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in my .bash_profile file i want to update value of PATH variable. Also, want to add JAVA_PATH and JRE_HOME variables. And, I want to do all this with Shell Script.

I have no idea about how to do this with commands, so I overwrite the entire file using cat command-

cat >> ~/.bash_profile << _EOF_
#!/bin/bash/
if [ -f ~/.bashrc ]; then
.~/.bashrc
fi

#User specific environment and startup programs
JAVA_PATH=/usr/java/jdk1.6.0_35/bin
PATH=$JAVA_PATH:$PATH:HOME/bin
JRE_HOME=/usr/jdk1.6.0_35

export PATH
unset USERNAME
_EOF_

What would be the impact of doing so with this file? How i can easily update value of PATH variable and insert JAVA_PATH and JRE_HOME variables in this file?

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  • 1
    Since you use >> for redirection instead of >, you are actually appending, not overwriting.
    – Arkku
    Oct 30, 2012 at 12:17
  • What problem are you trying to solve? Java changing location all the time after updates? Why not use symlinks in the filesystem to point to the current version? Then your .bash_profile can stay the same. Oct 30, 2012 at 12:47

1 Answer 1

0

You need to use some text manipulation tool - like sed or awk...

Here is simple example of how to change the PATH value in your .bash_profile

sed 's/^\([[:space:]]*PATH=\)\(.*\)$/\1"\/bin:\/usr\/bin:~\/bin"/' ~/.bash_profile

Notice the escaped special characters ( and /

It you want to overwrite your old file, you need to do it through temporary file like:

sed ... > /tmp/tmpbashprofile$$
mv /tmp/tmpbashprofile$$ ~/.bash_profile

Adding new settings is easy:

echo "JAVA_PATH=/usr/java/jdk1.6.0_35/bin" >> ~/.bash_profile

Notice the double >> - it appends data to specified file

2
  • echo "JAVA_PATH=/usr/java/jdk1.6.0_35/bin" >> ~/.bash_profile will append to the last line. But how we can append it before export PATH unset USERNAME Oct 30, 2012 at 12:40
  • Use command like sed 's/^(export PATH)$/JAVA_PATH=\/usr\/java\/jdk1.6.0_35\/bin\n\1/' ~/.bash_profile ... use it the same way as in my answer... Oct 30, 2012 at 14:21

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