10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. Homework & Coursework Questions
1. The problem statement:
What is the mesg value set for your environment? If it is on, how would you turn off your current
session? How would you set it permanently?
3. The attempts at a solution :
Read Unix The textbook.
3rd chapter has many things like environment variables and... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: mahinkhan22
5 Replies
2. HP-UX
Hi Experts,
Need your help in understanding the commands to setup the environment variables in hp-ux.
Beleive need to use either set,setenv or export.
I am confused between above three options, when to use which option?
On command line, I have tried both set and setenv but couldn't... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: sai_2507
1 Replies
3. Shell Programming and Scripting
I have read tons of posts about how you can't set persisting environment variable in a child script of a shell and have it persist. The only way is to source a file as
% . <scriptname>
I am finding that true... but I know there is a way around it. I just don't know how. I worked for 6... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: rwa25
5 Replies
4. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
why are all environment variables represented in a fixed format regardless of the shell you use?
like $HOME $PATH etc (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: sravani
6 Replies
5. Shell Programming and Scripting
say i define an environment variable in a particular script (upgrade.sh).
my script is upgarde.sh and it calls another script try.sh. will this environment variable be accessible to try.sh also. if not how to I make environment variables global so that they can be used by any script. (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: lassimanji
2 Replies
6. Programming
hi,
I want to create a new EV(Environment Variable) through a c program and I done this thing through setenv() method. But the newly created EV is not permanent, i.e. when I exit from the program the EV also no longer lives. But I want to make it a permanent EV for the current user. Actually I... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: sumsin
6 Replies
7. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
hi,
1). i would like to know what is meant by environment variables?
2). is the number of envi variables is a constant number for unix systems?
3). how to see the list of envi variables (and the values of the envi variables)in a single command?
4). if this questions were already asked... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: sekar sundaram
3 Replies
8. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Hi Folks,
Is it possible somehow to unset all the environment variables which have been defined before in UNIX (Solaris).
Thanks,
Slava (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: spavlov
3 Replies
9. Programming
Hi!
How-to get the environment variables in GNU.
getenv() only fetches the ones that you can find under export (not the ones under declare)...
best regars .David (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Esaia
2 Replies
10. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
what is the actual use of environment variables.
I know only PS1, LOGNAME, PS2 variables
what are the other variables & what is there use (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: indianguru
2 Replies
mkbundle(mkbundle 1.0) mkbundle(mkbundle 1.0)
NAME
mkbundle, mkbundle2 - Creates a bundled executable.
SYNOPSIS
mkbundle [options] assembly1 [assembly2 ...]
DESCRIPTION
mkbundle generates an executable program that will contain static copies of the assemblies listed on the command line. By default only the
assemblies specified in the command line will be included in the bundle. To automatically include all of the dependencies referenced, use
the "--deps" command line option.
Use mkbundle when you want the startup runtime to load the 1.0 profile, and use mkbundle2 when you want the startup runtime to load the 2.0
profile.
For example, to create a bundle for hello world, use the following command:
$ mkbundle -o hello hello.exe
The above will pull hello.exe into a native program called "hello". Notice that the produced image still contains the CIL image and no
precompilation is done.
In addition, it is possible to control whether mkbundle should compile the resulting executable or not with the -c option. This is useful
if you want to link additional libraries or control the generated output in more detail. For example, this could be used to link some
libraries statically:
$ mkbundle -c -o host.c -oo bundles.o --deps hello.exe
$ cc host.c bundles.o /usr/lib/libmono.a -lc -lrt
You may also use mkbundle to generate a bundle you can use when embedding the Mono runtime in a native application. In that case, use both
the -c and --nomain options. The resulting host.c file will not have a main() function. Call mono_mkbundle_init() before initializing the
JIT in your code so that the bundled assemblies are available to the embedded runtime.
OPTIONS
-c Produce the stub file, do not compile the resulting stub.
-o filename
Places the output on `out'. If the flag -c is specified, this is the C host program. If not, this contains the resulting exe-
cutable.
-oo filename
Specifies the name to be used for the helper object file that contains the bundle.
-L path
Adds the `path' do the search list for assemblies. The rules are the same as for the compiler -lib: or -L flags.
Specifies that a machine.config file must be bundled as well.
Typically this is $prefix/etc/mono/1.0/machine.config or $prefix/etc/mono/2.0/machine.config depending on the profile that you are
using (1.0 or 2.0)
--nodeps
This is the default: mkbundle will only include the assemblies that were specified on the command line to reduce the size of the
resulting image created.
--deps This option will bundle all of the referenced assemblies for the assemblies listed on the command line option. This is useful to
distribute a self-contained image.
--keeptemp
By default mkbundle will delete the temporary files that it uses to produce the bundle. This option keeps the file around.
--machine-config FILE
Uses the given FILE as the machine.config file for the generated application.
--nomain
With the -c option, generate the host stub without a main() function.
--config-dir DIR
When passed, DIR will be set for the MONO_CFG_DIR environment variable
--static
By default mkbundle dynamically links to mono and glib. This option causes it to statically link instead.
Important:
Since the Mono runtime is licensed under the LGPL, even if you use static you should transfer the component pieces of the mkbundle
to your users so they are able to upgrade the Mono runtime on their own.
If you want to use this for commercial licenses, you must obtain a
proprietary license for Mono from mono@novell.com
-z Compresses the assemblies before embedding. This results in smaller executable files, but increases startup time and requires zlib
to be installed on the target system.
WINDOWS
On Windows systems, it it necessary to have Unix-like toolchain to be installed for mkbundle to work. You can use cygwin's and install
gcc, gcc-mingw and as packages.
ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES
AS Assembler command. The default is "as".
CC C compiler command. The default is "cc" under Linux and "gcc -mno-cygwin" under Windows.
MONO_BUNDLED_OPTIONS
Options to be passed to the bundled Mono runtime, separated by spaces. See the mono(1) manual page or run mono --help.
FILES
This program will load referenced assemblies from the Mono assembly cache.
BUGS
The option "--static" is not supported under Windows. Moreover, a full cygwin environment containing at least "gcc" and "as" is required
for the build process. The generated executable does not depend on cygwin.
MAILING LISTS
Visit http://lists.ximian.com/mailman/listinfo/mono-devel-list for details.
WEB SITE
Visit: http://www.mono-project.com for details
SEE ALSO
mcs(1),mono(1),mono-config(5).
mkbundle(mkbundle 1.0)