Mercurial > dotfiles
view .shell.d/99.misc.zsh @ 377:117e3c11d953
zprofile: introduce zprofile use
El Capitan (OS X 10.11) introduces a system-level /etc/zprofile which
uses a path_helper thing to mangle $PATH. Unfortunately, the way
path_helper works, it forces /usr/local/bin and /usr/bin to the
*start* of the PATH variable, which means that any PATH mutations I
want have to run after /etc/zprofile calls path_helper. As such, move
my path insertions into .zprofile{,-machine} rather than
.zshenv{,-machine} so that I can still ensure my path entries are at
the start of PATH rather than the end. This works because:
> Commands are then read from $ZDOTDIR/.zshenv. If the shell is a
> login shell, commands are read from /etc/zprofile and then
> $ZDOTDIR/.zprofile. Then, if the shell is interactive, commands
> are read from /etc/zshrc and then $ZDOTDIR/.zshrc. Finally, if the
> shell is a login shell, /etc/zlogin and $ZDOTDIR/.zlogin are read.
This means that non-login shells no longer pick up my custom PATH
entries, but as I only use OS X as a desktop OS that seems like a
workable tradeoff for now.
author | Augie Fackler <raf@durin42.com> |
---|---|
date | Sun, 31 Jan 2016 20:46:29 -0500 |
parents | e9932cf1692f |
children |
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function certfor() { if [ "x$1" = "x" ] ; then echo 'abort: specify host:port pair as argument' return 1 fi openssl x509 -in <(echo | openssl s_client -showcerts -connect $1 | \ awk '/-----BEGIN CERTIFICATE-----/,/-----END CERTIFICATE-----/') -noout -text }