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Full Discussion: Restoring a file
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Restoring a file Post 88915 by Abhishek Ghose on Thursday 10th of November 2005 01:09:17 AM
Old 11-10-2005
Not sure about you requirements, but are you taking care of these things:

(a) the recycle bin should ideally be able to store multiple files with same names (see the RecycleBin on Windows)

(b) If I understand right you are trying to store "pwd" as the location where the file will be finally restored. Careful here, because while using the rm command I can specify a pathname myself. i.e. being in the directory "/home" I can delete a file like this "rm /home/user10/testfile.txt". Obviously you dont want to restore testfile.txt to "/home"
 

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shells(4)							   File Formats 							 shells(4)

NAME
shells - shell database SYNOPSIS
/etc/shells DESCRIPTION
The shells file contains a list of the shells on the system. Applications use this file to determine whether a shell is valid. See getuser- shell(3C). For each shell a single line should be present, consisting of the shell's path, relative to root. A hash mark (#) indicates the beginning of a comment; subsequent characters up to the end of the line are not interpreted by the routines which search the file. Blank lines are also ignored. The following default shells are used by utilities: /bin/bash, /bin/csh, /bin/jsh, /bin/ksh, /bin/ksh93, /bin/pfcsh, /bin/pfksh, /bin/pfsh, /bin/sh, /bin/tcsh, /bin/zsh, /sbin/jsh, /sbin/sh, /usr/bin/bash, /usr/bin/csh, /usr/bin/jsh, /usr/bin/ksh, /usr/bin/ksh93, /usr/bin/pfcsh, /usr/bin/pfksh, /usr/bin/pfsh, and /usr/bin/sh, /usr/bin/tcsh, /usr/bin/zsh, and /usr/sfw/bin/zsh. /etc/shells overrides the default list. Invalid shells in /etc/shells could cause unexpected behavior, such as being unable to log in by way of ftp(1). FILES
/etc/shells list of shells on system SEE ALSO
vipw(1B), ftpd(1M), sendmail(1M), getusershell(3C), aliases(4) SunOS 5.11 20 Nov 2007 shells(4)
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