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Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers Why Do You Need the Explicit Pathname to Execute? Post 302738151 by Corona688 on Friday 30th of November 2012 12:09:06 PM
Old 11-30-2012
Quote:
Originally Posted by alister
The open() system call, which is used to open a file for reading/writing, supports relative paths. When the path to the file does not contain any slashes, it is designed to look in the current working directory.

The exec*() family of system calls/library functions used to execute a file do not behave in this way. Some require an absolute path. Others (the ones with a p in their name), when the path provided does not contain a slash, will search only the directories in the $PATH environment variable.

Security aside, the PATH lookup mechanism is a convenience which saves a lot of typing. Further, since all unix-like systems do not agree on exactly where every executable should be placed, $PATH lookup insulates scripts from these differences, improving portability.

If you really wanted command invocation to work the way that file opening works, simply set PATH to [icode]./icode]. Absolute paths to commands never use PATH. Relative paths will only look in the current working directory. Such a configuration, however, if enforced from the kernel onwards, would severely break any extant unix. Boot scripts, shell profiles, software installation scripts, cronjobs, and more would all have to be rewritten.

Regards,
Alister
Adding a relative directory into your PATH can have problems beyond the obvious.

Many shells cache a list of available commands they find in PATH. Put a relative directory in there, and they may not always find all available commands because they don't know the cache needs to be regenerated every time you cd. Some may even crash if you put a relative directory in PATH.
 

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Env(3pm)						 Perl Programmers Reference Guide						  Env(3pm)

NAME
Env - perl module that imports environment variables as scalars or arrays SYNOPSIS
use Env; use Env qw(PATH HOME TERM); use Env qw($SHELL @LD_LIBRARY_PATH); DESCRIPTION
Perl maintains environment variables in a special hash named %ENV. For when this access method is inconvenient, the Perl module "Env" allows environment variables to be treated as scalar or array variables. The "Env::import()" function ties environment variables with suitable names to global Perl variables with the same names. By default it ties all existing environment variables ("keys %ENV") to scalars. If the "import" function receives arguments, it takes them to be a list of variables to tie; it's okay if they don't yet exist. The scalar type prefix '$' is inferred for any element of this list not prefixed by '$' or '@'. Arrays are implemented in terms of "split" and "join", using $Config::Config{path_sep} as the delimiter. After an environment variable is tied, merely use it like a normal variable. You may access its value @path = split(/:/, $PATH); print join(" ", @LD_LIBRARY_PATH), " "; or modify it $PATH .= ":."; push @LD_LIBRARY_PATH, $dir; however you'd like. Bear in mind, however, that each access to a tied array variable requires splitting the environment variable's string anew. The code: use Env qw(@PATH); push @PATH, '.'; is equivalent to: use Env qw(PATH); $PATH .= ":."; except that if $ENV{PATH} started out empty, the second approach leaves it with the (odd) value "":."", but the first approach leaves it with ""."". To remove a tied environment variable from the environment, assign it the undefined value undef $PATH; undef @LD_LIBRARY_PATH; LIMITATIONS
On VMS systems, arrays tied to environment variables are read-only. Attempting to change anything will cause a warning. AUTHOR
Chip Salzenberg <chip@fin.uucp> and Gregor N. Purdy <gregor@focusresearch.com> perl v5.8.0 2002-06-01 Env(3pm)
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