Anne Wilson wrote:
On Saturday 08 November 2008 20:38:43 William L. Maltby wrote:
/etc/bashrc

But be aware that root-specific ones are here on 5.x

# grep alias .bashrc
# User specific aliases and functions
alias rm='rm -i'
alias cp='cp -i'
alias mv='mv -i'

I'm sorry, but I just can't understand why I can't find these


bash runs...

   /etc/profile
   /etc/bashrc
and
   $HOME/.bash_profile
or
   $HOME/.bash_login
or
   $HOME/.profile

upon starting a login shell...

the standard supplied profiles by default also run

   /etc/profile.d/*.sh
   $HOME/.bashrc

and this last runs

   /etc/bashrc

I note that the commands you're seeing are aliased explicitly in

   /root/.bashrc

       [EMAIL PROTECTED] ~]# cat /root/.bashrc
       # .bashrc
# User specific aliases and functions alias rm='rm -i'
       alias cp='cp -i'
       alias mv='mv -i'
# Source global definitions
       if [ -f /etc/bashrc ]; then
               . /etc/bashrc
       fi


by default in most every RH system I checked, from the above CentOS 5 all the way back to RH Linux 6.2


[EMAIL PROTECTED] /root]# ls -la .bashrc
-rw-r--r--    1 root     root          176 Aug 23  1995 .bashrc
[EMAIL PROTECTED] /root]# rpm -qf .bashrc
rootfiles-5.2-5
[EMAIL PROTECTED] /root]# rpm -qi rootfiles
Name        : rootfiles                    Relocations: (not relocateable)
Version     : 5.2                               Vendor: Red Hat Software
Release : 5 Build Date: Sun Mar 21 20:00:32 1999 Install date: Wed Feb 23 13:13:29 2000 Build Host: porky.devel.redhat.com Group : System Environment/Base Source RPM: rootfiles-5.2-5.src.rpm
Size        : 1912                             License: public domain
Packager    : Red Hat Software <http://developer.redhat.com/bugzilla/>
Summary     : The basic required files for the root user's directory.
Description :
The rootfiles package contains basic required files that are placed
in the root user's account.  These files are basically the same
as the files found in the etcskel package, which are placed in regular
users' home directories.

note the date on that .bashrc file, heh.  13 years ago.




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