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z/OS V1R9.0 UNIX System Services Command ... - Christian Grothoff

z/OS V1R9.0 UNIX System Services Command ... - Christian Grothoff

z/OS V1R9.0 UNIX System Services Command ... - Christian Grothoff

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tcsh: % (percent)<br />

v % job & will move the specified job to the background. This syntax works the<br />

same as the bg built-in command. If no job is specified, the current job is moved<br />

to the background.<br />

Note: Current jobs will have a + next to the status column in jobs command<br />

output. See “Jobs” on page 650.<br />

Related information<br />

jobs, tcsh<br />

alloc built-in command for tcsh: Show the amount of dynamic memory<br />

acquired<br />

Format<br />

alloc argument<br />

Description<br />

Shows the amount of dynamic memory acquired, broken down into used and free<br />

memory. alloc used with an argument, shows the number of free and used blocks<br />

in each size category. The categories start at size 8 and double at each step.<br />

Note: alloc is supported, but the output is not meaningful on z/<strong>OS</strong>.<br />

Related information<br />

tcsh<br />

bindkey built-in command for tcsh: List all bound keys<br />

Format<br />

bindkey [-l|-d|-e|-v|-u]<br />

bindkey [-a] [-b] [-k] [-r] [– –] key<br />

bindkey [-a] [-b] [-k] [-c|-s] [– –] key command<br />

Description<br />

bindkey specified alone (without options, key, or key command) lists all bound keys<br />

and the editor command to which each is bound.<br />

bindkey specified with key (with or without options) lists the editor command to<br />

which key is bound.<br />

bindkey specified with key command (with or without options) binds the editor<br />

command to key.<br />

Options<br />

–l Lists all commands and a short description of each.<br />

–d Binds all keys to the standard bindings for the default editor.<br />

–e Binds all keys to the standard GNU Emacs-like bindings.<br />

–v Binds all keys to the standard vi-like bindings.<br />

–a Lists or changes key-bindings in the alternative key map. This is the key<br />

map used in vi command mode.<br />

–b key is interpreted as a control character written ^character (’^A’) or<br />

C-character (’C-A’), a meta character written M-character (’M-A’), or an<br />

extended prefix key written X-character (’X-A’).<br />

674 z/<strong>OS</strong> <strong>V1R9.0</strong> <strong>UNIX</strong> <strong>System</strong> <strong>Services</strong> <strong>Command</strong> Reference

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