Korean Solaris System Administrator's Guide

Preface

Korean Solaris System Administrator's Guide provides system administration information specific to Korean SolarisTM operation in the Common Desktop Environment (CDE). This guide also includes some additional information that advanced users and developers can use to access and control the features of the Korean Solaris operating environment.

Who Should Use This Book

You should read this guide if:

You should already be familiar with Sun's standard product documentation and the documentation of the window system that you are using. This guide adds only Korean features.

Before You Read This Book

Before you read this book, please review the product overview and any last-minute changes that arrived too late to be included in this document:

Make sure to install your system properly as described in the document appropriate to your hardware platform:

Each chapter of this manual addresses a different aspect of administration of the Korean Solaris operating environment. Some chapters give step-by-step instructions for using or customizing product features.

Chapter 1, "Starting the Korean Solaris Software," introduces the Korean Solaris operating environment, including CDE and the locales included in the product.

Chapter 2, "System Environment," describes advanced ways to use Korean window system features.

Chapter 3, "Setting Up Korean Solaris Printing Facilities," describes the set up for printers that can print Korean output and the use of PostScriptTM printers.

Chapter 4, "TTY Environment and Support," covers setting terminals to use the proper protocols for the input and display of Korean characters.

Related Books

The following books are related to the topic of this book and may prove helpful for further reading.

For information on how to use the window system and associated applications:

For information about how to develop applications for this Korean Solaris release:

What Typographic Changes Mean

The following table describes the typographic changes used in this book.

Typeface or Symbol 

Meaning 

Example 

AaBbCc123

The names of commands, files, and directories; on-screen computer output 

Edit your .login file.

Use ls -a to list all files.

machine_name% You have mail.

 

AaBbCc123

What you type, contrasted with on-screen computer output 

machine_name% su

Password:

AaBbCc123

Command-line placeholder: 

replace with a real name or value 

To delete a file, type rm filename.

AaBbCc123

Book titles, new words or terms, or words to be emphasized 

Read Chapter 6 in User's Guide. These are called class options.

You must be root to do this.

Shell Prompts in Command Examples

The following table shows the default system prompt and superuser prompt for the C shell, Bourne shell, and Korn shell.

Shell 

Prompt 

C shell prompt 

machine_name%

C shell superuser prompt 

machine_name#

Bourne shell and Korn shell prompt 

$

Bourne shell and Korn shell superuser prompt 

#