Software Distributor Administration Guide (March 2009)

Table Of Contents
A Command Options
This appendix reviews the basics of altering SD-UX command options and provides
an alphabetic list of all options and their default values.
Table A-1 Chapter Topics
Topics:
“Changing Command Options” (page 299)
“Options Listed Alphabetically” (page 300)
A.1 Changing Command Options
Changing the option values lets you change command behavior and tailor SD-UX
policies to your needs. You can change options using predefined files, values you
specify directly on the command-line, or the GUI Options Editor from the Options
menu. Altering option values using files can help when you don’t want to specify
command behavior every time you invoke the command.
These rules govern the way the options work:
Option values specified in /var/adm/sw/defaults affect all SD-UX commands
on that system. This file can change options for all commands to which an option
applies or for specific commands only.
Option values in your personal $HOME/.swdefaults file affect only you and not
the entire system.
Option values read from a session file affect only that session.
Options changed on the command line by the -X option_file or the
-xoption=value arguments override the system-wide and personal defaults
files but affect only that invocation of the command.
For system-wide policy setting, use the /var/adm/sw/defaults files. Keep in mind,
however, that users may override these values with their own $HOME/.swdefaults
file, session files, or command line changes.
The template file /usr/lib/sw/sys.defaults provides documentation for all
options, and contains instructions for an easy way to change system-wide or personal
default files.
The template file documents as comments all SD-UX command options, the commands
to which they apply, their possible values, and the resulting system behavior. You can
copy values from this file into the system defaults file (/var/adm/sw/defaults),
your personal defaults file ($HOME/.swdefaults), or an input file and uncomment
them to affect your system behavior.
Option files use the syntax:
A.1 Changing Command Options 299