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wrong echo command



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1















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.










share|improve this question


























    1















    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.










    share|improve this question
























      1












      1








      1








      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.










      share|improve this question














      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






      share|improve this question













      share|improve this question











      share|improve this question




      share|improve this question










      asked Mar 13 at 16:52









      Elias BendjaballahElias Bendjaballah

      83




      83




















          2 Answers
          2






          active

          oldest

          votes


















          1














          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.






          share|improve this answer























          • Thank you very much. It solved my problem and I now have a normal terminal.

            – Elias Bendjaballah
            Mar 14 at 17:21


















          3














          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.






          share|improve this answer























          • 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











          Your Answer








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          2 Answers
          2






          active

          oldest

          votes








          2 Answers
          2






          active

          oldest

          votes









          active

          oldest

          votes






          active

          oldest

          votes









          1














          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.






          share|improve this answer























          • Thank you very much. It solved my problem and I now have a normal terminal.

            – Elias Bendjaballah
            Mar 14 at 17:21















          1














          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.






          share|improve this answer























          • Thank you very much. It solved my problem and I now have a normal terminal.

            – Elias Bendjaballah
            Mar 14 at 17:21













          1












          1








          1







          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.






          share|improve this answer













          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.







          share|improve this answer












          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer










          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

















          • 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













          3














          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.






          share|improve this answer























          • 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
















          3














          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.






          share|improve this answer























          • 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














          3












          3








          3







          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.






          share|improve this answer













          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.







          share|improve this answer












          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer










          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


















          • 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


















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