Every time I monkey with my .profile
or .bashrc
file I regret it.(.profile
is what graybeards like me use instead of using .bash_profile
like all the young people who won’t stay off my lawn.)
If you’re like me, you get those confused all the time, so let’s go to the bash(1) man page. (Amazingly, it is a man page and not an info node. Ahem.) Here’s the salient bit of that 37,000 word tome:
When bash is invoked as an interactive login shell, or as a non-interactive shell with the –login option, it first reads and executes commands from the file /etc/profile
, if that file exists. After reading that file, it looks for ~/.bash_profile
, ~/.bash_login
, and ~/.profile
, in that order, and reads and executes commands from the first one that exists and is readable. The –noprofile option may be used when the shell is started to inhibit this behavior.
When a login shell exits, bash reads and executes commands from the files ~/.bash_logout
and /etc/bash.bash_logout
, if the files exists.
When an interactive shell that is not a login shell is started, bash reads and executes commands from ~/.bashrc
, if that file exists. This may be inhibited by using the –norc option. The –rcfile file option will force bash to read and execute commands from file instead of ~/.bashrc
.
When bash is started non-interactively, to run a shell script, for example, it looks for the variable BASH_ENV
in the environment, expands its value if it appears there, and uses the expanded value as the name of a file to read and execute. Bash behaves as if the following command were executed:
if [ -n "$BASH_ENV" ]; then . "$BASH_ENV"; fi
but the value of the PATH
variable is not used to search for the file name.
Got all that? The key is that your .profile
is read first for login shells and .bashrc
for non-login shells. There’s no reason why you should ever worry about what order they get invoked in, because there’s no reason to invoke them both at all. Except if you want to observe the DRY principle. In which case they should both invoke a separate startup file of your own design.