On Friday 19 July 2002 22:57, Trent Shipley wrote: > Suspicion: > > Either I need to find the script that reads and executes /etc/profile and > have it also execute /etc/profile.local OR have /etc/profile "execute" > /etc/profile.local. If you only want these in your own account, it should be run in ~/.profile or ~/.bashrc. Only put it in /etc/profile.local if you want this to apply to all users in your machine. Also recall that your .profile is only run on a login shell, other shells do not read .profile, but read .bashrc instead. It should not be necessary to reboot after you change /etc/profile.local. It is sufficient to start a new bash shell by typing "bash --login" after the prompt. Then see if your stuff ran correctly. Type "exit" to go back to the original shell, and to edit files if necessary. I think that your .profile should run after /etc/profile, but just in case it is overriding it instead you could add a line to .profile to make sure that /etc/profile is run: test -z "$PROFILEREAD" && . /etc/profile PROFILEREAD is set to true in /etc/profile. If you look through /etc/profile you should find a line that executes /etc/profile.local if it exists and has size greater than zero: test -s /etc/profile.local && . /etc/profile.local Start by putting an echo line in profile.local to make sure that it is getting run: echo "Yo! I am profile.local and I am running!" Just for future reference, I highly recommend the book _Learning_the_bash_Shell_, by Cameron Newham & Bill Rosenblatt, from my favorite publisher, O'Reilly. Let us know how things turn out, -Pete-