On Wed, 04 Mar 2009 10:34:56 -0600, Gerald L wrote: > Beartooth wrote:
>> I don't have any /home/btth/bin, nor even a /home/btth/.bin; do I >> just start with "mkdir bin"? Or does some wrinkle in Fedora mean I have >> to move it from /home/btth to some place like /usr/bin? Or do I just >> leave it where it is, without any bin directory? Or what? Where is >> Fedora's version of Pan going to look for it?? > You can actually put it anywhere you want. It is just fairly common > housekeeping practice to create a /home/username/bin directory as a > place to put executable files that you create -- as opposed to > executables that are installed by the system into /usr/bin, /usr/sbin, > /bin, etc. ... Hmmm ... I wouldn't bet on knowing a line of code if it bit me; but I certainly download a lot of executables -- mostly stuff like Opera that's not in my distro. Is there reason to put that there? > Some people simply place self-created executables into /usr/local/bin > because that should already exist but it is world-readable so > executables intended for a single user are more commonly put somewhere > in that user's /home directory. > > So, yes: > > mkdir /home/btth/bin > mv /home/btth/alpine_helper.pl /home/btth/bin/ OK, I did both of those. > You may also want to check your /home/btth/.bash_profile to be certain > it includes a stanza like this somewhere (mine is at the bottom): > > # set PATH so it includes user's private bin if it exists if [ -d ~/bin > ] ; then > PATH=~/bin:"${PATH}" > fi Mine has this : # Get the aliases and functions if [ -f ~/.bashrc ]; then . ~/.bashrc fi Is that another form of the same thing? Or do I just add the PATH lines below it? > That will ensure you can use any executables you drop into your > /home/btth/bin directory without having to type the full path. Verr-rr-rry intterr-rr-rresssttingg. .bash_profile turns out to be one of those things somebody walked me through once, long ago and far away, and then I kept not being able to find again. It now has a bunch of stuff at the bottom that's been out of date for years -- the mail accounts haven't existed for at least two or three. How much of the following should I just delete? (The last, very long, alias is actually all one line, from pine= to pinerc and the quotes.) Just the dead aliasses? Everything from the # on down? # User specific environment and startup programs PATH=$PATH:$HOME/bin export PATH unset USERNAME alias Adelpine='/usr/bin/pine' alias delpine='/usr/bin/pine' alias pine='/usr/bin/pine -p "{Teton.vresl.com/novalidate-cert/ user=khnhms}remote_pinerc"' -- Beartooth Staffwright, PhD, Neo-Redneck Linux Convert Remember I know precious little of what I am talking about. _______________________________________________ Pan-users mailing list Pan-users@nongnu.org http://lists.nongnu.org/mailman/listinfo/pan-users