On 2006-07-11 09:09, Peter [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I have the following in my .xinitrc file:
aterm -e screen
What is happening is that neither /etc/profile nor ~/.profile are
being read. How can I get either of them to be sourced?
By default, xterm, rxvt, aterm and various other
--- Giorgos Keramidas [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On 2006-07-11 09:09, Peter [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I have the following in my .xinitrc file:
aterm -e screen
What is happening is that neither /etc/profile nor ~/.profile are
being read. How can I get either of them to be sourced?
On 2006-07-11 09:40, Peter [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
--- Giorgos Keramidas [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On 2006-07-11 09:09, Peter [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I have the following in my .xinitrc file:
aterm -e screen
What is happening is that neither /etc/profile nor ~/.profile are
being read.
--- Giorgos Keramidas [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On 2006-07-11 09:40, Peter [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
--- Giorgos Keramidas [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On 2006-07-11 09:09, Peter [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I have the following in my .xinitrc file:
aterm -e screen
What is happening is
On 2006-07-11 11:18, Peter [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I added this option but I still do not get my ~/.profile sourced
(no aliases). Going '. ~/.profile' gives me my aliases. How does
aterm know what file to look for?
aterm doesn't care about .profile or other files. It starts a shell,
--- Giorgos Keramidas [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On 2006-07-11 11:18, Peter [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I added this option but I still do not get my ~/.profile sourced
(no aliases). Going '. ~/.profile' gives me my aliases. How
does
aterm know what file to look for?
aterm doesn't care
On 2006-07-11 12:05, Peter [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
--- Giorgos Keramidas [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
What do you see in your HOME directory with:
$ ls -ld .*profile .*rc
In my local setup here, I see something like this:
$ pwd
/home/giorgos
$ ls -ld .bash* .sh* .profile
--- Giorgos Keramidas [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Can you please also send the output of:
$ ls -ld .bash* .sh* .profile
$ ls -ld .bash* .sh* .profile
-rw-rw 1 peter users 7.7K Jul 11 09:31 .bash_history
-rw-rw 1 peter users 1.6K Jul 4 15:31 .profile
-rw-rw 1 peter
On 2006-07-11 12:39, Peter [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
--- Giorgos Keramidas [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Can you please also send the output of:
$ ls -ld .bash* .sh* .profile
$ ls -ld .bash* .sh* .profile
-rw-rw 1 peter users 7.7K Jul 11 09:31 .bash_history
-rw-rw 1 peter
--- Giorgos Keramidas [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On 2006-07-11 12:39, Peter [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
--- Giorgos Keramidas [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Can you please also send the output of:
$ ls -ld .bash* .sh* .profile
$ ls -ld .bash* .sh* .profile
-rw-rw 1 peter users
On 2006-07-11 14:11, Peter [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
--- Giorgos Keramidas [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I just tested here, with the CVS mirroring account I have at this
workstation, by:
[snip]
and when I su(1) to this account, the .profile is used by bash!
There is no question that .profile is
in message [EMAIL PROTECTED],
wrote Giorgos Keramidas thusly...
On 2006-07-11 12:05, Peter [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
--- Giorgos Keramidas [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
What do you see in your HOME directory with:
$ ls -ld .*profile .*rc
...
$ ls -ld .*profile .*rc
-rw-rw 1 peter
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