So if you do ls -l .bash* in your home directory,
what's the output?
[EMAIL PROTECTED] blissfix $ ls -l .bash*
-rw-r--r-- 1 blissfix users 0 Jul 6 14:59
.bash_history
-rw-r--r-- 1 blissfix users 232 Jul 2 21:12
.bash_profile
-rw-r--r-- 1 blissfix users 812 Jul 2 21:12 .bashrc
Note:
On Thu, 7 Jul 2005, maxim wexler wrote:
all academic now -- the pc just died :( Not a beep, no
screen o/p. The green light on front of the box comes
on for about 1/10 sec, fan turns a few degrees and
thats IT! Tried another power supply -- no dice. Tried
bypassing the on switch -- nope. Moved
Hi,
On Thu, 7 Jul 2005 21:14:44 -0700 (PDT)
maxim wexler [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
all academic now -- the pc just died :( Not a beep, no
screen o/p. The green light on front of the box comes
on for about 1/10 sec, fan turns a few degrees and
thats IT! Tried another power supply -- no dice.
maxim wexler wrote:
all academic now -- the pc just died :( Not a beep, no
screen o/p. The green light on front of the box comes
on for about 1/10 sec, fan turns a few degrees and
thats IT! Tried another power supply -- no dice. Tried
bypassing the on switch -- nope. Moved RAM to another
slot --
Please tell me it isn't the same system that gave
you so much trouble
with grub!! :-
-Richard
It is. Glad I have this spare(K6)
--
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Then set the same environment variables in your
current shell and they
should stick.
Nope, .bash_history completely empty after a bunch of
ls's. At least it didn't tell me to become root :o
So if you do ls -l .bash* in your home directory, what's the output?
--
gentoo-user@gentoo.org
On 08:51 Thu 07 Jul , Dave Nebinger wrote:
Then set the same environment variables in your
current shell and they
should stick.
Nope, .bash_history completely empty after a bunch of
ls's. At least it didn't tell me to become root :o
So if you do ls -l .bash* in your home
So if you do ls -l .bash* in your home
directory, what's the output?
I haven't been following this thread, but have you
tried doing set -o
history ?
all academic now -- the pc just died :( Not a beep, no
screen o/p. The green light on front of the box comes
on for about 1/10 sec, fan
Try to adjust those variables:
HISTFILE=/home/your_account/.bash_history
HISTFILESIZE=500
HISTSIZE=500
HTH, noro
Thanks noro.
I had to run the above from root and sure enough, they
were written into my home dir .bash_history, along
with the exit command to get back to user-space. So I
maxim wexler schreef:
Try to adjust those variables:
HISTFILE=/home/your_account/.bash_history
HISTFILESIZE=500
HISTSIZE=500
HTH, noro
Thanks noro.
I had to run the above from root and sure enough, they
were written into my home dir .bash_history, along
with the exit command to get
Try to adjust those variables:
HISTFILE=/home/your_account/.bash_history
HISTFILESIZE=500
HISTSIZE=500
I had to run the above from root and sure enough, they
were written into my home dir .bash_history, along
with the exit command to get back to user-space. So I
ran a series of
Why did you have to create a user file as root (not
saying you didn't
have to, just asking why)?
Holly
When I tried running HIST* etc as user I was told I
had to be root.
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Then set the same environment variables in your
current shell and they
should stick.
Nope, .bash_history completely empty after a bunch of
ls's. At least it didn't tell me to become root :o
Sell on Yahoo! Auctions
On Wed, Jul 06, 2005 at 02:06:50PM -0700, maxim wexler wrote:
Then set the same environment variables in your
current shell and they
should stick.
Nope, .bash_history completely empty after a bunch of
ls's. At least it didn't tell me to become root :o
Try exiting the session and log
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