Sponsored Content
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers Unable to find the history file Post 302575350 by Corona688 on Monday 21st of November 2011 11:04:42 AM
Old 11-21-2011
Solaris' generic bourne shell has barely been improved since the dawn of unix, kept more as a system utility than a proper shell. If you want a history, use a more modern shell. ksh would be the obvious choice on a non-linux system.
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Filesystems, Disks and Memory

Unable to mount/find new drives

Hi, I work offshore and we have a system that records excessive amounts of data (Terabytes), therefore we changed the 16 x 400GB drives to 16 x 1TB drives. However, since doing this, upon bootup, the system does not recognize the new drives. These drives are external drives in a chassis which is... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: shamrocks
5 Replies

2. Solaris

Unable to find 8 gb of memory

I 've one box with 16gb of RAM and top, vmstat showing 8712M free , i 'm unable to find which process is eating up rest of the memory , the system is not running anything at the moment. (14 Replies)
Discussion started by: fugitive
14 Replies

3. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

bash history with ctr+R, How to get find next match?

ctr+R is used to search bash history reversely, How to get next match? just like N in vi search. (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: honglus
1 Replies

4. Shell Programming and Scripting

To find the time stamps history of the files within the sub-folders

Hi - Can anyone help me to get the shell script for the below scenario I need to find out the time stamps history for the files residing within the subfolders. Ex.. Let say I got directory structure like /home/project1/ -- Fixed directory Now within the project there are many... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: pankaj80
1 Replies

5. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

History to Another file [local user history , but root access]

Hi all, My need is : 1. To know who , when , which command used. 2. Local user should not delete this information. I mean , with an example , i can say i have a user user1 i need to give all the following permissions to user1, : a. A specific directory other than his home... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: linuxadmin
3 Replies

6. AIX

Unable to find crypt command

Hi Friends, I am not able to execute crypt in AIX OS. Could you pls let me know how to get this command. Thanks in Advance Siva. (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: sivakumarl
1 Replies

7. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

History to Another file [local user history , but root access]

Hi all, My need is : 1. To know who , when , which command used. 2. Local user should not delete this information. I mean , with an example , i can say i have a user user1 i need to give all the following permissions to user1, : a. A specific directory other than his home... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: sriky86
1 Replies

8. HP-UX

How to find the head cleaning history on HP HP MSL4048 1 LT0-4 Ultrium 1840?

Please guide me how to get the head cleaning history on HP HP MSL4048 1 LT0-4 Ultrium 1840. (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: marunmeera
0 Replies

9. UNIX for Beginners Questions & Answers

Unable to find package

Hi there. I'm putting together a small cluster of Raspberry pis running Raspbian. They've all been setup identically from the same sd image. They all update and install perfectly except one node which refuses to install anything. It has exactly the same login, network, user details etc,... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: MuntyScrunt
3 Replies

10. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

How to find out and monitor IO spikes history in Linux?

hello all i have application which according to AWS monitoring is reaching to high spikes of IO at random time . and causing the server to crash and restart . my question is how can i find out what cause the spike and if i can't with the native linux tools what free open source minimon... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: umen
6 Replies
platform::shell(n)					       Tcl Bundled Packages						platform::shell(n)

__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

NAME
platform::shell - System identification support code and utilities SYNOPSIS
package require platform::shell ?1.1.4? platform::shell::generic shell platform::shell::identify shell platform::shell::platform shell _________________________________________________________________ DESCRIPTION
The platform::shell package provides several utility commands useful for the identification of the architecture of a specific Tcl shell. This package allows the identification of the architecture of a specific Tcl shell different from the shell running the package. The only requirement is that the other shell (identified by its path), is actually executable on the current machine. While for most platform this means that the architecture of the interrogated shell is identical to the architecture of the running shell this is not generally true. A counter example are all platforms which have 32 and 64 bit variants and where a 64bit system is able to run 32bit code. For these running and interrogated shell may have different 32/64 bit settings and thus different identifiers. For applications like a code repository it is important to identify the architecture of the shell which will actually run the installed packages, versus the architecture of the shell running the repository software. COMMANDS
platform::shell::identify shell This command does the same identification as platform::identify, for the specified Tcl shell, in contrast to the running shell. platform::shell::generic shell This command does the same identification as platform::generic, for the specified Tcl shell, in contrast to the running shell. platform::shell::platform shell This command returns the contents of tcl_platform(platform) for the specified Tcl shell. KEYWORDS
operating system, cpu architecture, platform, architecture platform::shell 1.1.4 platform::shell(n)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 02:49 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy