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Top Forums UNIX for Beginners Questions & Answers Understanding the difference between individual BASH login scripts Post 303006906 by apmcd47 on Thursday 9th of November 2017 04:19:46 AM
Old 11-09-2017
The profile and login files are for setting your non-volatile environment. For instance, any environment variables, such as PATH, that you export. So these variables will stay with you from shell to subshell to subshell. In the olden days, when people logged in from a terminal, commands like stty would also appear in the login files, because no matter how many subshells you start, you won't change your terminal.

The basrc/kshrc and rc files for other shells are for the volatile environment, such as functions and aliases, which don't stay with you when you start a subshell, or variables that you don't for some reason export.

Before somebody corrects me, I should say that functions can be exported in bash (and I think ksh), but they don't tend to be.

Andrew

---------- Post updated at 09:19 AM ---------- Previous update was at 09:07 AM ----------

Quote:
Originally Posted by bodisha

I looked through the profile and all the scripts under the /etc/profile.d directory and couldn't locate anything calling the /etc/bashrc script. Could I ask you for a clue on where else I might look to see what's starting it?

Thanks for your patience
From the bash man page on my Ubuntu system:
Code:
       --init-file file
       --rcfile file
              Execute commands from file instead of the system  wide  initial‐
              ization file /etc/bash.bashrc and the standard personal initial‐
              ization file ~/.bashrc if the shell is interactive (see  INVOCA‐
              TION below).

If you have /etc/bashrc it is possible that your distribution has changed the name of the default system bashrc file (or maybe Ubuntu or Debian have). But this file is read by bash by default on startup.

Andrew
 

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LKSH(1) 						    BSD General Commands Manual 						   LKSH(1)

NAME
lksh -- Legacy Korn shell built on mksh SYNOPSIS
lksh [-+abCefhiklmnprUuvXx] [-+o opt] [-c string | -s | file [args ...]] DESCRIPTION
lksh is a command interpreter intended exclusive for running legacy shell scripts. It is built on mksh; refer to its manual page for details on the scripting language. LEGACY MODE
lksh has the following differences from mksh: o lksh is not suitable for use as /bin/sh. o There is no explicit support for interactive use, nor any command line editing code. Hence, lksh is not suitable as a user's login shell, either; use mksh instead. o The KSH_VERSION string identifies lksh as ``LEGACY KSH'' instead of ``MIRBSD KSH''. o Some mksh specific extensions are missing; specifically, the -T command-line option. o lksh always uses traditional mode for constructs like: $ set -- $(getopt ab:c "$@") $ echo $? POSIX mandates this to show 0, but traditional mode passes through the errorlevel from the getopt(1) command. o lksh, unlike AT&T UNIX ksh, does not keep file descriptors > 2 private. o lksh parses leading-zero numbers as octal (base 8). o Integers use the host C environment's long type, not int32_t. Unsigned arithmetic is done using unsigned long, not uint32_t. Neither value limits nor wraparound is guaranteed. Dividing the largest negative number by -1 is Undefined Behaviour (but might work on 32-bit and 64-bit long types). o lksh only offers the traditional ten file descriptors to scripts. SEE ALSO
mksh(1) https://www.mirbsd.org/mksh.htm https://www.mirbsd.org/ksh-chan.htm CAVEATS
lksh tries to make a cross between a legacy bourne/posix compatibl-ish shell and a legacy pdksh-alike but ``legacy'' is not exactly speci- fied. Parsing numbers with leading zero digits or ``0x'' is relatively recent in all pdksh derivates, but supported here for completeness. It might make sense to make this a run-time option, but that might also be overkill. The set built-in command does not have all options one would expect from a full-blown mksh or pdksh. Talk to the MirOS development team using the mailing list at <miros-mksh@mirbsd.org> or the #!/bin/mksh (or #ksh) IRC channel at irc.freenode.net (Port 6697 SSL, 6667 unencrypted) if you need any further quirks or assistance, and consider migrating your legacy scripts to work with mksh instead of requiring lksh. MirBSD February 11, 2013 MirBSD
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