Andrey Repin writes:
> Greetings, Harry Putnam!
>
>> I'm sure there has been plenty of pounding over time about not being
>> able to get a sshd server working on win 10
>
> That was years ago, when M$ had introduced SSH server of their own into
> Windows10 Pro
I'm sorry my first post here is probably something that was thrashed
out here long ago.
I'm not finding the answers on goggle, even the hits that were from
this newsgroup.
I'm sure there has been plenty of pounding over time about not being
able to get a sshd server working on win 10
Running lat
Harry Putnam writes:
> I guess a way to test would be to use a different entry that relies on
> something besides the meta (alt) key... I've never used anything else
> since my inputrc files are not that complex.
>
> Can you show an example of an entry that uses some other c
Eric Blake writes:
> On 04/20/2011 09:51 AM, Harry Putnam wrote:
>> setup: Cygwin (very recent update) on win 7 (64bit)
>>
>>ls /etc/setup/*read*
>> /etc/setup/libreadline7.lst.gz
Eliot Moss writes:
> On 4/20/2011 12:01 PM, Eric Blake wrote:
>> On 04/20/2011 09:51 AM, Harry Putnam wrote:
>
>> Do you have CRLF line endings on your ~/.inputrc? That would explain
>> failures. To fix it, run 'd2u ~/.inputrc'. Other than that, it works
>
setup: Cygwin (very recent update) on win 7 (64bit)
ls /etc/setup/*read*
/etc/setup/libreadline7.lst.gz /etc/setup/readline.lst.gz
---- ---=--- -
I've never had a cygwin install where using an ~/.inputrc worked.
I've tried quite a few
Dave Korn writes:
> Harry Putnam wrote:
>> I'd like to be able to open a cygwin shell at a specific location
>> from windows explorer. Something like the old windows `power toy'
>> where you could open a windows cmdline shell HERE.
>
> It exists; it'
I'd like to be able to open a cygwin shell at a specific location from
windows explorer. Something like the old windows `power toy' where you
could open a windows cmdline shell HERE.
I have no scripting skills whatever under windows... not even familiar
with batch files and definitely not up on v
In the course of just kind of following my nose during cygwin install
I managed to get sshd setup to start restart etc at
/etc/rc.d/init.d cmd
I like that setup but it seems not to be conducive to working with
cygrunsrv or windows native `net start cmd' both of those approaches
fail.
C
First off, thanks posters for the responses
"Dave Korn" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Since 'id' on its own might give you too many matches, it's worth mentioning
> the handy trick that (this being 'doze not linux really) the full name of the
> program is of course 'id.exe'.
>
> http://cygwin.co
I've just installed a very minimal cygwin. I noticed the `id' tool is
not present and looking on the packages page I don't see it listed
separately so I'm guessing it is contained in a package whos name may
not reflect its presence.
Anyone know which package that might be?
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[EMAIL PROTECTED] (Eric Blake) writes:
> If you expect help, then try opening a plain cmd.com window
> first, running bash there and seeing if any error messages
> appear. Also, send, as a text attachment, the output of
> 'cygcheck -svr'.
When trying the cmd shell approach it became apparent tha
I've been running cygwin in a laptop running XP home. It was working
as expected. However its been a while since I used it and not sure
what all has happened that might effect cygwin... but can think of
nothing off hand.
However, now when I click the bash icon a terminal appears and just as
quic
"James R. Phillips" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Have you actually tried installing the x-server and using it? It takes a
> while
Yes. I just wanted to stay away from extra stuff. But as you
surmised, not if it requires huge energy output.
> to download, but can be used somewhat unobtrusivel
Andy Moreton <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> (cygwin-mount-activate)
Egad I am being a tedious bore. I failed to eval that in my test.
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Andy Moreton <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> On Fri, 26 Aug 2005 12:46:38 GMT, Harry Putnam wrote:
>
>> Andy Moreton <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>>
>>> On Fri, 26 Aug 2005 11:39:39 GMT, Harry Putnam wrote:
> [snipped]
>>>
>>> You may find
Igor Pechtchanski <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Well, you could try compiling Emacs yourself and linking it against libW11
> (that comes with rxvt). Most likely, this will not work, but I'm sure
> patches for missing functionality would be thoughtfully considered by the
> developers of rxvt. 'T
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (Henry S. Thompson) writes:
[...]
> This can be done easily with XEmacs. You can get an only slightly
> stale version (21.4.13) straight out of the box from XEmacs.org [1]
> (pick 'native windows').
>
> Or you can compile your own 21.4.17 from source, but this is _not_ a
> 'stra
Andy Moreton <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> On Fri, 26 Aug 2005 11:39:39 GMT, Harry Putnam wrote:
>
>> My background is unix/linux so when I find myself on MS OS of one
>> vintage or another I sorely need the cygwin tools.
>>
>> However, one thing I've n
My background is unix/linux so when I find myself on MS OS of one
vintage or another I sorely need the cygwin tools.
However, one thing I've not found a way to get smoothed out is how to
run emacs.
I want to run emacs in gui mode but without starting an X session.
That is, similar to what is po
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