If I make changes to .bashrc, how do I reload it without logging out and back in?
18 Answers
You can enter the long form command:
source ~/.bashrc
or you can use the shorter version of the command:
. ~/.bashrc
16 Comments
export PATH=$PATH:foo, and then you change it to export PATH=$PATH:bar. If you log in and back out, only bar will be in the PATH, but if you do what you suggest, both foo and bar will be in the PATH. Do you know of a way around this?alias editbashrc='vim ~/.bashrc; source ~/.bashrc'. This will make the editing much smoother, since you don't need to think about the reloading, after doing the edit, if using the custom alias.Or you could use:
exec bash
This does the same thing, and is easier to remember (at least for me).
The exec command completely replaces the shell process by running the specified command-line. In our example, it replaces whatever the current shell is with a fresh instance of bash (with the updated configuration files).
17 Comments
source .bashrc command and exec bash?source is a built-in shell command that executes the content of the file passed as argument, in the current shell. So in your example, it executes .bashrc file in the current shell. And exec command replaces the shell with a given program, in your example, it replaces your shell with bash (with the updated configuration files). ~/.bashrc will execute in dash rather than bash, so there is an error because shopt is missing. source isn't found from the shell, so that solution is out as well. I tried this and the docker image built smoothly!source ~/.bashrc will preserve your entire shell environment (though likely modified by the sourcing of ~/.bashrc), whereas exec bash will only preserve your current shell's environment variables (any ad-hoc changes to the current shell in terms of shell variables, function, options are lost). Depending on your needs, one or the other approach may be preferred.exec bash. The exec command replaces the shell with the program, in our case, bash. So, there is always one instance of bash in existence in the terminal.To complement and contrast the two most popular answers, . ~/.bashrc and exec bash:
Both solutions effectively reload ~/.bashrc, but there are differences:
. ~/.bashrcorsource ~/.bashrcwill preserve your current shell session:- Except for the modifications that reloading
~/.bashrcinto the current shell (sourcing) makes, the current shell process and its state are preserved, which includes environment variables, shell variables, shell options, shell functions, and command history.
- Except for the modifications that reloading
exec bash, or, more robustly,exec "$BASH"[1], will replace your current shell with a new instance, and therefore only preserve your current shell's environment variables (including ones you've defined ad hoc, in-session).- In other words: Any ad-hoc changes to the current shell in terms of shell variables, shell functions, shell options, command history are lost.
Depending on your needs, one or the other approach may be preferred.
Note: The above applies analogously to other shells too:
- To apply the
execapproach to whatever your default shell is, useexec $SHELL - Similarly, the sourcing approach requires you to know and specify the name of the shell-specific initialization file; e.g., for
zsh:. ~/.zshrc
[1] exec bash could in theory execute a different bash executable than the one that started the current shell, if it happens to exist in a directory listed earlier in the $PATH. Since special variable $BASH always contains the full path of the executable that started the current shell, exec "$BASH" is guaranteed to use the same executable.
A note re "..." around $BASH: double-quoting ensures that the variable value is used as-is, without interpretation by Bash; if the value has no embedded spaces or other shell metacharacters (which is likely in this case), you don't strictly need double quotes, but using them is a good habit to form.
8 Comments
exec $BASH will source ~/.bashrc, so you'll see its changes to the shell environment in the new session.broadcast all + source. Best of both worlds, imo.$SHELL reflects whatever shell is the current user's default shell, which may or may not be Bash.You can try do this:
. .bashrc
6 Comments
~/, but since the top answer shows both source ~/.bashrc and . ~/.bashrc I wonder if this answer should just be deleted as redundant.Depending on your environment, just typing
bash
may also work.
5 Comments
. ~/.bashrc
Alternatives
source ~/.bashrc
exec bash
execcommand replaces the shell with a given program... – WhoSayIn
1 Comment
exec bash still inherits the environment of the current shell. exec env -i bash would be closer (or exec env -i bash -l if you are currently in a login shell).I used easyengine to set up my vultr cloud based server.
I found my bash file at /etc/bash.bashrc.
So source /etc/bash.bashrc did the trick for me!
update
When setting up a bare server (ubuntu 16.04), you can use the above info, when you have not yet set up a username, and are logging in via root.
It's best to create a user (with sudo privileges), and login as this username instead.
This will create a directory for your settings, including .profile and .bashrc files as described on the previous ressource.
Now, you will edit and (and source) the ~/.bashrc file.
On my server, this was located at /home/your_username/.bashrc
(where your_username is actually the new username you created above, and now login with)
Comments
exec bash is a great way to re-execute and launch a new shell to replace current. just to add to the answer, $SHELL returns the current shell which is bash. By using the following, it will reload the current shell, and not only to bash.
exec $SHELL -l;
1 Comment
$SHELL reflects the current user's default shell, so this is a way to replace the current session - whatever shell's process it may be - with a new session of the user's default shell. -l makes the new session a login session, which is appropriate on macOS (and by default only loads ~/.bash_profile, not also ~/.bashrc), but not on Linux.Depending upon your environment, you may want to add scripting to have .bashrc load automatically when you open an SSH session. I recently did a migration to a server running Ubuntu, and there, .profile, not .bashrc or .bash_profile is loaded by default. To run any scripts in .bashrc, I had to run source ~/.bashrc every time a session was opened, which doesn't help when running remote deploys.
To have your .bashrc load automatically when opening a session, try adding this to .profile:
if [ -n "$BASH_VERSION" ]; then
# include .bashrc if it exists
if [ -f "$HOME/.bashrc" ]; then
. "$HOME/.bashrc"
fi
fi
Reopen your session, and it should load any paths/scripts you have in .bashrc.
1 Comment
For me what works when I change the PATH is: exec "$BASH" --login
1 Comment
~/.bashrc, which --login will not (directly) reload; at a user level, it'll reload ~/.bash_profile (or ~/.bash_login or ~/.profile) instead.i use the following command on msysgit
. ~/.bashrc
shorter version of
source ~/.bashrc
1 Comment
I noticed that pure exec bash command will preserve the environment variables, so you need to use exec -c bash to run bash in an empty environment.
For example, you login a bash, and export A=1, if you exec bash, the A == 1.
If you exec -cl bash, A is empty.
I think this is the best way to do your job.
1 Comment
exec -c the same as exec -cl?Assuming an interactive shell, and you'd like to keep your current command history and also load /etc/profile (which loads environment data including /etc/bashrc and on Mac OS X loads paths defined in /etc/paths.d/ via path_helper), append your command history and do an exec of bash with the login ('-l') option:
history -a && exec bash -l
Comments
I understand you want a shell as after logging out and in again. I believe the best way to achieve that is:
exec env -i HOME="$HOME" "$SHELL" -l
exec will replace the current shell, such that you are not left with it when the new one exits. env will create a new empty environment, with -i we add $HOME so that your shell (usually bash) given by $SHELL can find ~/.profile/~/.bash_profile (and thus (on ubuntu or if specified) ~/.bashrc). Those will be sourced thanks to -l. I'm not completely sure though.
1 Comment
Be aware of $SHELL may produce unexpected results
for example connected on a Docker environment
echo $SHELL
/usr/sbin/nologin
so if you try, you will be disconnected
exec $SHELL
This account is currently not available.
so you may have to use something more complicated like
exec $(pgrep -l sh | grep "^`echo $$` " | cut -d" " -f2)
assuming that every shell contains "sh", and this command pipeline
pgrep -l sh | grep "^`echo $$` " | cut -d" " -f2
produces a complete command
if you have arguments or flags you may have to use -f2,3,4
or try
pgrep -l sh | grep "^`echo $$` " | sed -E 's/^[0-9]+ //'
But read all the advices above
Personally i dont like to loose the shell history... but it's up to you and to your needs
Comments
I wrote a set of scripts I called bash_magic that automates this process across numerous shells. If you update a shell file in the bash magic shell directory (.bash.d by default), it will automatically source the update at the next prompt. So once you've made a change, just hit the Enter/return key and any updates will be sourced.