As long as your script controls setting $i and $L (not letting a malicious user provide input that could cause $i or $L to expand to something like
that could destroy any data accessible by your script), the following should do what you want:
This User Gave Thanks to Don Cragun For This Post:
Hi
I'm using Linux, in the directory /root/my
there is a.out. but when I try to run it , the
shell indicate "bash:a.out: command not found"
but I AM working in this directory. if I use
"./a.out" , it works perfectly.
can any body tell me how to do a permanent set up so that
I can use... (5 Replies)
I have a script that I'm trying to shorten (below) by removing repetitive code.
if ]
then
commodity_ndm_done=Y
fi
if ]
then
customer_ndm_done=Y
fi
if ]
then
department_ndm_done=Y
fi
if ]
then
division_ndm_done=Y
fi (3 Replies)
hi,
I am writing c++ code in unix operating system.In that i need to set the environment variable in unix.
suppose previously i have environment variable like path="something" now i need to change the path value to some othervalue . so that some other program will access that path value... (1 Reply)
I'm having an issue when I export within my program. I'm getting the variable name, not the variable value. I have a configuration file (config.txt) that has the values of the variables set as so:
set -a
export ARCHIVEPOSourceDir="/interfaces/po/log /interfaces/po/data"
export... (2 Replies)
Hi,
It is solaris 5.9, and Oracle 10G is the database. If i login as user, and give 'env' command i can see the Oracle environment variables are set.
PATH=/usr/bin:/usr/sbin:/usr/lib:/etc/ssh:/opt/oracle/app/oracle/product/10.2.0/db_1/bin:/opt/oracle/crs/oracle/product/10.2.0/crs_1/bin... (1 Reply)
I set my TERM variable to work with SMIT and everything works fine but when I logged out and log in again I have to set the variable again.
How can I set a permanent variable into the system so it will be as I wish even if a reboot is needed?
I set variables this way:
export VAR=value (7 Replies)
I thought that set and setenv was easy enough to understand until I started experimenting.
I noticed the same problem in a previous thread, so I will use it as an example.
set command gave the following output:
argv ()
cwd /homes/e/ee325328/assignment.2
home /homes/e/ee325328
path ( a... (2 Replies)
I'm writing a script that'll send a time-stamp to my backup server. I create a file with the name of the current date, send it to my server with scp and rm the file from the local computer.
Individually these commands work fine and with a set name the expect scripts also work fine. The problem... (0 Replies)
Hi
Could you please tell me how to set environment variables in Unix ksh.
And how can acess those varibles in shell scripts
( Please give the code with an example)
For my scenario.
We have written number of shell scripts with hard coded username and password.
But if we want to... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: shyamu544
1 Replies
LEARN ABOUT PHP
_env
_ENV(3) 1 _ENV(3)
$_ENV - Environment variables
An associative array of variables passed to the current script via the environment method.
These variables are imported into PHP's global namespace from the environment under which the PHP parser is running. Many are provided by
the shell under which PHP is running and different systems are likely running different kinds of shells, a definitive list is impossible.
Please see your shell's documentation for a list of defined environment variables.
Other environment variables include the CGI variables, placed there regardless of whether PHP is running as a server module or CGI proces-
sor.
$HTTP_ENV_VARS contains the same initial information, but is not a superglobal. (Note that $HTTP_ENV_VARS and $_ENV are different variables
and that PHP handles them as such)
+--------+---------------------------------------------------+
|Version | |
| | |
| | Description |
| | |
+--------+---------------------------------------------------+
| 4.1.0 | |
| | |
| | Introduced $_ENV that deprecated $HTTP_ENV_VARS. |
| | |
+--------+---------------------------------------------------+
Example #1
$_ENV example
<?php
echo 'My username is ' .$_ENV["USER"] . '!';
?>
Assuming "bjori" executes this script
The above example will output something similar to:
My username is bjori!
Note
This is a 'superglobal', or automatic global, variable. This simply means that it is available in all scopes throughout a script.
There is no need to do global $variable; to access it within functions or methods.
getenv(3), The filter extension.
PHP Documentation Group _ENV(3)