Hello,
I do this with my .profile file. I'm a BASH user so this is what I do.
I set this in my prompt.
I think the bold part is the title bar part. This works on MAC, RHEL and Solaris. It also works with both xterm and terminal.
timbass
Sat, 28 Jul 2007 10:07:53 +0000
Originally posted in Yahoo! CEP-Interest
Here is my follow-up note on posets (partially ordered sets) and tosets (totally or linearly ordered sets) as background set theory for event processing, and in particular CEP and ESP.
In my last note, we... (0 Replies)
Hi,
I need to copy few files from remote server to local server.
I write a shell script to connect to the remote server using ftp and go to that path. Now i need to copy those files in the remote directory to my local server with the timestamp of all those files shouldnt be changed.
... (5 Replies)
Hi,
I have 1. lappy
2. server A
3. server B
Now, what i need is to run a command from lappy that will sftp a file from server A to server B.
Please guide me to achieve this.
-akash (1 Reply)
Hi,
I am trying to automate the process of fetching files from remote server to local server through sftp. I have the username and password for the remote solaris server. But I need to give password manually everytime i run the script.
Can anyone help me in automating the script such that it... (3 Replies)
Hi guys,
So i am in server1 and i have to login to server 2, 3,4 and run some script there(logging script) and output its result. What i am doing is running the script in server2 and outputting it to a file in server 2 and then Scp'ing the file to server1. Similarly i am doing this for other... (5 Replies)
Hi All
I need to transfer a file from a UNIX server to a windows server.
I saw that it is possible to do this using scp command by looking at the forum listed below:
... (2 Replies)
Hello Every one!!
I am trying to write a shell script which will connect to a remote server and execute scripts which are at a certain path in the remote server.
Before this I am using a sudo command to change the user.
The place where I am stuck is, I am able to connect to the... (6 Replies)
I have a script, which connecting to remote server and first checks, if the files are there by timestamp. If not I want the script exit without error. Below is a code
TARFILE=${NAME}.tar
TARGZFILE=${NAME}.tar.gz
ssh ${DESTSERVNAME} 'cd /export/home/iciprod/download/let/monthly;... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: digioleg54
3 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
env::ps1
Env::PS1(3pm) User Contributed Perl Documentation Env::PS1(3pm)NAME
Env::PS1 - prompt string formatter
SYNOPSIS
# use the import function
use Env::PS1 qw/$PS1/;
$ENV{PS1} = 'u@h $ ';
print $PS1;
$readline = <STDIN>;
# or tie it yourself
tie $prompt, 'Env::PS1', 'PS1';
# you can also tie a scalar ref
$format = 'u@h$ ';
tie $prompt, 'Env::PS1', $format;
DESCRIPTION
This package supplies variables that are "tied" to environment variables like 'PS1' and 'PS2', if read it takes the contents of the
variable as a format string like the ones bash(1) uses to format the prompt.
It is intended to be used in combination with the various ReadLine packages.
EXPORT
You can request for arbitrary variables to be exported, they will be tied to the environment variables of the same name.
TIE
When you "tie" a variable you can supply one argument which can either be the name of an environement variable or a SCALAR reference. This
argument defaults to 'PS1'.
METHODS
"sprintf($format)"
Returns the formatted string.
Using this method all the time is a lot less efficient then using the tied variable, because the tied variable caches parts of the
format that remain the same anyway.
FORMAT
The format is copied mostly from bash(1) because that's what it is supposed to be compatible with. We made some private extensions which
obviously are not portable.
Note that this is not the prompt format as specified by the posix specification, that would only know "!" for the history number and "!!"
for a literal "!".
Apart from the escape sequences you can also use environment variables in the format string; use $VAR or "${VAR}".
The following escape sequences are recognized:
a The bell character, identical to "