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wrong echo command
2019 Community Moderator ElectionWhat is the purpose of .bashrc and how does it work?Minecraft server daily restart scriptOpening multiple tabs in gnome-terminal, having them automatically password-lessly ssh to servers and do so using alias from my bashrc fileWhy does tmux mess up my Ubuntu login, though it works ok once logged in for new windows?Why doesn't my bash terminal recognize any command in the shell?executable within $PATH still going unrecognizedHow to change/fix the v command in less using a shell profile?bash script not running at startupAvoid sourcing scripts multiple timesSince dist-upgrade, Debian crashes after a few minutes of using terminal, but only when an external monitor is not being usedxmodmap key bindings reset when I open a new tab in the shell
I am having a little problem with my ubuntu16.04 terminal.
I wanted to have access to a data-base through the use of the :
echo source /Infos/bd/config11 >> .bashrc
echo source /Infos/bd/config11 >> .bash_profile
However I unfortunately don't have acces to this data-base since it's not on my computer.
Every time I open a terminal I see:
bash: /Infos/bd/config11: No such file or directory
What can I do to stop seeing this on my terminal?
Thank you.
bash bashrc gnome-terminal echo
add a comment |
I am having a little problem with my ubuntu16.04 terminal.
I wanted to have access to a data-base through the use of the :
echo source /Infos/bd/config11 >> .bashrc
echo source /Infos/bd/config11 >> .bash_profile
However I unfortunately don't have acces to this data-base since it's not on my computer.
Every time I open a terminal I see:
bash: /Infos/bd/config11: No such file or directory
What can I do to stop seeing this on my terminal?
Thank you.
bash bashrc gnome-terminal echo
add a comment |
I am having a little problem with my ubuntu16.04 terminal.
I wanted to have access to a data-base through the use of the :
echo source /Infos/bd/config11 >> .bashrc
echo source /Infos/bd/config11 >> .bash_profile
However I unfortunately don't have acces to this data-base since it's not on my computer.
Every time I open a terminal I see:
bash: /Infos/bd/config11: No such file or directory
What can I do to stop seeing this on my terminal?
Thank you.
bash bashrc gnome-terminal echo
I am having a little problem with my ubuntu16.04 terminal.
I wanted to have access to a data-base through the use of the :
echo source /Infos/bd/config11 >> .bashrc
echo source /Infos/bd/config11 >> .bash_profile
However I unfortunately don't have acces to this data-base since it's not on my computer.
Every time I open a terminal I see:
bash: /Infos/bd/config11: No such file or directory
What can I do to stop seeing this on my terminal?
Thank you.
bash bashrc gnome-terminal echo
bash bashrc gnome-terminal echo
asked Mar 13 at 16:52
Elias BendjaballahElias Bendjaballah
83
83
add a comment |
add a comment |
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
To avoid seeing this, you should edit your startup scripts so they no longer attempt to source the missing file:
sed -i 'sXsource /Infos/bd/config11X#&X' ~/.bashrc ~/.bash_profile
This will comment out the line in both files.
Thank you very much. It solved my problem and I now have a normal terminal.
– Elias Bendjaballah
Mar 14 at 17:21
add a comment |
If your startup scripts are shared and you'd like the source
command to execute if possible, then wrap it in a test:
[ -r /Infos/bd/config11 ] && source /Infos/bd/config11
On systems without that file (specifically, where your account is unable to read that path), the test will fail and you will not receive an error message; on systems with that file (where you can read that file), it will be sourced in.
You may not need to have the command in both files; see, for example What is the purpose of .bashrc and how does it work?, and/or your local bash man pages.
The test failed and I had no error message. However I managed to comment out the line which tried to access to that missing file and every thing is working correctly now. Thank you very much.
– Elias Bendjaballah
Mar 14 at 17:22
add a comment |
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2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
To avoid seeing this, you should edit your startup scripts so they no longer attempt to source the missing file:
sed -i 'sXsource /Infos/bd/config11X#&X' ~/.bashrc ~/.bash_profile
This will comment out the line in both files.
Thank you very much. It solved my problem and I now have a normal terminal.
– Elias Bendjaballah
Mar 14 at 17:21
add a comment |
To avoid seeing this, you should edit your startup scripts so they no longer attempt to source the missing file:
sed -i 'sXsource /Infos/bd/config11X#&X' ~/.bashrc ~/.bash_profile
This will comment out the line in both files.
Thank you very much. It solved my problem and I now have a normal terminal.
– Elias Bendjaballah
Mar 14 at 17:21
add a comment |
To avoid seeing this, you should edit your startup scripts so they no longer attempt to source the missing file:
sed -i 'sXsource /Infos/bd/config11X#&X' ~/.bashrc ~/.bash_profile
This will comment out the line in both files.
To avoid seeing this, you should edit your startup scripts so they no longer attempt to source the missing file:
sed -i 'sXsource /Infos/bd/config11X#&X' ~/.bashrc ~/.bash_profile
This will comment out the line in both files.
answered Mar 13 at 16:59
Stephen KittStephen Kitt
177k24402480
177k24402480
Thank you very much. It solved my problem and I now have a normal terminal.
– Elias Bendjaballah
Mar 14 at 17:21
add a comment |
Thank you very much. It solved my problem and I now have a normal terminal.
– Elias Bendjaballah
Mar 14 at 17:21
Thank you very much. It solved my problem and I now have a normal terminal.
– Elias Bendjaballah
Mar 14 at 17:21
Thank you very much. It solved my problem and I now have a normal terminal.
– Elias Bendjaballah
Mar 14 at 17:21
add a comment |
If your startup scripts are shared and you'd like the source
command to execute if possible, then wrap it in a test:
[ -r /Infos/bd/config11 ] && source /Infos/bd/config11
On systems without that file (specifically, where your account is unable to read that path), the test will fail and you will not receive an error message; on systems with that file (where you can read that file), it will be sourced in.
You may not need to have the command in both files; see, for example What is the purpose of .bashrc and how does it work?, and/or your local bash man pages.
The test failed and I had no error message. However I managed to comment out the line which tried to access to that missing file and every thing is working correctly now. Thank you very much.
– Elias Bendjaballah
Mar 14 at 17:22
add a comment |
If your startup scripts are shared and you'd like the source
command to execute if possible, then wrap it in a test:
[ -r /Infos/bd/config11 ] && source /Infos/bd/config11
On systems without that file (specifically, where your account is unable to read that path), the test will fail and you will not receive an error message; on systems with that file (where you can read that file), it will be sourced in.
You may not need to have the command in both files; see, for example What is the purpose of .bashrc and how does it work?, and/or your local bash man pages.
The test failed and I had no error message. However I managed to comment out the line which tried to access to that missing file and every thing is working correctly now. Thank you very much.
– Elias Bendjaballah
Mar 14 at 17:22
add a comment |
If your startup scripts are shared and you'd like the source
command to execute if possible, then wrap it in a test:
[ -r /Infos/bd/config11 ] && source /Infos/bd/config11
On systems without that file (specifically, where your account is unable to read that path), the test will fail and you will not receive an error message; on systems with that file (where you can read that file), it will be sourced in.
You may not need to have the command in both files; see, for example What is the purpose of .bashrc and how does it work?, and/or your local bash man pages.
If your startup scripts are shared and you'd like the source
command to execute if possible, then wrap it in a test:
[ -r /Infos/bd/config11 ] && source /Infos/bd/config11
On systems without that file (specifically, where your account is unable to read that path), the test will fail and you will not receive an error message; on systems with that file (where you can read that file), it will be sourced in.
You may not need to have the command in both files; see, for example What is the purpose of .bashrc and how does it work?, and/or your local bash man pages.
answered Mar 13 at 17:36
Jeff SchallerJeff Schaller
43.8k1161141
43.8k1161141
The test failed and I had no error message. However I managed to comment out the line which tried to access to that missing file and every thing is working correctly now. Thank you very much.
– Elias Bendjaballah
Mar 14 at 17:22
add a comment |
The test failed and I had no error message. However I managed to comment out the line which tried to access to that missing file and every thing is working correctly now. Thank you very much.
– Elias Bendjaballah
Mar 14 at 17:22
The test failed and I had no error message. However I managed to comment out the line which tried to access to that missing file and every thing is working correctly now. Thank you very much.
– Elias Bendjaballah
Mar 14 at 17:22
The test failed and I had no error message. However I managed to comment out the line which tried to access to that missing file and every thing is working correctly now. Thank you very much.
– Elias Bendjaballah
Mar 14 at 17:22
add a comment |
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-bash, bashrc, echo, gnome-terminal