Export variable from within while loop - linux

I want to export a variable from within a loop. I was not able to do it. I am not sure what is missing here.
Any suggestion would be great help
var="ahs tcs amq tos"
for i in ${var}
do
${i}_log="/var/tmp/pmp_${i}_log"
#export ${i}_log
done

The idea is right, just use the declare variable to create variables on the fly. Also avoid using un-quoted variable expansion(for i in ${var}) for looping. Use a proper array syntax as
var=("ahs" "tcs" "amq" "tos")
for i in "${var[#]}"; do
declare ${i}_log="/var/tmp/pmp_${i}_log"
export "${i}_log"
done
As a side note for good practice, always specify the interpreter to run your script. It could be #!/bin/bash or #!/bin/sh or best do it by #!/usr/bin/env bash

This works on dash and bash (as long as the i's and the path to interpolate them into are reasonable):
#!/bin/sh
var="a b c d"
for i in $var
do
export "${i}_log=/var/tmp/pmp_${i}_log"
#test
sh -c "echo \$${i}_log"
done

An alternative could be to use a single exported associative array instead of multiple variables:
EDIT: oops, this won't work since arrays can't be exported. :\
var="ahs tcs amq tos"
declare -A logs
for i in ${var}
do
logs[$i]="/var/tmp/pmp_${i}_log"
done
echo ${logs[#]}
#### export logs
Also see Inian's answer for better practices for looping and arrays.

This can be done in one line without a loop
printf '%s\n' {ahs,tcs,amq,tos} | xargs -I {} bash -c 'export {}_log="/var/tmp/pmp_{}_log"; echo {}_log=${{}_log}'
or with a loop
#!/bin/bash
for i in {ahs,tcs,amq,tos}; do
#export
export "${i}_log=/var/tmp/pmp_${i}_log";
#test
bash -c 'echo '"${i}_log"'='"\$${i}_log"; done
done
The reason ${i}_log="/var/tmp/pmp_${i}_log" failed is because ${i}_log is unquoted and the syntax for exporting is export somevar=somedefintion. In order to dynamically generate the variable name, surround the statement in quotes so that it gets interpolated. ie. export "${dynamic}_var=${dynamic}_definition"
see http://wiki.bash-hackers.org/syntax/quoting

Related

use an env variable as part of the name of a different env variable in bash [duplicate]

I am confused about a bash script.
I have the following code:
function grep_search() {
magic_way_to_define_magic_variable_$1=`ls | tail -1`
echo $magic_variable_$1
}
I want to be able to create a variable name containing the first argument of the command and bearing the value of e.g. the last line of ls.
So to illustrate what I want:
$ ls | tail -1
stack-overflow.txt
$ grep_search() open_box
stack-overflow.txt
So, how should I define/declare $magic_way_to_define_magic_variable_$1 and how should I call it within the script?
I have tried eval, ${...}, \$${...}, but I am still confused.
I've been looking for better way of doing it recently. Associative array sounded like overkill for me. Look what I found:
suffix=bzz
declare prefix_$suffix=mystr
...and then...
varname=prefix_$suffix
echo ${!varname}
From the docs:
The ‘$’ character introduces parameter expansion, command substitution, or arithmetic expansion. ...
The basic form of parameter expansion is ${parameter}. The value of parameter is substituted. ...
If the first character of parameter is an exclamation point (!), and parameter is not a nameref, it introduces a level of indirection. Bash uses the value formed by expanding the rest of parameter as the new parameter; this is then expanded and that value is used in the rest of the expansion, rather than the expansion of the original parameter. This is known as indirect expansion. The value is subject to tilde expansion, parameter expansion, command substitution, and arithmetic expansion. ...
Use an associative array, with command names as keys.
# Requires bash 4, though
declare -A magic_variable=()
function grep_search() {
magic_variable[$1]=$( ls | tail -1 )
echo ${magic_variable[$1]}
}
If you can't use associative arrays (e.g., you must support bash 3), you can use declare to create dynamic variable names:
declare "magic_variable_$1=$(ls | tail -1)"
and use indirect parameter expansion to access the value.
var="magic_variable_$1"
echo "${!var}"
See BashFAQ: Indirection - Evaluating indirect/reference variables.
Beyond associative arrays, there are several ways of achieving dynamic variables in Bash. Note that all these techniques present risks, which are discussed at the end of this answer.
In the following examples I will assume that i=37 and that you want to alias the variable named var_37 whose initial value is lolilol.
Method 1. Using a “pointer” variable
You can simply store the name of the variable in an indirection variable, not unlike a C pointer. Bash then has a syntax for reading the aliased variable: ${!name} expands to the value of the variable whose name is the value of the variable name. You can think of it as a two-stage expansion: ${!name} expands to $var_37, which expands to lolilol.
name="var_$i"
echo "$name" # outputs “var_37”
echo "${!name}" # outputs “lolilol”
echo "${!name%lol}" # outputs “loli”
# etc.
Unfortunately, there is no counterpart syntax for modifying the aliased variable. Instead, you can achieve assignment with one of the following tricks.
1a. Assigning with eval
eval is evil, but is also the simplest and most portable way of achieving our goal. You have to carefully escape the right-hand side of the assignment, as it will be evaluated twice. An easy and systematic way of doing this is to evaluate the right-hand side beforehand (or to use printf %q).
And you should check manually that the left-hand side is a valid variable name, or a name with index (what if it was evil_code # ?). By contrast, all other methods below enforce it automatically.
# check that name is a valid variable name:
# note: this code does not support variable_name[index]
shopt -s globasciiranges
[[ "$name" == [a-zA-Z_]*([a-zA-Z_0-9]) ]] || exit
value='babibab'
eval "$name"='$value' # carefully escape the right-hand side!
echo "$var_37" # outputs “babibab”
Downsides:
does not check the validity of the variable name.
eval is evil.
eval is evil.
eval is evil.
1b. Assigning with read
The read builtin lets you assign values to a variable of which you give the name, a fact which can be exploited in conjunction with here-strings:
IFS= read -r -d '' "$name" <<< 'babibab'
echo "$var_37" # outputs “babibab\n”
The IFS part and the option -r make sure that the value is assigned as-is, while the option -d '' allows to assign multi-line values. Because of this last option, the command returns with an non-zero exit code.
Note that, since we are using a here-string, a newline character is appended to the value.
Downsides:
somewhat obscure;
returns with a non-zero exit code;
appends a newline to the value.
1c. Assigning with printf
Since Bash 3.1 (released 2005), the printf builtin can also assign its result to a variable whose name is given. By contrast with the previous solutions, it just works, no extra effort is needed to escape things, to prevent splitting and so on.
printf -v "$name" '%s' 'babibab'
echo "$var_37" # outputs “babibab”
Downsides:
Less portable (but, well).
Method 2. Using a “reference” variable
Since Bash 4.3 (released 2014), the declare builtin has an option -n for creating a variable which is a “name reference” to another variable, much like C++ references. Just as in Method 1, the reference stores the name of the aliased variable, but each time the reference is accessed (either for reading or assigning), Bash automatically resolves the indirection.
In addition, Bash has a special and very confusing syntax for getting the value of the reference itself, judge by yourself: ${!ref}.
declare -n ref="var_$i"
echo "${!ref}" # outputs “var_37”
echo "$ref" # outputs “lolilol”
ref='babibab'
echo "$var_37" # outputs “babibab”
This does not avoid the pitfalls explained below, but at least it makes the syntax straightforward.
Downsides:
Not portable.
Risks
All these aliasing techniques present several risks. The first one is executing arbitrary code each time you resolve the indirection (either for reading or for assigning). Indeed, instead of a scalar variable name, like var_37, you may as well alias an array subscript, like arr[42]. But Bash evaluates the contents of the square brackets each time it is needed, so aliasing arr[$(do_evil)] will have unexpected effects… As a consequence, only use these techniques when you control the provenance of the alias.
function guillemots {
declare -n var="$1"
var="«${var}»"
}
arr=( aaa bbb ccc )
guillemots 'arr[1]' # modifies the second cell of the array, as expected
guillemots 'arr[$(date>>date.out)1]' # writes twice into date.out
# (once when expanding var, once when assigning to it)
The second risk is creating a cyclic alias. As Bash variables are identified by their name and not by their scope, you may inadvertently create an alias to itself (while thinking it would alias a variable from an enclosing scope). This may happen in particular when using common variable names (like var). As a consequence, only use these techniques when you control the name of the aliased variable.
function guillemots {
# var is intended to be local to the function,
# aliasing a variable which comes from outside
declare -n var="$1"
var="«${var}»"
}
var='lolilol'
guillemots var # Bash warnings: “var: circular name reference”
echo "$var" # outputs anything!
Source:
BashFaq/006: How can I use variable variables (indirect variables, pointers, references) or associative arrays?
BashFAQ/048: eval command and security issues
Example below returns value of $name_of_var
var=name_of_var
echo $(eval echo "\$$var")
Use declare
There is no need on using prefixes like on other answers, neither arrays. Use just declare, double quotes, and parameter expansion.
I often use the following trick to parse argument lists contanining one to n arguments formatted as key=value otherkey=othervalue etc=etc, Like:
# brace expansion just to exemplify
for variable in {one=foo,two=bar,ninja=tip}
do
declare "${variable%=*}=${variable#*=}"
done
echo $one $two $ninja
# foo bar tip
But expanding the argv list like
for v in "$#"; do declare "${v%=*}=${v#*=}"; done
Extra tips
# parse argv's leading key=value parameters
for v in "$#"; do
case "$v" in ?*=?*) declare "${v%=*}=${v#*=}";; *) break;; esac
done
# consume argv's leading key=value parameters
while test $# -gt 0; do
case "$1" in ?*=?*) declare "${1%=*}=${1#*=}";; *) break;; esac
shift
done
Combining two highly rated answers here into a complete example that is hopefully useful and self-explanatory:
#!/bin/bash
intro="You know what,"
pet1="cat"
pet2="chicken"
pet3="cow"
pet4="dog"
pet5="pig"
# Setting and reading dynamic variables
for i in {1..5}; do
pet="pet$i"
declare "sentence$i=$intro I have a pet ${!pet} at home"
done
# Just reading dynamic variables
for i in {1..5}; do
sentence="sentence$i"
echo "${!sentence}"
done
echo
echo "Again, but reading regular variables:"
echo $sentence1
echo $sentence2
echo $sentence3
echo $sentence4
echo $sentence5
Output:
You know what, I have a pet cat at home
You know what, I have a pet chicken at home
You know what, I have a pet cow at home
You know what, I have a pet dog at home
You know what, I have a pet pig at home
Again, but reading regular variables:
You know what, I have a pet cat at home
You know what, I have a pet chicken at home
You know what, I have a pet cow at home
You know what, I have a pet dog at home
You know what, I have a pet pig at home
This will work too
my_country_code="green"
x="country"
eval z='$'my_"$x"_code
echo $z ## o/p: green
In your case
eval final_val='$'magic_way_to_define_magic_variable_"$1"
echo $final_val
This should work:
function grep_search() {
declare magic_variable_$1="$(ls | tail -1)"
echo "$(tmpvar=magic_variable_$1 && echo ${!tmpvar})"
}
grep_search var # calling grep_search with argument "var"
An extra method that doesn't rely on which shell/bash version you have is by using envsubst. For example:
newvar=$(echo '$magic_variable_'"${dynamic_part}" | envsubst)
For zsh (newers mac os versions), you should use
real_var="holaaaa"
aux_var="real_var"
echo ${(P)aux_var}
holaaaa
Instead of "!"
As per BashFAQ/006, you can use read with here string syntax for assigning indirect variables:
function grep_search() {
read "$1" <<<$(ls | tail -1);
}
Usage:
$ grep_search open_box
$ echo $open_box
stack-overflow.txt
Even though it's an old question, I still had some hard time with fetching dynamic variables names, while avoiding the eval (evil) command.
Solved it with declare -n which creates a reference to a dynamic value, this is especially useful in CI/CD processes, where the required secret names of the CI/CD service are not known until runtime. Here's how:
# Bash v4.3+
# -----------------------------------------------------------
# Secerts in CI/CD service, injected as environment variables
# AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID_DEV, AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY_DEV
# AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID_STG, AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY_STG
# -----------------------------------------------------------
# Environment variables injected by CI/CD service
# BRANCH_NAME="DEV"
# -----------------------------------------------------------
declare -n _AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID_REF=AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID_${BRANCH_NAME}
declare -n _AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY_REF=AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY_${BRANCH_NAME}
export AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID=${_AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID_REF}
export AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY=${_AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY_REF}
echo $AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID $AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY
aws s3 ls
Wow, most of the syntax is horrible! Here is one solution with some simpler syntax if you need to indirectly reference arrays:
#!/bin/bash
foo_1=(fff ddd) ;
foo_2=(ggg ccc) ;
for i in 1 2 ;
do
eval mine=( \${foo_$i[#]} ) ;
echo ${mine[#]}" " ;
done ;
For simpler use cases I recommend the syntax described in the Advanced Bash-Scripting Guide.
KISS approach:
a=1
c="bam"
let "$c$a"=4
echo $bam1
results in 4
I want to be able to create a variable name containing the first argument of the command
script.sh file:
#!/usr/bin/env bash
function grep_search() {
eval $1=$(ls | tail -1)
}
Test:
$ source script.sh
$ grep_search open_box
$ echo $open_box
script.sh
As per help eval:
Execute arguments as a shell command.
You may also use Bash ${!var} indirect expansion, as already mentioned, however it doesn't support retrieving of array indices.
For further read or examples, check BashFAQ/006 about Indirection.
We are not aware of any trick that can duplicate that functionality in POSIX or Bourne shells without eval, which can be difficult to do securely. So, consider this a use at your own risk hack.
However, you should re-consider using indirection as per the following notes.
Normally, in bash scripting, you won't need indirect references at all. Generally, people look at this for a solution when they don't understand or know about Bash Arrays or haven't fully considered other Bash features such as functions.
Putting variable names or any other bash syntax inside parameters is frequently done incorrectly and in inappropriate situations to solve problems that have better solutions. It violates the separation between code and data, and as such puts you on a slippery slope toward bugs and security issues. Indirection can make your code less transparent and harder to follow.
For indexed arrays, you can reference them like so:
foo=(a b c)
bar=(d e f)
for arr_var in 'foo' 'bar'; do
declare -a 'arr=("${'"$arr_var"'[#]}")'
# do something with $arr
echo "\$$arr_var contains:"
for char in "${arr[#]}"; do
echo "$char"
done
done
Associative arrays can be referenced similarly but need the -A switch on declare instead of -a.
POSIX compliant answer
For this solution you'll need to have r/w permissions to the /tmp folder.
We create a temporary file holding our variables and leverage the -a flag of the set built-in:
$ man set
...
-a Each variable or function that is created or modified is given the export attribute and marked for export to the environment of subsequent commands.
Therefore, if we create a file holding our dynamic variables, we can use set to bring them to life inside our script.
The implementation
#!/bin/sh
# Give the temp file a unique name so you don't mess with any other files in there
ENV_FILE="/tmp/$(date +%s)"
MY_KEY=foo
MY_VALUE=bar
echo "$MY_KEY=$MY_VALUE" >> "$ENV_FILE"
# Now that our env file is created and populated, we can use "set"
set -a; . "$ENV_FILE"; set +a
rm "$ENV_FILE"
echo "$foo"
# Output is "bar" (without quotes)
Explaining the steps above:
# Enables the -a behavior
set -a
# Sources the env file
. "$ENV_FILE"
# Disables the -a behavior
set +a
While I think declare -n is still the best way to do it there is another way nobody mentioned it, very useful in CI/CD
function dynamic(){
export a_$1="bla"
}
dynamic 2
echo $a_2
This function will not support spaces so dynamic "2 3" will return an error.
for varname=$prefix_suffix format, just use:
varname=${prefix}_suffix

2-part String to variable names bash [duplicate]

I am confused about a bash script.
I have the following code:
function grep_search() {
magic_way_to_define_magic_variable_$1=`ls | tail -1`
echo $magic_variable_$1
}
I want to be able to create a variable name containing the first argument of the command and bearing the value of e.g. the last line of ls.
So to illustrate what I want:
$ ls | tail -1
stack-overflow.txt
$ grep_search() open_box
stack-overflow.txt
So, how should I define/declare $magic_way_to_define_magic_variable_$1 and how should I call it within the script?
I have tried eval, ${...}, \$${...}, but I am still confused.
I've been looking for better way of doing it recently. Associative array sounded like overkill for me. Look what I found:
suffix=bzz
declare prefix_$suffix=mystr
...and then...
varname=prefix_$suffix
echo ${!varname}
From the docs:
The ‘$’ character introduces parameter expansion, command substitution, or arithmetic expansion. ...
The basic form of parameter expansion is ${parameter}. The value of parameter is substituted. ...
If the first character of parameter is an exclamation point (!), and parameter is not a nameref, it introduces a level of indirection. Bash uses the value formed by expanding the rest of parameter as the new parameter; this is then expanded and that value is used in the rest of the expansion, rather than the expansion of the original parameter. This is known as indirect expansion. The value is subject to tilde expansion, parameter expansion, command substitution, and arithmetic expansion. ...
Use an associative array, with command names as keys.
# Requires bash 4, though
declare -A magic_variable=()
function grep_search() {
magic_variable[$1]=$( ls | tail -1 )
echo ${magic_variable[$1]}
}
If you can't use associative arrays (e.g., you must support bash 3), you can use declare to create dynamic variable names:
declare "magic_variable_$1=$(ls | tail -1)"
and use indirect parameter expansion to access the value.
var="magic_variable_$1"
echo "${!var}"
See BashFAQ: Indirection - Evaluating indirect/reference variables.
Beyond associative arrays, there are several ways of achieving dynamic variables in Bash. Note that all these techniques present risks, which are discussed at the end of this answer.
In the following examples I will assume that i=37 and that you want to alias the variable named var_37 whose initial value is lolilol.
Method 1. Using a “pointer” variable
You can simply store the name of the variable in an indirection variable, not unlike a C pointer. Bash then has a syntax for reading the aliased variable: ${!name} expands to the value of the variable whose name is the value of the variable name. You can think of it as a two-stage expansion: ${!name} expands to $var_37, which expands to lolilol.
name="var_$i"
echo "$name" # outputs “var_37”
echo "${!name}" # outputs “lolilol”
echo "${!name%lol}" # outputs “loli”
# etc.
Unfortunately, there is no counterpart syntax for modifying the aliased variable. Instead, you can achieve assignment with one of the following tricks.
1a. Assigning with eval
eval is evil, but is also the simplest and most portable way of achieving our goal. You have to carefully escape the right-hand side of the assignment, as it will be evaluated twice. An easy and systematic way of doing this is to evaluate the right-hand side beforehand (or to use printf %q).
And you should check manually that the left-hand side is a valid variable name, or a name with index (what if it was evil_code # ?). By contrast, all other methods below enforce it automatically.
# check that name is a valid variable name:
# note: this code does not support variable_name[index]
shopt -s globasciiranges
[[ "$name" == [a-zA-Z_]*([a-zA-Z_0-9]) ]] || exit
value='babibab'
eval "$name"='$value' # carefully escape the right-hand side!
echo "$var_37" # outputs “babibab”
Downsides:
does not check the validity of the variable name.
eval is evil.
eval is evil.
eval is evil.
1b. Assigning with read
The read builtin lets you assign values to a variable of which you give the name, a fact which can be exploited in conjunction with here-strings:
IFS= read -r -d '' "$name" <<< 'babibab'
echo "$var_37" # outputs “babibab\n”
The IFS part and the option -r make sure that the value is assigned as-is, while the option -d '' allows to assign multi-line values. Because of this last option, the command returns with an non-zero exit code.
Note that, since we are using a here-string, a newline character is appended to the value.
Downsides:
somewhat obscure;
returns with a non-zero exit code;
appends a newline to the value.
1c. Assigning with printf
Since Bash 3.1 (released 2005), the printf builtin can also assign its result to a variable whose name is given. By contrast with the previous solutions, it just works, no extra effort is needed to escape things, to prevent splitting and so on.
printf -v "$name" '%s' 'babibab'
echo "$var_37" # outputs “babibab”
Downsides:
Less portable (but, well).
Method 2. Using a “reference” variable
Since Bash 4.3 (released 2014), the declare builtin has an option -n for creating a variable which is a “name reference” to another variable, much like C++ references. Just as in Method 1, the reference stores the name of the aliased variable, but each time the reference is accessed (either for reading or assigning), Bash automatically resolves the indirection.
In addition, Bash has a special and very confusing syntax for getting the value of the reference itself, judge by yourself: ${!ref}.
declare -n ref="var_$i"
echo "${!ref}" # outputs “var_37”
echo "$ref" # outputs “lolilol”
ref='babibab'
echo "$var_37" # outputs “babibab”
This does not avoid the pitfalls explained below, but at least it makes the syntax straightforward.
Downsides:
Not portable.
Risks
All these aliasing techniques present several risks. The first one is executing arbitrary code each time you resolve the indirection (either for reading or for assigning). Indeed, instead of a scalar variable name, like var_37, you may as well alias an array subscript, like arr[42]. But Bash evaluates the contents of the square brackets each time it is needed, so aliasing arr[$(do_evil)] will have unexpected effects… As a consequence, only use these techniques when you control the provenance of the alias.
function guillemots {
declare -n var="$1"
var="«${var}»"
}
arr=( aaa bbb ccc )
guillemots 'arr[1]' # modifies the second cell of the array, as expected
guillemots 'arr[$(date>>date.out)1]' # writes twice into date.out
# (once when expanding var, once when assigning to it)
The second risk is creating a cyclic alias. As Bash variables are identified by their name and not by their scope, you may inadvertently create an alias to itself (while thinking it would alias a variable from an enclosing scope). This may happen in particular when using common variable names (like var). As a consequence, only use these techniques when you control the name of the aliased variable.
function guillemots {
# var is intended to be local to the function,
# aliasing a variable which comes from outside
declare -n var="$1"
var="«${var}»"
}
var='lolilol'
guillemots var # Bash warnings: “var: circular name reference”
echo "$var" # outputs anything!
Source:
BashFaq/006: How can I use variable variables (indirect variables, pointers, references) or associative arrays?
BashFAQ/048: eval command and security issues
Example below returns value of $name_of_var
var=name_of_var
echo $(eval echo "\$$var")
Use declare
There is no need on using prefixes like on other answers, neither arrays. Use just declare, double quotes, and parameter expansion.
I often use the following trick to parse argument lists contanining one to n arguments formatted as key=value otherkey=othervalue etc=etc, Like:
# brace expansion just to exemplify
for variable in {one=foo,two=bar,ninja=tip}
do
declare "${variable%=*}=${variable#*=}"
done
echo $one $two $ninja
# foo bar tip
But expanding the argv list like
for v in "$#"; do declare "${v%=*}=${v#*=}"; done
Extra tips
# parse argv's leading key=value parameters
for v in "$#"; do
case "$v" in ?*=?*) declare "${v%=*}=${v#*=}";; *) break;; esac
done
# consume argv's leading key=value parameters
while test $# -gt 0; do
case "$1" in ?*=?*) declare "${1%=*}=${1#*=}";; *) break;; esac
shift
done
Combining two highly rated answers here into a complete example that is hopefully useful and self-explanatory:
#!/bin/bash
intro="You know what,"
pet1="cat"
pet2="chicken"
pet3="cow"
pet4="dog"
pet5="pig"
# Setting and reading dynamic variables
for i in {1..5}; do
pet="pet$i"
declare "sentence$i=$intro I have a pet ${!pet} at home"
done
# Just reading dynamic variables
for i in {1..5}; do
sentence="sentence$i"
echo "${!sentence}"
done
echo
echo "Again, but reading regular variables:"
echo $sentence1
echo $sentence2
echo $sentence3
echo $sentence4
echo $sentence5
Output:
You know what, I have a pet cat at home
You know what, I have a pet chicken at home
You know what, I have a pet cow at home
You know what, I have a pet dog at home
You know what, I have a pet pig at home
Again, but reading regular variables:
You know what, I have a pet cat at home
You know what, I have a pet chicken at home
You know what, I have a pet cow at home
You know what, I have a pet dog at home
You know what, I have a pet pig at home
This will work too
my_country_code="green"
x="country"
eval z='$'my_"$x"_code
echo $z ## o/p: green
In your case
eval final_val='$'magic_way_to_define_magic_variable_"$1"
echo $final_val
This should work:
function grep_search() {
declare magic_variable_$1="$(ls | tail -1)"
echo "$(tmpvar=magic_variable_$1 && echo ${!tmpvar})"
}
grep_search var # calling grep_search with argument "var"
An extra method that doesn't rely on which shell/bash version you have is by using envsubst. For example:
newvar=$(echo '$magic_variable_'"${dynamic_part}" | envsubst)
For zsh (newers mac os versions), you should use
real_var="holaaaa"
aux_var="real_var"
echo ${(P)aux_var}
holaaaa
Instead of "!"
As per BashFAQ/006, you can use read with here string syntax for assigning indirect variables:
function grep_search() {
read "$1" <<<$(ls | tail -1);
}
Usage:
$ grep_search open_box
$ echo $open_box
stack-overflow.txt
Even though it's an old question, I still had some hard time with fetching dynamic variables names, while avoiding the eval (evil) command.
Solved it with declare -n which creates a reference to a dynamic value, this is especially useful in CI/CD processes, where the required secret names of the CI/CD service are not known until runtime. Here's how:
# Bash v4.3+
# -----------------------------------------------------------
# Secerts in CI/CD service, injected as environment variables
# AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID_DEV, AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY_DEV
# AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID_STG, AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY_STG
# -----------------------------------------------------------
# Environment variables injected by CI/CD service
# BRANCH_NAME="DEV"
# -----------------------------------------------------------
declare -n _AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID_REF=AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID_${BRANCH_NAME}
declare -n _AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY_REF=AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY_${BRANCH_NAME}
export AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID=${_AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID_REF}
export AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY=${_AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY_REF}
echo $AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID $AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY
aws s3 ls
Wow, most of the syntax is horrible! Here is one solution with some simpler syntax if you need to indirectly reference arrays:
#!/bin/bash
foo_1=(fff ddd) ;
foo_2=(ggg ccc) ;
for i in 1 2 ;
do
eval mine=( \${foo_$i[#]} ) ;
echo ${mine[#]}" " ;
done ;
For simpler use cases I recommend the syntax described in the Advanced Bash-Scripting Guide.
KISS approach:
a=1
c="bam"
let "$c$a"=4
echo $bam1
results in 4
I want to be able to create a variable name containing the first argument of the command
script.sh file:
#!/usr/bin/env bash
function grep_search() {
eval $1=$(ls | tail -1)
}
Test:
$ source script.sh
$ grep_search open_box
$ echo $open_box
script.sh
As per help eval:
Execute arguments as a shell command.
You may also use Bash ${!var} indirect expansion, as already mentioned, however it doesn't support retrieving of array indices.
For further read or examples, check BashFAQ/006 about Indirection.
We are not aware of any trick that can duplicate that functionality in POSIX or Bourne shells without eval, which can be difficult to do securely. So, consider this a use at your own risk hack.
However, you should re-consider using indirection as per the following notes.
Normally, in bash scripting, you won't need indirect references at all. Generally, people look at this for a solution when they don't understand or know about Bash Arrays or haven't fully considered other Bash features such as functions.
Putting variable names or any other bash syntax inside parameters is frequently done incorrectly and in inappropriate situations to solve problems that have better solutions. It violates the separation between code and data, and as such puts you on a slippery slope toward bugs and security issues. Indirection can make your code less transparent and harder to follow.
For indexed arrays, you can reference them like so:
foo=(a b c)
bar=(d e f)
for arr_var in 'foo' 'bar'; do
declare -a 'arr=("${'"$arr_var"'[#]}")'
# do something with $arr
echo "\$$arr_var contains:"
for char in "${arr[#]}"; do
echo "$char"
done
done
Associative arrays can be referenced similarly but need the -A switch on declare instead of -a.
POSIX compliant answer
For this solution you'll need to have r/w permissions to the /tmp folder.
We create a temporary file holding our variables and leverage the -a flag of the set built-in:
$ man set
...
-a Each variable or function that is created or modified is given the export attribute and marked for export to the environment of subsequent commands.
Therefore, if we create a file holding our dynamic variables, we can use set to bring them to life inside our script.
The implementation
#!/bin/sh
# Give the temp file a unique name so you don't mess with any other files in there
ENV_FILE="/tmp/$(date +%s)"
MY_KEY=foo
MY_VALUE=bar
echo "$MY_KEY=$MY_VALUE" >> "$ENV_FILE"
# Now that our env file is created and populated, we can use "set"
set -a; . "$ENV_FILE"; set +a
rm "$ENV_FILE"
echo "$foo"
# Output is "bar" (without quotes)
Explaining the steps above:
# Enables the -a behavior
set -a
# Sources the env file
. "$ENV_FILE"
# Disables the -a behavior
set +a
While I think declare -n is still the best way to do it there is another way nobody mentioned it, very useful in CI/CD
function dynamic(){
export a_$1="bla"
}
dynamic 2
echo $a_2
This function will not support spaces so dynamic "2 3" will return an error.
for varname=$prefix_suffix format, just use:
varname=${prefix}_suffix

BASH - How to echo a variable inside a variable [duplicate]

I am confused about a bash script.
I have the following code:
function grep_search() {
magic_way_to_define_magic_variable_$1=`ls | tail -1`
echo $magic_variable_$1
}
I want to be able to create a variable name containing the first argument of the command and bearing the value of e.g. the last line of ls.
So to illustrate what I want:
$ ls | tail -1
stack-overflow.txt
$ grep_search() open_box
stack-overflow.txt
So, how should I define/declare $magic_way_to_define_magic_variable_$1 and how should I call it within the script?
I have tried eval, ${...}, \$${...}, but I am still confused.
I've been looking for better way of doing it recently. Associative array sounded like overkill for me. Look what I found:
suffix=bzz
declare prefix_$suffix=mystr
...and then...
varname=prefix_$suffix
echo ${!varname}
From the docs:
The ‘$’ character introduces parameter expansion, command substitution, or arithmetic expansion. ...
The basic form of parameter expansion is ${parameter}. The value of parameter is substituted. ...
If the first character of parameter is an exclamation point (!), and parameter is not a nameref, it introduces a level of indirection. Bash uses the value formed by expanding the rest of parameter as the new parameter; this is then expanded and that value is used in the rest of the expansion, rather than the expansion of the original parameter. This is known as indirect expansion. The value is subject to tilde expansion, parameter expansion, command substitution, and arithmetic expansion. ...
Use an associative array, with command names as keys.
# Requires bash 4, though
declare -A magic_variable=()
function grep_search() {
magic_variable[$1]=$( ls | tail -1 )
echo ${magic_variable[$1]}
}
If you can't use associative arrays (e.g., you must support bash 3), you can use declare to create dynamic variable names:
declare "magic_variable_$1=$(ls | tail -1)"
and use indirect parameter expansion to access the value.
var="magic_variable_$1"
echo "${!var}"
See BashFAQ: Indirection - Evaluating indirect/reference variables.
Beyond associative arrays, there are several ways of achieving dynamic variables in Bash. Note that all these techniques present risks, which are discussed at the end of this answer.
In the following examples I will assume that i=37 and that you want to alias the variable named var_37 whose initial value is lolilol.
Method 1. Using a “pointer” variable
You can simply store the name of the variable in an indirection variable, not unlike a C pointer. Bash then has a syntax for reading the aliased variable: ${!name} expands to the value of the variable whose name is the value of the variable name. You can think of it as a two-stage expansion: ${!name} expands to $var_37, which expands to lolilol.
name="var_$i"
echo "$name" # outputs “var_37”
echo "${!name}" # outputs “lolilol”
echo "${!name%lol}" # outputs “loli”
# etc.
Unfortunately, there is no counterpart syntax for modifying the aliased variable. Instead, you can achieve assignment with one of the following tricks.
1a. Assigning with eval
eval is evil, but is also the simplest and most portable way of achieving our goal. You have to carefully escape the right-hand side of the assignment, as it will be evaluated twice. An easy and systematic way of doing this is to evaluate the right-hand side beforehand (or to use printf %q).
And you should check manually that the left-hand side is a valid variable name, or a name with index (what if it was evil_code # ?). By contrast, all other methods below enforce it automatically.
# check that name is a valid variable name:
# note: this code does not support variable_name[index]
shopt -s globasciiranges
[[ "$name" == [a-zA-Z_]*([a-zA-Z_0-9]) ]] || exit
value='babibab'
eval "$name"='$value' # carefully escape the right-hand side!
echo "$var_37" # outputs “babibab”
Downsides:
does not check the validity of the variable name.
eval is evil.
eval is evil.
eval is evil.
1b. Assigning with read
The read builtin lets you assign values to a variable of which you give the name, a fact which can be exploited in conjunction with here-strings:
IFS= read -r -d '' "$name" <<< 'babibab'
echo "$var_37" # outputs “babibab\n”
The IFS part and the option -r make sure that the value is assigned as-is, while the option -d '' allows to assign multi-line values. Because of this last option, the command returns with an non-zero exit code.
Note that, since we are using a here-string, a newline character is appended to the value.
Downsides:
somewhat obscure;
returns with a non-zero exit code;
appends a newline to the value.
1c. Assigning with printf
Since Bash 3.1 (released 2005), the printf builtin can also assign its result to a variable whose name is given. By contrast with the previous solutions, it just works, no extra effort is needed to escape things, to prevent splitting and so on.
printf -v "$name" '%s' 'babibab'
echo "$var_37" # outputs “babibab”
Downsides:
Less portable (but, well).
Method 2. Using a “reference” variable
Since Bash 4.3 (released 2014), the declare builtin has an option -n for creating a variable which is a “name reference” to another variable, much like C++ references. Just as in Method 1, the reference stores the name of the aliased variable, but each time the reference is accessed (either for reading or assigning), Bash automatically resolves the indirection.
In addition, Bash has a special and very confusing syntax for getting the value of the reference itself, judge by yourself: ${!ref}.
declare -n ref="var_$i"
echo "${!ref}" # outputs “var_37”
echo "$ref" # outputs “lolilol”
ref='babibab'
echo "$var_37" # outputs “babibab”
This does not avoid the pitfalls explained below, but at least it makes the syntax straightforward.
Downsides:
Not portable.
Risks
All these aliasing techniques present several risks. The first one is executing arbitrary code each time you resolve the indirection (either for reading or for assigning). Indeed, instead of a scalar variable name, like var_37, you may as well alias an array subscript, like arr[42]. But Bash evaluates the contents of the square brackets each time it is needed, so aliasing arr[$(do_evil)] will have unexpected effects… As a consequence, only use these techniques when you control the provenance of the alias.
function guillemots {
declare -n var="$1"
var="«${var}»"
}
arr=( aaa bbb ccc )
guillemots 'arr[1]' # modifies the second cell of the array, as expected
guillemots 'arr[$(date>>date.out)1]' # writes twice into date.out
# (once when expanding var, once when assigning to it)
The second risk is creating a cyclic alias. As Bash variables are identified by their name and not by their scope, you may inadvertently create an alias to itself (while thinking it would alias a variable from an enclosing scope). This may happen in particular when using common variable names (like var). As a consequence, only use these techniques when you control the name of the aliased variable.
function guillemots {
# var is intended to be local to the function,
# aliasing a variable which comes from outside
declare -n var="$1"
var="«${var}»"
}
var='lolilol'
guillemots var # Bash warnings: “var: circular name reference”
echo "$var" # outputs anything!
Source:
BashFaq/006: How can I use variable variables (indirect variables, pointers, references) or associative arrays?
BashFAQ/048: eval command and security issues
Example below returns value of $name_of_var
var=name_of_var
echo $(eval echo "\$$var")
Use declare
There is no need on using prefixes like on other answers, neither arrays. Use just declare, double quotes, and parameter expansion.
I often use the following trick to parse argument lists contanining one to n arguments formatted as key=value otherkey=othervalue etc=etc, Like:
# brace expansion just to exemplify
for variable in {one=foo,two=bar,ninja=tip}
do
declare "${variable%=*}=${variable#*=}"
done
echo $one $two $ninja
# foo bar tip
But expanding the argv list like
for v in "$#"; do declare "${v%=*}=${v#*=}"; done
Extra tips
# parse argv's leading key=value parameters
for v in "$#"; do
case "$v" in ?*=?*) declare "${v%=*}=${v#*=}";; *) break;; esac
done
# consume argv's leading key=value parameters
while test $# -gt 0; do
case "$1" in ?*=?*) declare "${1%=*}=${1#*=}";; *) break;; esac
shift
done
Combining two highly rated answers here into a complete example that is hopefully useful and self-explanatory:
#!/bin/bash
intro="You know what,"
pet1="cat"
pet2="chicken"
pet3="cow"
pet4="dog"
pet5="pig"
# Setting and reading dynamic variables
for i in {1..5}; do
pet="pet$i"
declare "sentence$i=$intro I have a pet ${!pet} at home"
done
# Just reading dynamic variables
for i in {1..5}; do
sentence="sentence$i"
echo "${!sentence}"
done
echo
echo "Again, but reading regular variables:"
echo $sentence1
echo $sentence2
echo $sentence3
echo $sentence4
echo $sentence5
Output:
You know what, I have a pet cat at home
You know what, I have a pet chicken at home
You know what, I have a pet cow at home
You know what, I have a pet dog at home
You know what, I have a pet pig at home
Again, but reading regular variables:
You know what, I have a pet cat at home
You know what, I have a pet chicken at home
You know what, I have a pet cow at home
You know what, I have a pet dog at home
You know what, I have a pet pig at home
This will work too
my_country_code="green"
x="country"
eval z='$'my_"$x"_code
echo $z ## o/p: green
In your case
eval final_val='$'magic_way_to_define_magic_variable_"$1"
echo $final_val
This should work:
function grep_search() {
declare magic_variable_$1="$(ls | tail -1)"
echo "$(tmpvar=magic_variable_$1 && echo ${!tmpvar})"
}
grep_search var # calling grep_search with argument "var"
An extra method that doesn't rely on which shell/bash version you have is by using envsubst. For example:
newvar=$(echo '$magic_variable_'"${dynamic_part}" | envsubst)
For zsh (newers mac os versions), you should use
real_var="holaaaa"
aux_var="real_var"
echo ${(P)aux_var}
holaaaa
Instead of "!"
As per BashFAQ/006, you can use read with here string syntax for assigning indirect variables:
function grep_search() {
read "$1" <<<$(ls | tail -1);
}
Usage:
$ grep_search open_box
$ echo $open_box
stack-overflow.txt
Even though it's an old question, I still had some hard time with fetching dynamic variables names, while avoiding the eval (evil) command.
Solved it with declare -n which creates a reference to a dynamic value, this is especially useful in CI/CD processes, where the required secret names of the CI/CD service are not known until runtime. Here's how:
# Bash v4.3+
# -----------------------------------------------------------
# Secerts in CI/CD service, injected as environment variables
# AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID_DEV, AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY_DEV
# AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID_STG, AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY_STG
# -----------------------------------------------------------
# Environment variables injected by CI/CD service
# BRANCH_NAME="DEV"
# -----------------------------------------------------------
declare -n _AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID_REF=AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID_${BRANCH_NAME}
declare -n _AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY_REF=AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY_${BRANCH_NAME}
export AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID=${_AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID_REF}
export AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY=${_AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY_REF}
echo $AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID $AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY
aws s3 ls
Wow, most of the syntax is horrible! Here is one solution with some simpler syntax if you need to indirectly reference arrays:
#!/bin/bash
foo_1=(fff ddd) ;
foo_2=(ggg ccc) ;
for i in 1 2 ;
do
eval mine=( \${foo_$i[#]} ) ;
echo ${mine[#]}" " ;
done ;
For simpler use cases I recommend the syntax described in the Advanced Bash-Scripting Guide.
KISS approach:
a=1
c="bam"
let "$c$a"=4
echo $bam1
results in 4
I want to be able to create a variable name containing the first argument of the command
script.sh file:
#!/usr/bin/env bash
function grep_search() {
eval $1=$(ls | tail -1)
}
Test:
$ source script.sh
$ grep_search open_box
$ echo $open_box
script.sh
As per help eval:
Execute arguments as a shell command.
You may also use Bash ${!var} indirect expansion, as already mentioned, however it doesn't support retrieving of array indices.
For further read or examples, check BashFAQ/006 about Indirection.
We are not aware of any trick that can duplicate that functionality in POSIX or Bourne shells without eval, which can be difficult to do securely. So, consider this a use at your own risk hack.
However, you should re-consider using indirection as per the following notes.
Normally, in bash scripting, you won't need indirect references at all. Generally, people look at this for a solution when they don't understand or know about Bash Arrays or haven't fully considered other Bash features such as functions.
Putting variable names or any other bash syntax inside parameters is frequently done incorrectly and in inappropriate situations to solve problems that have better solutions. It violates the separation between code and data, and as such puts you on a slippery slope toward bugs and security issues. Indirection can make your code less transparent and harder to follow.
For indexed arrays, you can reference them like so:
foo=(a b c)
bar=(d e f)
for arr_var in 'foo' 'bar'; do
declare -a 'arr=("${'"$arr_var"'[#]}")'
# do something with $arr
echo "\$$arr_var contains:"
for char in "${arr[#]}"; do
echo "$char"
done
done
Associative arrays can be referenced similarly but need the -A switch on declare instead of -a.
POSIX compliant answer
For this solution you'll need to have r/w permissions to the /tmp folder.
We create a temporary file holding our variables and leverage the -a flag of the set built-in:
$ man set
...
-a Each variable or function that is created or modified is given the export attribute and marked for export to the environment of subsequent commands.
Therefore, if we create a file holding our dynamic variables, we can use set to bring them to life inside our script.
The implementation
#!/bin/sh
# Give the temp file a unique name so you don't mess with any other files in there
ENV_FILE="/tmp/$(date +%s)"
MY_KEY=foo
MY_VALUE=bar
echo "$MY_KEY=$MY_VALUE" >> "$ENV_FILE"
# Now that our env file is created and populated, we can use "set"
set -a; . "$ENV_FILE"; set +a
rm "$ENV_FILE"
echo "$foo"
# Output is "bar" (without quotes)
Explaining the steps above:
# Enables the -a behavior
set -a
# Sources the env file
. "$ENV_FILE"
# Disables the -a behavior
set +a
While I think declare -n is still the best way to do it there is another way nobody mentioned it, very useful in CI/CD
function dynamic(){
export a_$1="bla"
}
dynamic 2
echo $a_2
This function will not support spaces so dynamic "2 3" will return an error.
for varname=$prefix_suffix format, just use:
varname=${prefix}_suffix

How to call a variable as a path from another script?

Example
Var = '/etc/sysconfig/..'
export Var
bash script1.sh
in another script1
cat $Var
This is my Problem: The variable does not call the file in this path
Do this:
Var='/etc/sysconfig/..'
bash script1.sh "$Var"
Then in script1.sh:
Var=$1
cat "$Var"
The quotes around "$Var" are required to support paths containing spaces.
Your variable assignment is wrong, it should be:
Var='/etc/sysconfig/..'
No spaces around =.
If you want to send in a environment variable for one script only then you can use:
Var='/etc/sysconfig/..' ./my_script.sh
And inside my_script.sh:
printf "%s\n" "$Var"
# Will print /etc/sysconfig/..
If you want to send arguments to my_script.sh do what #JohnZwinck suggested. What I suggested is only to change environment variable and shouldn't be abused to send/receive regular variables to a command.
I think no need to to more thing
script 1
#!/bin/bash
a="/home/example" ### you can do with export command also export a="/home/example"
sctipt2 ## make effective
. script1;
cd $a

Bash Script Properties File Using '.' in Variable Name

I'm new to bash scripting and have a question about using properties from a .properties file within a bash script.
I have seen a bash properties file that uses'.' between variable names, for example:
this.prop.one=someProperty
and I've seen them called from within a script like:
echo ${this.prop.one}
But when I try to set this property I get an error:
./test.sh: line 5: ${this.prop.one}: bad substitution
I can use properties if I do it without '.' in the variable names, and include the props file:
#!/bin/bash
. test.properties
echo ${this_prop_one}
I would really like to be able to use '.' in the variable names, and, if at all possible, not have to include . test.properties in the script.
Is this possible?
UPDATE:
Thanks for your answers! Well, then this is strange. I'm working with a bash script that looks like this (a service for glassfish):
#!/bin/bash
start() {
sudo ${glassfish.home.dir}/bin/asadmin start-domain domain1
}
...
...and there are property files like this (build.properties):
# glassfish
glassfish.version=2.1
glassfish.home.dir=${app.install.dir}/${glassfish.target}
...
So, there must be some way of doing this right? Are these maybe not considered 'variables' by definition if they're declared in a properties file? Thanks again.
Load them into an associative array. This will require your shell to be bash 4.x, not /bin/sh (which, even when a symlink to bash, runs in POSIX compatibility mode).
declare -A props
while read -r; do
[[ $REPLY = *=* ]] || continue
props[${REPLY%%=*}]=${REPLY#*=}
done <input-file.properties
...after which you can access them like so:
echo "${props[this.prop.name]}"
If you want to recursively look up references, then it gets a bit more interesting.
getProp__property_re='[$][{]([[:alnum:].]+)[}]'
getProp() {
declare -A seen=( ) # to prevent endless recursion
declare propName=$1
declare value=${props[$propName]}
while [[ $value =~ $getProp__property_re ]]; do
nestedProp=${BASH_REMATCH[1]}
if [[ ${seen[$nestedProp]} ]]; then
echo "ERROR: Recursive definition encountered looking up $propName" >&2
return 1
fi
value=${value//${BASH_REMATCH[0]}/${props[$nestedProp]}}
done
printf '%s\n' "$value"
}
If we have props defined as follows (which you could also get by running the loop at the top of this answer with an appropriate input-file.properties):
declare -A props=(
[glassfish.home.dir]='${app.install.dir}/${glassfish.target}'
[app.install.dir]=/install
[glassfish.target]=target
)
...then behavior is as follows:
bash4-4.4$ getProp glassfish.home.dir
/install/target
No can do. The bash manual says this about variable names:
name
A word consisting solely of letters, numbers, and underscores, and beginning with a letter or underscore. Names are used as shell variable and function names. Also referred to as an identifier.
Dots not allowed.
dot is not allowed to be variable name. so you cannot just simply source the property file.
What you can do is:
"parse" the file, not source it. E.g. with perl, awk or grep to get the value of interesting property name, and assign it to your shell var.
if you do want to set a var with dot in its name, you can use env 'a.b.c=xyz' and get the a.b.c from env output.

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