SENSIBLE-EDITOR(1) General Commands Manual SENSIBLE-EDITOR(1)NAME
sensible-editor, sensible-pager, sensible-browser - sensible editing, paging, and web browsing
SYNOPSIS
sensible-editor [OPTIONS...]
sensible-pager [OPTIONS...]
sensible-browser url
DESCRIPTION
sensible-editor, sensible-pager and sensible-browser make sensible decisions on which editor, pager, and web browser to call, respectively.
Programs in Debian can use these scripts as their default editor, pager, or web browser or emulate their behavior.
SEE ALSO
Documentation of the EDITOR, VISUAL and PAGER variables in environ(7) and select-editor(1) for changing a user's default editor
STANDARD
Documentation of behavior of sensible-utils under a debian system is available under section 11.4 of debian-policy usually installed under
/usr/share/doc/debian-policy (you might need to install debian-policy)
Debian 14 Nov 2010 SENSIBLE-EDITOR(1)
Check Out this Related Man Page
LDBEDIT(1) User Commands LDBEDIT(1)NAME
ldbedit - Edit LDB databases using your preferred editor
SYNOPSIS
ldbedit [-?] [--usage] [-s base|one|sub] [-b basedn] [-a] [-e editor] [-H LDB-URL] [expression] [attributes...]
DESCRIPTION
ldbedit is a utility that allows you to edit LDB entries (in tdb files, sqlite files or LDAP servers) using your preferred editor. ldbedit
generates an LDIF file based on your query, allows you to edit the LDIF, and then merges that LDIF back into the LDB backend.
OPTIONS
-?, --help
Show list of available options, and a phrase describing what that option does.
--usage
Show list of available options. This is similar to the help option, however it does not provide any description, and is hence shorter.
-H <ldb-url>
LDB URL to connect to. For a tdb database, this will be of the form tdb://filename. For a LDAP connection over unix domain sockets,
this will be of the form ldapi://socket. For a (potentially remote) LDAP connection over TCP, this will be of the form ldap://hostname.
For an SQLite database, this will be of the form sqlite://filename.
-s one|sub|base
Search scope to use. One-level, subtree or base.
-a, -all
Edit all records. This allows you to apply the same change to a number of records at once. You probably want to combine this with an
expression of the form "objectclass=*".
-e editor, --editor editor
Specify the editor that should be used (overrides the VISUAL and EDITOR environment variables). If this option is not used, and neither
VISUAL nor EDITOR environment variables are set, then the vi editor will be used.
-b basedn
Specify Base Distinguished Name to use.
-v, --verbose
Make ldbedit more verbose about the operations that are being performed. Without this option, ldbedit will only provide a summary
change line.
ENVIRONMENT
LDB_URL
LDB URL to connect to. This can be overridden by using the -H command-line option.)
VISUAL and EDITOR
Environment variables used to determine what editor to use. VISUAL takes precedence over EDITOR, and both are overridden by the -e
command-line option.
VERSION
This man page is correct for version 4.0 of the Samba suite.
SEE ALSO ldb(7), ldbmodify(1), ldbdel(1), ldif(5), vi(1)AUTHOR
ldb was written by Andrew Tridgell.
If you wish to report a problem or make a suggestion then please see the : http://ldb.samba.org/ web site for current contact and
maintainer information.
This manpage was written by Jelmer Vernooij and updated by Brad Hards.
Samba 3.5 06/18/2010 LDBEDIT(1)
I need to use bash to convert sentences where all words start with a small letter into one where all words start with a capital letter.
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are utilities ready for hurricane sandy
becomes:
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Hi
I am new to this forum.
Any please help me to capture ctrl x and ctrl y via a bash script.
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BR
Ramukumar M (4 Replies)
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i know from the command line, the symbol $_ is used to get the last command that was run.
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hi folks,
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i only know how to exclude dir only with this command below:
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Quite an obscure question I think.
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Hi,
What is installation package and how to create it?
When we run:
in AIX:
installp package1
or
in Linux
rpm -ivh mypackage
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I hope my question is clear enough.
Thank you (2 Replies)
What is the point of this? Whenever I close my shell it appends to the history file without adding this. I have never seen it overwrite my history file.
# When the shell exits, append to the history file instead of overwriting it
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Example YAML-File:
--- !ruby/object:Puppet::Node::Facts
... (1 Reply)