Re: Terminal emulators can't read .profile
* MERIGHI Marcus mcmer-open...@tor.at [2012-12-10 12:48:26 +0100]: f...@zhou.es (Feng Zhou), 2012.12.10 (Mon) 12:02 (CET): I was trying out st and urxvt as a replacement for xterm, and it turned out that all the settings I put in ~/.profile are not recognised when I use either st or urxvt. Is this a bug or an expected behaviour that I need to do something about to use other terminals? The shell was not changed, it was the default ksh. At first I thought it was a problem of st, but it happened to urxvt too. So I thought it's best to ask here. Any help is much appreciated. I am guessing here, but from the times I used rxvt there's still: Rxvt*loginShell: TRUE in my .Xdefaults. Bye, Marcus I use urxvt with cwm. You need to to use the ~/.Xdefaults file as others have suggested: URxvt.loginShell:true ... This will solve your problem. BTW, it's documented on the FAQ I believe. Jamie
Re: Terminal emulators can't read .profile
I confirm that putting URxvt.loginShell:true into ~/.Xdefaults works for urxvt. Sorry I didn't get to reply earlier. I searched the FAQ after you mentioned it and it indeed is documented in section 8.16. But I didn't think of it and didn't know enough to know what keywords to search in the beginning. However, st doesn't seem to be able to read .profile with st.loginShell:true. If anyone knows why, it'd be great if you let me know. I know nothing about xorg. Nonetheless, I'm happy to have gotten urxvt working. Thank you very much all for your help. Feng On 13/12/2012, at 8:52 PM, Jamie Paul Griffin ja...@kode5.net wrote: * MERIGHI Marcus mcmer-open...@tor.at [2012-12-10 12:48:26 +0100]: f...@zhou.es (Feng Zhou), 2012.12.10 (Mon) 12:02 (CET): I was trying out st and urxvt as a replacement for xterm, and it turned out that all the settings I put in ~/.profile are not recognised when I use either st or urxvt. Is this a bug or an expected behaviour that I need to do something about to use other terminals? The shell was not changed, it was the default ksh. At first I thought it was a problem of st, but it happened to urxvt too. So I thought it's best to ask here. Any help is much appreciated. I am guessing here, but from the times I used rxvt there's still: Rxvt*loginShell: TRUE in my .Xdefaults. Bye, Marcus I use urxvt with cwm. You need to to use the ~/.Xdefaults file as others have suggested: URxvt.loginShell:true ... This will solve your problem. BTW, it's documented on the FAQ I believe. Jamie
Re: Terminal emulators can't read .profile
On 12/13/2012 01:14 PM, Feng Zhou wrote: However, st doesn't seem to be able to read .profile [...] Just to be a bit more precise here: It's *not* the terminal emulator that reads '.profile'. The terminal emulator just invokes a shell and the shell parses its configuration files. Regarding '.profile', I'll quote the ksh man page (assuming you are using ksh as your shell): -l Login shell. If the basename the shell is called with (i.e. argv[0]) starts with `-' or if this option is used, the shell is assumed to be a login shell and the shell reads and executes the contents of /etc/profile and $HOME/.profile if they exist and are readable. So it all comes down to *how* (i.e. with what options) the shell gets invoked. Don't confuse the terminal emulator with the shell, as these are two distinct things.
Re: Terminal emulators can't read .profile
Yep, I understand the difference between terminal emulator and shell. Thanks for the clarification anyway. It was just easier to type than with st*loginShell:true set in .Xdefault, st doesn't seem to be able to launch urxvt as login shell that reads .profile at start-up. On 13/12/2012, at 11:59 PM, Dustin Fechner d...@hush.com wrote: On 12/13/2012 01:14 PM, Feng Zhou wrote: However, st doesn't seem to be able to read .profile [...] Just to be a bit more precise here: It's *not* the terminal emulator that reads '.profile'. The terminal emulator just invokes a shell and the shell parses its configuration files. Regarding '.profile', I'll quote the ksh man page (assuming you are using ksh as your shell): -l Login shell. If the basename the shell is called with (i.e. argv[0]) starts with `-' or if this option is used, the shell is assumed to be a login shell and the shell reads and executes the contents of /etc/profile and $HOME/.profile if they exist and are readable. So it all comes down to *how* (i.e. with what options) the shell gets invoked. Don't confuse the terminal emulator with the shell, as these are two distinct things.
Re: Terminal emulators can't read .profile
On 12/10/2012 04:32 PM, Feng Zhou wrote: Hi, I was trying out st and urxvt as a replacement for xterm, and it turned out that all the settings I put in ~/.profile are not recognised when I use either st or urxvt. Is this a bug or an expected behaviour that I need to do something about to use other terminals? The shell was not changed, it was the default ksh. At first I thought it was a problem of st, but it happened to urxvt too. So I thought it's best to ask here. Any help is much appreciated. Try putting them in .kshrc, this the file that is read by terminal emulators.
Re: Terminal emulators can't read .profile
On Tue, Dec 11, 2012 at 9:40 PM, Sachidananda Urs sac@gmail.com wrote: Try putting them in .kshrc, this the file that is read by terminal emulators. Nope. ~/.kshrc isn't special to the shell or to terminal emulators. It *is* a traditional value for the ENV environment variable, but for that to have any effect on a non-login shell started by a terminal emulator, the ENV variable has to be set in the environment of the terminal emulator. Philip Guenther
Re: Terminal emulators can't read .profile
Hi On Tue, Dec 11, 2012 at 11:40 PM, Sachidananda Urs sac@gmail.comwrote: On 12/10/2012 04:32 PM, Feng Zhou wrote: Hi, I was trying out st and urxvt as a replacement for xterm, and it turned out that all the settings I put in ~/.profile are not recognised when I use either st or urxvt. Is this a bug or an expected behaviour that I need to do something about to use other terminals? The shell was not changed, it was the default ksh. At first I thought it was a problem of st, but it happened to urxvt too. So I thought it's best to ask here. Any help is much appreciated. You maybe need run $ urxvt -ls or put URxvt*loginShell: true in .Xdefaults file. Regards. Try putting them in .kshrc, this the file that is read by terminal emulators. -- Francisco Valladolid H. -- http://blog.bsdguy.net - Jesus Christ follower.
Terminal emulators can't read .profile
Hi, I was trying out st and urxvt as a replacement for xterm, and it turned out that all the settings I put in ~/.profile are not recognised when I use either st or urxvt. Is this a bug or an expected behaviour that I need to do something about to use other terminals? The shell was not changed, it was the default ksh. At first I thought it was a problem of st, but it happened to urxvt too. So I thought it's best to ask here. Any help is much appreciated. Cheers Feng
Re: Terminal emulators can't read .profile
f...@zhou.es (Feng Zhou), 2012.12.10 (Mon) 12:02 (CET): I was trying out st and urxvt as a replacement for xterm, and it turned out that all the settings I put in ~/.profile are not recognised when I use either st or urxvt. Is this a bug or an expected behaviour that I need to do something about to use other terminals? The shell was not changed, it was the default ksh. At first I thought it was a problem of st, but it happened to urxvt too. So I thought it's best to ask here. Any help is much appreciated. I am guessing here, but from the times I used rxvt there's still: Rxvt*loginShell: TRUE in my .Xdefaults. Bye, Marcus !DSPAM:50c5c16d184522009013524!
Re: Terminal emulators can't read .profile
On 12/10/2012 12:02 PM, Feng Zhou wrote: I was trying out st and urxvt as a replacement for xterm, and it turned out that all the settings I put in ~/.profile are not recognised when I use either st or urxvt. Have you set up st/urxvt so that they start a login shell?