From 98a43ee9cb65599c0881e85e8f92c1c12bd2db89 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Archaic Date: Thu, 23 Jun 2005 17:22:06 +0000 Subject: Rewrote the inputrc page. git-svn-id: http://svn.linuxfromscratch.org/LFS/trunk/BOOK@6128 4aa44e1e-78dd-0310-a6d2-fbcd4c07a689 --- chapter07/inputrc.xml | 57 ++++++++++++++++----------------------------------- 1 file changed, 18 insertions(+), 39 deletions(-) (limited to 'chapter07/inputrc.xml') diff --git a/chapter07/inputrc.xml b/chapter07/inputrc.xml index 842f35929..21558f729 100644 --- a/chapter07/inputrc.xml +++ b/chapter07/inputrc.xml @@ -9,50 +9,29 @@ /etc/inputrc -The /etc/inputrc file deals with mapping -the keyboard for specific situations. This file is the start-up file -used by Readline, the input-related -library used by Bash and most other -shells. - -For more information, see the bash info page, section -Readline Init File. The -readline info page is -also a good source of information. - -Global values are set in /etc/inputrc. -Personal user values are set in ~/.inputrc. The -~/.inputrc file will override the global settings -file. A later page sets up Bash to use -/etc/inputrc if there is no -.inputrc for a user when -/etc/profile is read (usually at login). To make -the system use both, or to negate global keyboard handling, it is a -good idea to place a default .inputrc into the -/etc/skel directory for use -with new users. - -Below is a base /etc/inputrc, along with -comments to explain what the various options do. Note that comments -cannot be on the same line as commands. - -To create the .inputrc in /etc/skel using the command below, change -the command's output to /etc/skel/.inputrc and be sure to -check/set permissions afterward. Copy that file to -/etc/inputrc and the home directory of any user -already existing on the system, including root, -that needs a private version of the file. Be certain to use the --p parameter of cp to -maintain permissions and be sure to change owner and group -appropriately. +The inputrc file handles keyboard mapping for +specific situations. This file is the startup file used by Readline — the +input-related library — used by Bash and most other shells. + +Most people do not need user-specific keyboard mappings so the command +below creates a global /etc/inputrc used by everyone who +logs in. If you later decide you need to override the defaults on a per-user +basis, you can create a .inputrc file in the user's home +directory with the modified mappings. + +For more information on how to edit the inputrc file, see info +bash under the Readline Init File section. +info readline is also a good source of information. + +Below is a generic global inputrc along with comments +to explain what the various options do. Note that comments cannot be on the same +line as commands. Create the file using the following command: cat > /etc/inputrc << "EOF" # Begin /etc/inputrc # Modified by Chris Lynn <roryo@roryo.dynup.net> -# Make sure we don't output everything on the 1 line +# Allow the command prompt to wrap to the next line set horizontal-scroll-mode Off # Enable 8bit input -- cgit v1.2.3-54-g00ecf