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Which profile, .bashrc or .bash_profile, is the appropriate spot for ssh-agent? I'm looking for an answer that explains the different between an interactive shell and a login shell.

3 Answers 3

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It depends somewhat on how you personally use shells.

An interactive shell is anything that has a terminal connected to its input and output. Login shells are spawned by /bin/login. Login shells source your .bash_profile. Most terminal emulators such as xterm start an interactive shell that is not a login shell. Interactive, non-login shells source your .bashrc.

What I typically do is have my .bash_profile source my .bashrc (after checking if it has already been sourced), and then I put my ssh-agent setup in my .bashrc.

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  • What's the check in .bash_profile to see if .bashrc has been sourced already? Sep 1, 2009 at 21:35
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    Nothing special. I generally just check to see if a variable I set in .bashrc is set.
    – meastham
    Sep 1, 2009 at 22:20
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You should use .bash_profile because .bashrc is sourced for every interactive shell and you only need one agent per login session.

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ssh-agent is a wrapper program.
You would typically want to do a "exec ssh-agent bash" at the start.

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