If it uses Mate terminal, the .bash_profile doesn't get read by
default. You could put them in .bashrc and it should read them when the
terminal is opened. I think .bashrc is read every time a shell is
invoked, so that is something to be aware of.
You can also have Mate terminal invoke a script for you, but I've never
done that. Type man mate-terminal.
Okay, so I've been using a ~/.bash_profile file with the following contents:
rm -f ~/.bash_history
export PS1='$(tty | sed 's#^/dev/tty##')\$'
export PATH=~/Programming/bash-scripts:$PATH
To clear the command history from the previous session, change the
prompt to something extremely short instead of the default user@host
/path/to/working/directory, and to add the directory where I store my
bash scripts to my path.
It works when logging into the console, but I recently bought a new
desktop and decided to give running a full desktop a go since I'm no
longer running a 12-year-old CPU with 4GB of RAM, and whichever
terminal emulator Debian Mate uses by default is clearly ignoring
~/.bash_profile.
So is there somewhere I can put the above lines so they'll besourced
both when logging into a text-only console and when launching a
terminal emulator?
Also, I have some scripts to automate sshing into some remote hosts or
mounting the remote filesystems locally, and part of it involves
creating a mounttt point that needs to be chown to my user. Is there a
shell variable I can use to make these scripts work for any user
instead of needing to edit the script to use the name of the user I'm
logged in as?
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