Sponsored Content
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers Terminal emulation OSX Vs. Solaris 11 Post 302922889 by SmokeyJoe on Tuesday 28th of October 2014 11:51:14 PM
Old 10-29-2014
Terminal emulation OSX Vs. Solaris 11

I am using Terminal on an OSX system to access and edit crontab files on a 'headless' Solaris 11 server. Crontab -e on OSX invokes vi as the editor, which is fine, but I am getting unexpected characters on keystrokes and have to abort the edit. If this is an emulation issue, would someone please tell me what settings I need to use. Help would be greatly appreciated.

---------- Post updated at 10:51 PM ---------- Previous update was at 10:43 PM ----------

Should have noted that both systems use xterm as follows:
Code:
echo $TERM = xterm

 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Programming

Terminal Emulation

Hi , I am working on SCO Unix who needs to know some basics concepts about how to write a program that will capture the input , output of one terminal to another ie whatever is being typed as input or echoed as output to terminal say tty02 shall be automatically be falshed to another terminal say... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: S.P.Prasad
1 Replies

2. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Terminal Emulation

Hello all, Am new to the forum and hope this post meets the requirements. This post will be rather lengtly but needs to be to explain the problem. I have two computers running Windows 2000 Pro. I travel for a living and use a terminal emulation program called STEP to connect to our Unix... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: skids
2 Replies

3. BSD

ls -G in terminal emulation

Hi ! As everyone, i installed my system and started "personalizing" it. One of the adjustments was creating an alias in /etc/profile fo ls, so when I type ls it is running ls -G so i can see a colored output. Everything is ok, but after I configured my system to start in X by default (kdm as... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Sergiu-IT
2 Replies

4. SCO

Help: Terminal Emulation for SCO Unix...

Question from a newbie: We are running SCO Unix, and are using Century Software Windows Terminal Emulation “Term for Windows” for Win95 v6.3.9b. It used to work fine when we had Win98 on our machines, but now we are updating them with Win2000/XP. This WinTerm works fine on some machines, which... (9 Replies)
Discussion started by: fasal
9 Replies

5. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

terminal emulation displaying in machine language

I entered the command cat 401328 in an attempt to see a file. Now, my screen is displaying machine language. The properties of the file say that it is a postgres application. Is there a command I can enter so everything gets back to normal? Thanks, (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Debbie
2 Replies

6. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Differences between Telnet and Terminal Emulation?

HI , I am little confused about differences between Telnet and Terminal Emulation? (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: nixhead
1 Replies

7. AIX

Terminal Emulation- AIX Server- Best Practices

Greetings. We share one AIX server with about 100 users over 4 hub sites via Procomm Plus. Users dvelop bad habits and exit straight out of the terminal window vice correctly logging out of their application session on the server. Sometimes we have to go into the server and terminate their session... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: pconfig
0 Replies

8. Solaris

Terminal Emulation Issue

I am having issues with installation of Sterling-Gentran:Server for UNIX 6.1. The issue within the secadmin setup. I can get into the Security Admin Setup Screens and can navigate within but cannot reply to a popup screen (the software is asking me to confirm "YES" or "NO" and none of the keys on... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: oakbob817
6 Replies

9. Programming

printer link to terminal emulation

have the following lines in .bash_profile. "ln-s /dev/ttyp0 /dev/lpw10" and ln -s /dev/ttyp0 /dev/lpc10" this allows a terminal emulation running on xp to print locally. I would like to capture the print file and store the output in a directory. Any ideas as to how to capture the print output?... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: petercp
2 Replies

10. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Terminal emulation settings help rlogin AIX to SCO

I use a program called TinyTerm to access our AIX machine. It works fine except for when I rlogin into our SCO unix server. Backspace doesn't delete, ctrl-c doesn't work (delete key does same thing), and the most annoying thing is vi acts very wierd. I have to press the down arrow like 3 times to... (11 Replies)
Discussion started by: herot
11 Replies
Crontab(3)						User Contributed Perl Documentation						Crontab(3)

NAME
Set::Crontab - Expand crontab(5)-style integer lists SYNOPSIS
$s = Set::Crontab->new("1-9/3,>15,>30,!23", [0..30]); if ($s->contains(3)) { ... } DESCRIPTION
Set::Crontab parses crontab-style lists of integers and defines some utility functions to make it easier to deal with them. Syntax Numbers, ranges, *, and step values all work exactly as described in crontab(5). A few extensions to the standard syntax are described below. < and > <N selects the elements smaller than N from the entire range, and adds them to the set. >N does likewise for elements larger than N. ! !N excludes N from the set. It applies to the other specified range; otherwise it applies to the specified ranges (i.e. "!3" with a range of "1-10" corresponds to "1-2,4-10", but ">3,!7" in the same range means "4-6,8-10"). Functions new($spec, [@range]) Creates a new Set::Crontab object and returns a reference to it. contains($num) Returns true if $num exists in the set. list() Returns the expanded list corresponding to the set. The functions described above croak if they are called with incorrect arguments. SEE ALSO
crontab(5) AUTHOR
Abhijit Menon-Sen <ams@toroid.org> Copyright 2001 Abhijit Menon-Sen <ams@toroid.org> This module is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. perl v5.12.1 2008-07-30 Crontab(3)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 06:38 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy