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Author Message
25 new of 870 responses total.
blaise
response 63 of 870: Mark Unseen   Dec 30 16:29 UTC 2004

Offhand, a good way to get the old behavior would be to use "exec login"
in place of "logout".
gull
response 64 of 870: Mark Unseen   Dec 30 16:29 UTC 2004

Re resp:62: If all you want to do is rerun your .login, use the command
'source .login'.

If you want to log in as someone else, type 'login' and you'll get a new
login prompt.  Note that this opens a subshell; when you type 'exit',
you'll be back in your own account, so don't just turn the computer over
to them and leave. ;)
remmers
response 65 of 870: Mark Unseen   Dec 30 16:44 UTC 2004

Or you could type 'exec login' if you don't want to open a subshell.
keesan
response 66 of 870: Mark Unseen   Dec 30 16:44 UTC 2004

Thanks, I will try all of the above ways to re-login.
I just looked at .login and I find /usr/ucb on the path and also
erase '^?' and tset in there.  Could the script that fixes .login's remove
/usr/ucb from the path?  I don't know why someone is having trouble with
backspace but that appears to be set in .login too.  Changing the ? to H might
fix the problem for those who have the problem.  My backspace works fine.
For some reason I have erase '^H' followed by erase '^?'.  I can erase what
I am typing here with Ctrl-H but not Ctrl-?.  Can someone explain?  
keesan
response 67 of 870: Mark Unseen   Dec 30 16:52 UTC 2004

I tried the following to login to Jim's account and get back to mine:
1.  login then logout > NO CARRIER
2.  exec login then exit > NO CARRIER
3.  login then exit > NO CARRIER
exit appears to invoke logout.   Luckily we now have unlimited phone service.
Did I miss anyone's suggestion of how to get out of Jim's account but stay
connected?  
cross
response 68 of 870: Mark Unseen   Dec 30 16:53 UTC 2004

This response has been erased.

keesan
response 69 of 870: Mark Unseen   Dec 30 17:24 UTC 2004

ssh jdeigert@localhost   asked me a question which I had to answer with yes
and then it added jdeigert to some list and let me into his account.  I could
exit with 'exit' and not get disconnected.  Thanks.  I will make an alias to
save typing this out.  
keesan
response 70 of 870: Mark Unseen   Dec 30 17:35 UTC 2004

A lot of brand new items showed up in other conferences and I could type
fixseen to put them back to used items except in 'homme', where I could
neither fixseen nor read them but was told 'bad item file header'.
blaise
response 71 of 870: Mark Unseen   Dec 30 17:48 UTC 2004

I had forgotten that you are using csh, where login is a builtin.  Try
"exec /usr/bin/login" -- that should log you off and let someone else
log in.  Note that once they have logged in, they will have to do the
same to let another person log in; if the next person to log in uses
logout/exit, then it will disconnect.
kentn
response 72 of 870: Mark Unseen   Dec 30 18:02 UTC 2004

Putting literal ANSI escape codes in picospan rsep/isep/ishort (via
.cfonce) doesn't work for changing colors in bbs any longer.  All I get
are the raw codes.  My terminal can show colors just fine otherwise. 
cross
response 73 of 870: Mark Unseen   Dec 30 18:14 UTC 2004

This response has been erased.

kentn
response 74 of 870: Mark Unseen   Dec 30 18:17 UTC 2004

I was running 'bbs' however 'ft' exhibits the same behavior.
cross
response 75 of 870: Mark Unseen   Dec 30 18:39 UTC 2004

This response has been erased.

nharmon
response 76 of 870: Mark Unseen   Dec 30 18:40 UTC 2004

Does anyone know what causes pine to create these .pine-debug1 files in my
home directory? They tend to annoy :)
cross
response 77 of 870: Mark Unseen   Dec 30 18:47 UTC 2004

This response has been erased.

albaugh
response 78 of 870: Mark Unseen   Dec 30 19:53 UTC 2004

When I just went to run mail I got this:


$ mail

/tmp: write failed, user disk limit reached
mail: /tmp: Disc quota exceeded


Wassup with that?!
albaugh
response 79 of 870: Mark Unseen   Dec 30 19:57 UTC 2004

I am seeing the last line of new / newresponse bbs items missing.
I forget what I had set my pager to - more or less - but now instead of seeing
"More" I am seeing "byte xxxx".  What gives?
gull
response 80 of 870: Mark Unseen   Dec 30 20:02 UTC 2004

Missing the last line of items is often a symptom that the number of
rows on your terminal is not the same as the system thinks it is.
albaugh
response 81 of 870: Mark Unseen   Dec 30 20:06 UTC 2004

(I can't read that last line. :-)

If it says something about number of lines per screen in some config file
setting somewhere, then since I didn't change anything, it's something that
got broken during nextgrex'ing.  Should I go on a search and destroy mission
for myself (and if so, where?), or will something systemic be fixed?

blaise
response 82 of 870: Mark Unseen   Dec 30 20:42 UTC 2004

Gull said:
 Missing the last line of items is often a symptom that the number of
 rows on your terminal is not the same as the system thinks it is.

What terminal type are you set to?  (echo $TERM)

This line is for the line-eater (oh, that takes me back...).
cross
response 83 of 870: Mark Unseen   Dec 30 20:56 UTC 2004

This response has been erased.

tod
response 84 of 870: Mark Unseen   Dec 30 21:02 UTC 2004

the !lock_my_terminal and !lock programs are defunct
drew
response 85 of 870: Mark Unseen   Dec 30 21:08 UTC 2004

    Intermittently there occurs some sort of condition where (a) Pine does
not function, and (b) attempts to enter even a single character into a BBS
response result in a "Core dumped" error message. It's not happening now, but
did happen last night and another previous time.
gelinas
response 86 of 870: Mark Unseen   Dec 30 22:16 UTC 2004

I think I fixed kermit.  Try it; if it doesn't work send a message to staff,
please.
keesan
response 87 of 870: Mark Unseen   Dec 30 23:35 UTC 2004

Pine no longer complains about permissions.   In my home director I find no
pine debug files but there are three '0' length pinerc-numbered files (1 of
3, etc) from June 20 which I presume I can delete.  Kermit worked for
telnetting to sdf, thanks Joe.  I will try exec /usr/bin/login (is this
different from /usr/bin/login?) and if it works make an alias.  But ssh worked
okay to change accounts.  
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