How to export a variable in bash

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没有蜡笔的小新
没有蜡笔的小新 2020-12-11 02:56

I need to set a system environment variable from a bash script that would be available outside of the current scope. So you would normally export environment variables like

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  • 2020-12-11 03:08

    This is the only way I know to do what you want:

    In foo.sh, you have:

    #!/bin/bash
    echo MYVAR=abc123
    

    And when you want to get the value of the variable, you have to do the following:

    $ eval "$(foo.sh)"  # assuming foo.sh is in your $PATH
    $ echo $MYVAR #==> abc123
    

    Depending on what you want to do, and how you want to do it, Douglas Leeder's suggestion about using source could be used, but it will source the whole file, functions and all. Using eval, only the stuff that gets echoed will be evaluated.

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  • 2020-12-11 03:08

    Not really - once you're running in a subprocess you can't affect your parent.

    There two possibilities:

    1) Source the script rather than run it (see source .):

        source {script}
    

    2) Have the script output the export commands, and eval that:

        eval `bash {script}`
    OR:
        eval "$(bash script.sh)"
    

    EDIT: Corrected the second option to be eval rather than source. Opps.

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  • 2020-12-11 03:08

    Set the variable in /etc/profile (create the file if needed). That will essentially make the variable available to every bash process.

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  • 2020-12-11 03:23

    Set the variable in /etc/profile (create the file if needed). That will essentially make the variable available to every bash process.

    ...to every NEW bash process...

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