# Managing PATH environment variable
# Add a path to the PATH environment variable
The PATH environment variable is generally defined in ~/.bashrc or ~/.bash_profile or /etc/profile or ~/.profile or /etc/bash.bashrc (distro specific Bash configuration file)
$ echo $PATH
/usr/local/sbin:/usr/local/bin:/usr/sbin:/usr/bin:/sbin:/bin:/usr/games:/usr/local/games:/snap/bin:/usr/lib/jvm/jdk1.8.0_92/bin:/usr/lib/jvm/jdk1.8.0_92/db/bin:/usr/lib/jvm/jdk1.8.0_92/jre/bin
Now, if we want to add a path (e.g ~/bin
) to the PATH variable:
PATH=~/bin:$PATH
# or
PATH=$PATH:~/bin
But this will modify the PATH only in the current shell (and its subshell). Once you exit the shell, this modification will be gone.
To make it permanent, we need to add that bit of code to the ~/.bashrc (or whatever) file and reload the file.
If you run the following code (in terminal), it will add ~/bin
to the PATH permanently:
echo 'PATH=~/bin:$PATH' >> ~/.bashrc && source ~/.bashrc
Explanation:
echo 'PATH=~/bin:$PATH' >> ~/.bashrc
adds the linePATH=~/bin:$PATH
at the end of ~/.bashrc file (you could do it with a text editor)source ~/.bashrc
reloads the ~/.bashrc file
path=~/bin # path to be included
bashrc=~/.bashrc # bash file to be written and reloaded
# run the following code unmodified
echo $PATH | grep -q "\(^\|:\)$path\(:\|/\{0,1\}$\)" || echo "PATH=\$PATH:$path" >> "$bashrc"; source "$bashrc"
# Remove a path from the PATH environment variable
To remove a PATH from a PATH environment variable, you need to edit ~/.bashrc or ~/.bash_profile or /etc/profile or ~/.profile or /etc/bash.bashrc (distro specific) file and remove the assignment for that particular path.
Instead of finding the exact assignment, you could just do a replacement in the $PATH
in its final stage.
The following will safely remove $path
from $PATH
:
path=~/bin
PATH="$(echo "$PATH" |sed -e "s#\(^\|:\)$(echo "$path" |sed -e 's/[^^]/[&]/g' -e 's/\^/\\^/g')\(:\|/\{0,1\}$\)#\1\2#" -e 's#:\+#:#g' -e 's#^:\|:$##g')"
To make it permanent, you will need to add it at the end of your bash configuration file.
rpath(){
for path in "$@";do
PATH="$(echo "$PATH" |sed -e "s#\(^\|:\)$(echo "$path" |sed -e 's/[^^]/[&]/g' -e 's/\^/\\^/g')\(:\|/\{0,1\}$\)#\1\2#" -e 's#:\+#:#g' -e 's#^:\|:$##g')"
done
echo "$PATH"
}
PATH="$(rpath ~/bin /usr/local/sbin /usr/local/bin)"
PATH="$(rpath /usr/games)"
# etc ...
This will make it easier to handle multiple paths.
Notes:
- You will need to add these codes in the Bash configuration file (~/.bashrc or whatever).
- Run
source ~/.bashrc
to reload the Bash configuration (~/.bashrc) file.
# Syntax
- Add path : PATH=$PATH:/new/path
- Add path : PATH=/new/path:$PATH
# Parameters
Parameter | Details |
---|---|
PATH | Path environment variable |
# Remarks
Bash configuration file:
This file is sourced whenever a new interactive Bash shell is started.
In GNU/Linux systems it's generally the ~/.bashrc file; in Mac it's ~/.bash_profile or ~/.profile
Export:
The PATH variable must be exported once (It's done by default). Once it is exported it will remain exported and any changes made to it will be applied immediately.
Apply changes:
To apply changes to a Bash configuration file, you must reload that file in a terminal (source /path/to/bash_config_file
)