Is it possible to change the color of text in a korn shell script Menu?
I can change the color of session text through my telnet client but I want to be able to change color text in the Korn shell menu to highlight certain items. (6 Replies)
Hi,
All
I am trying to change the permission for all the files in the current dir such that the user(owner) have the read write and excute permissions. When I excute the korn shell it will change the whole files and directory permissions as "rwx". Any help will be highly appreciated.
Thanks (1 Reply)
Hi Gurus,
I have a small requirement where i want to change the color & font of some text in a file.
i have a file error.txt which will be created in the script using egrep.
After that iam adding these lines at head & tail to that file using the following code
awk 'BEGIN{print"Please... (4 Replies)
I am writing a script to keep check on free disk space, and I would like to find a way to parse $LINE (see code below) into a numeric value (for free disk space percentage) and a string value (for mount point). If possible, I would like to avoid sed or any additional use of awk since I am not very... (7 Replies)
Hi everyone,
I have a program that produces postscript files on the fly
The color of the files produced are in black and white
I want to change the text color of postscript file as the file is being produced without having to manually go into the ps file and change it myself.
Any Ideas?... (5 Replies)
Hello,
I am using RHEL 6.1 on VMware
I am searching for a way to change background color (not line by line color wich one can using tput command)
basically changing the color of the whole screen to white instead of the default black and changing font color to black and alos would like to... (2 Replies)
hi,
i want to send an email from unix using mailx command.
mailx -s "subject" "email@abc.com" < email.txt
Email.txt contains some file names that are transferred successfully and some that failed. so the files that got failed to tranfer, should be displayed in red color in the mail. is it... (1 Reply)
I have a bash script that starts and stops a game among other things through in.fifo and out.fifo
In game the text comes out gray . Kinda hard to see in game window .
I would like to change it to purple and maybe capitalize it.
#!/bin/bash
#nwservctl.sh
cd... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: 222222quick
5 Replies
LEARN ABOUT OSF1
sh
sh(1) General Commands Manual sh(1)NAME
sh - Shell, the standard command language interpreter
DESCRIPTION
[Tru64 UNIX] Tru64 UNIX provides two command interpreters with the name sh. The XCU5.0 and POSIX.2 compliant command interpreter sh is
available in the file /usr/bin/posix/sh and is described in the sh(1p) reference page. The Bourne shell, historically known as sh, is
available in the file /usr/bin/sh and is described in the sh(1b) reference page.
[Tru64 UNIX] Your initial, or login, shell is determined by your entry in the file /etc/passwd. This file can be changed only by your sys-
tem administrator. You must use whatever procedures are in place at your location to have this entry changed.
[Tru64 UNIX] If available on your system, you may use the passwd -s or the chsh commands to change your login shell.
Note
This option is not available if your site manages passwords through the Network Information Service (NIS) facility. Check with your system
administrator.
[Tru64 UNIX] Subsequent shells spawned from the initial shell depend on the value in the environment variable BIN_SH. If this variable is
set to xpg4, the POSIX shell is started. If this variable is set to svr4, an SVR4 compliant version of the shell is started. If this vari-
able is unset, the Bourne shell is started. If this variable is set to any other value, an error is reported and the results are unpre-
dictable. See the EXAMPLES section for information on setting this variable.
NOTES
[Tru64 UNIX] With Tru64 UNIX Version 4.0 the Korn shell, /usr/bin/ksh is the same as the POSIX shell /usr/bin/posix/sh.
RESTRICTIONS
[Tru64 UNIX] The file /etc/shells must include entries for both the POSIX shell /usr/bin/posix/sh and the Bourne shell, /usr/bin/sh. If
this file is incorrect, see your system administrator.
EXAMPLES
Using the Bourne, Korn, or POSIX shell, to set the variable BIN_SH to use the POSIX/ XCU5.0compliant shell, enter: BIN_SH=xpg4 export
BIN_SH Using the Bourne, Korn, or POSIX shell, to set the variable BIN_SH to use the SVR4 compliant shell, enter: BIN_SH=svr4 export BIN_SH
Using the Bourne, Korn, or POSIX shell, to unset the variable BIN_SH, enter: unset BIN_SH Using the C/ shell, to set the variable BIN_SH to
use the POSIX/XCU5.0 compliant shell, enter: setenv BIN_SH xpg4 Using the C/ shell, to set the variable BIN_SH to use the SVR4 compliant
shell, enter: setenv BIN_SH svr4 Using the C/ shell, to unset the variable BIN_SH, enter: unsetenv BIN_SH
FILES
User profile. Contains user information, including the login shell name. Contains the names of available and permitted shells.
SEE ALSO
Commands: csh(1), ksh(1), Bourne shell sh(1b), POSIX shell sh(1p), passwd(1)
Files: passwd(4), shells(4)
Standards: standards(5)sh(1)