On Sunday 01 of February 2009 21:21:33 Gerald Pfeifer wrote:
On Thu, 11 Dec 2008, Susanne Oberhauser wrote:
Command not found. If this is not a typo, see make-it-work(1) for help.
And then the make-it-work man page will tell you right away to run "make-it-work commandname' to locate and install the package providing fancytool.
Seasoned shell kiddies will go one back in history, prefix their last command with 'make-it-work ' and have fun...
Problem is that seasoned shell kiddies don't know about make-it-work command, just because they're kiddies. Better option is change the default behavior of c-n-f handler. On a first run it could print a hint how to activate it, or how to remove it: $ cmd Command 'cmd' not found. To activate the hint type echo "export command_not_found_handle=verbose" >> ~/.bashrc; source ~/.bashrc or disable it by echo "unset commad_not_found_handle" >> ~/.bashrc; source ~/.bashrc $
imho the current solution is solving a problem that doesn't really exist (pretend all software is preinstalled) and creates a new one (lag).
I had many troubles with commands in /usr/sbin, because users responses - it wrote me command not found - even if I told they must use a root. So c-n-f handler warns if command exists and is in /sbin /usr/sbin, which solves those problems. At least this problem is real and exists. Best regards Michal Vyskocil -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse-factory+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse-factory+help@opensuse.org