What is a login shell
and interactive shell
, and what is a .bash_profile
and .bashrc
?
2 Answers
An interactive shell is one started without non-option arguments, unless -s is specified, without specifying the -c option, and whose input and error output are both connected to terminals (as determined by isatty(3)), or one started with the -i option.
An interactive shell generally reads from and writes to a user’s terminal.
A login shell is a shell where you login. You can recognize a login shell from a ps -f
listing, it will have a hyphen at the start of the program name, for example:
root 3561 3553 0 09:38 pts/0 00:00:00 -bash
qa 7327 3432 0 10:46 pts/1 00:00:00 -bash
An interactive shell is one which reads commands from its standard-input, usually a terminal.
For example,
- if you login to bash using an xterm or terminal emulator like
putty
, then the session is both a login shell and an interactive one. - if you then type
bash
then you enter an interactive shell, but it is not a login shell.
If a shell script (a file containing shell commands) is run, then it is neither a login shell nor an interactive one.
Start-up files are highly tailorable in bash:
When a login bash shell is invoked, then /etc/profile
is sourced (executed in the current environment). After that, three files are checked for existence. The checks for these files are done in this order, the first one that exists is run.
/etc/profile
~/.bash_profile
~/.bash_login
~/.profile
Once a match is found, the other files are ignored, even if they exist. The /etc/bashrc
file might be used by both the ~/.bash_profile
and the ~/.bashrc
files. That would mean that the /etc/bashrc
file is sourced on all interactive invocations of bash, whether it is a login or non-login shell.
So, the .bashrc
file is also run every time you request a new interactive shell. This does not include a shell script. Normally variables, aliases or functions are placed in this file.
Bash shell scripts read a different file if suitably instructed. If the user defines (usually in their own .bash_profile
) a variable BASH_ENV
which contains a filename, scripts will read this. If this variable is not set (and exported) then bash scripts will not read any startup files.
-
2See
man bash
at sectionINVOCATION
on the files being loaded on startup, the information there may very likely be clearer.– sjasMar 19, 2015 at 14:08 -
Is it possible for there to be a login shell that is non-interactive? Sounds impossible. Dec 11, 2015 at 7:50
-
1@CMCDragonkai: yes it is. A non-interactive bash process can be started using the
--login
(or-l
) option. You might do that if you wanted all the startup files to be executed, for example when running fromcrond
. However some scripts make the false assumption that login equates to interactive.– cdarkeDec 12, 2015 at 7:53 -
7"Once a match is found, the other files are ignored, even if they exist" is incorrect per man bash > INVOCATION, which says bash "first reads and executes commands from the file /etc/profile, if that file exists. After reading that file, it looks for ~/.bash_profile, ~/.bash_login, and ~/.profile" Aug 10, 2017 at 20:26
-
2@mellow-yellow, I agree that
/etc/profile
will be sourced at first, but it should be emphasized that~/.bash_profile
,~/.bash_login
, and~/.profile
will be looked for in sequence, and if one is found, the following files are ignored (the answer is partially right). I have verified it (I defineJAVA_HOME
in/etc/profile
, andBASH_PROFILE_SOURED
in~/.bash_profile
,BASH_LOGIN_SOURCED
in~/.bash_login
, andBASH_DEFAULT_PROFILE_SOURCED
in~/.profile
. In a newly login shell, onlyJAVA_HOME
andBASH_PROFILE_SOURED
is defined). Apr 27, 2022 at 1:00
Since you probably know what a "shell" is and are using it your question only targets the difference between login shell and everything else...
A login shell only differs from any other shell by the fact that one or more initial setup scripts (resources) are loaded on startup, typically named with "profile" in their name. in there basic settings are defined that are derived to subsequently opened shells (so they only need to be defined once).