Hey I want to add a command to my system. I am not using any package-format or anything. I just want to install a script that I wrote.
I know of some ways to do that:
- add my script into whatever is the first thing in $PATH
- add a custom path to $PATH (in /etc/profile.d/ or /etc/environment) and put the script into the custom path
- add my script into /usr/bin or /usr/local/bin
I remember reading that profile.d/ doesn’t get picked up by all shells and that /etc/environment (which exists but is empty on my system) shouldn’t be used.
What should I do to ensure that my command will be available everywhere on any gnu/linux or bsd system?
EDIT: I should clarify that I am asking this only out of curiosity. I just like knowing how this stuff works. The script was just an example (I thought this would make it easier to understand, lol). I am interested in knowing a way to install a command without any chance of that command later not being found by other programs. I find many different answers to this and they all seem a little muddy, like “doing x should usually work”. I want to know the solution that always works
I always add ~/.local/bin to my path then throw binaries in it. I do however make sure it’s last on my path so it can’t overwrite system packages, say maliciously…
That’s a good point about it going last in your PATH. Malicious applications running as non-root can still install payloads to ~/.local/bin and hijack common system functions.
Yeah, consider a script named Sudo that reads as follows
sudo virus-payload && sudo "$@”
Why not
sudo virus-payload & sudo "$@"
?
Probably also fine.
The first one only runs the actual command after the virus payload finishes, and only if it succeeds. The second one runs both almost at the same time
Couldn’t whatever is putting itself into .local/bin also rewrite $PATH to suite itself?
Only for it’s child processes, e.g. call a bash script with a modified PATH. Still problematic though.
…I suppose they could also modify your .bashrc equivalent.