I am trying to define some aliases in cygwin, but with no success. I am doing so like this at the end of the .bashrc
file.
alias foo=\'pwd\'
Your .bashrc
file will be loaded from wherever Cygwin Bash thinks your home directory is when it starts. You've mentioned in your edit that you've changed your home directory, but not how, so it's possible you've made a mistake there.
Cygwin will load your home directory from one of two places, and if they differ it can cause problems:
The HOME
environment variable. This will be picked up from however you launch Cygwin, so normally from Windows itself. You can see what environment variables you have defined by pressing Win+Pause, going to "Advanced system settings", "Environment Variables…". If "HOME" is in either "User variables" or "System variables", delete it – it's unnecessary and only causes problems.
Cygwin's /etc/passwd
file (normally C:\Cygwin\etc\passwd
from Windows). This will have a number of lines containing details of each user on the system; the seventh :
separated field is the home directory. You can tell which user it's looking at by running whoami
from a Cygwin bash shell.
If whoami
reports nunos
, you should have a line in Cygwin's /etc/passwd
that looks something like the following:
nunos:unused:1001:513:U-System\nunos:S-1-2-34-567890-123456-7890123-1001:/home/nunos:/bin/bash
It's that /home/nunos
that's important; if it's something different you should probably reset it to that, at which point you want to use the .bashrc
in Cygwin's /home/nunos/
.
You should also be very wary of directories that contain spaces for this. C:\Users\nunos
should be fine, but beware in particular C:\Documents and Settings\nunos
, which just won't work with Cygwin.
Here's a really quick and dirty way to do it, but it works fine for most things!
Let's say you want to always run 'ls --color' instead of just 'ls'. Instead of messing around with .bashrc stuff, you can create a simple .bat file that essentially bootlegs the original ls command.
Here's what I did:
cd /bin
echo ls2.exe %* --color > lsNew.bat
mv ls.exe ls2.exe
mv lsNew.bat ls.bat
So now, whenever you type in ls from CMD, you actually are calling ls.bat, which in turn calls ls2.exe --color, the original ls command with the --color flag, along with the rest of the arguments, which are nicely passed through %*.
This is working for me On windows 10 with Cygwin64. Don't worry "kubectl" is just the program that I want to run when I type "k". restart Cygwin terminal after the change.
Smith@NB-Smith-3 ~ echo "alias k=C:/Users/Smith/kube/kubectl" >> $HOME/.bash_profile
changes this file C:\cygwin64\home\Smith.bash_profile
I had same problem is why the path not is correct, the path correct is: D:\C++\cygwin\home\USER_WINDOWS.bash_profile
It works as explained from cygwin:
Create a file ".profile" in your windows home dir. This will load every time when you start cygwin.
You can edit the file with your alias or you can source the .bashrc.
If you'll source, insert "source .bashrc" and save .bashrc also in your windows home dir. Now you can start editing the .bashrc.
As me_and already explained what's going on I just want to add a workaround should you for whatever reason not be able or willing to remove Windows' HOME environment variable.
Normally the shortcut for Cygwin executes
C:\cygwin\bin\mintty.exe -i /Cygwin-Terminal.ico -
Instead you can create a batchfile with the following content and start that:
@echo off
set HOME=
start C:\cygwin\bin\mintty.exe -i /Cygwin-Terminal.ico -
That will start a a Cygwin windows whose home directory settings are not overridden by a Windows environment variable.