Modern Path Environment Variable_raw
Title: Modern PATH environment variable
URL Source: https://blog.izissise.net/posts/env-path/
Published Time: 2024-10-08
Markdown Content:
The PATH environment variable is read by the shell or libc to find and execute programs, this is how the shell can find /bin/ls when ls is typed in a terminal.
Shrink it
On Debian based desktop systems the default PATH variable look like this:
PATH=/usr/local/sbin:/usr/local/bin:/usr/sbin:/usr/bin:/sbin:/bin:/usr/games:/usr/local/games
Much of this is not really necessary.
First, on modern systems, /{bin,sbin}/ directories are symlinks to /usr/{bin,sbin}/.
/usr/local has no use to me, if I compile/install software I’d rather they be put in the default locations[1].
Because sometimes I forgot to do ./configure --prefix=/usr before compiling, I have setup /usr/local to symlink to /usr (cd /usr && ln -s /usr local). For software that are not found in public repositories and that should run as a daemon I use /opt.
This leaves a much shorter PATH:
PATH=/usr/sbin:/usr/bin:/usr/games
To go further, I remove /usr/games since I run GUI programs (like games) through their .desktop entries. These entries are located at ${XDG_DATA_DIRS}/applications.
And as of the year 2024 that’s it, I’ll use the root symlinks to have a little bit shorter string:
PATH=/sbin:/bin
Eventually, /usr/sbin might merge into /usr/bin, so only /bin will be needed.
Expand it
Setting PATH in /etc/environment is not the entire picture.
Once the shell is loaded, it also reads /etc/profile and ~/.profile.
Modern programming environments, like Rust or Python, often add an entry to the PATH. However, I prefer to be explicit about what goes into the PATH, so I create symlinks:
$ file ~/bin ~/bin-rust ~/bin-py ~/bin-go ~/bin-js
~/bin: directory
~/bin-rust: symbolic link to .cargo/bin
~/bin-py: symbolic link to .local/bin
~/bin-go: symbolic link to .golang/bin
~/bin-js: symbolic link to .nvm/versions/node/v22.1.0/bin
I also want system binaries to take precedence on user one, so my .profile I make sure that $PATH comes first when reassigning:
# ...
# Hide default GOPATH
if [ -d "$HOME/.golang" ] ; then
GOPATH="$HOME/.golang"
fi
# User's local bin if it exists
if [ -d "$HOME/bin" ] ; then
PATH="$PATH:$HOME/bin"
fi
# RUST local bin if it exists
if [ -d "$HOME/bin-rust" ] ; then
PATH="$PATH:$HOME/bin-rust"
fi
# Python local bin if it exists
if [ -d "$HOME/bin-py" ] ; then
PATH="$PATH:$HOME/bin-py"
fi
# Golang local bin if it exists
if [ -d "$HOME/bin-go" ] ; then
PATH="$PATH:$HOME/bin-go"
fi
# NodeJs local bin if it exists
if [ -d "$HOME/bin-js" ] ; then
PATH="$PATH:$HOME/bin-js"
fi
export GOPATH
export PATH
With this setup, I can more easily verify if the correct binary is called.
man hierfor a description of system path. ↩