glfs/postlfs/config/logon.xml
Larry Lawrence 5628618eb9 spellcheck pass
git-svn-id: svn://svn.linuxfromscratch.org/BLFS/trunk/BOOK@832 af4574ff-66df-0310-9fd7-8a98e5e911e0
2003-04-07 21:14:53 +00:00

54 lines
2.5 KiB
XML

<sect1 id="postlfs-config-logon">
<?dbhtml filename="logon.html" dir="postlfs"?>
<title>/etc/issue (Customizing your logon)</title>
<para>When you first boot up your new LFS system, the logon screen will
be nice and plain (as it should be in a bare-bones system). Many people
however, will want their system to display some information in the logon
message. This can be accomplished using the
file <filename>/etc/issue</filename>.</para>
<para>The <filename>/etc/issue</filename> file is a plain text file
which will also accept certain Escape sequences (see below) in order to
insert information about the system. There is also the file
<filename>issue.net</filename> which can be used when logging on remotely.
SSH however, will only use it if you set the option in the
configuration file and will also <emphasis>not</emphasis> interpret the
escape sequences as shown below.</para>
<para>One of the most common things which people want to do is to clear
the screen at each logon. The easiest way of doing that is to put a
"clear" escape into /etc/issue. A simple way of doing this is to do
<userinput>clear > /etc/issue</userinput>. This will insert the
relevant escape code into the start of the
<filename>/etc/issue</filename> file. Note that if you do this, when
you edit the file, you should leave the ^[c character on the first line
alone.</para>
<para>The following escapes are recognized by agetty (the program which
usually parses <filename>/etc/issue</filename>). This information is from
<userinput>man agetty</userinput> where you can find extra information
about the logon process.</para>
<para>The issue-file can contain certain escape codes to display various
information. All escape codes consist of a backslash (\) immediately followed
by one of the letters explained below (so \d in
<filename>/etc/issue</filename> would insert the current date).</para>
<para><screen>b Insert the baudrate of the current line.
d Insert the current date.
s Insert the system name, the name of the operating system.
l Insert the name of the current tty line.
m Insert the architecture identifier of the machine, e.g. i486
n Insert the nodename of the machine, also known as the hostname.
o Insert the domainname of the machine.
r Insert the release number of the kernel, e.g. 2.4.16.
t Insert the current time.
u Insert the number of current users logged in.
U Insert the string "1 user" or "&lt;n&gt; users" where &lt;n&gt; is the
number of current users logged in.
v Insert the version of the OS, e.g. the build-date etc.</screen></para>
</sect1>