Updated 28-Jun-2024
PATH can be a pain, but there are some basics:
- Syntax
- $PATH before or after (before)
- Is EXPORT needed, or not (not)
- Where is PATH set
- All apps+shells
/etc/environment
- All shells
~/.profile
or/etc/profile
for all users (or a separate file under /etc/profile.d/ if using pacman) - Bash shell
~/.bashrc
(or~/.bash_profile
or~/.bash_login
) - Fish shell
~/.config/fish/config.fish
- All apps+shells
To Export or Not
Export is useful in a script, when say making a copy of the path, changing the path, exporting (updating the live path), executing some other commands, and then changing the path back and re-exporting (see example here). However, export doesn't work the same way in all shells.
However, simply having permanent Export commands in a standard config file makes no sense, though it is common practice.
Where to put the PATH variable
> bash as a login shell doesn't parse ~/.profile
if either ~/.bash_profile
or ~/.bash_login
exists. -Source
Also, note that ~/.bash_profile
is not run if there is a non-login shell invocation, which means ~/.bashrc
is really where you want PATH to be (for Bash).
~/.bashrc vs. ~/.bash_profile vs. ~/.profile
~/.bashrc
only works for shells that are both non-login and interactive, though this is largely ignored as most~/.bash_profile
s load~/.bashrc
by default.~/.profile
is the old/bin/sh
login script, and Bash will read it to be backward compatible~/.bashrc
is generally good, for odd/unknown reasons it fails to load at times, especially second and subsequent logins.
Environment
If a single PATH should be the same for every shell, and even every app, then a core environmental variable should be the place where the PATH would reside.
Previous to all ./profiles is the use of /etc/environment
which is global.
Bash ~/.bashrc Example
# .bashrc
# Source global definitions
if [ -f /etc/bashrc ]; then
. /etc/bashrc
fi
# User specific aliases and functions
alias rm='rm -i'
alias cp='cp -i'
alias mv='mv -i'
alias lx='ls -la --color=auto'
alias rx='rm -rf'
PATH=$PATH:$HOME/bin:~/.local/bin:/usr/local/bin
export PATH
Fish ~/.config/fish/config.fish Example
set PATH $PATH /usr/local/bin
export PATH
function ll
ls -lh $argv
end
See also: Fish Shell $PATH
Reload the Config file (while preserving the session)
- Bash:
source ~/.bashrc
- Fish:
source ~/.config/fish/config.fish