Gli interpreti dei comandi (o shell) possono essere il primo punto di contatto dell'utente con il computer, e devono quindi essere piuttosto amichevoli. Molti usano script di inizializzazione che consentono la configurazione del loro comportamento (completamento automatico, testo del prompt, ecc.).
bash
, la shell standard, usa lo script di inizializzazione /etc/bash.bashrc
per shell «interattive» e /etc/profile
per le shell di «login».
In termini semplici, una shell di login è invocata quando si esegue il login alla console localmente o da remoto usando ssh
, oppure eseguendo il comando esplicito bash --login
. Che si tratti di una shell di login oppure no, una shell può essere interattiva (per esempio in un terminale tipo xterm
) o non interattiva (quando si esegue uno script).
For bash
, it is useful to install and activate “automatic completion”. The package bash-completion contains these completions for most common programs and is usually enabled if the user's .bashrc
configuration file was copied from /etc/skel/.bashrc
. Otherwise it can be enabled via /etc/bash.bashrc
(simply uncomment a few lines) or /etc/profile
.
In addition to these common scripts, each user can create their own ~/.bashrc
and ~/.bash_profile
to configure their shell. The most common changes are the addition of aliases; these are words that are automatically replaced with the execution of a command, which makes it faster to invoke that command. For instance, you could create the la
alias for the command ls -la | less
command; then you only have to type la
to inspect the contents of a directory in detail. Please note that the shell needs to be reinitialized after adding an alias, e.g. by starting a new shell.
Setting default environment variables is an important element of shell configuration. Leaving aside the variables specific to a shell, it is preferable to place system wide variables in the /etc/environment
file, since it is used by the various programs likely to initiate a shell session. Variables typically defined there include ORGANIZATION
, which usually contains the name of the company or organization, and HTTP_PROXY
, which indicates the existence and location of an HTTP proxy. Other options include to set system wide variables via scripts in /etc/profile.d
, or session wide variables via .pam_environment
or .profile
, where the latter can override any definition contained in the first. The file /etc/default/locale
is meant to contain system wide locale related environment variables.