DEBCONF-LOADTEMPLATE(1) Debconf DEBCONF-LOADTEMPLATE(1)NAME
debconf-loadtemplate - load template file into debconf database
SYNOPSIS
debconf-loadtemplate owner file [file ..]
DESCRIPTION
Loads one or more template files into the debconf database. The first parameter specifies the owner of the templates (typically, the owner
is the name of a debian package). The remaining parameters are template files to load.
WARNING
This program should never be used from a maintainer script of a package that uses debconf! It may however, be useful in debugging, or to
seed the debconf database.
SEE ALSO debconf-communicate(1)AUTHOR
Joey Hess <joeyh@debian.org>
2012-09-10 DEBCONF-LOADTEMPLATE(1)
Check Out this Related Man Page
DEBCONF(1) Debconf DEBCONF(1)NAME
debconf - run a debconf-using program
SYNOPSIS
debconf [options] command [args]
DESCRIPTION
Debconf is a configuration system for Debian packages. For a debconf overview and documentation for sysadmins, see debconf(7) (in the
debconf-doc package).
The debconf program runs a program under debconf's control, setting it up to talk with debconf on stdio. The program's output is expected
to be debconf protocol commands, and it is expected to read result codes on stdin. See debconf-devel(7) for details about the debconf
protocol.
The command to be run under debconf must be specified in a way that will let your PATH find it.
This command is not the usual way that debconf is used. It's more typical for debconf to be used via dpkg-preconfigure(8) or
dpkg-reconfigure(8).
OPTIONS -opackage, --owner=package
Tell debconf what package the command it is running is a part of. This is necessary to get ownership of registered questions right, and
to support unregister and purge commands properly.
-ftype, --frontend=type
Select the frontend to use.
-pvalue, --priority=value
Specify the minimum priority of question that will be displayed.
--terse
Enables terse output mode. This affects only some frontends.
EXAMPLES
To debug a shell script that uses debconf, you might use:
DEBCONF_DEBUG=developer debconf my-shell-prog
Or, you might use this:
debconf --frontend=readline sh -x my-shell-prog
SEE ALSO debconf-devel(7), debconf(7)AUTHOR
Joey Hess <joeyh@debian.org>
2012-09-10 DEBCONF(1)
There is no xorg.conf file and no XF86Config file on a certain FreeBSD machine:
# locate xorg.conf
/usr/local/man/man5/xorg.conf.5.gz
# locate XF86Config
#
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I'm looking for finer granularity than the 20 ANSI escape sequence screen modes. What I'd like to do is have the terminal increase it's own height when I have to show the user a long menu.
Platform is Cygwin 64 running over Win 7 Pro.
Mike (4 Replies)
What is the point of this? Whenever I close my shell it appends to the history file without adding this. I have never seen it overwrite my history file.
# When the shell exits, append to the history file instead of overwriting it
shopt -s histappend (3 Replies)
Look this very good rendering on Slackware 14.2
in my opinion is near perfect.
https://i.stack.imgur.com/q5trL.png
Now look the same page on Fedora 30
https://i.stack.imgur.com/FBQv7.png
In my opinion the fonts on Fedora are too small and difficult to read, I prefer the fat fonts of... (20 Replies)