Re: Another .bashrc Question

2006-02-11 Thread Dave
O. Olson wrote: If I log in (either locally and remotely) I get the bash prompt, but the .bashrc is not sourced. If I then type “bash” on the command line then this file gets sourced. `man bash` Check the Invocation chapter. A (bash) login shell is not expected to source .bashrc, alt

Re: Another .bashrc Question

2006-02-10 Thread O. Olson
--- René Berber <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> ha scritto: > Recently it was recommended to use (in a command > window probably is better): > > bash -x -li > > to see what's really going on when bash starts. > > You'll see in the output where your .bashrc is > looked for. > -- > René Berber > T

Re: Another .bashrc Question

2006-02-08 Thread René Berber
O. Olson wrote: >>Define a HOME variable in Windows >>Control Panel->System->Advanced->Environment Variables >>I generally have my home directory in C:\Home\Arun. >> >>You must have .bashrc and .bash_login there. Mine >>are both identical. >>Arun >> > > Thanks Arun, but this does not work i.e. ye

Re: Another .bashrc Question

2006-02-08 Thread O. Olson
--- Arun Biyani <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> ha scritto: > Define a HOME variable in Windows > Control Panel->System->Advanced->Environment > Variables > I generally have my home directory in C:\Home\Arun. > > You must have .bashrc and .bash_login there. Mine > are both identical. > Arun > Thanks Arun,

Another .bashrc Question

2006-02-08 Thread O. Olson
Hi, I have defined a number of alias’s in my .bashrc, and these do not appear, so I assume that the .bashrc is not sourced, when I start up cygwin or I log in remotely. I have made copies of my .bashrc in / and in /home/user_name/ - but it does not look at either of them. I have l