2012/9/20-11/7 [Computer/SW/Unix, Finance/Investment] UID:54482 Activity:nil | 9/20 How do I change my shell? chsh says "Cannot change ID to root."
\_ /usr/bin/chsh does not have the SUID permission set. Without
being set, it does not successfully change a user's shell.
Typical newbie sys admin (on soda)
\_ Actually, it does: -rwsr-xr-x 1 root root 37552 Feb 15 2011 /usr/bin/chsh
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2012/9/24-11/7 [Computer/SW/Languages, Computer/SW/Unix] UID:54484 Activity:nil | 9/24 How come changing my shell using ldapmodify (chsh doesn't work) doesn't
work either? ldapsearch and getent show the new shell but I still get
the old shell on login.
\_ Scratch that, it magically took my new shell now. WTF?
\_ probably nscd(8)
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2011/10/26-12/6 [Computer/SW/Unix] UID:54202 Activity:nil | 10/24 What's an easy way to see if say column 3 of a file matches a list of
expressions in a file? Basically I want to combine "grep -f <file>"
to store the patterns and awk's $3 ~ /(AAA|BBB|CCC)/ ... I realize
I can do this with "egrep -f " and use regexp instead of strings, but
was wondering if there was some magic way to do this.
\_ UNIX has no magic. Make a shell script to produce the ask or egrep
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2011/5/19-7/13 [Computer/SW/Languages/Misc] UID:54115 Activity:nil | 5/19 If script A runs, and calls script B ..... is it possible for me to exit\
script A based on results of script B and not continue?
\_ assume any shell
\_ Yes.
\_ without passing the result to some stupid temp file?
\_ It sounds like you want "scriptb || exit", which will run
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2009/12/9-2010/1/13 [Computer/SW/Unix] UID:53586 Activity:nil | 12/8 Is there a bash equivalent to tcsh's history-search-backward ?
\_ There's something similar called... history-search-backward. It
is a bit more limited, in that it only searches for strings and
not glob patterns. You may find reverse-i-search to be useful also.
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2009/8/18-9/1 [Computer/SW/Unix] UID:53284 Activity:nil | 8/18 Is it possible to truncate your path name in your prompt in tcsh?
Tsch veterans REPRESENT! I know this is how to do it in bash:
# truncate path: returns $1 truncated to $2 chars, prefixed with ...
truncate_path () {
if [ -z "$1" -o -z "$2" ]
then
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