7
Sometimes when I simply type a valid command like 'find ...', or anything really, I get back the following, which is completely unexpected and confusing (...
is command name I type):
sh: $'\302\211...': command not found
There is some corruption going on I think. I don't use color in my prompt, I am using the Bash shell in POSIX mode as sh
(chsh
to /bin/sh
and so on - $SHELL
is sh
).
What is going on and why does this keep happening? Anything I can debug? I think this is more of an xterm
issue than sh
, or at least a combination of the two.
Files, for context:
My /etc/profile
, as distributed with Arch Linux x86-64:
# /etc/profile
#Set our umask
umask 022
# Set our default path
PATH="/usr/local/sbin:/usr/local/bin:/usr/bin"
export PATH
# Load profiles from /etc/profile.d
if test -d /etc/profile.d/; then
for profile in /etc/profile.d/*.sh; do
test -r "$profile" && . "$profile"
done
unset profile
fi
# Source global bash config
if test "$PS1" && test "$BASH" && test -r /etc/bash.bashrc; then
. /etc/bash.bashrc
fi
# Termcap is outdated, old, and crusty, kill it.
unset TERMCAP
# Man is much better than us at figuring this out
unset MANPATH
My /etc/shrc
, which I created as a way to have sh
parse some file on startup, when non-login shell. This is achieved using ENV
variable set in /etc/environment
with the line ENV=/etc/shrc
:
PS1='\u@\H \w \$ '
alias ls='ls -F --color'
alias grep='grep -i --color'
[ -f ~/.shrc ] && . ~/.shrc
My ~/.profile
, I am launching X when logging in through first virtual tty:
[[ -z $DISPLAY && $XDG_VTNR -eq 1 ]] && exec xinit -- -dpi 111
My ~/.xinitc
, as you can see I am using the system as a Virtual Box guest:
xrdb -merge ~/.Xresources
VBoxClient-all
awesome &
exec xterm
And finally, my ~/.Xresources
, no fancy stuff here I guess:
*faceName: Inconsolata
*faceSize: 10
xterm*VT100*translations: #override <Btn1Up>: select-end(PRIMARY, CLIPBOARD, CUT_BUFFER0)
xterm*colorBDMode: true
xterm*colorBD: #ff8000
xterm*cursorColor: S_red
Since ~/.profile
references among other things /etc/bash.bashrc
, here is its content:
#
# /etc/bash.bashrc
#
# If not running interactively, don't do anything
[[ $- != *i* ]] && return
PS1='[\u@\h \W]\$ '
PS2='> '
PS3='> '
PS4='+ '
case ${TERM} in
xterm*|rxvt*|Eterm|aterm|kterm|gnome*)
PROMPT_COMMAND=${PROMPT_COMMAND:+$PROMPT_COMMAND; }'printf "\033]0;%s@%s:%s\007" "${USER}" "${HOSTNAME%%.*}" "${PWD/#$HOME/~}"'
;;
screen)
PROMPT_COMMAND=${PROMPT_COMMAND:+$PROMPT_COMMAND; }'printf "\033_%s@%s:%s\033\\" "${USER}" "${HOSTNAME%%.*}" "${PWD/#$HOME/~}"'
;;
esac
[ -r /usr/share/bash-completion/bash_completion ] && . /usr/share/bash-completion/bash_completion
I have no idea what that case
statement does, by the way, it does look a bit suspicious though, but then again, who am I to know.
1What is the output of
ls -l /bin/sh
? Also, please post your~/.bashrc
, the problem is probably there. What OS is this? Answers are often OS-dependent. Are you connecting to a remote machine via ssh or is this local? If remote, please post your~/.profile
and/or~/.bash_profile
if present. – terdon – 2013-11-07T14:26:14.943I have updated the question with all kinds of file content, I hope it suffices. Output of
ls -l /bin/sh
islrwxrwxrwx 1 root root 4 Aug 25 12:06 /bin/sh -> bash*
. I don't have a~/.bashrc
as I am running the Bash shell in so-called POSIX mode. No~/.bash_profile
either. – amn – 2013-11-08T08:29:43.587