29

This is a very interesting question that I stumbled upon when I was creating a command-line application tool for Linux. Unfortunately, the answer on SO is so hidden among the myriad answers to other questions that I decided to ask another question on SO for those who want to modify PATH programmatically.

2
  • also stackoverflow.com/questions/11709374/…
    – Thilo
    Jun 7, 2016 at 10:33
  • 8
    This is not a duplicate. He's asking where the path is set. Not how to set it himself. I want to know the same answer, since something in Ubuntu is adding multiple folders multiple times to the path, and it's not me. Thankfully, the answers to this question is providing me the info I need (even though it was copied from the duplicate... <sigh>). Suggestion: Remove the duplicate marking, and reword the question name to be more clear? Sep 16, 2017 at 0:33

2 Answers 2

48

Grzegorz Żur's answer to another question captures it brilliantly. Unfortunately it was hidden away among many other answers.

There are multiple ways to do it. The actual solution depends on the purpose.

The variable values are usually stored in either a list of assignments or a shell script that is run at the start of the system or user session. In case of the shell script you must use a specific shell syntax.

System wide

  1. /etc/environment List of unique assignments. Perfect for adding system-wide directories like /usr/local/something/bin to PATH variable or defining JAVA_HOME.
  2. /etc/xprofile Shell script executed while starting X Window System session. This is run for every user that logs into X Window System. It is a good choice for PATH entries that are valid for every user like /usr/local/something/bin. The file is included by other script so use POSIX shell syntax not the syntax of your user shell.
  3. /etc/profile and /etc/profile.d/* Shell script. This is a good choice for shell-only systems. Those files are read only by shells.
  4. /etc/<shell>.<shell>rc. Shell script. This is a poor choice because it is single shell specific.

Also, /etc/environment is not a script file, but rather consists of assignment expressions, one per line. Since this file stores the system-wide locale and path settings, it is most oft quoted choice. Using /etc/profile is not preferred. It exists only to point to /etc/bash.bashrc and to collect entries from /etc/profile.d

User session

  1. ~/.pam_environment. List of unique assignments. Loaded by PAM at the start of every user session irrelevant if it is an X Window System session or shell. You cannot reference other variable including HOME or PATH so it has limited use.
  2. ~/.xprofile Shell script. This is executed when the user logs into X Window System system. The variables defined here are visible to every X application. Perfect choice for extending PATH with values such as ~/bin or ~/go/bin or defining user specific GOPATH or NPM_HOME. The file is included by other script so use POSIX shell syntax not the syntax of your user shell. Your graphical text editor or IDE started by shortcut will see those values.
  3. ~/.profile Shell script. It will be visible only for programs started from terminal or terminal emulator. It is a good choice for shell-only systems.
  4. ~/.<shell>rc. Shell script. This is a poor choice because it is single shell specific.
4
  • 2
    Why have you c+p an answer from the duplicate question ?
    – 123
    Jun 7, 2016 at 10:45
  • 4
    There are around a million questions on SO that plays around this topic. I asked this question because it could lead developers quickly to this answer which is complete and informative... Jun 7, 2016 at 10:53
  • 1
    The question you took this answer from is far more complete and informative...
    – 123
    Jun 7, 2016 at 10:58
  • 1
    And yet it is still linked, if someone requires further information
    – SimonC
    Apr 19, 2023 at 10:55
10

For temporary change:

~$ export PATH=$PATH:~/root/scripts

For permanent change, you can add this line to the /etc/environment file like this:

PATH=$PATH:~/root/scripts
1
  • 5
    and then source /etc/environment
    – andymnc
    Mar 27, 2019 at 15:36

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.