I am at a loss as to what you are trying to do.
IF you are sourcing a file, . /path/to/file then that will execute inside the parent shell.
Variables will be passed at that position where the sourced file is...
A quick demo...
Sourced file:
AND parent file:
Results OSX 10.14.6, default shell terminal.
HPUX11.0/Korn Shell
I have an old script that takes in a series of arguments when its called. The script is really more of a common set of functions that gets called by other scripts as needed. I have been asked to make this into a menu driven script to rollout to app support for their use during... (2 Replies)
A good place to start is simple variable passing....
Passing variables from one script to another
The next level is passing a variable into a more complex command such as using a variable in a sed command. There are some simple quoting techniques that are very general. These are mentioned... (0 Replies)
Hello,
I am using the Bourne shell.
I am trying to understand the concept of positional parameters.
I do understand that positional parameters:
1. Are initialized by shell
2. Have a max of 9 parameters ($1 to $9)
3. Have no limit on the number of arguments
4. Can be rearranged... (15 Replies)
I need to get file names from commandline arguments, it may be any no of arguements, Using for loop i got but how do i display it, bcoz $i will give the number i is assigned $$i is not working either $($i), i need the names of the files got in the arguement (2 Replies)
Hi,
Can any one provide the Unix command to reset the positional parameters?
Please see the below example where i have to pass 2 parameters to Shell1.sh.
Step1) . ./Shell1.sh 2 3
successfully executed, Then i executed(next step only) the same shell script again,this time no... (4 Replies)
Hi all,
I have one small requirment...
I have prepared one script. we have to pass two possitional parameters to the script. What I want to do is if the parameters are not passed then i dont want the script to start the process...
For ex:
$ ./a.sh parm1 parm2
#Here, it can start... (7 Replies)
In a Bash script I used getopts command to let a user does something regards to the selected options. The question is: How do you find out what is the name of the file that user inserted in the command line like the following:
The good part is this file is always the last argument in the... (2 Replies)
I'm new with 'sed' and for sure something still I don't understand yet with it. If you see my output on ">Output..." portion, the new directory still on "source_dir" instead of "dest_dir". You may disregard for the "tar" part, this is just a test script, just for me to understand 'sed' using the... (3 Replies)
I am trying to code an if statement that accepts two parameters and see if those parameters are in another file called teledir.txt. If it already exists in the file, it is to say "Entry Exists". If not, I add it to the file and say "Entry Added". This is the code I have so far:
if ; then
... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Eric7giants
1 Replies
LEARN ABOUT NETBSD
cd
CD(1) BSD General Commands Manual CD(1)NAME
cd -- change working directory
SYNOPSIS
cd directory
DESCRIPTION
Directory is an absolute or relative pathname which becomes the new working directory. The interpretation of a relative pathname by cd
depends on the CDPATH environment variable (see below).
ENVIRONMENT
The following environment variables affect the execution of cd:
CDPATH If the directory operand does not begin with a slash (/) character, and the first component is not dot (.) or dot-dot (..), cd
searches for the directory relative to each directory named in the CDPATH variable, in the order listed. The new working directory
is set to the first matching directory found. An empty string in place of a directory pathname represents the current directory. If
the new working directory was derived from CDPATH, it will be printed to the standard output.
HOME If cd is invoked without arguments and the HOME environment variable exists and contains a directory name, that directory becomes the
new working directory.
See csh(1) for more information on environment variables.
The cd utility exits 0 on success, and >0 if an error occurs.
SEE ALSO csh(1), pwd(1), sh(1), chdir(2)STANDARDS
The cd command is expected to be IEEE Std 1003.2 (``POSIX.2'') compatible.
BSD June 5, 1993 BSD