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env: bash\r: No such file or directory [duplicate]

Writer Andrew Henderson

I'm trying to install YouCompleteMe from here.

When I execute:

./install.sh --clang-completer

I get this error:

env: bash\r: No such file or directory

I don't know what's wrong with environment variables. Here's my bash path:

which bash
/bin/bash

Do I need to change it to /usr/bash? If yes, then how should I do that? I tried changing ~/.bashrc file, but it didn't work.

3

11 Answers

The error message suggests that the script you're invoking has embedded \r characters, which in turn suggests that it has Windows-style \r\n line endings instead of the \n-only line endings bash expects.

As a quick fix, you can remove the \r chars. as follows:

sed $'s/\r$//' ./install.sh > ./install.Unix.sh

Note: The $'...' string is an ANSI-C quoted string supported in bash, ksh, and zsh. It is used to ensure that the \r expands to an actual CR character before sed sees the script, because not all sed implementations themselves support \r as an escape sequence.

and then run

./install.Unix.sh --clang-completer

However, the larger question is why you've ended up with \r\n-style files - most likely, other files are affected, too.

Perhaps you're running Git on Windows, where a typical configuration is to convert Unix-style \n-only line breaks to Windows-style \r\n line breaks on checking files out and re-converting to \n-only line breaks on committing.

While this makes sense for development on Windows, it gets in the way of installation scenarios like these.

To make Git check out files with Unix-style file endings on Windows - at least temporarily - use:

git config --global core.autocrlf false

Then run your installation commands involving git clone again.

To restore Git's behavior later, run git config --global core.autocrlf true.

0
>vim gradlew
:set fileformat=unix
:wq
>./gradlew clean build
0

It is happening due to windows line endings. To fix the issue follow below steps

For MAC:

brew install dos2unix # Installs dos2unix Mac
find . -type f -exec dos2unix {} \; # recursively removes windows related stuff

For Linux:

sudo apt-get install -y dos2unix # Installs dos2unix Linux
sudo find . -type f -exec dos2unix {} \; # recursively removes windows related stuff

And make sure your git config is set as follows:

git config --global core.autocrlf input

input makes sure to convert CRLF to LF when writing to the object database

6

Your file has Windows line endings. Change to Unix line endings.

Quick command for converting line ending:

dos2unix thescript.sh
0

Ran into something similar. You can use dos2unix install.sh to convert the line endings. Multiple files via find [pattern] | xargs dos2unix

1

If you are on MAC, and using VS Code, you can switch from CRLF to LF and save the file again. This will replace all CRLF with LF.

enter image description here

1

In my case I had a wrong git configuration. The git documentation states:

If you’re programming on Windows and working with people who are not (or vice-versa), you’ll probably run into line-ending issues at some point

I'm using Mac OS and I exactly have this issue in one of my projects. To solve it I turned autocrlf to true which was wrong.

You can check the autocrlf state of your git configuration like this:

git config core.autocrlf

So if this returns true and the problem occurs within a git repository you'll have to change that configuration to

git config --global core.autocrlf input

on a Mac / Unix system. For Windows only projects you can use

git config --global core.autocrlf false

In my case I deleted the git repository and cloned it again and after that everything worked again as expected.

Find out more at

0

This link helped me solving the issue.

I edited my .sh file, replacing all CRLF with LF

1

In my case: This error occurs when I downloaded and unzip the WINDOWS version into MAC

and then added the windows version path to .bash_profile or .zprofile

so the solution for me was to remove the paths from (.bash_profile and .zprofile) then download the mac version by opening the terminal and type:

  1. mkdir src
  2. cd src
  3. git clone -b stable
  4. export PATH="$PATH:pwd/flutter/bin"
  5. flutter doctor

I used to have this problem when I tried to downgrade flutter

this solved my issue

rm -rf flutter
git config --global core.autocrlf false
git clone :flutter/flutter.git
flutter channel stable