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How to restart my current MacOS terminal session without closing the window?

In Linux I use exec bash but it does not work in this environment. I made a few changes to the .bash_profile (prompt, alias etc) I would like to see without closing it and opening again.

8
  • how's about just running terminal(or whatever your terminal program is named -- iTerm?) from the current terminal to open a new terminal?
    – user2849202
    Jul 29, 2019 at 23:46
  • is about reseting the same terminal session, not the application nor the window
    – blagus
    Jul 30, 2019 at 1:52
  • 2
    @blagus : Wouldn't . ~/.bash_profile achieve what you want? Jul 30, 2019 at 5:59
  • 1
    @blagus, I also use macOS and i guess exec bash -l works pretty well for the scenario. Jul 30, 2019 at 17:42
  • 2
    If all you need to do is reload changes from your .bash_profile - try source ~/.bash_profile. stackoverflow.com/questions/4608187/…
    – nwxdev
    Jul 30, 2019 at 19:55

5 Answers 5

112

Just type in the command:

exec bash -l

I guess that should do it.

For zsh,

exec zsh -l

This is needed because every shell on macOS by default is a login shell.

Justing writing exec bash would replace the current shell with a non-login shell which is not the same effect as closing and re-opening the terminal.

exec would make new bash -l process replace the current shell. If exec is not used, bash -l would spawn a new shell over the current shell incrementing the $SHLVL.

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  • 1
    this only clears the terminal, it does not restart the bash scripts
    – blagus
    Jul 30, 2019 at 13:52
  • @blagus, sorry i misread your question before, check the updated answer Jul 30, 2019 at 13:57
  • 5
    i tried exec zsh -l and it restarted zsh session.
    – ssi-anik
    Apr 20, 2020 at 16:59
  • exec zsh -l is working in the latest terminal
    – Shubham K.
    May 9 at 6:59
10

For me none of the other solutions work for ZSH.

Simply source ~/.zshrc did the job actually.

Note: running exec zsh -l outputs /Users/my_username/.zprofile:3: command not found: yarn (where my_username is my username). But running only the command mentioned above does the job.

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  • 2
    I think that simply means that your .zprofile calls yarn when it is not in path or not installed (which you will need to fix). I have not been in touch with macOS from sometime but AFAIK, every shell is a login shell there. So, you should be getting the above error on opening every new tab if you are on macOS. If you are not on macOS, simply do exec zsh. Sep 15, 2021 at 18:01
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    Also, sourcing .zshrc again is not always a good idea. You are basically running the code in .zshrc twice. Many tools add their initialisation code to .zshrc and some of them may not be able to tolerate their code being run twice. I mean, they should generally handle it but not everyone does. A better idea is to clear the effects caused by previous run and restart again: exec zsh or exec zsh -l Sep 15, 2021 at 18:08
1

If your session is hanging (maybe your SSH connection was interrupted), you won't be able to restart by entering a command.

On iTerm, you can navigate to "Session" > "Restart Session" in the menu bar.

You can also add a key binding for this via "iTerm" > "Preferences" > "Keys" > "Key Bindings" > "+".

  • Keyboard Shortcut: Your choice, I use Cmd-R
  • Action: "Select Menu Item..." > "Restart Session"

Keyboard Shortcut Example

0

The actual answer, assuming you interpret the question as having the same effect at the state of the terminal session as closing and reopening Terminal would, appears to be to run the executable of the used shell to start a new session:

https://unix.stackexchange.com/a/217907/137983

zsh

If you're not on Catalina where ZSH is the default shell, it's going to be:

bash

After this, all state of the previous session (like session environment variables) will be reset. Also ZSH profile should be re-sourced I think.

1
  • 1
    On macOS, every shell by default is a login shell. So no, just running the executable will not have the same effect as closing and re-opening the terminal. Just writing bash would invoke .bashrc whereas writing bash -l invokes .bash_profile. Also without exec the current shell will stay in place and a new shell with incremented $SHLVL will be spawned. Oct 18, 2020 at 0:14
0

If you've made any changes to your .bashrc and .bash_profile, then without closing the terminal you can specify alias in your .bashrc and .bash_profile as shown below to restart the terminal:

alias rest='exec bash -l;source ~/.bashrc;source ~/.bash_profile'

This command sources the .bashrc and .bash_profile again, in the sense restarts the terminal and creates a new terminal session. It works for me. Give this a try!

So, if you wanna restart the terminal, just enter rest (short for restart) in your terminal.

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