On Wednesday 23 December 2009 03:05:05 Petrus de Calguarium wrote:
Anne Wilson wrote:
> On Tuesday 22 December 2009 17:51:27 Patrick Boutilier wrote:
>> On 12/22/2009 01:46 PM, Anne Wilson wrote:
>> > On Tuesday 22 December 2009 17:30:44 Patrick Boutilier wrote:
>> >> On 12/22/2009 01:13 PM, Anne Wilson wrote:
>> >>> In ~/.bashrc I have the following alias:
>> >>>
>> >>> alias yus='yum update --skip-broken'
>> >>>
>> >>> This no longer works since I installed F12. Any idea why?
>> >>
>> >> What is the result of running "alias" from the command line?
>> >
>> > alias l.='ls -d .* --color=auto'
>> > alias ll='ls -l --color=auto'
>> > alias ls='ls --color=auto'
>> > alias vi='vim'
>> > alias which='alias | /usr/bin/which --tty-only --read-alias --show-dot
>> > --show- tilde'
>> > alias yus='yum update --skip-broken'
>>
>> alias has been added. What doesn't work? :-)
>
> bash doesn't recognise the command.
>
> -bash: yus: command not found
>
> Anne
I defined:
alias yu="sudo yum --skip-broken update"
the only differences being that I put the flag first, then the argument,
and I used quotation marks, not apostrophes. I know there is a difference
in bash between ' and ", but mine really DOES work (on both of my
computers, for both me and root on each).
Maybe try?
I tried this, but 'which yus' still returns the old one. Do I need
'newaliases' or something?
Anne
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