man 8 agetty
refers. About 3/4 of the way down the manual page there is the ISSUE
ESCAPES paragraph.

fyi the \l refers to the name of the tty line to which you are connected.

The /etc/issue on my ThinkPad lappie running Gentoo is:-

This is \n.\O on \l (\s \m \r) \t \d



On 3/13/08, Nick Rout <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> On Thu, March 13, 2008 10:13 am, Kerry wrote:
> > Hi Rex,
> >
> > I have often wondered how to do this myself, one question however. After
> > running to command:
> >
> > cat /etc/issue
> >
> > I get the following output:
> >
> > Ubuntu 6.06 LTS \n \l
> >
> > Any idea what the \n \l means?
>
> \n new line
> \l unsure
>
> >
> > Regards,
> > Kerry
> >
> > On Wed, 2008-03-12 at 11:05 +1300, Roger Searle wrote:
> >> Rex wrote:
> >> > Roger Searle wrote:
> >> >> Hi, trivial question for the day: I fired up a laptop that I don't
> >> >> often use, that I have a kubuntu distro installed on, and am not sure
> >> >> if it is feisty or gutsy.  It's not obvious where I should look to
> >> >> see distro version.  I can easily find my KDE or kernel version.
> >> >> Googling for a command gives me so much info about "ubuntu versions"
> >> >> or command line commands, but not for the 2 together.  Where is the
> >> >> easy way to see?
> >> >
> >> > Have a look in /etc/issue.
> >> >
> >> > Cheers, Rex
> >> Nice, thank you!
> >> Roger
> >
> >
>
>
> --
> Nick Rout
>
>


-- 
Sincerely etc.
Christopher Sawtell

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