A generic message like "No such file or directory" only says something about the specific error code that was returned, but nothing about *what*, *where*, *how* or *why* it happened. The rest of the error message is vital for filling in the gaps. It's especially important to **copy-paste everything exactly as it is**, because even tiny changes in punctuation provide important information. For example, consider these shell script error messages: 1 : No such file or directory 2 ./myscript: line 2: /tmp/myfile: No such file or directory 3 ./myscript: line 2: '/tmp/myfile': No such file or directory 4 ./myscript: line 2: *.jpg: No such file or directory 5 bash: ./myscript: No such file or directory 6 bash: /myscript: No such file or directory 7 bash: ./myscript: /bin/bash: bad interpreter: No such file or directory Here's what you may currently see: > No such file or directory Here's what a trained eye sees: 1. There's a **leading colon**. This script has DOS line terminators. 1. There are **two spaces** before the file path. Leading whitespace has snuck into a variable. 1. There are **unexpected quotes** around the file path. It's being misquoted. 1. The file name **contains a glob**. The pattern doesn't match anything, or is misquoted. 1. The line **starts with `bash:`**, so it's from the shell and not your script. The script may be in a different directory. 1. There's a **missing period**. You tried to run `. /myscript` instead of `./myscript`. 1. It mentions a **bad interpreter**, indicating that the shebang has the wrong path to `bash`. So please, **always include full, unmodified, unabbreviated output**, even if you don't see how it could possibly be relevant. PS: If you want to hide some information like file names or host names, please don't just edit the output to hide them. Instead, create a new test case with non-sensitive data, make sure it has the same problem, and make a post about that instead.