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Closed 8 years ago.
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I'm running Linux Mint 14 and accidentally replaced the contents of /etc/environment file. It was originally something like:
PATH=/usr/bin
but with some extra stuff. At the moment, most commands don't work in the terminal. If I do "ls", I get "command not found". Does anyone know the standard contents of this file is?
On ubuntu 12.04 it is:
PATH="/usr/local/sbin:/usr/local/bin:/usr/sbin:/usr/bin:/sbin:/bin:/usr/games"
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Closed 2 years ago.
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I have set the shell path to /usr/sbin but it does not open the terminal in IntelliJ IDEA is an IDE for Java,
You need to write: /bin/bash, /bin/zsh, /home/user/myOwnShell etcjust write path to file no to directory.
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Closed 2 years ago.
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When I was setting up my Ubuntu environment, I think I mistyped and did something like this:
echo 'srouce /opt/whatever'
And now when I open terminal, the first line is always:
srouce: command not found
How can I get fix this issue?
Fix the misspelling in your shell startup files:
sed -i 's/srouce/source/' .bashrc .profile
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Closed 7 years ago.
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I think I messed up my bashrc file adding Java to the path.
None of my commands will work, I cant cd,ls,gedit or sudo.
I tried to manually find my bashrc and change it back but I cant access it because it says I dont have permissions.
How can I reset my bashrc in this state?
Try this:
PATH="/usr/sbin:/usr/bin:/sbin:/bin"
Most things should work now to fix your ~/.bashrc
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Closed 8 years ago.
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While installation of bugzilla I was running this commmand, /.checksetup.pl , but I am getting the error,
bash: ./checksetup.pl: No such file or directory
I am using centos v6.5.
check if you in the right place (u can use 'ls' command and see if it's showing 'checksetup.pl' )
it might be not executable ,then try this :
sudo chmod +x checksetup.pl
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Closed 8 years ago.
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I just uninstalled a program (ros) from my computer (ubuntu) using the ubuntu software center.
However, since this moment, whenever I open a shell, I get the following message:
bash: /opt/ros/groovy/setup.bash: No such file or directory
Did I do anything wrong?
Have a look at ~/.bash_profile