Login shells typically do different things than non-login shells. For example, the bash shell will behave differently in terms of what user environment scripts it parses and what environment variables it sets, depending on whether it was run as a login or non-login shell, as well as whether it was run in interactive or non-interactive mode (also a command line argument).

Depending on how it's called, my shell script needs to do different things.


In reply to Re^4: How do I test if my Perl script was run using a login vs a non-login shell by paulski82
in thread How do I test if my Perl script was run using a login vs a non-login shell by paulski82

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