Julian Daich wrote:
Thank you. It is also the reason for what I didn't find the
command"
$chmod" in any place.
J
El dom, 06-02-2005 a las 23:16 -0800, Charles A. Crayne escribió:
>On Mon, 07 Feb 2005 08:27:09 +0200
>Julian Daich <julianlx(a)gmail.com> wrote:
>
>:[root@localhost ~]# $chmod 664 /dev/hdc
>:-bash: 664: command not found
>
>Remove the '$' from the command.
People answering questions on mailing lists (and other online
documentation) will often give commands that need to be run. Sometimes
these instructions will show a typical shell prompt too. So, for
instance, an instruction to run the command "chmod 664 /dev/hdc" will
often be written as:
$ chmod 664 /dev/hdc
The "$" here is supposed to indicate the shell prompt. You might also
find people writing this as "#" to indicate a command that should be run
as the root user:
# chmod 664 /dev/hdc
In your case your shell prompt (for the root user) appears to be
"[root@localhost ~]#" but this will vary from system to system, which is
why the shorthand "$" or "#" is usually shown instead.
Paul.