I work with different types of machines every day. It is often necessary to set things up differently for, say, a Linux box, than a SPARCstation. Going beyond that, you may want to set things up differently on a per-host basis.
I have this test in my .cshrc file:
setenv if ~ |
setenv HOST "`uname -n`" if (-e ~/lib/cshrc.hosts/cshrc.$HOST) then source ~/lib/cshrc.hosts/cshrc.$HOST endif |
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So, if I log in to a machine named ( 50.7 ) bosco , and I have a file called ~/lib/cshrc.hosts/cshrc.bosco , I can source ( 44.23 ) it to customize my environment for that one machine. Examples of things you would put in a .cshrc.$HOST file:
Search path ( 8.7 ) : some machines have /usr/local/bin , and some have /opt . The same goes for cdpath ( 14.5 ) .
Terminal settings ( 5.9 ) : I always like to reach for the upper-right part of a keyboard to erase characters. Sometimes this is the location for the BACKSPACE key, and sometimes it is the DELETE key. I set things up so that I can consistently get "erase" behavior from whatever key is there.
Other shell variables ( 6.8 ) and environment variables ( 6.1 ) may be different. You may run a package on a certain machine that relies on a few environment variables. No need to always set them and use up a little bit of memory if you only use them in one place!
In general, this idea allows you to group together whatever exceptions you want for a machine, rather than having to write a series of switch ( 47.6 ) or if statements ( 47.3 ) throughout your .cshrc and .login files.
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