HP-UX Reference (11i v2 03/08) - 1 User Commands N-Z (vol 2)
s
sh-posix(1) sh-posix(1)
typeset alone displays a list of parameter names, prefixed by any flags specified above.
typeset - displays the parameter names followed by their values. Specify one or more of the
option letters to restrict the list. Some options are incompatible with others.
typeset + displays the parameter names alone. Specify one or more of the option letters to res-
trict the list. Some options are incompatible with others.
ulimit [-HSacdfnst][limit]
Set or display a resource limit. The limit for a specified resource is set when limit is specified. The
value of limit can be a number in the unit specified with each resource, or the keyword
unlim-
ited.
The
-H and -S flags specify whether the hard limit or the soft limit is set for the given resource. A
hard limit cannot be increased once it is set. A soft limit can be increased up to the hard limit. If
neither -H nor -S is specified, the limit applies to both. The current resource limit is printed when
limit is omitted. In this case, the soft limit is printed unless
-H is specified. When more than one
resource is specified, the limit name and unit are printed before the value.
If no option is given,
-f
is assumed.
-a List all of the current resource limits.
-c The number of 512-byte blocks in the size of core dumps.
-d The number of kilobytes in the size of the data area.
-f The number of 512-byte blocks in files written by child processes (files of any size can be
read).
-n The number of file descriptors.
-s The number of kilobytes in the size of the stack area.
-t The number of seconds to be used by each process.
umask [-S][mask]
Set the user file-creation mask mask. mask can be either an octal number or a symbolic value as
described in umask(1). A symbolic value shows permissions that are unmasked. An octal value
shows permissions that are masked off.
Without mask, print the current value of the mask. With
-S, print the value in symbolic format.
Without -S, print the value as an octal number. The output from either form can be used as the
mask of a subsequent invocation of umask.
unalias name ...
unalias -a
Remove each name from the alias list. With -a, remove all alias definitions from the current
shell execution environment. See also the alias special command.
%
unset [-fv] name ...
Remove the named shell parameters from the parameter list. Their values and attributes are
erased. Read-only variables cannot be unset. With
-f, names refer to function names. With -v,
names refer to variable names. Unsetting _, ERRNO, LINENO, MAILCHECK, OPTARG, OPTIND,
RANDOM, SECONDS, and TMOUT removes their special meaning, even if they are subsequently
assigned to.
wait [job]
Wait for the specified job to terminate or stop, and report its status. This status becomes the return
code for the
wait command. Without job, wait for all currently active child processes to terminate
or stop. The termination status returned is that of the last process. See the Jobs subsection for a
description of the format of job.
whence [-pv] name ...
For each name, indicate how it would be interpreted if used as a command name. With
-v, produce
a more verbose report. With -p do a path search for name, disregarding any use as an alias, a
function, or a reserved word.
Comments
A word beginning with
# causes that word and all the following characters up to a newline to be ignored.
HP-UX 11i Version 2: August 2003 − 11 − Hewlett-Packard Company Section 1−−809