5.2 KiB
Bootstrap Installation Troubleshooting Guide
Problem on "Other Computer"
When running bootstrap.py on another machine, the installation completes successfully with messages about creating mm.bat, but the mm command is not recognized when executed.
Root Cause: Windows terminal sessions cache the PATH environment variable. When registry changes are made, existing terminal sessions don't automatically reload the new PATH. The batch shim is created correctly, but it isn't discoverable until either the current session reloads PATH or a new terminal is opened.
Solution
Option 1: Restart Terminal (Easiest)
Simply close and reopen your terminal window or PowerShell session. Windows will automatically load the updated PATH from the registry.
# Close the current terminal
# Then open a new PowerShell or CMD window
mm --help
Option 2: Reload PATH in Current Session (Manual)
If you don't want to restart, you can reload the PATH in your current PowerShell session:
$env:PATH = [Environment]::GetEnvironmentVariable('PATH', 'User') + ';' + [Environment]::GetEnvironmentVariable('PATH', 'Machine')
mm --help
Note: The bootstrap installation already attempts a reload for you, but it only affects new commands started after the update (or terminals that already inherit the updated PATH).
Diagnostic Command
To verify the installation and troubleshoot issues:
python scripts/bootstrap.py --check-install
This will check:
- ✓ Batch shim exists (
mm.bat) - ✓ Shim content is valid and points at the local venv
- ✓ PATH environment variable is configured
- ✓ Registry PATH was updated
- ✓ Test if
mmcommand is accessible
Example Output
Checking 'mm' command installation...
Checking for shim files:
mm.bat: ✓ (C:\Users\Admin\bin\mm.bat)
Checking PATH environment variable:
C:\Users\Admin\bin in current session PATH: ✗
C:\Users\Admin\bin in registry PATH: ✗
Testing 'mm' command...
✗ 'mm' command not found in PATH
Shims exist but command is not accessible via PATH
Attempting to call shim directly...
✓ Direct shim call works!
The shim files are valid and functional.
⚠️ 'mm' is not in PATH, but the shim is working correctly.
Possible causes and fixes:
1. Terminal needs restart: Close and reopen your terminal/PowerShell
2. PATH reload: Run: $env:Path = [Environment]::GetEnvironmentVariable('PATH', 'User') + ';' + [Environment]::GetEnvironmentVariable('PATH', 'Machine')
3. Manual PATH: Add C:\Users\Admin\bin to your system PATH manually
If the diagnostic shows:
- ✓ Direct shim call works! → Your installation is fine, just reload PATH
- ✗ Shim files not found → Re-run
bootstrap.pywithout arguments - ✗ PATH not in registry → Run bootstrap with
--debugto see what happened
Debug Mode
For detailed diagnostic output during installation:
python scripts\bootstrap.py --debug
This shows:
- Repo path detection
- Venv creation status
- Shim file creation details
- PATH registration results
Installation Steps (for "Other Computer")
-
Run bootstrap:
python scripts\bootstrap.py -
Check installation:
python scripts\bootstrap.py --check-install -
If 'mm' is not found:
- Close and reopen your terminal (simplest), OR
- Reload PATH:
$env:PATH = [Environment]::GetEnvironmentVariable('PATH', 'User') + ';' + [Environment]::GetEnvironmentVariable('PATH', 'Machine')
-
Verify it works:
mm --help
Shim File Locations
The installation creates a Windows shim in:
- User bin directory:
C:\Users\<YourUsername>\bin\ - File created:
mm.bat– a batch shim that both CMD and PowerShell can execute without changing the system execution policy.
The batch shim contains the absolute path to your project and venv, so it always runs the local CLI regardless of the current directory.
Why This Happens
On Windows, the PATH environment variable is read from the registry when a terminal session starts. If you change the registry PATH while a terminal is open, that terminal doesn't automatically pick up the change. That's why:
- New terminals work: They read the updated registry PATH
- Current terminal doesn't work: It still has the old PATH
- Shim files still work: They can be called directly by absolute path
This is a Windows OS behavior, not a bug in the installation script.
Manual PATH Addition (If Registry Update Fails)
If for some reason the registry update fails (requires admin rights), you can add the path manually:
-
Open System Properties:
- Press
Win + X, select "System" - Click "Advanced system settings"
- Press
-
Click "Environment Variables"
-
Under "User variables," click "New"
- Variable name:
PATH - Variable value:
C:\Users\Admin\bin
- Variable name:
-
Click OK and close all terminals
-
Open a new terminal and test
mm --help
Next Steps
Once mm works:
mm --help # Show all available commands
mm pipeline --help # Get help for specific command
mm config --show # Show current configuration
For more information, see the main README.