what does this means? 'In this folder make sure your shell is bash or a derivative and run fix-it-all.sh.'












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I am following the steps to install a simulator Disksim, please let me know the meaning of this line. What i actually need to do here?










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    I am following the steps to install a simulator Disksim, please let me know the meaning of this line. What i actually need to do here?










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      I am following the steps to install a simulator Disksim, please let me know the meaning of this line. What i actually need to do here?










      share|improve this question














      I am following the steps to install a simulator Disksim, please let me know the meaning of this line. What i actually need to do here?







      command-line






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      asked Feb 17 at 7:24









      NazishNazish

      2




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          If you didn't change anything to your Ubuntu installation, you will have bash as your default shell. You can make sure with the command ps.



          Then cd into this directory and there run the indicated shell script:



          cd given_directory
          ./fix-it-all.sh





          share|improve this answer
























          • I tried this but when i run 'fix-it-all.sh'. It says command not found. @muclux

            – Nazish
            Feb 24 at 6:14













          • Did you type it with the beginning './' and did you do the 'cd' before as I wrote? Then check the permissions of ./fix-it-all.sh and eventually do chmod +x fix-it-all.sh before running it.

            – muclux
            Feb 24 at 6:56











          • Yes i did 'cd' first. When i wrote it with './' it says 'no such file or directory' and when i did without this it says 'command not found'.

            – Nazish
            Feb 24 at 7:59











          • Then please add the output of ls -l given_directory and ls -ld given_directoryto your question (replacing of course 'given_directory' by the directory in your original question.

            – muclux
            Feb 24 at 8:34













          Your Answer








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          0














          If you didn't change anything to your Ubuntu installation, you will have bash as your default shell. You can make sure with the command ps.



          Then cd into this directory and there run the indicated shell script:



          cd given_directory
          ./fix-it-all.sh





          share|improve this answer
























          • I tried this but when i run 'fix-it-all.sh'. It says command not found. @muclux

            – Nazish
            Feb 24 at 6:14













          • Did you type it with the beginning './' and did you do the 'cd' before as I wrote? Then check the permissions of ./fix-it-all.sh and eventually do chmod +x fix-it-all.sh before running it.

            – muclux
            Feb 24 at 6:56











          • Yes i did 'cd' first. When i wrote it with './' it says 'no such file or directory' and when i did without this it says 'command not found'.

            – Nazish
            Feb 24 at 7:59











          • Then please add the output of ls -l given_directory and ls -ld given_directoryto your question (replacing of course 'given_directory' by the directory in your original question.

            – muclux
            Feb 24 at 8:34


















          0














          If you didn't change anything to your Ubuntu installation, you will have bash as your default shell. You can make sure with the command ps.



          Then cd into this directory and there run the indicated shell script:



          cd given_directory
          ./fix-it-all.sh





          share|improve this answer
























          • I tried this but when i run 'fix-it-all.sh'. It says command not found. @muclux

            – Nazish
            Feb 24 at 6:14













          • Did you type it with the beginning './' and did you do the 'cd' before as I wrote? Then check the permissions of ./fix-it-all.sh and eventually do chmod +x fix-it-all.sh before running it.

            – muclux
            Feb 24 at 6:56











          • Yes i did 'cd' first. When i wrote it with './' it says 'no such file or directory' and when i did without this it says 'command not found'.

            – Nazish
            Feb 24 at 7:59











          • Then please add the output of ls -l given_directory and ls -ld given_directoryto your question (replacing of course 'given_directory' by the directory in your original question.

            – muclux
            Feb 24 at 8:34
















          0












          0








          0







          If you didn't change anything to your Ubuntu installation, you will have bash as your default shell. You can make sure with the command ps.



          Then cd into this directory and there run the indicated shell script:



          cd given_directory
          ./fix-it-all.sh





          share|improve this answer













          If you didn't change anything to your Ubuntu installation, you will have bash as your default shell. You can make sure with the command ps.



          Then cd into this directory and there run the indicated shell script:



          cd given_directory
          ./fix-it-all.sh






          share|improve this answer












          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer










          answered Feb 17 at 8:09









          mucluxmuclux

          3,22111130




          3,22111130













          • I tried this but when i run 'fix-it-all.sh'. It says command not found. @muclux

            – Nazish
            Feb 24 at 6:14













          • Did you type it with the beginning './' and did you do the 'cd' before as I wrote? Then check the permissions of ./fix-it-all.sh and eventually do chmod +x fix-it-all.sh before running it.

            – muclux
            Feb 24 at 6:56











          • Yes i did 'cd' first. When i wrote it with './' it says 'no such file or directory' and when i did without this it says 'command not found'.

            – Nazish
            Feb 24 at 7:59











          • Then please add the output of ls -l given_directory and ls -ld given_directoryto your question (replacing of course 'given_directory' by the directory in your original question.

            – muclux
            Feb 24 at 8:34





















          • I tried this but when i run 'fix-it-all.sh'. It says command not found. @muclux

            – Nazish
            Feb 24 at 6:14













          • Did you type it with the beginning './' and did you do the 'cd' before as I wrote? Then check the permissions of ./fix-it-all.sh and eventually do chmod +x fix-it-all.sh before running it.

            – muclux
            Feb 24 at 6:56











          • Yes i did 'cd' first. When i wrote it with './' it says 'no such file or directory' and when i did without this it says 'command not found'.

            – Nazish
            Feb 24 at 7:59











          • Then please add the output of ls -l given_directory and ls -ld given_directoryto your question (replacing of course 'given_directory' by the directory in your original question.

            – muclux
            Feb 24 at 8:34



















          I tried this but when i run 'fix-it-all.sh'. It says command not found. @muclux

          – Nazish
          Feb 24 at 6:14







          I tried this but when i run 'fix-it-all.sh'. It says command not found. @muclux

          – Nazish
          Feb 24 at 6:14















          Did you type it with the beginning './' and did you do the 'cd' before as I wrote? Then check the permissions of ./fix-it-all.sh and eventually do chmod +x fix-it-all.sh before running it.

          – muclux
          Feb 24 at 6:56





          Did you type it with the beginning './' and did you do the 'cd' before as I wrote? Then check the permissions of ./fix-it-all.sh and eventually do chmod +x fix-it-all.sh before running it.

          – muclux
          Feb 24 at 6:56













          Yes i did 'cd' first. When i wrote it with './' it says 'no such file or directory' and when i did without this it says 'command not found'.

          – Nazish
          Feb 24 at 7:59





          Yes i did 'cd' first. When i wrote it with './' it says 'no such file or directory' and when i did without this it says 'command not found'.

          – Nazish
          Feb 24 at 7:59













          Then please add the output of ls -l given_directory and ls -ld given_directoryto your question (replacing of course 'given_directory' by the directory in your original question.

          – muclux
          Feb 24 at 8:34







          Then please add the output of ls -l given_directory and ls -ld given_directoryto your question (replacing of course 'given_directory' by the directory in your original question.

          – muclux
          Feb 24 at 8:34




















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