These files contain the aliases and environmental variables made available to Bash running as a user shell and to all Bash scripts invoked after system initialization.
/etc/profile
Systemwide defaults, mostly setting the environment (all Bourne-type shells, not just Bash [146])
/etc/bashrc
systemwide functions and aliases for Bash
$HOME
/.bash_profile
user-specific Bash environmental default settings,
found in each user's home directory (the local counterpart
to /etc/profile
)
$HOME
/.bashrc
user-specific Bash init file, found in each user's home
directory (the local counterpart to
/etc/bashrc
). Only interactive
shells and user scripts read this file. See
Appendix M, Sample .bashrc
and
.bash_profile
Files for a sample
.bashrc
file.
$HOME
/.bash_logout
user-specific instruction file, found in each user's home directory. Upon exit from a login (Bash) shell, the commands in this file execute.
/etc/passwd
A listing of all the user accounts on the system,
their identities, their home directories, the groups they
belong to, and their default shell. Note that the user
passwords are not
stored in this file,
[147]
but in /etc/shadow
in encrypted form.
/etc/sysconfig/hwconf
Listing and description of attached hardware devices. This information is in text form and can be extracted and parsed.
bash$
grep -A 5 AUDIO /etc/sysconfig/hwconf
class: AUDIO bus: PCI detached: 0 driver: snd-intel8x0 desc: "Intel Corporation 82801CA/CAM AC'97 Audio Controller" vendorId: 8086
This file is present on Red Hat and Fedora Core installations, but may be missing from other distros.