On Thu, Aug 01, 2013 at 11:49:27AM -0700, Joe Zeff wrote:
On 08/01/2013 06:20 AM, Tom Horsley wrote:
>On Thu, 01 Aug 2013 09:07:07 -0400
>Neal Becker wrote:
>
>>I suspect colored prompts are confusing emacs tramp. What's the easiest way
to
>>turn it off for all users (especially root)?
>
>There is a whole slew of things in /etc/profile that turn on
>annoying environment variables which enable things like that.
>Grep for the one responsible, do an rpm -q -f /etc/profile/whatever
>to see which package inflicted it on you, then yum -C erase
>that package (of course, checking to see there aren't
>other more critical things provided by the package :-).
>
Personally, I've never liked color ls, largely because it's almost
impossible to find a chart that tells you what the colors mean. I
used to track down where that was set and disable it, but that can
get changed by an update. Now, I just put the following line near
the bottom of ~/.bashrc:
alias ls=ls
and that overrides anything done earlier. Maybe there's something
equivalent for this that will work for all users on prompts.
The colors are defined in /etc/profile.d/colorls.sh:
mcpierce@mcpierce-laptop:temp (master) $ rpm -qf /etc/profile.d/colorls.sh
coreutils-8.21-11.fc19.x86_64
--
Darryl L. Pierce <mcpierce(a)gmail.com>
http://mcpierce.fedorapeople.org/
"What do you care what people think, Mr. Feynman?"