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Date:      Wed, 9 Jun 1999 12:26:48 +0200 (MET DST)
From:      Lukas Ruf <lpruf@stud.ee.ethz.ch>
To:        Ritwik Bhattacharya <ritwik@dbrci.blr.daimlerbenz.com>
Cc:        FreeBSD Questions <freebsd-questions@FreeBSD.ORG>
Subject:   Re: CSH script -- Need help
Message-ID:  <Pine.GSO.4.10.9906091221380.16279-100000@tardis-a2.ee.ethz.ch>
In-Reply-To: <Pine.BSF.4.10.9906091538240.27046-100000@hamsadhwani.dbrci.blr.daimlerbenz.com>

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Hi Ritwik,

On Wed, 9 Jun 1999, Ritwik Bhattacharya wrote:

> 
> I checked man limit. It's a built-in command of csh, that sets limits on
> the resources a process is allowed to use. Maybe your defaults are a
> problem? I don't use csh, so I don't really know much about this. Is there
> a particular reason you need to use csh ? Bash is far more powerful.
> 
I know, that limit is a built-in of csh. I already tried with different
limits than th defaults -- bot no success.

I know bash from my Linux ages, too. But since I changed to FreeBSD (I
needed to -- since then I am really FreeBSD addicted :-) I have been
using tcsh as the front end and doing my shell programming jobs with
/bin/csh. I really appreciate the similarity of csh to C.

Btw: Executing an empty script with nothing than #!/bin/csh fails.
Executing it with tcsh <script> succeeds.

Thanks for your support.

Kind Regards,

Lukas
--
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