On Wed, Dec 17, 2008 at 10:28 AM, John Lange
I don't like the fact that SUSE aliases l = ls -laF. I'd rather have it as 'ls -lF'. Ok, no problem (I thought). I'll just create /etc/bash.bashrc.local and put "alias l='ls -lF'" .
It works and here is my alias entries:
alias l='ls -lF' alias la='ls -la' alias ll='ls -l' alias ls='/bin/ls $LS_OPTIONS'
Except, it actually doesn't work. No matter what I do "ls" always does a "-a".
Try it. If you do "ls", you actually get "ls -a". "ls -l" is actually "ls -la".
Where is "ls" is getting "-a" from and I how do I fix it? It's not in an alias entry so where could it be?
-- John Lange www.johnlange.ca
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It sounds like you may need to either edit your shell environment or just use /bin/ls instead. Boris. -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse+help@opensuse.org