Definitely Ross. I'll tell my friend. Thank you.
Sent from Samsung Galaxy ^^ On Aug 6, 2012 8:23 PM, "Ross Cavanagh" ross.cav@gmail.com wrote:
On Mon, Aug 6, 2012 at 9:14 PM, Fajar Priyanto fajarpri@arinet.org wrote:
I see. Thanks Ross. That makes sense.
Sent from Samsung Galaxy ^^ On Aug 6, 2012 8:12 PM, "Ross Cavanagh" ross.cav@gmail.com wrote:
On Mon, Aug 6, 2012 at 8:58 PM, Fajar Priyanto fajarpri@arinet.org wrote:
On Mon, Aug 6, 2012 at 7:54 PM, Ross Cavanagh ross.cav@gmail.com
wrote:
You're prompt will reference whatever the hostname is doesn't it?
I'm
located in Tokyo, I haven't setup any servers with Japanese
hostnames
actually, but on occasion some filenames are written in Japanese.
What
is
it you wanted to see exactly? It also depends on the keyboard setup
you
have set to the default. Most people in Japan set the keyboard to a
US
style - where they enter romaji, and don't usually enter the kana
from
the
different keyboard layout. So, you type the roman characters ra for
example
to make ら, but there is a Japanese keyboard layout where you can
type
the ら
character directly - but I never really see that used.
So, as far as I know, you'll be using whatever input methods you
actually
have on your local system where you're ssh'ing from. So, if you
needed
to
write Japanese input you'd need some local IME on your particular
system.
Hi Ross, thanks for your time. What I want to know is, during the initial ssh login. Will it display the dialogue fully in Japanese? e.g. fajar@8.8.8.8's password: (will it be in Japanese?)
As far as I'm aware, you would be seeing virtually everything in
English
as the directory structures are in English. Usually people's home directories are setup in English, I don't think I've ever come across a user login that does use Japanese actually (not sure if you can -
otherwise
your SSH connection you'd have to match you user name - eg. Ross would
be
my katakana name, ロス@8.8.8.8 - don't even know it's possible). I've
worked
at one Japanese company as the only foreigner, and all others companies have been international ones - but everyone uses Roman characters for
their
logins and not kana or kanji.
Same with passwords.
Usually, on systems I've seen in Japan most of the time files and
folders
are creating using Roman characters for naming (most of the time).
Within a
document, of course it could be written 100% in Japanese. Some folders
and
files can be in Japanese, so it can be hard to navigate through some directories if you don't have any IME tools for Japanese input. Lots of
tab
autocomplete and copy and pasting at times - but that's usually within
a
home directory for a user for example.
I just quickly started up a CentOS VM to check something...
[root@CENT01 ~]# useradd -m ロス useradd: invalid user name 'ロス'
So, looks like it needs to be in Roman characters.
But it appears even I have some issues via my terminal too:
[root@CENT01 ~]# useradd -m ross [root@CENT01 ~]# cd /home/ross/ [root@CENT01 ross]# touch ロス [root@CENT01 ross]# ls ??????
So, my Japanese input isn't being displayed. But I did get a warning when I SSH'd in about that:
-bash: warning: setlocale: LC_CTYPE: cannot change locale (UTF-8)
Hope that helps. _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos