Hitchhiker's Guide to Openbsd
- Can I change the root shell?
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- 10.18 - What else can I do with ksh
10.17 - Can I change the root shell?
It is sometimes said that one should never change the root shell, though there is no reason not to in OpenBSD. The default shell for root on OpenBSD is ksh . A traditional Unix guideline is to only use statically compiled shells for root, because if your system comes up in single user mode, non-root partitions won't be mounted and dynamically linked shells won't be able to access libraries located in the /usr partition. This isn't actually a significant issue for OpenBSD, as the system will prompt you for a shell when it comes up in single user mode, and the default is sh . The three standard shells in OpenBSD ( csh , sh and ksh ) are all statically linked, and thus usable in single user mode. 10.18 - What else can I do with ksh? http://www.openbsd.org/faq/faq10.html (25 of 32)9/4/2011 10:02:15 AM 10 - System Management In OpenBSD, ksh is pdksh , the Public Domain Korn Shell, and is the same binary as sh . Users comfortable with bash, often used on Linux systems, will probably find ksh very familiar. Ksh(1) provides most of the commonly used features in bash, including tab completion, command line editing and history via the arrow keys, and CTRL-A/CTRL-E to jump to beginning/end of the command line. If other features of bash are desired, bash itself can be loaded via either packages or ports . The command prompt of ksh can easily be changed to something providing more information than the default "$ " by setting the PS1 variable. For example, inserting the following line: export PS1='$PWD $ ' in your /etc/profile produces the following command prompt: /home/nick $ See the file /etc/ksh.kshrc , which includes many useful features and examples, and may be invoked in your user's .profile . OpenBSD's ksh(1) has been enhanced with a number of "special characters" for the primary prompt string, PS1, similar to those used in bash. For example: \e - Insert an ASCII escape character. \h - The hostname, minus domain name. \H - The full hostname, including domain name. \n - Insert a newline character. \t - The current time, in 24-hour HH:MM:SS format. \u - The current user's username. \w - The current working directory. $HOME is abbreviated as `~'. \W - The basename of the current working directory. \$ - Displays "#" for root users, "$" for non-root users. (see the ksh(1) man page for more details, and many, many more special characters! Also note the "$" character has special meaning inside double quotes, so handle it carefully) One could use the following command: export PS1="\n\u@\H\n\w \\$ " to give an overly verbose but somewhat useful prompt. http://www.openbsd.org/faq/faq10.html (26 of 32)9/4/2011 10:02:15 AM |
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