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Re: questions
> From oferm@NetVision.net.il Thu Feb 8 12:10 IST 1996
> From: Ofer Maor <oferm@NetVision.net.il>
> To: "Israeli Linux users list" <Linux-il@hagiga.jct.ac.il>
> Subject: Re: questions
> Date: Thu, 8 Feb 96 12:01:36 GMT
> X-Listname: <Linux-il@hagiga.jct.ac.il>
> Mime-Version: 1.0
>
> errr... who said anything about some OS's... as far as I remember... this is
> linux-il, and those were linux oriented questions! in linux - no reason why
> NOT to use tcsh.
>
> --- On Thu, 8 Feb 1996 11:01:33 +0200 (IST) Shay Rojansky
> <roji@cs.huji.ac.il> wrote:
>
> >On Wed, 7 Feb 1996, Ofer Maor wrote:
> >
> >> quite bullshit ;)
> >>
> >> all scripts can be still on bash, while the shell you work in is on tcsh.
> >> when you run a script, the shell it's on is runned again anyway. unless a
> >> shell is specified in the first line in #!/bin/blabla - then it will
> invoke
> >> the current shell - but every normal shell DOES have this line on top. I
> run
> >> root as tcsh (although I know bash is better, but I am just used for tcsh,
>
> >> what can I do... :) - and everyting works just fine.
> >
> >Quite not bullshit ;)
> >
> >I'm not sure about Linux, but in some OSs you might have a situation
> >where after a crash you don't have access to tcsh, since it isn't
> >"necessary". You might reach a stage where you can't login as root because
> >tcsh isn't available.
> >
> >Shay
> >
> >--
> >Shay Rojansky, roji@cs.huji.ac.il Finger for PGP public key
> >
> >
> >
>
> -----------------End of Original Message-----------------
>
>
>
> ============================================================================
> Ofer Maor IRC Nick: Slarti
> NetVision Technical Support | Student, Computer Science, Technion
> Email: oferm@NetVision.net.il | Email: s3866563@techst02.technion.ac.il
> Work Phone: +972-4-8550330 | Home Phone: +972-4-8256482
> HomePage: http://www.netvision.net.il/~oferm/
>
There is only one reason not to use tcsh and not to copy it to bin:
the root can log in into any workstation in the network without
taking care about the login shell: it will be the same, even if mounts
have failed and there is no /bin/[t]csh locally.
Besides, it is not very common to put new things into /bin,
the upgrade can spoil everything.
But if you are root at your home and not connected to network
( besides some PPP/SLIP connection ), why not?
Yuri Shirman ( yuri@orbotech.co.il )