Changing default shell in Linux
You should have a 'skeleton' somewhere in /etc
, probably /etc/skeleton
, or check the default settings, probably /etc/default
or something. Those are scripts that define standard environment variables getting set during a login.
If it is just for your own account: check the (hidden) file ~/.profile
and ~/.login
. Or generate them, if they don't exist. These are also evaluated by the login process.
Try linux command chsh
.
The detailed command is chsh -s /bin/bash
.
It will prompt you to enter your password.
Your default login shell is /bin/bash
now. You must log out and log back in to see this change.
The following is quoted from man page:
The chsh command changes the user login shell. This determines the name of the users initial login command. A normal user may only change the login shell for her own account, the superuser may change the login shell for any account
This command will change the default login shell permanently.
Note: If your user account is remote such as on Kerberos authentication (e.g. Enterprise RHEL) then you will not be able to use chsh
.
You can change the passwd file directly for the particular user or use the below command
chsh -s /usr/local/bin/bash username
Then log out and log in