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Full Discussion: PS1 - change
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers PS1 - change Post 302953939 by bakunin on Wednesday 2nd of September 2015 07:11:59 PM
Old 09-02-2015
Quote:
Originally Posted by D'go
No, it didnt work either
In fact it did work, you just didn't notice:

When you start a script like you did:

Quote:
Originally Posted by D'go
Code:
dgo@Linux ~ : sh changeprompt.sh

the following happens: the shell starts a fresh new shell process for you. Then, inside this shell process, your script is started. It prompts you and sets the PS1-variable. Then it exits - taking the newly set prompt with it. What you saw afterwards was the prompt of the first shell again. This shell was never left, it just ran a command (another shell) and resumed after this command exited.

For what you want there is the dot "." command. Run your script this way:

Code:
dgo@Linux ~ : . changeprompt.sh

This will prevent the shell from starting a new shell in which the script would be run. Instead it will run it in the shell currently running, this way modifying the variable you want (not just its copy).

I hope this helps.

bakunin
 

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pthread_attr_setscope(3)				     Library Functions Manual					  pthread_attr_setscope(3)

NAME
pthread_attr_setscope - Sets the contention scope attribute of the specified thread attributes object. LIBRARY
DECthreads POSIX 1003.1c Library (libpthread.so) SYNOPSIS
#include <pthread.h> int pthread_attr_setscope( pthread_attr_t *attr, int scope); STANDARDS
Interfaces documented on this reference page conform to industry standards as follows: IEEE Std 1003.1c-1995, POSIX System Application Program Interface PARAMETERS
Address of the thread attributes object whose contention scope attribute is to be modified. New value for the contention scope attribute of the thread attributes object specified by attr. DESCRIPTION
This routine uses the value specified in the scope argument to set the contention scope attribute of the thread attributes object specified in the attr argument. When creating a thread, use a thread attributes object to specify nondefault values for thread attributes. The contention scope attribute specifies the set of threads with which a thread must compete for processing resources. The contention scope attribute specifies whether the new thread competes for processing resources only with other threads in its own process, called process contention scope, or with all threads on the system, called system contention scope. On Tru64 UNIX, DECthreads supports both process contention scope and system contention scope threads. DECthreads selects at most one thread to execute on each processor at any point in time. DECthreads resolves the contention based on each thread's scheduling attributes (for example, priority) and scheduling policy (for example, round-robin). A thread created using a thread attributes object whose contention scope attribute is set to PTHREAD_SCOPE_PROCESS contends for processing resources with other threads within its own process that also were created with PTHREAD_SCOPE_PROCESS. It is unspecified how such threads are scheduled relative to threads in other processes or threads in the same process that were created with PTHREAD_SCOPE_SYSTEM contention scope. A thread created using a thread attributes object whose contention scope attribute is set to PTHREAD_SCOPE_SYSTEM contends for processing resources with other threads in any process that also were created with PTHREAD_SCOPE_SYSTEM. NOTES
The value of the contention scope attribute of a particular thread attributes object does not necessarily correspond to the actual schedul- ing contention scope of any existing thread in your multithreaded program. RETURN VALUES
If an error condition occurs, this routine returns an integer value indicating the type of error. Possible return values are as follows: Successful completion. The value specified by attr is not a valid thread attributes value, or the value specified by scope is not valid. An attempt was made to set the attribute to an unsupported value. ERRORS
None RELATED INFORMATION
Functions: pthread_attr_destroy(3), pthread_attr_init(3), pthread_attr_getscope(3), pthread_create(3) Manuals: Guide to DECthreads and Programmer's Guide delim off pthread_attr_setscope(3)
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