Where does $PATH get set in OS X 10.6 Snow Leopard?
When bash
starts it reads the following files every time you login. For the purposes of OS X, this means every time you open a new Terminal
window.
/etc/profile
~/.bash_profile
~/.bash_login (if .bash_profile does not exist)
~/.profile (if .bash_login does not exist)
When you start a new shell by typing bash
on the command line, it reads .bashrc
OS X also uses ~/.MacOSX/environment.plist
to set more environment variables, including paths if necessary.
Finally, /etc/paths
and /etc/paths.d
are read by the shell too.
/opt/local/bin
etc. are added in ~/.tcshrc
by MacPorts. Also be sure to look in ~/.cshrc
.
Take a look at the file /etc/paths
, which is used by /usr/libexec/path_helper
, which is used by /etc/profile
.
For MacPorts, use sudo /etc/paths/opt/local/bin
and reopen the terminal window.
Seriously, Leopard gave us a new way to add path. Just create a file containing the path part you want to add, and put it in /etc/paths.d
A quick example of doing this in one step is:
echo "/some/path/to/add" >> /etc/paths.d/somefilename
Otherwise, you can just go to /etc/paths.d and put the file there directly. Either way, any path parts in the files in that directory will be appended to the default path.
This also works for manpath.
Here's a link to more details:
ars technica: how do i add something to PATH in snow leopard?
On a 2nd note: MacPorts puts everything into the opt directory precisely because it isn't used by Apple's stuff. That way it won't conflict. Their guide (excellently written, BTW) has an explanation of why it uses opt and how to change that default if you'd like.
MacPorts Guide