Winter 2015 - January to Apil 2015 - Updated 2017-04-11 12:48 EDT
$foo
and ${foo}
IndexOne of the things the Unix shell does to make work easier is let you define variables that can contain text (or numbers) that you can insert into your command lines and in shell scripts. Also, some variables affect how the shell operates, e.g. the $PATH
variable tells the shell where to look for command names to execute.
You assign to a variable using an equals sign =
with no blanks around it:
$ foo=hello
$ foo="hello there this has blanks"
$ foo='this has blanks too'
$ foo=this\ also\ has\ blanks
$ copy_of_foo=$foo
The uses below are wrong because the shell splits the line on blanks:
$ foo=hello there # WRONG
bash: there: command not found # WRONG
$ foo= hi there # WRONG
bash: hi: command not found # WRONG
$ foo =hi # WRONG
bash: foo: command not found # WRONG
Variable names must start with a letter or underscore. The shell will expand or substitute the value of a variable into a command line if you put a Dollar Sign $
in front of the variable name, e.g.
$ x=hello
$ y=there
$ echo "x"
x
$ echo "$x"
hello
$ echo "$x $y, $x"
hello there, hello
$ y="hello there this has blanks"
$ echo "$y"
hello there this has blanks
If you want to expand a variable name with text immediately after it, you will need to surround the variable name in curly braces to separate it from the text:
$ foo=FOO
$ echo "$foo"
FOO
$ echo "$foobar" # no variable named "foobar"
$ echo "${foo}bar" # use curly braces around the name
FOObar
Unless you protect the Dollar Signs ($
) using single quotes or backslashes, the shell will find and expand variables by looking for Dollar Sign metacharacters, even inside double-quoted strings. If you don’t want the shell to expand variables, you must hide the dollar signs from the shell:
$ x=hello
$ echo "the variable x contains $x"
the variable x contains hello
$ echo "protect the double-quoted Dollar Sign using backslash \$x"
protect the double-quoted Dollar Sign using backslash $x
$ echo 'protect the Dollar Sign using single quotes $x'
protect the Dollar Sign using single quotes $x
Single quotes and backslashes will protect Dollar Signs ('$'
and \$
) from expansion by the shell. Single quotes are “stronger” than double quotes. Nothing is special inside single quotes.
When the shell finds and expands a variable (looking for the leading Dollar Sign), the expanded text may itself contain more shell meta-characters that the shell will act on, e.g. blanks or GLOB characters. This is almost NEVER what you want to have happen!
You can prevent the shell from re-processing the text substituted by variables, by always expanding the variables inside double quotes, where the quotes hide the meaning of any other possible metacharacters that might be hidden inside the variable contents:
$ x='*' # x contains an asterisk (possible GLOB character)
$ echo "$x" # remember to double-quote the variable
* # GLOB character does not expand (good!)
Inside the double quotes, the shell expands the $x
variable to be the string containing an asterisk *
, but the double quotes prevent the asterisk character from being a GLOB pattern that matches file names.
The original command line:
$ echo "$x"
becomes this after the shell expands the $x
variable:
$ echo "*"
which outputs just *
, not all the files in the current directory. The double quotes stop GLOB character expansion.
Leaving the quotes off causes GLOB expansion:
$ echo $x # unquoted variable is not safe!
file1 file2 # GLOB character expands (BAD BAD BAD!)
This is because the original command line (without quotes):
$ echo $x
becomes this after the shell expands the $x
variable:
$ echo *
which is then GLOB expanded by the shell to become something like:
$ echo file1 file3
and so you see file name on your screen instead of the asterisk *
.
Because there are no double quotes to hide the GLOB characters, the shell first expands the $x
to be the string *
and then expands the GLOB asterisk character *
to match all the files in the current directory. This is never what you want! Always use double quotes around variables!
More examples of variables containing GLOB characters:
$ x='* hi *' # single quoted string protects all characters
$ echo "$x" # use double quotes around the variable
* hi * # the quoted string appears correctly
$ echo $x # note the lack of double quotes (BAD! BAD! BAD!)
file1 file2 hi file1 file2
$ msg='* Warning *' # set a prefix for a warning message
$ echo "$msg test" # double-quoted variable is safe to use
* Warning * test # GLOB characters do not expand (good!)
$ echo $msg test # unquoted variable is not safe!
file1 file2 warning file1 file2 test # GLOB characters expand (BAD!)
You must remember to put double quotes around any shell variables that might contain shell metacharacters, otherwise the metacharacters will be expanded by the shell and the result may not be what you want.
Without double quotes, the shell also splits variable expansions on blanks:
$ foo='My Documents' # a name with a space in it
$ mkdir "$foo" # create a name with a space in it
$ rmdir $foo # WRONG - missing double quotes
rmdir: failed to remove 'My': Not a directory
rmdir: failed to remove 'Documents': No such file or directory
$ rmdir "$foo" # RIGHT - always use double quotes
Always double-quote your variables, to prevent the shell from splitting the interpolated text on blanks and from expanding any GLOB characters in the interpolated text.
Always put double-quotes around variables when you expand them.
Double-quote all uses of variables, to stop GLOB expansion!
By default, undefined variables are not an error and simply expand quietly to be nothing:
$ echo "this is $nosuchvariable expanding"
this is expanding
I recommend that you set the Bourne shell nounset
shell option that will cause the shell to signal an error for undefined variables:
$ echo "this is $nosuchvariable expanding"
this is expanding
$ set -o nounset
$ echo "this is $nosuchvariable expanding"
bash: nosuchvariable: unbound variable
With nounset
set, typing mistakes in variable names will cause errors instead of silently doing the wrong thing. Consider this mistake:
# DIR=/home/me # my home directory
# rm -rf "$DIRR/bin" # typing error causes "/bin" to be removed
With the shellnounset
option set, the above typing mistake would result in an error message about the undefined $DIRR
variable, instead of letting the unknown variable expand to be nothing and thus deleting the whole system /bin
directory:
# set -o nounset
# DIR=/home/me # my home directory
# rm -rf "$DIRR/bin" # typing error is caught this time
bash: DIRR: unbound variable
Consider this worse typing mistake:
# INSTALL=opt/installdir # where to install the software
# rm -rf "/$INSTAL" # small typing error wipes out everything
Put set -o nounset
in your .bashrc
for all your shells!
If you wish to keep the content of a variable and add text to the end, you can use the variable as part of the assignment statement:
$ echo "$PATH"
/bin:/usr/bin
$ PATH=$PATH:/sbin # appends the text :/sbin
$ echo "$PATH"
/bin:/usr/bin:/sbin
$ PATH=$PATH:/usr/sbin # appends the text :/usr/sbin
$ echo "$PATH"
/bin:/usr/bin:/sbin:/usr/sbin
You can prefix text to any variable using the same method:
$ echo "$PATH"
/sbin:/usr/sbin
$ PATH=/usr/bin:$PATH # prepends the text /usr/bin:
$ echo "$PATH"
/usr/bin:/sbin:/usr/sbin
$ PATH=/bin:$PATH # prepends the text /bin:
$ echo "$PATH"
/bin:/usr/bin:/sbin:/usr/sbin
Each of the above examples uses the current value of the variable as part of the new value.
You don’t have to double-quote variable expansions that are used in assignment statements, since word-splitting and GLOB are turned off for variables expanded in assignment statements, but it doesn’t hurt to do so:
$ PATH="$PATH:/home/idallen/bin" # append my own bin directory
$ PATH=$PATH:/home/idallen/bin # same -- no quotes needed here
You must double-quote all other variable expansions that are not part of shell variable assignment statements!
Variable definitions can be local to the current shell process (the default), or they can be exported (using the export
built-in command) to the “environment” of child processes of the shell:
$ x=foo # define a local variable named x containing foo
$ /bin/bash # start a child process (another sub-shell)
bash$ echo "see x $x"
see x # variable x was not exported to child environment
bash$ exit # exit subshell and return to the previous shell
$ export x # export the variable we set earlier
$ /bin/bash # start a child process (another sub-shell)
bash$ echo "see x $x"
see x foo # variable x was exported; value is inherited
Exported variables are also called “environment” variables; since, they are part of the starting environment of a new child process. Local variables are not passed to child processes.
By convention, Environment Variables (exported variables) have names that are all UPPER-CASE, e.g. PATH, HOME, USER, LOGNAME, TERM
As with anything in a child process (also including such things as umask
and current directory), setting a variable (local or environment) in a child process does not affect any parent processes. Parent processes cannot reverse-inherit shell variable values from child processes. Once the child has a copy of the variable, further changes to the variable in the child don’t affect the parent shell (but will affect subsequent children of the child shell).
Once a child process has taken a copy into its environment of all exported variables, the parent process has no more effect. Changing a variable in a parent process will not change the value in an already-running child process. New child processes only get a copy of the exported variables at the time the new process is started.
When you log in to a Unix system, your login shell has many variables already set for you. Some of these variables are local to your login shell; many are already exported to any child processes you start from the shell. Typing set
with no arguments lists all the variables (both local and exported) and their current values. Typing printenv
or env
with no arguments lists only environment (exported) variables.
$ set | wc
85 108 1697
$ printenv | wc
40 45 876
PATH
– shell command search path (locations of commands)USER
– the login userid of the current user (some systems use LOGNAME
)HOME
– the home directory of the current user (cd
takes you here)TERM
– the terminal typeSHELL
– your login shell (not necessarily your current shell)Examples:
$ cd ; pwd
/home/idallen
$ HOME=/bin ; cd ; pwd
/bin
$ HOME=/usr/bin ; cd ; pwd
/usr/bin
$ HOME=/home/$USER ; cd ; pwd
/home/idallen
You should know the meaning of the following shell variables:
$USER and/or $LOGNAME # environment variable
$HOME # environment variable
$SHELL # environment variable
$PATH # environment variable
$TERM # environment variable
$$ # local to each shell
$USER
or $LOGNAME
idallen
, abcd0001
, root
, etc. Some systems set $LOGNAME
instead of or in addition to $USER
.
$HOME
cd
(with no arguments) takes you. The shell metacharacter tilde ~
is a synonym for $HOME
if used at the start of a pathname, before a slash, e.g. ~/foo
is the same as $HOME/foo
, but double-quoting the tilde turns off its meaning (and double-quoting a variable does not).
$SHELL
$PATH
$TERM
vt100
, xterm
, ansi
, and linux
.
$$
The process ID of the current shell. Since every running process has a unique ID number, $$
is often used when creating unique temporary file names in the /tmp
directory, e.g.
tmp="/tmp/tempfile$$"
date >"$tmp" ; wc "$tmp" ; sort "$tmp"