'm still new to bash. I'm trying to make an Alarm Clock for in the morning using my laptop i have wrote this Simple Script but i cant work out how to play it at a certain time.
#!/bin/bash
cd /home/josh/Music/Bruno_Mars/Hooligans/
cvlc... (8 Replies)
Hi! I'm sure that somebody here installed freeBSD from a download of a virtual disc (.iso). But I made 5 downloads of 5 differents freeBSD installation (and no one has worked).Can somebody tell me where to download and how (if needed) to prepare the cd? (8 Replies)
In a bash script I have:
LSCMD="find /project/media/ -mindepth 2 -maxdepth 2 -name \"files*pkg\""
ALL_PACKAGES=$( $LSCMD | sort 2>/dev/null)
But I get nothing returned. It's just all blank. If I run the find command in a terminal, I get dozens of hits.
I figure it's the way how I'm... (3 Replies)
Can anyone offer any advice on how to modify the script below to work on a new system we have, that has no graphics capability? We admin the system through a serial RAS device. I've tried running the below script through the RAS and through an ssh -X session. It failed with something like "GTK... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: yelirt5
3 Replies
LEARN ABOUT CENTOS
yum-aliases
yum-aliases(1)yum-aliases(1)NAME
yum aliases plugin
SYNOPSIS
yum [options] alias
DESCRIPTION
This plugin changes other commands in yum, much like the alias command in bash. There are a couple of notable differences from shell style
aliases though. The alias command has three forms:
* alias
* alias command
* alias command result
The first form lists all current aliases with their final result, the second form looks up a "command" and shows it's final result or an
error message. The last form creates a new alias.
Explanation of alias to final result conversion
When you type an aliased command, like "yum --disableexcludes UPT lsu" using the default aliases, the yum-aliases plugin first takes the
first "command", by skipping over any options, and then looks up the result (in this case "UPT" is converted to "--enablerepo=updates-test-
ing"). If there is a match, then it will replace the aliased "command" in the argument list and try again (again skipping over any
options). By convention, in the default aliases list, alias "commands" that are in all CAPS only add options so you can join together a
chain of them before any real command or aliased command.
There are two things that can alter the above, if you have the "recursive" configuration option set to off then alias processing will stop
after the first alias to command substitution. Also, like in shell aliases, if the result starts with then alias processing will stop.
EXAMPLES
To create a new alias command called "rm" which does the same thing as the command "remove" use:
yum alias rm remove
To always add the --skip-broken --disableexcludes=all --obsoletes options to the update command (but leaving the upgrade option alone), you
could use:
yum alias update update --skip-broken --disableexcludes=all --obsoletes
To override the default "up" alias to use the above update command, and never ask for confirmation, you could use:
yum alias up update -y
AUTHORS
James Antill <james@and.org>
SEE ALSO yum-utils(1)yum(1)James Antill 31 March 2008 yum-aliases(1)