145 lines
9.0 KiB
Plaintext
145 lines
9.0 KiB
Plaintext
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Episode: 1113
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Title: HPR1113: TermDuckEn aptsh - screen - guake
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr1113/hpr1113.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-17 19:10:13
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---
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Howdy folks, this is 5150 for Hacker Public Radio.
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I recently discovered the AppShell, a pseudo shell which gives users of distributions which
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use app for package management quick access to the functionality of AppDash yet.
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The command to get into the shell is actually Alpha, Papa, Tango, Sierra Hotel.
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You should find AppShell in their repositories of Debian-based distros.
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Once installed, you can launch AppShell's root from the command link, i.e. pseudo-appshell.
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One of the drawbacks of installing software from Terminals is that sometimes you don't
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know the exact name of the package you want to install.
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From the AppShell prompt, ls plus search string will show all the packages that have that
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string in their names.
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You can then type install plus a partial package name and use tab completion to finish
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the instruction.
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The function of the update and upgrade commands are self-explanatory.
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Unfortunately, you can't string them together on the same line, like you can in Bash.
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i.e. pseudo-appdash-get-update-ampersand-ampersand-sudo-appdashget-y-safe-upgrade.
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Instead, you can use the backtick key to put AppShell into Q mode.
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In Q mode, you can enter commands 1 by 1 to be launched in sequence at a later time.
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To bring your system up to date, you could run, hit backtick, and the APTSH prompt will
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change to asterisk-based APTSH, and you can type in update, hit return, and type in upgrade,
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and hit return, and hit the backtick again to close the Q mode.
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And then from the regular appshell prompt, type in Q-comment-safe-yes, space-yes.
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Backtick toggles the Q entry, and Q-comment runs whatever is in the queue.
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Q-comment-safe tells AppShell to answer in the affirmative to any queries from commands
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executed in the queue in much the same way, as appdash-get-space-y-space-safe-upgrade confirms
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software updates without user interaction.
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And fortunately, I must be using AppShell wrong, because I can't ever get that to work.
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I've done Q-comment-safe-y, I've done Q-comment-safe-yes.
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None of them seem to actually work in installing updated packages where you're prompted to
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confirm whether or not you want to install.
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AppShell is capable of other app-related tasks, but I think I've covered the most useful
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ones.
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The trouble with running AppShell is that unless you start an internal when you start
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computer and leave it running all day, as opposed to opening it as a new shell within
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your terminal every time you want to do an update or an install, despite the convenience
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of the package name search and tab completion, it's really not going to save you any key
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strokes.
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With that in mind, I start looking for ways to have the app-shell available at a key
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stroke.
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And we're going to leave the wisdom of having a shell open with a subset of root privileges
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for another day.
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I had Gwake installed, but rarely used it because I usually have multiple terminal tabs
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open at once, since I'm logged into my server remotely.
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And actually, I'd forgotten that Gwake supports tab terminals quite well, really.
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You can open a new tab with Shift-Control T in Gwake, and then switch between open tabs
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with Control-Page Out or Control-Page Down, or by clicking Session buttons that appear
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at the bottom of the Gwake window.
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I'd forgotten this until I started doing research on this story.
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Since this revelation kind of ruins my story, we're going to forget about tab terminal
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support in Gwake and not mention it again.
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I'm also going to assume that everybody is familiar with Gwake.
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If not, suffice it to say, Gwake is a terminal that pops down on the top third of the screen
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when you hit a hotkey, F12 being the default.
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It returns to the background, with the session still running when you press F12 again, or
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when you click the lower part of the desktop.
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It is patterned after the command shell in the game Quake that lets you input diagnostic
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and cheat codes.
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Hence the name.
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I wasn't using Gwake as a terminal anyway, so I wanted to see if I could make it run
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app-shell by default.
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I found you could access Gwake's graphical configuration manager by right-clicking inside
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the open Gwake terminal and selecting preferences.
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On the first preferences tab, I found command interpreter.
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But since app-shell is only a pseudo-shell, it isn't found in the drop-down list.
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However, one option was screen, which would give me a way to run multiple terminals that
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I thought Gwake lacked.
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Next, I'd look up how to configure screen.
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I figured there must be a way to make screen run, app-shell in one session by default, and
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I found it.
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In the show notes, I've included a version of my .screen RC file for my home folder, which
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I set up with a help with an article from the online Red Hat magazine, link in the show
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notes.
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And I am not going to, the comp of my .screen RC is right there in the show notes.
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I'm not going to try to read it off, but I will try to describe as fast I can, the
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content.
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The two lines have hard status command, and they are used to set up the screen status
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line.
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The first puts it at the bottom of the terminal, it says hard status face always last line.
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And the second sets up what is going to appear on the status line, and it included is
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a host name and date, and an indicator that lights up to show which screen window you're
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looking at.
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Below the comment, pound default screens, sets up the screen sessions that are opened
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by default.
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The first line opens up a regular terminal, named shell one, and that line greens screen
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face dash t, face shell one, face or tab zero.
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The second window opens up a window called aptash shell, and that's how it is identified
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in the aforementioned status line, and launches apt shell, and the format of that command
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is screen space dash t, space aptash shell, space one, space pseudo, space apt shell.
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I'm sure you've already found them that the format of the lines in the pound default
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screen section goes long screen t to open up a new terminal window in end screen, and
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then give that screen a name or designation that's going to appear in the status line
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and be highlighted when you have that screen session opened, so just stringing it could
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be anything.
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And then the terminal window number started with zero, so first line zero, second line
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is one.
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And then finally, if you're going to have, if you are going to buy default, launch a
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bash command or script in that terminal window, that comes last.
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My last two screen windows that I have opened by default open sales chest sessions into
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other computers.
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The first one is SSH space 5150 server, which is an alias to my server, and I was able
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to set up thanks to Ken Fallon and his excellent HPR on SSH and how to modify your, in your
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home folder, your dot SSH slash config file.
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And then my second one, if it's up and running, it'll open a shell session into my Fedora
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laptop.
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And that command is SSH space 5150 at redbook.
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I still, when I launch screen by hitting f12 first time to launch and launch weight, which
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launches screen, I still have to cycle through my screen windows and type in passwords for
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whatever resources they're brought up by default, a pseudo in case of the running app shell
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session, and SSH passwords for the remote sessions into other computers.
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But the configuration file could be set up to launch any bash script or bash command
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by default.
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The cited article didn't include any more configuration tips, so I'm certain there must
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be ways to set other screen options such as split windows by default.
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Since I'm also running screen in the remote session on my server, I have to remember there
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is a command prefix for additional layers in screen, and that is control A followed by
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another A.
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Here I go.
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If I wanted to move to the next window in a screen session running under wake on my local
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PC, the command would be control A and then in.
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But if I'm in the screen session that's open to an SSH session to an open terminal on
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my server, then the command sequence is would be control A, then just regular A by itself.
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And then in after that, to move to the next screen window on the server.
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Well, that's how I learn to run app shell inside screen inside wake.
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I've been 5150 for hacker public radio.
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I can be contacted at 5150 at LinuxVacement.com or by using the contact form on the big red
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switch dot triple gardens dot com.
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You have been listening to Hacker Public Radio at Hacker Public Radio does our we are
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