[ubuntu-uk] 1000 commands

Alan Jenkins alan.james.jenkins at gmail.com
Tue Nov 5 18:11:37 UTC 2013


Shell scripts and aliases are the way to go for common commands. What on
earth are you using more than a 1000 commands in your history for? I
recommend making yourself aliases and scripts for your most used commands
which you should be able to discern from your history file.

On 5 Nov 2013, at 17:32, Simon Greenwood <sfgreenwood at gmail.com> wrote:




On 5 November 2013 17:18, Steven Roberts <cwmbranmathstutor at gmail.com>wrote:

> I just discovered that, as a default,  only the last 1000 commands are
> stored in the bash history file. Pretty horrified! A quick bit of googling
> gave me the fix to increase the limit etc.
>
> Not sure if this is just Ubuntu or linux in general.
>
> If you're into the command line 1000 commands don't cover a very long
> period. I had made a backup of my history file in google docs/drive so not
> all was lost. But it's something I've never seen reference too before. I
> was on Ubuntu 12.04 so maybe it's changed since then? Don't know.
>
>
> It's been a thousand on most Linux distributions for a while. It certainly
is in CentOS 5 and 6 so that goes back about six years. Interestingly it
appears to have been 500 in Ubuntu in 2009 but I honestly can't remember.
Would converting a few things into aliases or shell scripts reduce your
reliance on history?

S/

-- 
ubuntu-uk at lists.ubuntu.com
https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-uk
https://wiki.ubuntu.com/UKTeam/
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/ubuntu-uk/attachments/20131105/2921b2f1/attachment-0001.html>


More information about the ubuntu-uk mailing list