I am trying to invoke a shell command with a modified environment via the command env
.
According to the manual
env HELLO=\'Hello World\'
I think what happens is similar to this situation in which I was also puzzled.
In a nutshell, the variable expansion in the first case is done by the current shell which doesn't have $HELLO
in its environment. In the second case, though, single quotes prevent the current shell from doing the variable expansion, so everything works as expected.
Note how changing single quotes to double quotes prevents this command from working the way you want:
HELLO='Hello World' bash -c "echo $HELLO"
Now this will be failing for the same reason as the first command in your question.
This works and is good for me
$ MY_VAR='Hello' ANOTHER_VAR='World!!!' && echo "$MY_VAR $ANOTHER_VAR"
Hello World!!!
It's because in your first case, your current shell expands the $HELLO
variable before running the commands. And there's no HELLO
variable set in your current shell.
env HELLO='Hello World' echo $HELLO
will do this:
$HELLO
'HELLO=Hello World'
, 'echo'
and ''
(an empty string, since there's no HELLO
variable set in the current shell)env
command will run and set the HELLO='Hello World'
in its environmentenv
will run echo
with the argument ''
(an empty string)As you see, the current shell expanded the $HELLO
variable, which isn't set.
HELLO='Hello World' bash -c 'echo $HELLO'
will do this:
HELLO='Hello World
for the following command'-c'
and 'echo $HELLO'
echo $HELLO
$HELLO
in the new bash sub-shell, bash first expands anything it can, $HELLO
in this case, and the parent shell set that to Hello World
for us.echo 'Hello World'
If you tried to do e.g. this:
env HELLO='Hello World' echo '$HELLO'
$HELLO
is enclosed in single quotes'HELLO=Hello World'
, 'echo'
and '$HELLO'
HELLO='Hello World'
in its environment'$HELLO'
In this case, there's no shell that will expand the $HELLO
, so echo
receives the string $HELLO
and prints out that. Variable expansion is done by shells only.
Here is an easier way to confirm shell is working as expected.
env A=42 env
env
The first command runs sets A
to 42 and runs env
. The second command also runs runs env
. Compare the output of both.