At 1:56p -0400 on 02 Jun 2007, sac wrote: > On 6/2/07, Christopher Hilton <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: >> VeeJay wrote: >>> Could someone would like to describe that how we can disable to show >>> last executed commands by pressing Up Arrow? >>> >> >> That would depend on which shell you are running. Can you run the >> following command and post the results here? >> >> echo $SHELL > > By default most of the shells like bash, zsh, ksh have history option. > But you can avoid writing the history of the current session to the > history file by unsetting the HISTFILE environment variable. > So next time when you login the history of the previous session will > not be shown.
I'd be curious as to the underlying "why?". Having a history of what you've done is generally a Good Thing. The only reason that I personally have ever come across to necessitate not storing my actions is when I'm playing a prank on one of my friends. Other than that, having the ability to go see what commands I was executing three years ago comes in awful handy. I /could/ recreate that arcane command sequence for that one-off job I needed 1,237 days ago, or I could do a history | grep 'substring I remember in command' | less And, if you're worried about the space it takes to store the history, don't. It's extremely negligible. Kevin _______________________________________________ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"