Shell management: Difference between revisions

From Alpine Linux
m (rephrased sentence. moved the note to front.)
(Use a more realistic example of an interactive shell)
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{{Cmd|# chsh username}}
{{Cmd|# chsh username}}


Now enter the path for the shell you want to use (e.g {{Path|/bin/bash}})
Now enter the path for the shell you want to use (e.g {{Path|/bin/zsh}})
and press {{Key|Enter}} to confirm this change. The shell should exist in {{Path|/etc/shells}}.
and press {{Key|Enter}} to confirm this change. The shell should exist in {{Path|/etc/shells}}.


[[Category:Shell]]
[[Category:Shell]]
[[Category:System Administration]]
[[Category:System Administration]]

Revision as of 19:04, 19 July 2025

Alpine Linux uses the BusyBox variant of the ash shell. This page explains various ways to change the default shell in Alpine Linux to other popular shells like bash, zsh, fish etc.. You can revert back to ash shell at anytime with the same steps.

Note: You need to log out and login again for these changes to take effect.

By hand

Edit /etc/passwd manually. An example line for a user named user is:

Contents of /etc/passwd

... user:x:1000:1000:user:/home/user:/bin/ash ...

Change /bin/ash to point to the path of a shell from /etc/shells. Take care to not delete/mangle the line, as it would make you unable to log in again. The user should be the user you are changing the default login shell for.

Using shadow

Download the required package:

# apk add shadow

And use chsh:

# chsh username

Now enter the path for the shell you want to use (e.g /bin/zsh) and press Enter to confirm this change. The shell should exist in /etc/shells.