Re: Configuring a non-root-user profile

2004-01-07 Thread gmorais
Ruby Deepdelver wrote: Hi. I'm a newbie in debian, and almost everything that i used to do in Mandrake now doesn't work in debian. I understand i'm doing something in the wrong way. I need to configure in my account some extra entries in the PATH variable. I configure my .bash_profile and it

Re: Configuring a non-root-user profile

2004-01-07 Thread s. keeling
Incoming from gmorais: Ruby Deepdelver wrote: Hi. I'm a newbie in debian, and almost everything that i used to do in Mandrake now doesn't work in debian. I understand i'm doing something in the wrong way. I need to configure in my account some extra entries in the PATH variable. I

Re: Configuring a non-root-user profile

2004-01-07 Thread s. keeling
Incoming from s. keeling: The last time I read O'Reilly's Learning the Bash Shell, it said .bash_profile is run on all logins. .bashrc is run on top of that (automagically) for all _interactive_ logins (which is why aliases Forget that automagically bit. I just tried it and it fails

Re: Configuring a non-root-user profile

2004-01-07 Thread Colin Watson
On Wed, Jan 07, 2004 at 09:29:45AM -0700, s. keeling wrote: Incoming from s. keeling: The last time I read O'Reilly's Learning the Bash Shell, it said .bash_profile is run on all logins. .bashrc is run on top of that (automagically) for all _interactive_ logins (which is why aliases

Re: Configuring a non-root-user profile

2004-01-07 Thread Ruby Deepdelver
From: gmorais [EMAIL PROTECTED] To: Ruby Deepdelver [EMAIL PROTECTED] CC: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: Re: Configuring a non-root-user profile Date: Wed, 07 Jan 2004 08:55:21 + This is something like newbie to newbie: I had the same problem while ago and the solution was: 1. edit your .bashrc

Re: Configuring a non-root-user profile

2004-01-07 Thread s. keeling
Incoming from Colin Watson: On Wed, Jan 07, 2004 at 09:29:45AM -0700, s. keeling wrote: Incoming from s. keeling: The last time I read O'Reilly's Learning the Bash Shell, it said .bash_profile is run on all logins. .bashrc is run on top of that (automagically) for all _interactive_

Re: Configuring a non-root-user profile

2004-01-07 Thread Paul Morgan
On Wed, 07 Jan 2004 18:06:34 +, Ruby Deepdelver wrote: Thak you very much for your concern but i did this and the term doesn't start anymore. Are you sure that the line that i have to insert in .bashrc is source .bash_profile? Anyway, i've just find out that when i login in a term

Re: Configuring a non-root-user profile

2004-01-07 Thread gmorais
Ruby Deepdelver wrote: From: gmorais [EMAIL PROTECTED] To: Ruby Deepdelver [EMAIL PROTECTED] CC: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: Re: Configuring a non-root-user profile Date: Wed, 07 Jan 2004 08:55:21 + This is something like newbie to newbie: I had the same problem while ago and the solution

Re: Configuring a non-root-user profile

2004-01-07 Thread Colin Watson
On Wed, Jan 07, 2004 at 01:20:28PM -0700, s. keeling wrote: Re-reading it now, this chapter appears very confusing. According to it, the automagically bit refers to .bashrc being run for sub-shells. Then it tells you to put as little as possible in .bash_profile and source .bashrc from the

Configuring a non-root-user profile

2004-01-06 Thread Ruby Deepdelver
Hi. I'm a newbie in debian, and almost everything that i used to do in Mandrake now doesn't work in debian. I understand i'm doing something in the wrong way. I need to configure in my account some extra entries in the PATH variable. I configure my .bash_profile and it looks like this:

Configuring a non-root-user profile

2004-01-06 Thread Ruby Deepdelver
Hi. I'm a newbie in debian, and almost everything that i used to do in Mandrake now doesn't work in debian. I understand i'm doing something in the wrong way. I need to configure in my account some extra entries in the PATH variable. I configure my .bash_profile and it looks like this: