hiho,
nachdem ich festgestellt hab, dass hier doch einige linux-cracks unterwegs sind und ich im inet nichts funzendes gefunden habe, hier mal ne frage.
ich hab einen raspi v3 als hifi-audioplayer. darauf rennt mpd. da der player über ein display (aber keine tastatur/maus) verfügt, wollt ich immer gleich beim reboot cli-visualisation starten.
ich kriegs allerdings ned hin.
das ding liegt unter /bin/vis und läuft beim händischen start problemlos. unter rc.d oder als script in /etc/init.d krieg ichs nicht zum laufen. habs sogar als @reboot im crontab probiert.
es fällt auf: liegts in rc.d kommt ne fehlermeldung und dann erst die automatische anmeldung des pi-users. ich nehme also an: ich starte vis zu früh an.
kann mir da wer helfen?
nachtrag:
verzögertes starten funzt (zumindest startet das programm, zeigt aber nix an), sobald ich ein sudo vorsetze.
dachte, rc.d startet sowieso als root? - totale verwirrung
hat den keiner hier ne idee, wie ich ein kleines, dummes progrämmchen automatische starten kann, sobald alles fertig geladen ist?
Den Aufruf den Du in der Konsole zum starten ein gibt einfach in die
/etc/rc.local
vor dem exit 0 eintragen.
ja sorry, verschrieben, genau da tu ichs
passieren tut nix
das startet zumindest mal ohne fehler
(/bin/sleep 20 && sudo /bin/vis)&
ohne sudo kommt ne fehlermeldung, dass er rc.local nicht weiter ausführen konnte mit sudo startet vis, zeigt aber nur nen schwarzen bildschirm
ein su pi anstelle sudo macht die selbe fehlermeldung wie kein sudo
aja, einfach ein händisches "vis" in die konsole - alles rennt wie butter
nur vvism also ohne "/bin" führt zur üblichen fehlermeldung
zeig mal dein script
büdde
GNU nano 2.2.6 Datei: /etc/rc.local Verändert
#!/bin/sh -e
#
# rc.local
#
# This script is executed at the end of each multiuser runlevel.
# Make sure that the script will "exit 0" on success or any other
# value on error.
#
# In order to enable or disable this script just change the execution
# bits.
#
# By default this script does nothing.
# Print the IP address
_IP=$(hostname -I) || true
if [ "$_IP" ]; then
printf "My IP address is %s\n" "$_IP"
fi
/home/pi/IQ_rot&
setterm -blank 0 -powerdown 0
(/bin/sleep 15 && /bin/vis)&
exit 0
nur, falls die frage aufkommt: "/home/pi/IQ_rot&" startet mir mein script für den externen lautstärkeregler an
ach juhuu, jetzt krieg ich damit auch nen error:
nach der waittime stht in der console: "termiate called after throwing an instance of 'std::logic_error' what (): basic_string::_$_construct null not valid"
naja, der is wenigstens mal neu *g*
Glaube nicht das das so geht
(/bin/sleep 15 && /bin/vis)&
Mach doch einfach erstmal ein Stinknormalen Aufruf um zu sehen ob es generell geht.
/bin/vis &
und dann mal schauen
Also den Aufruf so stinknormal in die Datei eintragen statt Deiner sleep Klammer Sache da
da kommt die fehlermeldung nur früher
kommt sie mit den klammern ganz am ende, so kommt sie hier nach der anzeige, dass rc.local erfolgreich gestartet is
hier mal, wovon ich überhaupt rede: https://github.com/dpayne/cli-visualizer
Wenn Du das ganze in der Konsole auf rufst machst du es dann auch so
/bin/vis &
/bin kommt mir sowieso komisch vor. Wenn dann /usr/bin oder wen du es selbst kompiliert hast und kein ./configure ..prefix=/ gemacht hast landet das binär Teil in /usr/local/bin
in der console reicht auch ein simples vis zum laufen
/bin/vis geht auch
das & bleibt halt weg - aber angeblich is das ja zwingend erforderlich bei rc.local?
pi@ratOmat:~ $ /bin/vis & <-- kommt nur die lustige zahl
[1] 922
pi@ratOmat:~ $ /bin/vis <-- startet wunderbar
[1]+ Angehalten /bin/vis <-- is nur der ausstieg aus vis mit strg+c
pi@ratOmat:~ $
pi@ratOmat:~ $ cd /bin
pi@ratOmat:/bin $ ls
bash chvt fgconsole lessecho mount ntfscmp red systemd-ask-password vdir
bunzip2 con2fbmap fgrep lessfile mountpoint ntfsfallocate rm systemd-escape vis
bzcat cp findmnt lesskey mt ntfsfix rmdir systemd-inhibit wdctl
bzcmp cpio fuser lesspipe mt-gnu ntfsinfo rnano systemd-machine-id-setup which
bzdiff dash fusermount ln mv ntfsls run-parts systemd-notify ypdomainname
bzegrep date getfacl loadkeys nano ntfsmove sed systemd-tmpfiles zcat
bzexe dd grep login nc ntfstruncate setfacl systemd-tty-ask-password-agent zcmp
bzfgrep df gunzip loginctl nc.openbsd ntfswipe setfont tailf zdiff
bzgrep dir gzexe lowntfs-3g nc.traditional open setupcon tar zegrep
bzip2 dmesg gzip ls netcat openvt sh tempfile zfgrep
bzip2recover dnsdomainname hciconfig lsblk netstat pidof sh.distrib touch zforce
bzless domainname hostname lsmod nisdomainname ping sleep true zgrep
bzmore dumpkeys ip machinectl ntfs-3g ping6 ss udevadm zless
cat echo journalctl mkdir ntfs-3g.probe plymouth stty ulockmgr_server zmore
chacl ed kbd_mode mknod ntfs-3g.secaudit ps su umount znew
chgrp egrep kill mktemp ntfs-3g.usermap pwd sync uname
chmod false kmod modeline2fb ntfscat rbash systemctl uncompress
chown fbset less more ntfscluster readlink systemd unicode_start
pi@ratOmat:/bin $
gebacken nach: https://linuxundich.de/gnu-linux/audio-visualizer-terminal-cli-visualizer/
ich habs! ICH HABS !!!!!
mir hat nur keiner gsagt, dass es für jeden user nen autostart in form von .bashrc gibt ...
if [ $(tty) == /dev/tty1 ]; then
/bin/vis
fi
danke für deine hilfe, gelle!
bashrc ist kein Autostart sondern eine Konfigurationsdatei für Deine bash Shell. Farbe, Form, Umgebungsvariablen und so weiter. Aber anscheinend seit neusten auch für Programme starten zu nutzen. :)
Aber vermutlich nur solange beim PI eingestellt ist:
console mit autologin...
Gruß, Joachim
naja, es geht zumindest mal
jetzt muß ich nur noch die farben des terminals hinbekommen - die vorlage vom progger is - naja - hässlich *g*
aber da habts ihr ja grade nen hinweis gegeben.
aber: ums einfacher zu machen - habts ihr vielleicht eine tabelle, wo gesagt wird, welche der consolen-farben für was is?
also so nach dem motto: 1=hintergrund, 2=blaa, 3...
Meine .bashrc
Habe ich mal vor Jahren angelegt.
#------------------------------------------------------------
# my personal bashrc
# CoolTux 2014
#-----------------------------------------------------------
#----------------------------------------------------------
# Bug in scp wenn echo Befel in der bashrc ist, daher das hier zu aller erst
# if not running in interactivly, don't do anything
if [[ $- != *i* ]]; then return; fi
# export my script Directory
export PATH="/usr/local/sbin:/usr/local/bin:/usr/sbin:/usr/bin:/sbin:/bin:/usr/games:/usr/local/games:$HOME/bin"
#----------------------------------------------------------
#-------------------------------------------------------------
# Greeting, motd etc. ...
#-------------------------------------------------------------
# Color definitions (taken from Color Bash Prompt HowTo).
# Some colors might look different of some terminals.
# For example, I see 'Bold Red' as 'orange' on my screen,
# hence the 'Green' 'BRed' 'Red' sequence I often use in my prompt.
# Normal Colors
Black='\e[0;30m' # Black
Red='\e[0;31m' # Red
Green='\e[0;32m' # Green
Yellow='\e[0;33m' # Yellow
Blue='\e[0;34m' # Blue
Purple='\e[0;35m' # Purple
Cyan='\e[0;36m' # Cyan
White='\e[0;37m' # White
# Bold
BBlack='\e[1;30m' # Black
BRed='\e[1;31m' # Red
BGreen='\e[1;32m' # Green
BYellow='\e[1;33m' # Yellow
BBlue='\e[1;34m' # Blue
BPurple='\e[1;35m' # Purple
BCyan='\e[1;36m' # Cyan
BWhite='\e[1;37m' # White
# Background
On_Black='\e[40m' # Black
On_Red='\e[41m' # Red
On_Green='\e[42m' # Green
On_Yellow='\e[43m' # Yellow
On_Blue='\e[44m' # Blue
On_Purple='\e[45m' # Purple
On_Cyan='\e[46m' # Cyan
On_White='\e[47m' # White
NC="\e[m" # Color Reset
ALERT=${BWhite}${On_Red} # Bold White on red background
echo -e "${BCyan}This is BASH ${BRed}${BASH_VERSION%.*}${BCyan}\
- DISPLAY on ${BRed}$DISPLAY${NC}\n"
date
function _exit() # Function to run upon exit of shell.
{
echo -e "${BRed}Hasta la vista, baby${NC}"
}
trap _exit EXIT
#-------------------------------------------------------------
# Shell Prompt - for many examples, see:
# http://www.debian-administration.org/articles/205
# http://www.askapache.com/linux/bash-power-prompt.html
# http://tldp.org/HOWTO/Bash-Prompt-HOWTO
# https://github.com/nojhan/liquidprompt
#-------------------------------------------------------------
# Current Format: [TIME USER@HOST PWD] >
# TIME:
# Green == machine load is low
# Orange == machine load is medium
# Red == machine load is high
# ALERT == machine load is very high
# USER:
# Cyan == normal user
# Orange == SU to user
# Red == root
# HOST:
# Cyan == local session
# Green == secured remote connection (via ssh)
# Red == unsecured remote connection
# PWD:
# Green == more than 10% free disk space
# Orange == less than 10% free disk space
# ALERT == less than 5% free disk space
# Red == current user does not have write privileges
# Cyan == current filesystem is size zero (like /proc)
# >:
# White == no background or suspended jobs in this shell
# Cyan == at least one background job in this shell
# Orange == at least one suspended job in this shell
#
# Command is added to the history file each time you hit enter,
# so it's available to all shells (using 'history -a').
# Test connection type:
if [ -n "${SSH_CONNECTION}" ]; then
CNX=${Green} # Connected on remote machine, via ssh (good).
elif [[ "${DISPLAY%%:0*}" != "" ]]; then
CNX=${ALERT} # Connected on remote machine, not via ssh (bad).
else
CNX=${BCyan} # Connected on local machine.
fi
# Test user type:
if [[ ${USER} == "root" ]]; then
SU=${Red} # User is root.
elif [[ ${USER} != $(logname) ]]; then
SU=${BRed} # User is not login user.
else
SU=${BCyan} # User is normal (well ... most of us are).
fi
NCPU=$(grep -c 'processor' /proc/cpuinfo) # Number of CPUs
SLOAD=$(( 100*${NCPU} )) # Small load
MLOAD=$(( 200*${NCPU} )) # Medium load
XLOAD=$(( 400*${NCPU} )) # Xlarge load
# Returns system load as percentage, i.e., '40' rather than '0.40)'.
function load()
{
local SYSLOAD=$(cut -d " " -f1 /proc/loadavg | tr -d '.')
# System load of the current host.
echo $((10#$SYSLOAD)) # Convert to decimal.
}
# Returns a color indicating system load.
function load_color()
{
local SYSLOAD=$(load)
if [ ${SYSLOAD} -gt ${XLOAD} ]; then
echo -en ${ALERT}
elif [ ${SYSLOAD} -gt ${MLOAD} ]; then
echo -en ${Red}
elif [ ${SYSLOAD} -gt ${SLOAD} ]; then
echo -en ${BRed}
else
echo -en ${Green}
fi
}
# Returns a color according to free disk space in $PWD.
function disk_color()
{
if [ ! -w "${PWD}" ] ; then
echo -en ${Red}
# No 'write' privilege in the current directory.
elif [ -s "${PWD}" ] ; then
local used=$(command df -P "$PWD" |
awk 'END {print $5} {sub(/%/,"")}')
if [ ${used} -gt 95 ]; then
echo -en ${ALERT} # Disk almost full (>95%).
elif [ ${used} -gt 90 ]; then
echo -en ${BRed} # Free disk space almost gone.
else
echo -en ${Green} # Free disk space is ok.
fi
else
echo -en ${Cyan}
# Current directory is size '0' (like /proc, /sys etc).
fi
}
# Returns a color according to running/suspended jobs.
function job_color()
{
if [ $(jobs -s | wc -l) -gt "0" ]; then
echo -en ${BRed}
elif [ $(jobs -r | wc -l) -gt "0" ] ; then
echo -en ${BCyan}
fi
}
# Now we construct the prompt.
PROMPT_COMMAND="history -a"
case ${TERM} in
*term | rxvt | linux)
PS1="\[\$(load_color)\][\A\[${NC}\] "
# Time of day (with load info):
PS1="\[\$(load_color)\][\A\[${NC}\] "
# User@Host (with connection type info):
PS1=${PS1}"\[${SU}\]\u\[${NC}\]@\[${CNX}\]\h\[${NC}\] "
# PWD (with 'disk space' info):
PS1=${PS1}"\[\$(disk_color)\]\W]\[${NC}\] "
# Prompt (with 'job' info):
PS1=${PS1}"\[\$(job_color)\]>\[${NC}\] "
# Set title of current xterm:
PS1=${PS1}"\[\e]0;[\u@\h] \w\a\]"
;;
*)
PS1="(\A \u@\h \W) > " # --> PS1="(\A \u@\h \w) > "
# --> Shows full pathname of current dir.
;;
esac
export TIMEFORMAT=$'\nreal %3R\tuser %3U\tsys %3S\tpcpu %P\n'
export HISTIGNORE="&:bg:fg:ll:h"
export HISTTIMEFORMAT="$(echo -e ${BCyan})[%d/%m %H:%M:%S]$(echo -e ${NC}) "
export HISTCONTROL=ignoredups
#-------------------
# Personnal Aliases
#-------------------
alias rm='rm -i'
alias cp='cp -i'
alias mv='mv -i'
# -> Prevents accidentally clobbering files.
alias mkdir='mkdir -p'
alias h='history'
alias j='jobs -l'
alias which='type -a'
alias ..='cd ..'
# Pretty-print of some PATH variables:
alias path='echo -e ${PATH//:/\\n}'
alias libpath='echo -e ${LD_LIBRARY_PATH//:/\\n}'
alias du='du -kh' # Makes a more readable output.
alias df='df -kTh'
#-------------------------------------------------------------
# The 'ls' family (this assumes you use a recent GNU ls).
#-------------------------------------------------------------
# Add colors for filetype and human-readable sizes by default on 'ls':
alias ls='ls -h --color'
alias lx='ls -lXB' # Sort by extension.
alias lk='ls -lSr' # Sort by size, biggest last.
alias lt='ls -ltr' # Sort by date, most recent last.
alias lc='ls -ltcr' # Sort by/show change time,most recent last.
alias lu='ls -ltur' # Sort by/show access time,most recent last.
# The ubiquitous 'll': directories first, with alphanumeric sorting:
alias ll="ls -lv --group-directories-first"
alias lm='ll |more' # Pipe through 'more'
alias lr='ll -R' # Recursive ls.
alias la='ll -A' # Show hidden files.
alias tree='tree -Csuh' # Nice alternative to 'recursive ls' ...
# persönliche Anpassungen - schneller Vereichniswechsel
alias fgit='find $HOME -type d -name .git'
alias insync-trash='find $HOME -type d -name .insync-trash'
alias Dokumente='cd $HOME/Dokumente'
alias Scripts='cd $HOME/Programmieren_und_Entwicklung/Shell_Scripting/Projekte/'
#-------------------------------------------------------------
# Tailoring 'less'
#-------------------------------------------------------------
alias more='less'
export PAGER=less
export LESSCHARSET='latin1'
export LESSOPEN='|/usr/bin/lesspipe.sh %s 2>&-'
# Use this if lesspipe.sh exists.
export LESS='-i -N -w -z-4 -g -e -M -X -F -R -P%t?f%f \
:stdin .?pb%pb\%:?lbLine %lb:?bbByte %bb:-...'
# LESS man page colors (makes Man pages more readable).
export LESS_TERMCAP_mb=$'\E[01;31m'
export LESS_TERMCAP_md=$'\E[01;31m'
export LESS_TERMCAP_me=$'\E[0m'
export LESS_TERMCAP_se=$'\E[0m'
export LESS_TERMCAP_so=$'\E[01;44;33m'
export LESS_TERMCAP_ue=$'\E[0m'
export LESS_TERMCAP_us=$'\E[01;32m'
#-------------------------------------------------------------
# Make the following commands run in background automatically:
#-------------------------------------------------------------
function soffice() { command soffice "$@" & }
function firefox() { command firefox "$@" & }
function xpdf() { command xpdf "$@" & }
# Find a file with a pattern in name:
function ff() { find . -type f -iname '*'"$*"'*' -ls ; }
# Find a file with pattern $1 in name and Execute $2 on it:
function fe() { find . -type f -iname '*'"${1:-}"'*' \
-exec ${2:-file} {} \; ; }
# Find a pattern in a set of files and highlight them:
#+ (needs a recent version of egrep).
function fstr()
{
OPTIND=1
local mycase=""
local usage="fstr: find string in files.
Usage: fstr [-i] \"pattern\" [\"filename pattern\"] "
while getopts :it opt
do
case "$opt" in
i) mycase="-i " ;;
*) echo "$usage"; return ;;
esac
done
shift $(( $OPTIND - 1 ))
if [ "$#" -lt 1 ]; then
echo "$usage"
return;
fi
find . -type f -name "${2:-*}" -print0 | \
xargs -0 egrep --color=always -sn ${case} "$1" 2>&- | more
}
function extract() # Handy Extract Program
{
if [ -f $1 ] ; then
case $1 in
*.tar.bz2) tar xvjf $1 ;;
*.tar.gz) tar xvzf $1 ;;
*.bz2) bunzip2 $1 ;;
*.rar) unrar x $1 ;;
*.gz) gunzip $1 ;;
*.tar) tar xvf $1 ;;
*.tbz2) tar xvjf $1 ;;
*.tgz) tar xvzf $1 ;;
*.zip) unzip $1 ;;
*.Z) uncompress $1 ;;
*.7z) 7z x $1 ;;
*) echo "'$1' cannot be extracted via >extract<" ;;
esac
else
echo "'$1' is not a valid file!"
fi
}
# Creates an archive (*.tar.gz) from given directory.
function maketar() { tar cvzf "${1%%/}.tar.gz" "${1%%/}/"; }
# Create a ZIP archive of a file or folder.
function makezip() { zip -r "${1%%/}.zip" "$1" ; }
# Make your directories and files access rights sane.
function sanitize() { chmod -R u=rwX,g=rX,o= "$@" ;}
#-------------------------------------------------------------
# Process/system related functions:
#-------------------------------------------------------------
function my_ps() { ps $@ -u $USER -o pid,%cpu,%mem,bsdtime,command ; }
function pp() { my_ps f | awk '!/awk/ && $0~var' var=${1:-".*"} ; }
function killps() # kill by process name
{
local pid pname sig="-TERM" # default signal
if [ "$#" -lt 1 ] || [ "$#" -gt 2 ]; then
echo "Usage: killps [-SIGNAL] pattern"
return;
fi
if [ $# = 2 ]; then sig=$1 ; fi
for pid in $(my_ps| awk '!/awk/ && $0~pat { print $1 }' pat=${!#} )
do
pname=$(my_ps | awk '$1~var { print $5 }' var=$pid )
if ask "Kill process $pid <$pname> with signal $sig?"
then kill $sig $pid
fi
done
}
function mydf() # Pretty-print of 'df' output.
{ # Inspired by 'dfc' utility.
for fs ; do
if [ ! -d $fs ]
then
echo -e $fs" :No such file or directory" ; continue
fi
local info=( $(command df -P $fs | awk 'END{ print $2,$3,$5 }') )
local free=( $(command df -Pkh $fs | awk 'END{ print $4 }') )
local nbstars=$(( 20 * ${info[1]} / ${info[0]} ))
local out="["
for ((j=0;j<20;j++)); do
if [ ${j} -lt ${nbstars} ]; then
out=$out"*"
else
out=$out"-"
fi
done
out=${info[2]}" "$out"] ("$free" free on "$fs")"
echo -e $out
done
}
function my_ip() # Get IP adress on ethernet.
{
MY_IP=$(/sbin/ifconfig eth0 | awk '/inet/ { print $2 } ' |
sed -e s/addr://)
echo ${MY_IP:-"Not connected"}
}
function ii() # Get current host related info.
{
echo -e "\nYou are logged on ${BRed}$HOST"
echo -e "\n${BRed}Additionnal information:$NC " ; uname -a
echo -e "\n${BRed}Users logged on:$NC " ; w -hs |
cut -d " " -f1 | sort | uniq
echo -e "\n${BRed}Current date :$NC " ; date
echo -e "\n${BRed}Machine stats :$NC " ; uptime
echo -e "\n${BRed}Memory stats :$NC " ; free
echo -e "\n${BRed}Diskspace :$NC " ; mydf / $HOME
echo -e "\n${BRed}Local IP Address :$NC" ; my_ip
echo -e "\n${BRed}Open connections :$NC "; netstat -pan --inet;
echo
}
#-------------------------------------------------------------
# Misc utilities:
#-------------------------------------------------------------
function repeat() # Repeat n times command.
{
local i max
max=$1; shift;
for ((i=1; i <= max ; i++)); do # --> C-like syntax
eval "$@";
done
}
function ask() # See 'killps' for example of use.
{
echo -n "$@" '[y/n] ' ; read ans
case "$ans" in
y*|Y*) return 0 ;;
*) return 1 ;;
esac
}
function corename() # Get name of app that created a corefile.
{
for file ; do
echo -n $file : ; gdb --core=$file --batch | head -1
done
}
#=========================================================================
#
# PROGRAMMABLE COMPLETION SECTION
# Most are taken from the bash 2.05 documentation and from Ian McDonald's
# 'Bash completion' package (http://www.caliban.org/bash/#completion)
# You will in fact need bash more recent then 3.0 for some features.
#
# Note that most linux distributions now provide many completions
# 'out of the box' - however, you might need to make your own one day,
# so I kept those here as examples.
#=========================================================================
if [ "${BASH_VERSION%.*}" \< "3.0" ]; then
echo "You will need to upgrade to version 3.0 for full \
programmable completion features"
return
fi
shopt -s extglob # Necessary.
complete -A hostname rsh rcp telnet rlogin ftp ping disk
complete -A export printenv
complete -A variable export local readonly unset
complete -A enabled builtin
complete -A alias alias unalias
complete -A function function
complete -A user su mail finger
complete -A helptopic help # Currently same as builtins.
complete -A shopt shopt
complete -A stopped -P '%' bg
complete -A job -P '%' fg jobs disown
complete -A directory mkdir rmdir
complete -A directory -o default cd
# Compression
complete -f -o default -X '*.+(zip|ZIP)' zip
complete -f -o default -X '!*.+(zip|ZIP)' unzip
complete -f -o default -X '*.+(z|Z)' compress
complete -f -o default -X '!*.+(z|Z)' uncompress
complete -f -o default -X '*.+(gz|GZ)' gzip
complete -f -o default -X '!*.+(gz|GZ)' gunzip
complete -f -o default -X '*.+(bz2|BZ2)' bzip2
complete -f -o default -X '!*.+(bz2|BZ2)' bunzip2
complete -f -o default -X '!*.+(zip|ZIP|z|Z|gz|GZ|bz2|BZ2)' extract
# Documents - Postscript,pdf,dvi.....
complete -f -o default -X '!*.+(ps|PS)' gs ghostview ps2pdf ps2ascii
complete -f -o default -X \
'!*.+(dvi|DVI)' dvips dvipdf xdvi dviselect dvitype
complete -f -o default -X '!*.+(pdf|PDF)' acroread pdf2ps
complete -f -o default -X '!*.@(@(?(e)ps|?(E)PS|pdf|PDF)?\
(.gz|.GZ|.bz2|.BZ2|.Z))' gv ggv
complete -f -o default -X '!*.texi*' makeinfo texi2dvi texi2html texi2pdf
complete -f -o default -X '!*.tex' tex latex slitex
complete -f -o default -X '!*.lyx' lyx
complete -f -o default -X '!*.+(htm*|HTM*)' lynx html2ps
complete -f -o default -X \
'!*.+(doc|DOC|xls|XLS|ppt|PPT|sx?|SX?|csv|CSV|od?|OD?|ott|OTT)' soffice
# Multimedia
complete -f -o default -X \
'!*.+(gif|GIF|jp*g|JP*G|bmp|BMP|xpm|XPM|png|PNG)' xv gimp ee gqview
complete -f -o default -X '!*.+(mp3|MP3)' mpg123 mpg321
complete -f -o default -X '!*.+(ogg|OGG)' ogg123
complete -f -o default -X \
'!*.@(mp[23]|MP[23]|ogg|OGG|wav|WAV|pls|\
m3u|xm|mod|s[3t]m|it|mtm|ult|flac)' xmms
complete -f -o default -X '!*.@(mp?(e)g|MP?(E)G|wma|avi|AVI|\
asf|vob|VOB|bin|dat|vcd|ps|pes|fli|viv|rm|ram|yuv|mov|MOV|qt|\
QT|wmv|mp3|MP3|ogg|OGG|ogm|OGM|mp4|MP4|wav|WAV|asx|ASX)' xine
complete -f -o default -X '!*.pl' perl perl5
_killall()
{
local cur prev
COMPREPLY=()
cur=${COMP_WORDS[COMP_CWORD]}
# Get a list of processes
#+ (the first sed evaluation
#+ takes care of swapped out processes, the second
#+ takes care of getting the basename of the process).
COMPREPLY=( $( ps -u $USER -o comm | \
sed -e '1,1d' -e 's#[]\[]##g' -e 's#^.*/##'| \
awk '{if ($0 ~ /^'$cur'/) print $0}' ))
return 0
}
complete -F _killall killall killps
{ echo -e "\nuptime:"
uptime
echo -e "\ndisk:"
df -h 2> /dev/null
echo -e "\nblock devices:"
blkid
echo -e "\nmemory:"
free -m
} | less
thx
kann ich aber nix mit anfangen leider.
der onkel hat seine farben einfach von 0-15 durchnummeriert. aber ich hab ja zeit *g*