On Wed, 2005-08-31 at 07:12 +0100, Paul Howarth wrote: > On Tue, 2005-08-30 at 22:26 -0400, David Niemi wrote: > > ************ Excerpt from Install Instructions > > script (install.sh) creates compiler environment script files > > (ifortvars.sh/idbvars.sh) that set these variables. It is strongly > > recommended that you add those script files into your login script > > > source the script to setup the compiler environment: > > > > * > source <install-dir>/bin/ifortvars.sh(.csh) > > to use ifort > > * > source <install-dir>/bin/idbvars.sh(.csh) > > to use idb > > ****************** > > > > Should I put the paths to the script files in my .bash_profile or > > in /etc/profile so that all users (me) can use it? > > What's in these files? Do they have conflicting settings for any of the > variables (i.e. if you run both, can you then use both products without > needing to run either script again?)? These scripts just put in the path to the compiler and debugger into the path statement and add a couple environment variables. PATH="/opt/intel/fc/9.0/bin:$PATH"; export PATH LD_LIBRARY_PATH="/opt/intel/fc/9.0/lib:$LD_LIBRARY_PATH"; export LD_LIBRARY_PATH MANPATH="/opt/intel/fc/9.0/man:${MANPATH}"; export MANPATH with if statements to find the status / existence of the variables. Yes, the first thing I did was inspect the scripts to see what they did before even thinking of running them. > If they don't conflict, the best place is probably in /etc/profile.d, > where the settings will be picked up automatically by all users. > After putting the path and script name into the profile.d, should I log out and back in again for it to take effect, or? I found the following site for checking the environment settings http://www.comptechdoc.org/os/linux/usersguide/linux_ugenvironment.html (didn't want to just issue commands and fubar everything :) ) Thanks for the info Paul, you, Alexander and others are great assistance to the rest of us as we get up to speed on everything.