Permissions on Linux
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Yeah, default login shell at work is csh.
Gah. Have you not read "C Shell Considered Harmful"? (TLTL atm)
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Gah. Have you not read "C Shell Considered Harmful"? (TLTL atm)
The Unix Hater's Club is over there.
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The Unix Hater's Club is over there.
This isn't Unix I'm trying to hate on. It's the abomination known as csh, which Unix's most rabid fanatics hate, for very good reason.
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The Unix Hater's Club, like the Unix Hater's Handbook, is not only for Unix as a whole, but also for the included abominations such as the one you mention.
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The Unix Hater's Club, like the Unix Hater's Handbook, is not only for Unix as a whole, but also for the included abominations such as the one you mention.
What about simply estranging csh from the Unix family, as many of us rabid fanatics already do?
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If you think that will work, try asking anyone who isn't a *nix zealot whether csh or bash is better.
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Recently, I've been preferring "ls -latr"
I think you'll probably prefer-A
to-a
. They're almost the same, but-A
omits the entries for.
and..
(which are usually very uninteresting). I also tend to use-F
but that's because I'm used to using non-colourized terminals…
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I also tend to use -F but that's because I'm used to using non-colourized terminals
I use colo
urized terminals, but I used -F for so long before colourized terminals (and I have it aliased so I don't even think about it) that I tend to ignore the colour in favor of the trailing character.
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Of course, I also have a batch script on windows called ls that runs a dir..
WHY IS IT NOT ALSO
ll
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Recently, I've been preferring "ls -latr" as in "ls, later"...at least, that's how it works out in my head.
ls -lart
here. As in http://www.catb.org/jargon/html/L/LART.html
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Linux also supports ACLs
HOLY SHIT! IT'S LIKE A REAL OPERATING SYSTEM!I can start taking it seriously now!
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There's always the universal solution: "fuck it, I'll run everything as root".
Filed under: what could go wrong?
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There's always the universal solution: "fuck it, I'll run everything as root".
<small>Filed under: what could go wrong?
No, no,
rm -rf /*
is the universal solution.
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"fuck it, I'll run everything as root"
Doesn't work for getting around SELinux. Try it yourself: