On Fri, Jun 09, 2023 at 11:51:15AM +0100, David Wright wrote: > On Fri 09 Jun 2023 at 06:20:07 (-0400), gene heskett wrote: > > Change of subject: > > > > I have a mod I make to the $PATH which I've put in .profile, but I've > > failed to find a place to make it autoexec when I login. And I'm tired > > of typing ". .profile in every shell tab I open. > > > > Suggestion? > > Read INVOCATION in man 1 bash (and check the existence and priorities > of the several startup files). But I feel I'm wasting my breath.
I must have said this a hundred times, but... it depends on HOW you login. The only times .profile is read are when you have a login shell (from a pure text console login, or an ssh login, or something like "su - gene"), or if some other file that IS read dots it in. If your changes to .profile are not being seen at login time, that means you aren't using one of the above -- OR, something is overwriting your change later. In your previous emails, you've mentioned a Trinity Desktop Environment. If that's how you login (a graphical Display Manager brought in as part of TDE), then it's no surprise that .profile is not being read. See <https://wiki.debian.org/Xsession> assuming your TDE + Display Manager setup still uses a Debian X session. If your setup does NOT use a Debian X session, then I would revert to the traditional configuration -- create a .xsession file, put your changes in it (which may simply be dotting in .profile, or not, depending on what's in .profile), and then make sure it executes the startup command for TDE at the end. Which means you have to figure out what that startup command IS. The tricky parts of the traditional configuration are figuring out how to invoke your WM or desktop environment, and figuring out whether you can dot in .profile, or whether you have to duplicate parts of it. The key is that .xsession is NOT executed in a terminal environment. So, if it tries to write any messages to stdout, you won't see them. If it tries to call stty or any other terminal-oriented program, it will fail. In a lot of cases, you can simply ignore these failures, but without knowing what's in your .profile (and all the files it dots in), it's impossible to give specific advice. Finally, remember that .xsession is run by /bin/sh, not by your login shell. So, if you've got bash syntax in .profile (or anything it dots in, such as .bashrc), then you cannot safely dot it in from .xsession.