Getting the path right for Mercurial over SSH

Ben Schmidt mail_ben_schmidt at yahoo.com.au
Thu Jun 19 12:12:27 CDT 2008


[When starting a non-interactive non-login shell from an ssh session...]
>   What bash does is source /etc/bashrc and ~/.bashrc--it evidently
>   treats ssh like rsh and does a little more than is documented even for
>   rsh (search for rsh in the bash man page for details).

So another, simpler, system-wide solution is to set your $PATH in
/etc/bashrc. However, this is not documented in the bash man page (which
is why I came up with the more complicated solution, as I hadn't
realised this behaviour at that stage). So I'm not sure whether it is
standard/will occur on all systems, etc.

If you're like me and like to have interactive stuff in bashrc and login
stuff in profile, you can arrange your files like this (very similar to
before, but ~/.bashrc needn't source /etc/profile now, nor do its check
with $- and grep, as /etc/bashrc does that and avoids setting $PS1).

    In /etc/profile

      # System-wide .profile for sh(1)
      PATH=...
      export PATH
      # Source /etc/bashrc for interactive shells.
      [ -n "$PS1" -a -r /etc/bashrc ] && source /etc/bashrc
      ... stuff for login shells (more environment mostly)

    In /etc/bashrc

      # System-wide .bashrc file for interactive bash(1) shells.
      # If the shell isn't actually interactive it is an ssh session, and
      # we want to source etc/profile instead.
      if [ -z "$PS1" ] ; then
        [ -r /etc/profile ] && source /etc/profile
        return
      fi
      ... stuff for interactive shells (aliases and terminal stuff mostly)

    In ~/.profile

      # For login shells (interactive or not).
      # For interactive non-login shells see ~/.bashrc.
      # For non-interactive non-login ssh shells see ~/.bashrc.
      # For other non-interactive non-login shells see $BASH_ENV.
      # At present this is sourced by ~/.bashrc for the ssh case, so
      # all ssh sessions act like login sessions.
      PATH=...
      export PATH
      # Source ~/.bashrc for interactive shells.
      if [ -n "$PS1" -a -r ~/.bashrc ]; then source ~/.bashrc ; fi
      ... stuff for login shells (more environment mostly)

    In ~/.bashrc

      # For interactive non-login shells
      # and non-interactive non-login ssh shells.
      # For login shells (interactive or not) see first existent of
      # ~/.bash_profile, ~/.bash_login and ~/.profile.
      # For other non-interactive non-login shells see $BASH_ENV.
      # At present, this is sourced by ~/.profile so runs for all
      # interactive shells (login or not).
      # If the shell isn't actually interactive it is an ssh session, and
      # we want to source ~/.profile instead.
      if [ -z "$PS1" ] ; then
        source ~/.profile
        return
      fi
      ... stuff for interactive shells (aliases and terminal stuff mostly)

Ben.




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