Ciaran McCreesh posted <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, excerpted below, on Sun, 11 Dec 2005 21:19:08 +0000:
> Does anyone really use emerge --ask? Oh, /my/ yes! The following should speak for itself. (I have a similar set of ep* commands, those in /usr/local/bin, so I can --pretend as my normal user. Yes, I do have autocompletion setup for them all, too, tho it was basically a matter of ensuring the gentoo autocompletion ran first, then using the same autocomplete functions emerge did, since these are almost all just special cases of the emerge command.) ~#cd /usr/local/sbin /usr/local/sbin#for eascript in ea* ;do echo $eascript;cat $eascript;done ea #!/bin/bash exec emerge -av --oneshot $* ea2 #!/bin/bash exec emerge -av $* eafetch #!/bin/bash exec emerge -avuDf $* eafetchworld #!/bin/bash exec emerge -avuDf world eapaK #!/bin/bash exec emerge -avk --oneshot $* eapaK2 #!/bin/bash exec emerge -avk $* eapak #!/bin/bash exec emerge -avK --oneshot $* eapak2 #!/bin/bash exec emerge -avK $* easync #!/bin/bash emerge sync eupdatedb emerge -avuDf world eatree #!/bin/bash exec emerge -avuDt --oneshot $* eatree2 #!/bin/bash exec emerge -avuDt $* eatreeworld #!/bin/bash exec emerge -avuDt world eaworld #!/bin/bash exec emerge -avuD world -- Duncan - List replies preferred. No HTML msgs. "Every nonfree program has a lord, a master -- and if you use the program, he is your master." Richard Stallman in http://www.linuxdevcenter.com/pub/a/linux/2004/12/22/rms_interview.html -- gentoo-dev@gentoo.org mailing list