| 123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960616263646566676869707172737475767778798081828384858687888990919293949596979899100101102103104 | <?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?><!DOCTYPE sect1 PUBLIC "-//OASIS//DTD DocBook XML V4.4//EN" "http://www.oasis-open.org/docbook/xml/4.4/docbookx.dtd" [  <!ENTITY % general-entities SYSTEM "../general.ent">  %general-entities;]><sect1 id="ch-scripts-profile"><title>The Bash Shell Startup Files</title><?dbhtml filename="profile.html"?><indexterm zone="ch-scripts-profile"><primary sortas="e-/etc/profile">/etc/profile</primary></indexterm><para>The shell program <command>/bin/bash</command> (hereafterreferred to as <quote>the shell</quote>) uses a collection of startupfiles to help create an environment to run in. Each file has aspecific use and may effect login and interactive environmentsdifferently. The files in the <filenameclass="directory">/etc</filename> directory provide global settings.If an equivalent file exists in the home directory, it may overridethe global settings.</para><para>An interactive login shell is started after a successful login,using <command>/bin/login</command>, by reading the<filename>/etc/passwd</filename> file. An interactive non-login shellis started at the command-line (e.g.,<prompt>[prompt]$</prompt><command>/bin/bash</command>). Anon-interactive shell is usually present when a shell script isrunning. It is non-interactive because it is processing a script andnot waiting for user input between commands.</para><para>For more information, see <command>info bash</command> - Nodes:Bash Startup Files and Interactive Shells.</para><para>The files <filename>/etc/profile</filename> and<filename>~/.bash_profile</filename> are read when the shell isinvoked as an interactive login shell.</para><para>A base <filename>/etc/profile</filename> below sets someenvironment variables necessary for native language support. Settingthem properly results in:</para><itemizedlist><listitem><para>The output of programs translated into the nativelanguage</para></listitem><listitem><para>Correct classification of characters into letters,digits and other classes. This is necessary for Bash to properlyaccept non-ASCII characters in command lines in non-Englishlocales</para></listitem><listitem><para>The correct alphabetical sorting order for thecountry</para></listitem><listitem><para>Appropriate default paper size</para></listitem><listitem><para>Correct formatting of monetary, time, and datevalues</para></listitem></itemizedlist><para>This script also sets the <envar>INPUTRC</envar>environment variable that makes <application>Bash</application> and<application>Readline</application> use the<filename>/etc/inputrc</filename> file created earlier.</para><para>Replace <replaceable>[ll]</replaceable> below with thetwo-letter code for the desired language (e.g., <quote>en</quote>) and<replaceable>[CC]</replaceable> with the two-letter code for theappropriate country (e.g., <quote>GB</quote>). It may also benecessary to specify (and this is actually the preferred form) thecharacter encoding (e.g.  <quote>iso8859-1</quote>) after a dot (sothat the result is <quote>en_GB.iso8859-1</quote>).  Issue thefollowing command for more information:</para><screen><userinput>man 3 setlocale</userinput></screen><para>The list of all locales supported by Glibc can be obtained by runningthe following command:</para><screen><userinput>locale -a</userinput></screen><para>Once the proper locale settings have been determined, create the<filename>/etc/profile</filename> file:</para><screen><userinput>cat > /etc/profile << "EOF"<literal># Begin /etc/profileexport LC_ALL=<replaceable>[ll]</replaceable>_<replaceable>[CC]</replaceable>export LANG=<replaceable>[ll]</replaceable>_<replaceable>[CC]</replaceable>export INPUTRC=/etc/inputrc# End /etc/profile</literal>EOF</userinput></screen><note><para>The <quote>C</quote> (default) and <quote>en_US</quote>(the recommended one for United States English users) locales aredifferent.</para></note><para>Setting the keyboard layout, screen font, and locale-related environment variables are the only internationalizationsteps needed to support locales that use ordinary single-byteencodings and left-to-right writing direction. More complex cases(including UTF-8 based locales) require additional steps andadditional patches because many applications tend to not work properlyunder such conditions.  These steps and patches are not included inthe LFS book and such locales are not supported by LFS in anyway.</para></sect1>
 |