Plain' aroud with terminal, i noticed that there is many ways to create permanent aliases.
Im a linux newbie, and for what i know doing:
sudo ln -s /path/to/esecutable /usr/local/bin/desidered_alias- adding
desidered_alias = '/path/to/executable'to ~/.bashrc
and uncommenting those lines in ~/.bashrc:
if [ -f ~/.bash_aliases ]; then
. ~/.bash_aliases
fi
and then putting desidered_alias = '/path/to/executable' into the ~/.bash_aliases has the same effect.
But where the difference between first and second method?
-
With the first method you are not creating an alias, you are creating a symlink. Symlinks are short for symbolic links:
Symbolic links are files that act as pointers to other files. [...] A symbolic link is a special type of file whose contents are a string that is the pathname another file, the file to which the link refers. In other words, a symbolic link is a pointer to another name, and not to an underlying object.
Read more about symlinks here and here.
Only with the second method you are, in fact, creating an alias.
Aliases allow a string to be substituted for a word when it is used as the first word of a simple command. The shell maintains a list of aliases that may be set and unset with the alias and unalias builtin commands (see SHELL BUILTIN COMMANDS below). The first word of each simple command, if unquoted, is checked to see if it has an alias. If so, that word is replaced by the text of the alias.
You can define an alias anywhere where you can type a command and have the shell (bash in this case) interpret it, however in order for the alias to be available in other shells it needs to be defined in a file that's interpreted by the shell on startup (shell startup, not computer startup).
For bash these are /etc/bash.bashrc (system wide) and ~/.bashrc. These files are interpreted when the shell starts in interactive mode (like when using "Terminal"). I'm not going to mention the profile files because they serve a different purpose.
So, you want to add your aliases to ~/.bashrc to have them available in every interactive shell.
The .bash_aliases method accomplishes exactly the same thing as putting the aliases in ~/.bashrc but has the added benefit of being easier to be parsed and manipulated by programs.
The
. ~/.bash_aliasesmeans source (load) _~/.bash_aliases_ in the context of the currently running shell.garbagecollector : @lilo you beat me to the tutorial! +1Li Lo : @gc I'm hitting the sack so go wild :)garbagecollector : @lilo hahahha :)DaNieL : thanks, but why the symbolic link in /usr/local/bin is working as well?Li Lo : You may think it's working the same, but it's not. Please read the materials on symlinks that I referred in my answer. Symlink and aliases serve different purposes and were created with different purposes in mind. To give you an example why symlinks are not working like aliases try this -- define an alias like: alias px="ps axu". Now try to accomplish the same with symlinks.DaNieL : @Li Lo: i have understood the difference between synlink and /usr/local/bin, but my question (that's maybe a little bit off-topic with the general question) is: what is exaclty /usr/local/bin used for?Li Lo : @daniel: /usr/local/bin: Binaries for programs local to the site (from "man hier"). For example if you would compile and install a program from sources it would go to /usr/local/bin.From Li Lo
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