I have been given a personal profile on a linux project server running bash 3.2.15. Every time I run a command it echoes the text of the command to screen. This isn't a serious issue, but it bugs the crap out of me. I can't find any specific command in .profile or .bashrc that sets this up, and everything I find through google is how to enable it. Not how to disable it. Anybody got any ideas?
It sounds like debugging has been enabled (using set -x). You can disable it using set +x.
Related
I just switched to a windows machine and I'm trying to get fish configured correctly. I installed it through the default route, as a shell selected through cygwin setup. It seems to be working fine, but when I directly access fish.exe or run fish.exe through IntelliJ, it outputs a ? before very prompt:
I googled and found this on fish documentation FAQ:
I'm seeing weird output before each prompt when using screen. What's wrong?
Quick answer:
Run the following command in fish:
echo 'function fish_title;end' > ~/.config/fish/config.fish
Problem solved!
The long answer:
Fish is trying to set the titlebar message of your terminal. While
screen itself supports this feature, your terminal does not.
Unfortunately, when the underlying terminal doesn't support setting
the titlebar, screen simply passes through the escape codes and text
to the underlying terminal instead of ignoring them. It is impossible
detect and resolve this problem from inside fish since fish has no way
of knowing what the underlying terminal type is. For now, the only way
to fix this is to unset the titlebar message, as suggested above.
Note that fish has a default titlebar message, which will be used if
the fish_title function is undefined. So simply unsetting the
fish_title function will not work
So it appears that intelliJ and cmd (fish.exe runs in cmd.exe if you access it directly) do not support setting the title bar, so they just output the character to the terminal instead. However, their suggested solution does not work. I've tried various options like echoing an empty string or a space, but nothing gets rid of that darn question mark.
Has anyone else run into this and found a solution?
Notes:
It doesn't have this behavior when using fish through mintty.exe,
most likely since that terminal supports setting the title, but I really prefer
to use the terminal inside intelliJ instead of having it in a
separate window.
It didn't have this problem when I used fish through IntelliJ on Ubuntu or MacOSX, it appears to be isolated to Windows
I have Vim on Windows server 2012, and when I start it from the start menu everything works fine. However, when I start it from the command line it take 5 seconds and uses 700MB memory. Even when its not opening a file. There is something weird going on, and I was wondering if there are any ways to debug it/figure out what is causing this? Thanks, Eric.
EDIT:
Here is the result of vim --startuptime outputfile (abbreviated):
times in msec
clock self+sourced self: sourced script
clock elapsed: other lines
000.000 000.000: --- VIM STARTING ---
...
016.000 016.000: parsing arguments
016.000 000.000: expanding arguments
4794.000 4778.000: shell init
4794.000 000.000: Termcap init
...
4825.000 000.000: setting raw mode
8768.000 3943.000: start termcap
8768.000 000.000: clearing screen
8783.000 000.000: --- VIM STARTED ---
You could use Sysinternals' Process Explorer to check if any of the processes are starting child processes or if there is any difference in the environmental variables.
Also, Sysinternals' Procmon would allow you to check what registry entries, files, etc does any application use (filter by command name includes vim), but probably you will find the differences just with Process Explorer.
Sysinternals was a company that created some nice apps for Windows and Microsoft bought it some years ago. You can access the last version of any of their apps on http://live.sysinternals.com
Excerpt from Vim FAQ 2.5:
2.5. I have a "xyz" (some) problem with Vim. How do I determine it is a
problem with my setup or with Vim? / Have I found a bug in Vim?
First, you need to find out, whether the error is in the actual runtime
files or any plugin that is distributed with Vim or whether it is a
simple side effect of any configuration option from your .vimrc or
.gvimrc. So first, start vim like this:
vim -u NONE -U NONE -N -i NONE
this starts Vim in nocompatible mode (-N), without reading your viminfo
file (-i NONE), without reading any configuration file (-u NONE for not
reading .vimrc file and -U NONE for not reading a .gvimrc file) or even
plugin.
In this invocation, try to reproduce your problem. If the error
persists, the chance is good you've found a bug in Vim (see also
Question 2.6. faq-2.6)
If the error does not occur when starting Vim this way, then the problem
is either related to some plugin of yours or some setting in one of your
local setup files. You need to find out, what triggers the error, you
try starting Vim this way:
vim -u NONE -U NONE -N
If the error occurs, the problem is your .viminfo file. Simply delete
the viminfo file then. If the error does not occur, try:
vim -u ~/.vimrc --noplugin -N -i NONE
This will simply use your .vimrc as configuration file, but not load any
plugins. If the error occurs this time, the error is possibly caused by
some configuration option inside your .vimrc file. Depending on the
length of your vimrc file, it can be quite hard to trace the origin
within that file.
The best way is to add :finish command in the middle of your .vimrc.
Then restart again using the same command line. If the error still
occurs, the bug must be caused because of a setting in the first half of
your .vimrc. If it doesn't happen, the problematic setting must be in
the second half of your .vimrc. So move the :finish command to the
middle of that half, of which you know that triggers the error and move
your way along, until you find the problematic option.
It also mentions how to create a log file:
You can also use the -V command line argument to get more debug
information to analyze the problem:
$ vim -V2logfile
You can increase the value passed to the -V argument to get more debug
information. By also specifying a logfile name, this makes sure, the
debug messages don't appear on the screen and won't disturb you when
trying to reproduce the problem.
I have a "stock" xmonad install on Arch.
No changes to my xmonad.hs yet
I have installed dmenu.
It runs by alt-p, the default, and displays and filters as expected.
Chromium runs, but other items, like ranger, alsamixer or other tasks do not.
I am not finding anything anywhere about anyone having to do anything to get these items to run, nor anyone having any issues with doing so.
Surely, then, there is something wrong in my install.
my dmenu_run is as follows:
#!/bin/sh
dmenu_path | dmenu "$#" | ${SHELL:-"/bin/sh"} &
I would normally run terminology with bash or zsh. I have tried to alter the SHELL to /bin/bash, but to no avail.
Is there any other place I must look or items I should alter?
Such a shame as I am really liking xmonad so far, and want to get dmenu working before I start exploring xmonad.hs...
Thanks in advance
UPDATE: I have found the following
here over at Archwiki that involves changing dmenu_run and adding a .demenu_term in one's home. It seems to work, but still wonder if there was a more orthadox mechanism.
ranger and alsamixer are applications which run inside a terminal. Imagine (or try) to run ls via dmenu, where should the directory listing be printed to without a terminal?
You look for functionality which is provided either by prompt imported from XMonad.Prompt.Shell by using a convinient keybinding like
((modm .|. shiftMask, xK_c), prompt ("xterm" ++ " -e") greenXPConfig)
(described in the linked documentation) or shellPrompt where you execute
xterm -e alsamixer
or any other command, e.g.
feh path/to/image/you/want/to/open/now.jpg
instead of opening a terminal, running above with tailing & and exiting the terminal.
I want to create my own personal logfile that logs not only when I log in and out, but also when I lock/unlock my screen. Kindof like /var/log/wtmp on steroids.
To do this, I decided to run a script when I log into Ubuntu that runs in the background until I quit. My plan to do this is to add the script to .bashrc, using ./startlogging.sh & and in the script I will use trap to catch signals. That's great, except .bashrc gets run every time I open a new terminal, which is not what I want for the logger.
Is there a way to tell in Bash that the current login is a gnome login? Alternatively, is there some sort of .gnomerc I can use to run my script?
Edit: Here is my script:
Edit 2: Removed the script, since it's not related to the question. I will repost my other question, rather than repurpose this one.
Are you looking for a way to detect what type of terminal it is?
Try:
echo $TERM
From Wikipedia:
TERM (Unix-like) - specifies the type of computer terminal or terminal
emulator being used (e.g., vt100 or dumb).
See also: List of Terminal Emulators
for bash use : ~/.bash_logout
that will get executed when you logout, which sounds like what you are trying to do.
Well, for just bash, what you want are .bash_login/.bash_logout in your home directory (rather than .bashrc) These are run whenever a LOGIN shell starts/finishes, which happens any time you log in to a shell (on a tty or console, or via ssh or other network login). These are NOT run for bash processes created to run in terminal windows that you create (as those are not login shells) so won't get run any time you open a new terminal.
The problem is that if you log in with some mechanism that does not involve a terminal (such as gdm running on the console to start a gnome or kde or unity session), then there's no login shell so .bash_login/logout never get run. For that case, the easiest is probably to put something in your .xsessionrc, which will get run every time you start an X session (which happens for any of those GUI environments, regardless of which one you run). Unfortunately, there's no standard script that runs when an X session finishes.
I am using a bash script to run a number of application (some repeatedly) on a Windows machine through cygwin. The script contains commands to launch those applications, line by line. Most of these applications run for many minutes and many times I have observed that the i+1 th application is not being started even after i th application is completed. In such cases, if I press enter in the cygwin console on which the bash script is running, the next application starts running. Is it because of any issue with bash on cygwin? Or is it an issue with the Windows OS itself? Have any of you observed such an issue with bash + cygwin + Windows?
Thanks.
I think I have seen this before.
Instead of
somecommand
try
somecommand </dev/null
If that doesn't work, try
cmd /c somecommand
Or experiment with other redirections, e.g.
somecommand >/dev/null
Sounds like you may have a problem with your shell script encoding; DOS (and Windows) uses CR+LF line endings, whereas Linux uses LF endings. Try saving the file as LF.
What might also be going on:
When I was running Cygwin on a school laptop, I encountered a dramatic slowing of shell scripts vs. when they were running in a native Linux environment. This was especially apparent when running a configure script from GNU Autotools.
Check your path for slow drives. (From the Cygwin FAQ):
Why is Cygwin suddenly so slow?
If suddenly every command takes a very long time, then something is probably attempting to access a network share. You may have the obsolete //c notation in your PATH or startup files. Using //c means to contact the network server c, which will slow things down tremendously if it does not exist.
You might also want to check whether you have an antivirus program running. Antivirus programs tend to scan every single executable file as it is executed; this can cause problems for even simple shell scripts that run hundreds or even thousands of individual programs before they run their course.
This mailing list post outlines what is needed to pseudo-mount the main /usr/bin directory as cygexec. I'm not sure what that does, but I found it helped.
If you're running a configure script, try the -C option.
Hope this helps!
Occasionally, I'll get this behaviour because I have accidentally deleted the 'she-bang' at the top of the script, that is, deleted the #!/bin/bash on the first line of the script.
It's even more likely for this to happen when a parent shell script calls a child script that has the she-bang missing!
Hope this helps.
A bit of a long shot, but I have seen some similar behaviour previously.
In Windows 2000, if any program running in a command prompt window had some of it's text highlighted by the cursor, it would pause the command running, and you had to press enter or clear the highlighting to get the command prompt to continue executing.
As I said, bit of a long shot, but accidental mouse clicks could be your issue...
Install cygwin with unix style line breaks and forget weird problems like that.
Try saving your script as "the-properly-line-broken-style" for your cygwin. That is, use the style you specified under installation.
Here is some relevant information:
https://stackoverflow.com/a/7048200/657703