How to permanently enable scl CentOS 6.4?
In your ~/.bashrc
or ~/.bash_profile
Simply source the "enable" script provided with the devtoolset. For example, with the Devtoolset 2, the command is:
source /opt/rh/devtoolset-2/enable
or
source scl_source enable devtoolset-2
Lot more efficient: no forkbomb, no tricky shell
An alternative of source /opt/rh/devtoolset-4/enable
is
source scl_source enable devtoolset-4
The above shell script scl_source
is more elegant than using a hard coded path (may be different on another machine). However scl_source
does less because /opt/rh/devtoolset-4/enable
uses scl_source
and other stuff.
To use scl_source
you may have to upgrade package scl-utils
yum update scl-utils # old scl-utils versions miss scl_source
Quick copy-paste
echo 'source scl_source enable devtoolset-4' >> ~/.bashrc
# Do not forget to change the version ↑
Source code for curious people
An example of scl_source
source code:
https://gist.github.com/bkabrda/6435016
The scl_source
installed on my Red Hat 7.1
#!/bin/bash
_scl_source_help="Usage: source scl_source <action> [<collection> ...]
Don't use this script outside of SCL scriptlets!
Options:
-h, --help display this help and exit"
if [ $# -eq 0 -o $1 = "-h" -o $1 = "--help" ]; then
echo "$_scl_source_help"
return 0
fi
if [ -z "$_recursion" ]; then
_recursion="false"
fi
if [ -z "$_scl_scriptlet_name" ]; then
# The only allowed action in the case of recursion is the same
# as was the original
_scl_scriptlet_name=$1
fi
shift 1
if [ -z "$_scl_dir" ]; then
# No need to re-define the directory twice
_scl_dir=/etc/scl/conf
if [ ! -e $_scl_dir ]; then
_scl_dir=/etc/scl/prefixes
fi
fi
for arg in "$@"; do
_scl_prefix_file=$_scl_dir/$arg
_scl_prefix=`cat $_scl_prefix_file 2> /dev/null`
if [ $? -ne 0 ]; then
echo "Can't read $_scl_prefix_file, $arg is probably not installed."
return 1
fi
# First check if the collection is already in the list
# of collections to be enabled
for scl in ${_scls[@]}; do
if [ $arg == $scl ]; then
continue 2
fi
done
# Now check if the collection isn't already enabled
/usr/bin/scl_enabled $arg > /dev/null 2> /dev/null
if [ $? -ne 0 ]; then
_scls+=($arg)
_scl_prefixes+=($_scl_prefix)
fi;
done
if [ $_recursion == "false" ]; then
_i=0
_recursion="true"
while [ $_i -lt ${#_scls[@]} ]; do
_scl_scriptlet_path="${_scl_prefixes[$_i]}/${_scls[$_i]}/${_scl_scriptlet_name}"
source "$_scl_scriptlet_path"
if [ $? -ne 0 ]; then
echo "Can't source $_scl_scriptlet_name, skipping."
else
export X_SCLS="${_scls[$_i]} $X_SCLS"
fi;
_i=$(($_i+1))
done
_scls=()
_scl_prefixes=()
_scl_scriptlet_name=""
_recursion="false"
fi
The problem is that scl enable devtoolset-1.1 bash
creates a new bash shell. So when you put it in your .bashrc, it creates a new shell...which loads your .bashrc, which runs scl enable devtoolset-1.1 bash
, which creates a new shell, which loads your .bashrc... Forkbomb!
You probably want something like this in your .bashrc:
if [ "$(gcc -dumpversion)" != "4.7.2" ]; then
scl enable devtoolset-1.1 bash
fi
or
if [ -z "$TRIEDSCLDEVTOOLSET" ]; then
export TRIEDSCLDEVTOOLSET=true
scl enable devtoolset-1.1 bash
fi
- the first will continue to forkbomb if devtoolset-1.1 does not contain gcc 4.7.2, and will also fail to work if your native environment has gcc 4.7.2.
- this creates a new shell, as above. So when you create your terminal window or ssh session, you will be in two bash sessions, and have to
exit
twice.