Bypass ~/.profile on remote login to a linux server
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Chapters
00:00 Question
00:23 Accepted answer (Score 31)
00:34 Answer 2 (Score 15)
01:17 Answer 3 (Score 4)
01:37 Answer 4 (Score 1)
01:59 Thank you
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Full question
https://superuser.com/questions/48147/by...
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Content licensed under CC BY-SA
https://meta.stackexchange.com/help/lice...
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Tags
#linux #ssh #putty #profile
#avk47
ACCEPTED ANSWER
Score 31
For bash:
$ ssh hostname "bash --noprofile"
ANSWER 2
Score 15
If you are looking to disable all login scripts, you can use the --noprofile flag to disable /etc/profile, ~/.profile, etc. and --norc to disable ~/.bashrc like so:
$ ssh 127.0.0.1 "bash --noprofile --norc"
Keep in mind you can also launch an alternative shell if one is available. I've had to use this after messing up in chsh:
$ ssh 127.0.0.1 sh
This will most likely drop you to a blank shell (no prompt) so give it an ls to make sure it is working.
ANSWER 3
Score 5
If your target machine is in a bash shell:
user@host:/$ ssh hostname "bash --noprofile"
Alternatively, if there's another profile you wish to use
user@host:/$ ssh hostname "bash --noprofile; source ~/.other_profile"
ANSWER 4
Score 2
As others have mentioned, running bash with the --noprofile flag when you initiate the connection will work, although if you're using a different shell this may or may not be an option.
One alternative would be to have the profile script detect an SSH connection itself and behave accordingly. Since SSH connections will normally set a number of environment variables, this can easily be checked. Adding something like the following lines to the start of your profile should suffice:
if [ "$SSH_CONNECTION" != "" ]; then
echo Logging in with ssh
return
else
echo Logging in with something that is not ssh
fi
# rest of your profile goes here
The return will skip the rest of the script if the $SSH_CONNECTION environment variable is set, which would normally be created whenever an SSH connection is initiated. Otherwise the profile will be run like normal.
Note that this will only skip the affected profile script. All other profile scripts (e.g.: /etc/profile) would still be processed unless you modify them similarly.