Difficulty: Easy
Correct Answer: .profile
Explanation:
Introduction / Context:
When a user logs into a Unix system using a Bourne-compatible shell, the shell reads certain startup files to set environment variables, PATH, aliases, and other customizations. Recognizing which file is responsible is essential for troubleshooting login behavior and configuring user environments.
Given Data / Assumptions:
Concept / Approach:
The classic Bourne shell reads $HOME/.profile for login shells. Korn shell also reads it; bash reads ~/.bash_profile or ~/.profile if the former is absent for login shells. Other files like .exrc configure vi, and .mbox is a mailbox file.
Step-by-Step Solution:
.profile is sourced.Recognize alternatives: bash-specific files may take precedence, but .profile remains the generic answer.Select .profile as correct.
Verification / Alternative check:
Run echo $SHELL to identify the shell. For bash, check man bash under INVOCATION; for sh/ksh, consult their manuals. You will see .profile mentioned for login shells.
Why Other Options Are Wrong:
.profile is correct.
Common Pitfalls:
Confusing .bashrc (non-login interactive) with .profile; forgetting that display managers or modern shells may load different files depending on login type; mixing csh (.login) conventions with Bourne shell behavior.
Final Answer:
.profile
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