I set up git on my FreeBSD box so that I can commit my code to GitHub. Today I tried to scp some stuff over and I was met with this rather unhelpful message:
vivin@serenity ~/Projects/code $ scp -r [email protected]:~/code/agnostic . Password: ps: Process environment requires procfs(5) Initializing new SSH agent... vivin@serenity ~/Projects/code $
I fixed the procfs problem by adding the following to my /etc/fstab:
proc /proc procfs rw 0 0 linproc /compat/linux/proc linprocfs rw 0 0
and then running:
vivin@enterprise ~ $ sudo mount /compat/linux/proc vivin@enterprise ~ $ sudo mount /proc
So I try to scp again and I get:
vivin@serenity ~/Projects/code $ scp -r [email protected]:~/code/agnostic . Password: Initializing new SSH agent... vivin@serenity ~/Projects/code $
WTF? Then I remembered making some changes to my .bashrc to be able to commit to github:
function start_agent { echo "Initializing new SSH agent..." /usr/bin/ssh-agent | sed 's/^echo/#echo/' > "${SSH_ENV}" echo succeeded chmod 600 "${SSH_ENV}" . "${SSH_ENV}" > /dev/null /usr/bin/ssh-add; } # Source SSH settings, if applicable if [ -f "${SSH_ENV}" ]; then . "${SSH_ENV}" > /dev/null #ps ${SSH_AGENT_PID} doesn't work under cywgin ps -ef | grep ${SSH_AGENT_PID} | grep ssh-agent$ > /dev/null || { start_agent; } else start_agent; fi
I pulled all that out of my .bashrc and made a separate shell script for it. After I did that, scp started working again. I had no idea that calling scp would actually run .bashrc
Running scp won’t run .bashrc. Opening the terminal session (starting the bash shell) will.