my MAC is getting hair-wired after I change console to ksh, and change it back again to /bin/bash
the console prompt is now static bash-3.2 regardless current directory I am in. Meanwhile in .bash_profile I have set # modify console
export PS1="\W > "
rake gem and few others in Ruby are missing, although it was reinstalled again after I run bundle install , but there are subsequent strange issue, e.g. rake command does not hit the right rake file..
Any idea?
Thanks a lot.
The .bash_profile is only run by bash when you first log in. (It only gets run by Terminal if you have Terminal set up to make each shell a "login shell"). If you have commands that you want to get run every time you fire up bash, even if it's not a login shell, you should put them in .bashrc instead. But you can always make a shell be a login shell by running bash --login instead of just bash.
Not sure where your ksh comes from, but note that it doesn't understand '\W' etc in the prompt string, so I would expect you to get a literal '\W' in the prompt instead of the expanded working dir. If you're running ksh as a login shell, it's probably something in the .profile (or /etc/profile, etc.). ksh doesn't have an exact equivalent of .bashrc, but if $ENV is set to a filename after the profile runs, that file is executed as well (even on non-login shells, if ENV is already set when the shell starts). Ksh, of course, ignores .bash_profile and .bashrc.
Since there's no ref to gems in the body of your question (anymore?), you might want to change the question and remove the Ruby tag...
Related
I was assigned an account for log in to a remote server, and I want to change my default shell.
I tried chsh command but it says: chsh: "/public/home/{my_id}/bin/zsh" is not listed in /etc/shells.
If you don't have permission to install zsh system wide, a quick fix is to append exec ~/bin/zsh -l to ~/.bash_profile (if bash is the current shell), or an equivalent rc file for the current login shell.
zsh -l starts zsh as a login shell.
exec COMMAND replaces the current process with COMMAND, so you'll only have to type exit (or press ctrl+d) once.
~/.bash_profile is executed when bash starts as a login shell, you can still run command bash normally.
Depending what is in ~/.bash_profile (or equivalent), you may wish to avoid executing its other contents, by putting exec ~/bin/zsh -l at the start of the file (not the end), and copy/port anything important over to the zsh equivalent, $ZDOTDIR/.zprofile.
I might also do export SHELL="$HOME/bin/zsh", although I'm unsure of the full effects of setting SHELL differently to that specified for your user in /etc/passwd, to a shell not in /etc/shells, and to a shell binary in your home path.
First check all the shells available on your linux system
cat /etc/shells
Use chsh command line utility for changing a login shell with the -s or –shell option like this.
# chsh --shell /bin/sh tecmint
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Possible Duplicate:
What's the difference between .bashrc, .bash_profile, and .environment?
It seems that if I use
alias ls='ls -F'
inside of .bashrc on Mac OS X, then the newly created shell will not have that alias. I need to type bash again and that alias will be in effect.
And if I log into Linux on the hosting company, the .bashrc file has a comment line that says:
For non-login shell
and the .bash_profile file has a comment that says
for login shell
So where should aliases be written in? How come we separate the login shell and non-login shell?
Some webpage say use .bash_aliases, but it doesn't work on Mac OS X, it seems.
The reason you separate the login and non-login shell is because the .bashrc file is reloaded every time you start a new copy of Bash. The .profile file is loaded only when you either log in or use the appropriate flag to tell Bash to act as a login shell.
Personally,
I put my PATH setup into a .profile file (because I sometimes use other shells);
I put my Bash aliases and functions into my .bashrc file;
I put this
#!/bin/bash
#
# CRM .bash_profile Time-stamp: "2008-12-07 19:42"
#
# echo "Loading ${HOME}/.bash_profile"
source ~/.profile # get my PATH setup
source ~/.bashrc # get my Bash aliases
in my .bash_profile file.
Oh, and the reason you need to type bash again to get the new alias is that Bash loads your .bashrc file when it starts but it doesn't reload it unless you tell it to. You can reload the .bashrc file (and not need a second shell) by typing
source ~/.bashrc
which loads the .bashrc file as if you had typed the commands directly to Bash.
Check out http://mywiki.wooledge.org/DotFiles for an excellent resource on the topic aside from man bash.
Summary:
You only log in once, and that's when ~/.bash_profile or ~/.profile is read and executed. Since everything you run from your login shell inherits the login shell's environment, you should put all your environment variables in there. Like LESS, PATH, MANPATH, LC_*, ... For an example, see: My .profile
Once you log in, you can run several more shells. Imagine logging in, running X, and in X starting a few terminals with bash shells. That means your login shell started X, which inherited your login shell's environment variables, which started your terminals, which started your non-login bash shells. Your environment variables were passed along in the whole chain, so your non-login shells don't need to load them anymore. Non-login shells only execute ~/.bashrc, not /.profile or ~/.bash_profile, for this exact reason, so in there define everything that only applies to bash. That's functions, aliases, bash-only variables like HISTSIZE (this is not an environment variable, don't export it!), shell options with set and shopt, etc. For an example, see: My .bashrc
Now, as part of UNIX peculiarity, a login-shell does NOT execute ~/.bashrc but only ~/.profile or ~/.bash_profile, so you should source that one manually from the latter. You'll see me do that in my ~/.profile too: source ~/.bashrc.
From the bash manpage:
When bash is invoked as an
interactive login shell, or as a
non-interactive shell with the
--login option, it first reads and executes commands from the file
/etc/profile, if that file exists.
After reading that file, it looks for
~/.bash_profile, ~/.bash_login, and
~/.profile, in that order, and reads
and executes commands from the first
one that exists and is readable. The
--noprofile option may be used when the shell is started to inhibit this
behavior.
When a login shell exits, bash
reads and executes commands from the
file ~/.bash_logout, if it exists.
When an interactive shell that is not a login shell is started, bash
reads and executes commands from ~/.bashrc, if that file exists. This
may be inhibited by using the --norc option. The --rcfile file option
will force bash to read and execute commands from file instead of
~/.bashrc.
Thus, if you want to get the same behavior for both login shells and interactive non-login shells, you should put all of your commands in either .bashrc or .bash_profile, and then have the other file source the first one.
.bash_profile is loaded for a "login shell". I am not sure what that would be on OS X, but on Linux that is either X11 or a virtual terminal.
.bashrc is loaded every time you run Bash. That is where you should put stuff you want loaded whenever you open a new Terminal.app window.
I personally put everything in .bashrc so that I don't have to restart the application for changes to take effect.
If I start ksh manually by typing
/usr/bin/ksh
in bash, then ksh starts in interactive mode. So far so good. But, since it isn't a login shell, it won't execute its $HOME/.profile, which I need it to do. I tried running
/usr/bin/ksh $HOME/.profile
but then it just executed .profile and exited back to bash, without going into interactive mode. I've tried using the -i flag to force ksh to go into interactive mode, but it doesn't seem to work when I also give it .profile to execute.
I am using ksh93 on Raspian Linux.
When you want the settings in .profile (or any other shellscript), make sure the file is processed in the current shell, not a subshell. Start the commandline with a dot.
. $HOME/.profile
This is not a login shell, just an environment with your .profile executed.
You can use $HOME/.kshrc just like .bashrc for Bash.
I need to change the greeting of user, which is logging in. So I modifyed file /etc/profile. In this greeting I need to know, which shell this user use and tell it to user. The problem is that then I change my shell on zsh or csh it doesnt work. Even if I just type in this file echo $SHELL it do nothing. As I think, when I use csh and zsh this file (/etc/profile) doesnt run at all. How can I fix this problem?
Thanks you, sorry for my English)
You should start by reading the manpage of every shell on your system.
There are different flavours of shells. Each flavours uses slightly different (per session and per shell, per site and per user) initialisation files. For example:
sh (and bash) use /etc/profile and ~/.profile
bash also uses ~/.bash_profile, ~/.bashrc, ~/.bash_logout
csh uses /etc/.login and ~/.cshrc
etc...
The above list is not meant to be exhaustive. It is to illustrate you will need to check the exact behaviour of each shell that is used on your system and configure it appropriately.
You also need to consider whether you want to change system-wide behaviour (corresponding to initialisation files under /etc) or user-specific behaviour (corresponding to initialisation files in the user's home directory).
For certain shells, there's also per-session (i.e. once per login) and per-shell settings (e.g. for every terminal window). A good example is ~/.bash_login (executed once per login) and ~/.bashrc (executed for every shell - e.g. terminal window).
They both execute different files:
From fro zsh http://zsh.sourceforge.net/Guide/zshguide02.html
Now here's a list of the startup files and when they're run. You'll
see they fall into two classes: those in the /etc directory, which are
put there by the system administrator and are run for all users, and
those in your home directory, which zsh, like many shells, allows you
to abbreviate to a `~'.
/etc/zshenv
Always run for every zsh.
~/.zshenv
Usually run for every zsh (see below).
/etc/zprofile
Run for login shells.
~/.zprofile
Run for login shells.
/etc/zshrc
Run for interactive shells.
~/.zshrc
Run for interactive shells.
/etc/zlogin
Run for login shells.
~/.zlogin
for csh http://unixhelp.ed.ac.uk/CGI/man-cgi?csh+1
A login shell begins by executing commands from the system files
/etc/csh.cshrc and /etc/csh.login.
You can make a soft link to point to the same file:
ln -s /etc/profile /etc/zshenv
ln -s /etc/profile /etc/csh.login
I have modified my etc/profile file to start a python script on startup. now my program is running but there is a black screen, because my program has a while True loop in it and now I am not able to stop it. Kindly tell me how to stop the program, I have tried ctrl+C but nothing happened.
I've been editing .bashrc files and other init files, and it seems that I've left behind a few code snippets or two that are causing a few errors at the prompt (e.g. file missing), but I can't find them.
How do I debug the prompt to find out what init scripts I've carelessly hacked?
Most of the shells have debug flags that show the commands being executed. Bash may even have one that shows a command before expansion of variables and after. Have you tried checking (I believe) -c -x or -X flags and see if they show the information you are looking for.
You can set them as first thing in the rc files (most global one) or just pass it down into bash command by invoking it from another shell.
In fact, if you invoke bash from another shell, you can also use script command to record everything you see and do into the file, which makes postmortem analysis so much easier.
Try invoking bash with the -x flag, then sourcing your .bashrc or .bash_profile or whatever you're using. That ought to be prolix enough to find your problem
ie:
bash -x
source .bashrc
The easiest way to get a clean initial state is to SSH into your current host, but instead of letting SSH launch your shell with default settings, you provide an explicit command which prevents .bashrc from being read.
ssh -tt localhost /bin/bash --norc
The -tt forces SSH to allocate a TTY, which is what would normally happen when you open a shell connection, but is not default when running an explicit command.
The --norc prevents bash from reading your settings file (since we want to do that ourselves).
You should now be at a bash prompt, in a clean environment. This is useful for examining what variable are set to before your .bashrc runs etc. Enable tracing and source your .bashrc:
set -x # Enable tracing
source .bashrc
Try to see where you've defined prompt - probably it in some dot file in your home directory:
grep PS1 ~/.*
You can see current value of prompt by just printing it:
echo $PS1
HTH
Check the .bash_history file in your home directory to find out what commands you have been running. If you used commands like vi filename to open the init scripts, it will find them in the command history.