David C. Rankin wrote:
K.R. Foley wrote:
That doesn't make any sense. Could you post the actual code of the script? If the code is as you show it above there is no way that it lists the current directory, unless you have some kind of wierd alias for ls. Type "which ls" without the quotes to see where ls is being run from.
I agree that it doesn't make any sense. Here is the script in its entirety:
#!/bin/bash echo -e *** /usr/lib/libGL.so Config '\n' ls -al /usr/lib/libGL.so* echo -e *** /usr/lib/libIndirect Config '\n' ls -al /usr/lib/libIn* echo -e '\n' read -p "Strike and Key to See xorg.conf: " key echo -e '\n' tail -n24 /etc/X11/xorg.conf
Run it, it just shows a few config files. You will see that is produces a ls of the present directory before doing what it should. Any thoughts?
Hi, Your script is wrong. change all your echo to (use double quotes) echo -e "*** /usr/lib/libGL.so Config \n" and all your probs will disappear!! -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse+help@opensuse.org