Hi all !
Yesterday I defined an environmental variable PATH, but today when I restarted machine, I could not see that it was stored any place.
Is there any file where I could save the settings ?
I have quite a few env.variables defined, so I need a smarter way to define.
regards
D (5 Replies)
I want to be able to access an environment variable to control how a program is compiled.
So:
export MY_VERSN=9
Then ideally, within my C++ code, I would have
#if MY_VERSN = 9
iret = FRED9()
#else
iret = FRED()
#endif
The way I thought I could do it is that in the script that... (2 Replies)
Hi,
I'm using an array that contains compiler FLAGS
that need to be executed either before ./configure
or after the main 'make' command.
example of array containing compiler flags.
-------------------------------------------------
FLAGS="CFLAGS=\"-arch x86_64 -g -Os -pipe... (7 Replies)
I am writing a few korn scripts to be used by all our operators on several 4.1/4.2 AIX servers.
I want to create environmental variables that once set, can be read/modified by my scripts (ex: specific folders, file names, conventions, general values, ...). I thought this would be better then... (4 Replies)
Hi,
Getting below error on executing the shell script which initiates sqlplus
How to set oracle enviornment variables in the shell script ?
With Regards (3 Replies)
I am wondering if there is away to increment a date in c shell. What I need to do is basic, but I lack the knowledge.
I have they following environmental variable in my job scripts
setenv YYYY `date '+%Y'`
I then set YYYY to be part of my output dataset name:
setenv dd_OUTPUTP... (1 Reply)
Hey,
I'm recently learning Unix from the video course by Kevin Scoglund. I'm stuck at the moment where he goes into Environmenat variables. I have some issues with understanding what's the essential difference between EV and command aliases: for instance, by writing the command
alias ll='ls... (3 Replies)
I m passing a variable stringg from Unix shell which has value 'Good Day' to ansible and from ansible to a second shell script where it print only Good instead of 'Good Day'
passing the variable stringg from unix shell script1.sh
echo $stringg
ansible-playbook install.yml -i... (1 Reply)
Hi Team,
I have a wrapper script which i have pasted below, it internally calls one python script to generate Environmental in a file called /home/oracle/myenv.sh, when i execute this script via wrapper script, its not reflecting in my current session, still showing old env variables. any... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: kamauv234
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
rabbitmq-env.conf
RABBITMQ-ENV.CONF(5) RabbitMQ Server RABBITMQ-ENV.CONF(5)NAME
rabbitmq-env.conf - default settings for RabbitMQ AMQP server
DESCRIPTION
/etc/rabbitmq/rabbitmq-env.conf contains variable settings that override the defaults built in to the RabbitMQ startup scripts.
The file is interpreted by the system shell, and so should consist of a sequence of shell environment variable definitions. Normal shell
syntax is permitted (since the file is sourced using the shell "." operator), including line comments starting with "#".
In order of preference, the startup scripts get their values from the environment, from /etc/rabbitmq/rabbitmq-env.conf and finally from
the built-in default values. For example, for the RABBITMQ_NODENAME setting,
RABBITMQ_NODENAME
from the environment is checked first. If it is absent or equal to the empty string, then
NODENAME
from /etc/rabbitmq/rabbitmq-env.conf is checked. If it is also absent or set equal to the empty string then the default value from the
startup script is used.
The variable names in /etc/rabbitmq/rabbitmq-env.conf are always equal to the environment variable names, with the RABBITMQ_ prefix
removed: RABBITMQ_NODE_PORT from the environment becomes NODE_PORT in the /etc/rabbitmq/rabbitmq-env.conf file, etc.
# I am a complete /etc/rabbitmq/rabbitmq-env.conf file.
# Comment lines start with a hash character.
# This is a /bin/sh script file - use ordinary envt var syntax
NODENAME=hare
SEE ALSO rabbitmq-server(1)rabbitmqctl(1)EXAMPLES
# I am a complete /etc/rabbitmq/rabbitmq-env.conf file.
# Comment lines start with a hash character.
# This is a /bin/sh script file - use ordinary envt var syntax
NODENAME=hare
This is an example of a complete /etc/rabbitmq/rabbitmq-env.conf file that overrides the default Erlang node name from "rabbit" to "hare".
AUTHOR
The RabbitMQ Team <info@rabbitmq.com>
RabbitMQ Server 06/22/2012 RABBITMQ-ENV.CONF(5)