diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'app-shells/bash/files/bashrc')
-rw-r--r-- | app-shells/bash/files/bashrc | 109 |
1 files changed, 0 insertions, 109 deletions
diff --git a/app-shells/bash/files/bashrc b/app-shells/bash/files/bashrc deleted file mode 100644 index 8d9c29738b62..000000000000 --- a/app-shells/bash/files/bashrc +++ /dev/null @@ -1,109 +0,0 @@ -# /etc/bash/bashrc -# -# This file is sourced by all *interactive* bash shells on startup, -# including some apparently interactive shells such as scp and rcp -# that can't tolerate any output. So make sure this doesn't display -# anything or bad things will happen ! - - -# Test for an interactive shell. There is no need to set anything -# past this point for scp and rcp, and it's important to refrain from -# outputting anything in those cases. -if [[ $- != *i* ]] ; then - # Shell is non-interactive. Be done now! - return -fi - -# Bash won't get SIGWINCH if another process is in the foreground. -# Enable checkwinsize so that bash will check the terminal size when -# it regains control. #65623 -# http://cnswww.cns.cwru.edu/~chet/bash/FAQ (E11) -shopt -s checkwinsize - -# Disable completion when the input buffer is empty. i.e. Hitting tab -# and waiting a long time for bash to expand all of $PATH. -shopt -s no_empty_cmd_completion - -# Enable history appending instead of overwriting when exiting. #139609 -shopt -s histappend - -# Save each command to the history file as it's executed. #517342 -# This does mean sessions get interleaved when reading later on, but this -# way the history is always up to date. History is not synced across live -# sessions though; that is what `history -n` does. -# Disabled by default due to concerns related to system recovery when $HOME -# is under duress, or lives somewhere flaky (like NFS). Constantly syncing -# the history will halt the shell prompt until it's finished. -#PROMPT_COMMAND='history -a' - -# Change the window title of X terminals -case ${TERM} in - [aEkx]term*|rxvt*|gnome*|konsole*|interix) - PS1='\[\033]0;\u@\h:\w\007\]' - ;; - screen*) - PS1='\[\033k\u@\h:\w\033\\\]' - ;; - *) - unset PS1 - ;; -esac - -# Set colorful PS1 only on colorful terminals. -# dircolors --print-database uses its own built-in database -# instead of using /etc/DIR_COLORS. Try to use the external file -# first to take advantage of user additions. -# We run dircolors directly due to its changes in file syntax and -# terminal name patching. -use_color=false -if type -P dircolors >/dev/null ; then - # Enable colors for ls, etc. Prefer ~/.dir_colors #64489 - LS_COLORS= - if [[ -f ~/.dir_colors ]] ; then - eval "$(dircolors -b ~/.dir_colors)" - elif [[ -f /etc/DIR_COLORS ]] ; then - eval "$(dircolors -b /etc/DIR_COLORS)" - else - eval "$(dircolors -b)" - fi - # Note: We always evaluate the LS_COLORS setting even when it's the - # default. If it isn't set, then `ls` will only colorize by default - # based on file attributes and ignore extensions (even the compiled - # in defaults of dircolors). #583814 - if [[ -n ${LS_COLORS:+set} ]] ; then - use_color=true - else - # Delete it if it's empty as it's useless in that case. - unset LS_COLORS - fi -else - # Some systems (e.g. BSD & embedded) don't typically come with - # dircolors so we need to hardcode some terminals in here. - case ${TERM} in - [aEkx]term*|rxvt*|gnome*|konsole*|screen|cons25|*color) use_color=true;; - esac -fi - -if ${use_color} ; then - if [[ ${EUID} == 0 ]] ; then - PS1+='\[\033[01;31m\]\h\[\033[01;34m\] \w \$\[\033[00m\] ' - else - PS1+='\[\033[01;32m\]\u@\h\[\033[01;34m\] \w \$\[\033[00m\] ' - fi - - #BSD#@export CLICOLOR=1 - #GNU#@alias ls='ls --color=auto' - alias grep='grep --colour=auto' - alias egrep='egrep --colour=auto' - alias fgrep='fgrep --colour=auto' -else - # show root@ when we don't have colors - PS1+='\u@\h \w \$ ' -fi - -for sh in /etc/bash/bashrc.d/* ; do - [[ -r ${sh} ]] && source "${sh}" -done - -# Try to keep environment pollution down, EPA loves us. -unset use_color sh |