If you work at several kinds of terminals, terminal setup can be tough. For instance, my X terminal sends a backspace character when I push the upper-right key, but the same key on another terminal sends a delete character-I want stty erase ( 5.9 ) to set the right erase character automatically. Maybe you want a full set of calendar programs started when you log in to the terminal at your desk, but not when you make a quickie login ( 2.5 ) from somewhere else.
Here are some ideas for changing your login sequence automatically. Some examples are for the C shell and use that shell's switch ( 47.6 ) and if ( 47.3 ) . Examples for Bourne-type shells use case ( 44.5 ) and if ( 44.8 ) . If you use the other type of shell, the idea still applies; just switch the syntax.
If all you want to do is initialize your terminal (set the TERM variable ( 5.10 ) , set your erase character, etc.), the tset ( 5.3 ) command may be all you need.
If your TERM environment variable is set differently on each terminal, you can add a test like this to your .login file:
switch ($TERM) case vt100:
...do commands for vt100
breaksw case
xxx
:
...do commands for xxx
breaksw default:
...do commands for other terminals
breaksw endsw
and so on.
If you log in from other hosts ( 1.33 ) or from hosts running the X window system ( 1.31 ) , the who am i command will probably show a hostname and/or window information in parentheses:
bash$who am ijpeek pts/6 Jul 17 10:30 (www.jpeek.com:0.0)
(Long hostnames may be truncated. Check yours before you write this test.) If the information in parentheses will help, add commands like these to your .profile file:
case \(..\) \1 |
case "`who am i | sed -n 's/.*(\(.*\))/\1/p'`" in *0.0) ...do commands for X display 0 ;; mac2*) ...do commands for the host mac2.foo.com ;; "") ...no output (probably not a remote login) ;; *) ...do commands for other situations ;; esac |
|---|
That uses
sed
(
34.24
)
to give the text between the parentheses for that remote host to the
case
. This
*0.0
case matches lines ending with
0.0
, the
mac2
case matches lines that start with
mac2
, an empty string means
sed
probably didn't find any parentheses, and the
*
case catches everything else.
If you know that certain port numbers are used for certain kinds of logins, you can test that. For example, many systems use ttyp0 , ttyq1 , etc. as network ports for rlogin and telnet ( 1.33 ) . This test will branch on the port name:
case "`tty`" in /dev/tty[pqrs]?) # rlogin, telnet: ... /dev/tty02) # terminal on my desk: ... "not a tty") ;; ...not a terminal login session; do nothing esac
Certain systems set certain environment variables. For example, the X Window System sets a DISPLAY environment variable. (If you aren't sure about your system, use the env or printenv command ( 6.1 ) to look for changes in your environment at different systems.) You can test that:
if $? |
if ($?DISPLAY) then # on X window system ... else if ($?WIN_PARENT) then # on SunView system ... else ... endif |
|---|
Your system may have a /etc/ttytab or /etc/ttys file that lists the type of each terminal port. Lines in the file look something like this:
console "/usr/etc/getty std.9600" vt100 on local tty00 "/usr/etc/getty std.9600" dialup off local tty01 "/usr/etc/getty std.9600" plugboard off local ... ttyp0 none network off ...
(For example, port ttyp0 is network , the type used by xterm ( 1.31 ) , telnet ( 1.33 ) , and so on.)
You can match the output of the
tty
(
3.8
)
command, which shows your current tty, to the first column of that file. The output of
tty
starts with
/dev
or
/dev/pts
. So, to match your current tty to the file, you need to strip the name to its tail. For example, in
bash
and
ksh
, these three lines would put the terminal port type (
vt100
,
plugboard
, etc.) into the
ttykind
shell variable:
${..#..} awk |
tty=`tty` ttytail=${tty#/dev/} ttykind=`awk '$1 == "'$ttytail'" {print $3}' /etc/ttys`
|
|---|
You can also deal with many of these cases using the venerable but obscure tset ( 5.3 ) program to select and initialize the correct terminal type. Another program you can use to set the terminal type is qterm ( 5.5 ) , available on the CD-ROM.
-