haiku/data/etc/profile
Ingo Weinhold 425b1199b0 I don't know, if that makes is less almost-ksh compatible, but whence
(aka which) now returns 1 when it cannot find a specified command.


git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@25169 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
2008-04-26 00:50:21 +00:00

100 lines
1.6 KiB
Bash

#
# Administrative startup for /bin/sh
# Place user customizations in /.profile
#
echo -e "\nWelcome to the Haiku shell.\n"
# switch to $HOME
cd
export PS1="\w>"
export HISTFILESIZE=50
bind '"\e[2~":paste-from-clipboard'
bind '"\e[3~":delete-char'
bind '"\e[4~":end-of-line'
bind '"\e[5~":history-search-forward'
bind '"\e[6~":history-search-backward'
alias ls="ls --color"
alias ll="ls -l"
alias la="ls -A"
alias lal="ls -Al"
alias m="more"
#
# and now we include a few useful things...
#
#
# An almost-ksh compatible `whence' command. This is as hairy as it is
# because of the desire to exactly mimic ksh.
#
# This depends somewhat on knowing the format of the output of the bash
# `builtin type' command.
#
# Chet Ramey
# chet@ins.CWRU.Edu
#
whence()
{
local vflag= path=
if [ "$#" = "0" ] ; then
echo "whence: argument expected"
return 1
fi
case "$1" in
-v) vflag=1
shift 1
;;
-*) echo "whence: bad option: $1"
return 1
;;
*) ;;
esac
if [ "$#" = "0" ] ; then
echo "whence: bad argument count"
return 1
fi
returnValue=0
for cmd
do
if [ "$vflag" ] ; then
echo $(builtin type $cmd | sed 1q)
else
path=$(builtin type -path $cmd)
if [ "$path" ] ; then
echo $path
else
case "$cmd" in
*/*) if [ -x "$cmd" ]; then
echo "$cmd"
else
returnValue=1
fi
;;
*) case "$(builtin type -type $cmd)" in
"") returnValue=1
;;
*) echo "$cmd"
;;
esac
;;
esac
fi
fi
done
return $returnValue
}
alias which='whence'
function dir {
ls -lF "$@";
}