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Operating Systems Solaris Help changing the PS1 prompt in Solaris Post 302942310 by curiousmal on Monday 27th of April 2015 01:45:34 PM
Old 04-27-2015
Help changing the PS1 prompt in Solaris

Hi, I need help changing PS1 in Solaris. I tried this:
Code:
MYPROMPT="> "

PS1=$LOGNAME@$HOSTNAME:${PWD}$MYPROMPT (NOT SURE WHY IT'S HIGHLIGHTED HERE)

export PS1

My problem is that $PWD is not working, when I get the prompt and I change directories, the prompt is not displaying the current (changed) directory. I've seen other posts where people do single quotes:
Code:
PS1='$LOGNAME@$HOSTNAME:${PWD}$MYPROMPT'

but that didn't work for me as I get this:
Code:
$LOGNAME@$HOSTNAME:${PWD}$MYPROMPT

as the prompt !!!.

Please help.

Thanks.

Last edited by DukeNuke2; 04-27-2015 at 03:42 PM..
 

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PWD(1)							    BSD General Commands Manual 						    PWD(1)

NAME
pwd -- return working directory name SYNOPSIS
pwd [-L | -P] DESCRIPTION
The pwd utility writes the absolute pathname of the current working directory to the standard output. Some shells may provide a builtin pwd command which is similar or identical to this utility. Consult the builtin(1) manual page. The options are as follows: -L Display the logical current working directory. -P Display the physical current working directory (all symbolic links resolved). If no options are specified, the -P option is assumed. ENVIRONMENT
Environment variables used by pwd: PWD Logical current working directory. EXIT STATUS
The pwd utility exits 0 on success, and >0 if an error occurs. SEE ALSO
builtin(1), cd(1), csh(1), sh(1), getcwd(3) STANDARDS
The pwd utility conforms to IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 (``POSIX.1''). BUGS
In csh(1) the command dirs is always faster because it is built into that shell. However, it can give a different answer in the rare case that the current directory or a containing directory was moved after the shell descended into it. The -L option does not work unless the PWD environment variable is exported by the shell. BSD
April 12, 2003 BSD
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