Difference between .bashrc and .bash_profile
Traditionally, when you log into a Unix system, the system would start one program for you. That program is a shell, i.e., a program designed to start other programs. It's a command line shell: you start another program by typing its name. The default shell, a Bourne shell, reads commands from ~/.profile
when it is invoked as the login shell.
Bash is a Bourne-like shell. It reads commands from ~/.bash_profile
when it is invoked as the login shell, and if that file doesn't exist¹, it tries reading ~/.profile
instead.
You can invoke a shell directly at any time, for example by launching a terminal emulator inside a GUI environment. If the shell is not a login shell, it doesn't read ~/.profile
. When you start bash as an interactive shell (i.e., not to run a script), it reads ~/.bashrc
(except when invoked as a login shell, then it only reads ~/.bash_profile
or ~/.profile
.
Therefore:
~/.profile
is the place to put stuff that applies to your whole session, such as programs that you want to start when you log in (but not graphical programs, they go into a different file), and environment variable definitions.~/.bashrc
is the place to put stuff that applies only to bash itself, such as alias and function definitions, shell options, and prompt settings. (You could also put key bindings there, but for bash they normally go into~/.inputrc
.)~/.bash_profile
can be used instead of~/.profile
, but it is read by bash only, not by any other shell. (This is mostly a concern if you want your initialization files to work on multiple machines and your login shell isn't bash on all of them.) This is a logical place to include~/.bashrc
if the shell is interactive. I recommend the following contents in~/.bash_profile
:if [ -r ~/.profile ]; then . ~/.profile; fi case "$-" in *i*) if [ -r ~/.bashrc ]; then . ~/.bashrc; fi;; esac
On modern unices, there's an added complication related to ~/.profile
. If you log in in a graphical environment (that is, if the program where you type your password is running in graphics mode), you don't automatically get a login shell that reads ~/.profile
. Depending on the graphical login program, on the window manager or desktop environment you run afterwards, and on how your distribution configured these programs, your ~/.profile
may or may not be read. If it's not, there's usually another place where you can define environment variables and programs to launch when you log in, but there is unfortunately no standard location.
Note that you may see here and there recommendations to either put environment variable definitions in ~/.bashrc
or always launch login shells in terminals. Both are bad ideas. The most common problem with either of these ideas is that your environment variables will only be set in programs launched via the terminal, not in programs started directly with an icon or menu or keyboard shortcut.
¹ For completeness, by request: if .bash_profile
doesn't exist, bash also tries .bash_login
before falling back to .profile
. Feel free to forget it exists.
From this short article
According to the bash man page, .bash_profile is executed for login shells, while .bashrc is executed for interactive non-login shells.
What is a login or non-login shell?
When you login (eg: type username and password) via console, either physically sitting at the machine when booting, or remotely via ssh: .bash_profile is executed to configure things before the initial command prompt.
But, if you've already logged into your machine and open a new terminal window (xterm) inside Gnome or KDE, then .bashrc is executed before the window command prompt. .bashrc is also run when you start a new bash instance by typing /bin/bash in a terminal.
Back in the old days, when pseudo tty's weren't pseudo and actually, well, typed, and UNIXes were accessed by modems so slow you could see each letter being printed to your screen, efficiency was paramount. To help efficiency somewhat you had a concept of a main login window and whatever other windows you used to actually work. In your main window, you'd like notifications to any new mail, possibly run some other programs in the background.
To support this, shells sourced a file .profile
specifically on 'login shells'. This would do the special, once a session setup. Bash extended this somewhat to look at .bash_profile first before .profile, this way you could put bash only things in there (so they don't screw up Bourne shell, etc, that also looked at .profile). Other shells, non-login, would just source the rc file, .bashrc (or .kshrc, etc).
This is a bit of an anachronism now. You don't log into a main shell as much as you log into a gui window manager. There is no main window any different than any other window.
My suggestion - don't worry about this difference, it's based on an older style of using unix. Eliminate the difference in your files. The entire contents of .bash_profile should be:
[ -f $HOME/.bashrc ] && . $HOME/.bashrc
And put everything you actually want to set in .bashrc
Remember that .bashrc is sourced for all shells, interactive and non-interactive. You can short circuit the sourcing for non-interactive shells by putting this code near the top of .bashrc:
[[ $- != *i* ]] && return