16

I recently changed my password corresponding to my username for my proxy. Hence I updated the apt.conf and /etc/environment files with my new password. However when I type

echo $http_proxy

or

env

which prints all the environment variables, it displays the value with old password. Similarly for socks_proxy, all_proxy.

Any solutions?

2 Answers 2

25

You can change the http/https/ftp proxy environmental variables using the following commands:

export http_proxy='http://user:password@prox-server:3128'
export https_proxy='http://user:password@prox-server:3128'
export ftp_proxy='http://user:password@prox-server:3128'

as a one-liner:

export {http,https,ftp}_proxy='http://user:password@prox-server:3128'

These will not persist however, so you may wish to add it to your bashrc.

1

Changes to /etc/environment requires a restart to take effect. First restart your computer and see if your still facing the same problem.

If the problem still exists, open your ~/.bashrc file and add the proxy entry in this file.

For this to take effect, you have to either restart your terminal or run source ~/.bashrc

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