Michael, Editing /etc/profile is not good, since any future changes of it in the base system will be ignored.
The better way is to create a ~/.bashrc file (look how it is called in /etc/profile) . Of course you need the ~/.bashrc file to be persistent across reboots, that can be done by either: 1) create the directory "/mnt/kd/root" and then /root will be automatically symlinked to /mnt/kd/root at startup. 2) In a startup script, (ex. /mnt/kd/rc.local) copy a persistent file from /mnt/kd/ to /root/.bashrc . Then in the .bashrc file would include: -- export PATH="$PATH:/mnt/kd/scripts" -- I assume you are doing all this so a CLI user can type a command without the full path name ? Lonnie On Apr 10, 2016, at 7:39 PM, Michael Knill <michael.kn...@ipcsolutions.com.au> wrote: > Hi group > > I have a new script in /mnt/kd/scripts that I want in $PATH and I have edited > it in /etc/profiles. > Is this the best way of doing it e.g. So I don’t need to do this for every > build. > > Regards > Michael Knill ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Find and fix application performance issues faster with Applications Manager Applications Manager provides deep performance insights into multiple tiers of your business applications. It resolves application problems quickly and reduces your MTTR. Get your free trial! http://pubads.g.doubleclick.net/ gampad/clk?id=1444514301&iu=/ca-pub-7940484522588532 _______________________________________________ Astlinux-users mailing list Astlinux-users@lists.sourceforge.net https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/astlinux-users Donations to support AstLinux are graciously accepted via PayPal to pay...@krisk.org.