I'm on OSX and I need to put something like this, alias blah="/usr/bin/blah" in a config file but I don't know where the config file is.
16 Answers
You can add an alias or a function in your startup script file. Usually this is .bashrc, .bash_login or .profile file in your home directory.
Since these files are hidden you will have to do an ls -a to list them. If you don't have one you can create one.
If I remember correctly, when I had bought my Mac, the .bash_login file wasn't there. I had to create it for myself so that I could put prompt info, alias, functions, etc. in it.
Here are the steps if you would like to create one:
- Start up Terminal
- Type
cd ~/to go to your home folder - Type
touch .bash_profileto create your new file. - Edit
.bash_profilewith your favorite editor (or you can just typeopen -e .bash_profileto open it in TextEdit. - Type
. .bash_profileto reload.bash_profileand update any alias you add.
I just open zshrc with sublime, and edit it.
subl .zshrc And add this on sublime:
alias blah="/usr/bin/blah" Run this command in terminal:
source ~/.zshrc Done.
1On OS X you want to use ~/.bash_profile. This is because by default Terminal.app opens a login shell for each new window.
See more about the different configuration files and when they are used here: What's the difference between .bashrc, .bash_profile, and .environment?
and in relation to OSX here: About .bash_profile, .bashrc, and where should alias be written in?
0MacOS Catalina and Above
Apple switched their default shell to zsh, so the config files include ~/.zshenv and ~/.zshrc. This is just like ~/.bashrc, but for zsh. Just edit the file and add what you need; it should be sourced every time you open a new terminal window:
nano ~/.zshenv alias py=python
Then do ctrl+x, y, then enter to save.
This file seems to be executed no matter what (login, non-login, or script), so seems better than the ~/.zshrc file.
High Sierra and earlier
The default shell is bash, and you can edit the file ~/.bash_profile and add aliases:
nano ~/.bash_profile alias py=python
Then ctrl+x, y, and enter to save. See this post for more on these configs. It's a little better to set it up with your alias in ~/.bashrc, then source ~/.bashrc from ~/.bash_profile. In ~/.bash_profile it would then look like:
source ~/.bashrc
In my .bashrc file the following lines were there by default:
# Alias definitions. # You may want to put all your additions into a separate file like # ~/.bash_aliases, instead of adding them here directly. # See /usr/share/doc/bash-doc/examples in the bash-doc package. if [ -f ~/.bash_aliases ]; then . ~/.bash_aliases fi Hence, in my platform .bash_aliases is the file used for aliases by default (and the one I use). I'm not an OS X user, but I guess that if you open your .bashrc file, you'll be able to identify what's the file commonly used for aliases in your platform.
It works for me on macOS Mojave
You can do a few simple steps:
open terminal
sudo nano /.bash_profileadd your aliases, as example:
some aliases
alias ll='ls -alF' alias la='ls -A' alias eb="sudo nano ~/.bash_profile && source ~/.bash_profile" #docker aliases alias d='docker' alias dc='docker-compose' alias dnax="docker rm $(docker ps -aq)" #git aliases alias g='git' alias new="git checkout -b" alias last="git log -2" alias gg='git status' alias lg="git log --pretty=format:'%h was %an, %ar, message: %s' --graph" alias nah="git reset --hard && git clean -df" alias squash="git rebase -i HEAD~2"
source /.bash_profile
Done. Use and enjoy!
4cd /etc sudo vi bashrc Add the following like:
alias ll="ls -lrt" Finally restart Terminal.
1The config file for scripts and programs is ~/.bashrc and the config file that gets loaded when you use Terminal is ~/.bash_login.
I think the best way is to just have everything in ~/.bashrc.
For your specific question just enter (this will overwrite any existing ~/.bashrc):
echo "alias blah=\"/usr/bin/blah\"" >>~/.bashrc into the Terminal and a ~/.bashrc file will be created with your new alises. After that just edit the file to add new aliases, functions, settings etc.
- Go to home
- Open .bashrc
Create alias at bottom of the file
alias alias_name='command to do' eg: alias cdDesktop='cd /Desktop'Save the file
source .bashrc
source ~/.bashrcOpen terminal (Ctrl+Alt+T) & type cdDesktop & press enter
If you put blah="/usr/bin/blah" in your ~/.bashrc then you can use $blah in your login shell as a substitute for typing /usr/bin/blah
For macOS Catalina Users:
Step 1: create or update .zshrc file
vi ~/.zshrc Step 2: Add your alias line
alias blah="/usr/bin/blah" Step 3: Source .zshrc
source ~/.zshrc Step 4: Check you're alias, by typing alias on the command prompt
alias You probably want to edit the .bashrc file in your home directory.
I need to run the Postgres database and created an alias for the purpose. The work through is provided below:
$ nano ~/.bash_profile # in the bash_profile, insert the following texts: alias pgst="pg_ctl -D /usr/local/var/postgres start" alias pgsp="pg_ctl -D /usr/local/var/postgres stop" $ source ~/.bash_profile ### This will start the Postgres server $ pgst ### This will stop the Postgres server $ pgsp create a bash_profile at your user root - ex
/user/username/.bash_profile open file
vim ~/.bash_profile
add alias as ex. (save and exit)
alias mydir="cd ~/Documents/dirname/anotherdir" in new terminal just type mydir - it should open
/user/username/Documents/dirname/anotherdir I think it's proper way:
1) Go to teminal. open ~/.bashrc. Add if not exists
if [ -f ~/.bash_aliases ]; then . ~/.bash_aliases fi 2) open ~/.bash_aliases. If not exists: touch ~/.bash_aliases && open ~/.bash_aliases
3) To add new alias rather
- edit .bash_aliases file and restart terminal or print source ~/.bash_aliases
- print echo "alias clr='clear'" >> ~/.bash_aliases && source ~/.bash_aliases where your alias is alias clr='clear'.
4) Add line source ~/.bash_aliases to ~/.bash_profile file. It needs to load aliases in each init of terminal.
To create a permanent alias shortcut, put it in .bash_profile file and point .bashrc file to .bash_profile file. Follow these steps (I am creating an alias command called bnode to run babel transpiler on ES6 code):
- Go to terminal command prompt and type “cd” (this will take you to the home directory. Note: even though your programming files may be located on your “D: drive”, your “.bash” files may be located on your “C: drive” )
- To see the location of the home directory, type “pwd” (this will show you the home directory path and where the .bash files are probably located)
- To see all dot "." files in the home directory, type “ls -la” (this will show ALL files including hidden dot "." files)
- You will see 2 files: “.bash_profile” and “.bashrc”
- Open .bashrc file in VS Code Editor or your IDE and enter “source ~/.bash_profile” in first line (to point .bashrc file to .bash_profile)
- Open .bash_profile file in VS Code Editor and enter “alias bnode='./node_modules/.bin/babel-node'” (to create permanent bnode shortcut to execute as bash command)
- Save and close both files
- Now open the file you want to execute (index.js) and open in terminal command prompt and run file by using command “bnode index.js”
- Now your index.js file will execute but before creating bnode alias in .bash_profile file you would get the error "bash: bnode command not found" and it would not recognize and give errors on some ES6 code.
- Helpful link to learn about dotfiles:
I hope this helps! Good luck!