diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'source/a/etc/_etc/etc/profile.d')
4 files changed, 106 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/source/a/etc/_etc/etc/profile.d/lang.csh.new b/source/a/etc/_etc/etc/profile.d/lang.csh.new new file mode 100755 index 000000000..3073a2d73 --- /dev/null +++ b/source/a/etc/_etc/etc/profile.d/lang.csh.new @@ -0,0 +1,35 @@ +#!/bin/csh +# Set the system locale. (no, we don't have a menu for this ;-) +# For a list of locales which are supported by this machine, type: +# locale -a + +# en_US.UTF-8 is the Slackware default locale. If you're looking for +# a different UTF-8 locale, be aware that some of them do not include +# UTF-8 or utf8 in the name. To test if a locale is UTF-8, use this +# command: +# +# LANG=<locale> locale -k charmap +# +# UTF-8 locales will include "UTF-8" in the output. +setenv LANG en_US.UTF-8 + +# 'C' is the old Slackware (and UNIX) default, which is 127-bit ASCII +# with a charmap setting of ANSI_X3.4-1968. These days, it's better to +# use en_US.UTF-8 or another modern $LANG setting (or at least en_US) +# to support extended character sets. +#setenv LANG C + +# Non-UTF-8 options for en_US: +#setenv LANG en_US +#setenv LANG en_US.ISO8859-1 + +# One side effect of the newer locales is that the sort order +# is no longer according to ASCII values, so the sort order will +# change in many places. Since this isn't usually expected and +# can break scripts, we'll stick with traditional ASCII sorting. +# If you'd prefer the sort algorithm that goes with your $LANG +# setting, comment this out. +setenv LC_COLLATE C + +# End of /etc/profile.d/lang.csh + diff --git a/source/a/etc/_etc/etc/profile.d/lang.sh.new b/source/a/etc/_etc/etc/profile.d/lang.sh.new new file mode 100755 index 000000000..93faef3b1 --- /dev/null +++ b/source/a/etc/_etc/etc/profile.d/lang.sh.new @@ -0,0 +1,35 @@ +#!/bin/sh +# Set the system locale. (no, we don't have a menu for this ;-) +# For a list of locales which are supported by this machine, type: +# locale -a + +# en_US.UTF-8 is the Slackware default locale. If you're looking for +# a different UTF-8 locale, be aware that some of them do not include +# UTF-8 or utf8 in the name. To test if a locale is UTF-8, use this +# command: +# +# LANG=<locale> locale -k charmap +# +# UTF-8 locales will include "UTF-8" in the output. +export LANG=en_US.UTF-8 + +# 'C' is the old Slackware (and UNIX) default, which is 127-bit ASCII +# with a charmap setting of ANSI_X3.4-1968. These days, it's better to +# use en_US.UTF-8 or another modern $LANG setting (or at least en_US) +# to support extended character sets. +#export LANG=C + +# Non-UTF-8 options for en_US: +#export LANG=en_US +#export LANG=en_US.ISO8859-1 + +# One side effect of the newer locales is that the sort order +# is no longer according to ASCII values, so the sort order will +# change in many places. Since this isn't usually expected and +# can break scripts, we'll stick with traditional ASCII sorting. +# If you'd prefer the sort algorithm that goes with your $LANG +# setting, comment this out. +export LC_COLLATE=C + +# End of /etc/profile.d/lang.sh + diff --git a/source/a/etc/_etc/etc/profile.d/z-dot-in-non-root-path.csh.new b/source/a/etc/_etc/etc/profile.d/z-dot-in-non-root-path.csh.new new file mode 100644 index 000000000..8ff364f1b --- /dev/null +++ b/source/a/etc/_etc/etc/profile.d/z-dot-in-non-root-path.csh.new @@ -0,0 +1,17 @@ +#!/bin/csh +# Traditionally Slackware has included '.' at the end of the non-root +# $path, and kept this behavior long after it had been dropped elsewhere +# due to the relatively low attack risk by having it at (or near) the +# end of the $path. But times have changed, and having this as a default +# violates POLA (principle of least astonishment) just like removing it +# back in the early 90s would have. So, by default this script is not +# enabled. If you'd like '.' back at the end of your $path for non-root +# users systemwide, make this script executable. A better choice is +# probably to leave it off and let individual users decide to add it +# in their local profile scripts if they want it. Even better is just +# to start programs in '.' with ./program, like most of us have been +# doing for years. + +# For non-root users, add the current directory to the search path: +if (! "$uid" == "0") set path = ( $path . ) + diff --git a/source/a/etc/_etc/etc/profile.d/z-dot-in-non-root-path.sh.new b/source/a/etc/_etc/etc/profile.d/z-dot-in-non-root-path.sh.new new file mode 100644 index 000000000..92880d102 --- /dev/null +++ b/source/a/etc/_etc/etc/profile.d/z-dot-in-non-root-path.sh.new @@ -0,0 +1,19 @@ +#!/bin/sh +# Traditionally Slackware has included '.' at the end of the non-root +# $PATH, and kept this behavior long after it had been dropped elsewhere +# due to the relatively low attack risk by having it at (or near) the +# end of the $PATH. But times have changed, and having this as a default +# violates POLA (principle of least astonishment) just like removing it +# back in the early 90s would have. So, by default this script is not +# enabled. If you'd like '.' back at the end of your $PATH for non-root +# users systemwide, make this script executable. A better choice is +# probably to leave it off and let individual users decide to add it +# in their local profile scripts if they want it. Even better is just +# to start programs in '.' with ./program, like most of us have been +# doing for years. + +# For non-root users, add the current directory to the search path: +if [ ! "`id -u`" = "0" ]; then + PATH="$PATH:." +fi + |