Is there a way to get into an alias directory from shell with the command "cd" ? It always returns that "htdocs" isn't a directory.
Edit: I made the shortcut with the OS GUI -> rightclicked the htdocs directory and chose "Alias..." (i'm using a german OS if it's not alias maybe it's called shortcut in english?) then i moved it to my home directory (because my terminal starts from there when i open it).
All i want is to open my terminal and type "cd htdocs" so that i can work from there.
I personally use this to quickly work in the directory which is present deep inside one of my Volumes in my Mac.
Open your
~/.bash_profile
, create an alias to the directory by adding this:Save it, restart your terminal. Now on typing
cdh
in your terminal should change the working directory to the one mentioned as the alias.There is a old hint on macworld to do this in a way that is integrated with BASH: Enable 'cd' into directory aliases from the Terminal
Plus, here is an answer that uses this solution on superuser.
You may be able to use osascript to do this -- this command seems to work:
Basically this command is running an AppleScript that finds the destination path of the argument (path_to_my_Finder_alias) in a subshell, then wraps it in double quotes, and changes the directory to it.
Maybe someone with a little more bash expertise can turn it into a bash alias or function.
try:
cdgo will run, then get command "cd /root/go/" and enter, and it will change your directory in current terminal process
It works on my centos, no test with osx
The easier approach is probably to ignore the links and add the parent directory of your
htdocs
directory to theCDPATH
environment variable.bash(1)
will check the contents of theCDPATH
environment variable when you typecd foo
to find thefoo
directory in one of the directories listed. This will work no matter what your current working directory is, and it'll be easier than setting symbolic links.If the path to your
htdocs
is located/srv/www/htdocs/
, then you could useCDPATH=/srv/www
. Then,cd foo
would first look for/srv/www/foo/
and change to it if it exists; if not, then it would look forfoo
in the current working directory and change to it if it exists. (This might get confusing if you have multiplehtdocs
directories on your system; in that case,CDPATH=.:/srv/www
would let you change into a child directory easily but still use the/srv/www/htdocs/
version if no./htdocs
directory is present.)You can add the
CDPATH=/srv/www
line to your~/.bashrc
file so it works every time you start a terminal.I am not sure how OSX exposes Alias links but since you are using bash you can just create a variable in your
.bashrc
file.On its own line put:
Once you have restarted bash you can just type
cd $htdocs