If I have a shell script where I get the parent folder using "../" can I expand that out somehow into it's absolute path?
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as far as i remember "pwd" gives you the Parent Working Directory– weberikOct 24, 2011 at 15:11
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@weberik: "print working directory"– Ignacio Vazquez-AbramsOct 24, 2011 at 15:12
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oh ok, remembered wrong, thx for the hint :)– weberikOct 24, 2011 at 15:13
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idea: ask stackoverflow instead of google :-)– GyomOct 24, 2011 at 15:15
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4 Answers
You want readlink -f
.
$ cd /tmp
$ readlink -f ..
/
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This is the best answer for Linux. But in case anyone is wondering,
readlink -f
is not supported on OS X. Then you can usecd "$(dirname "${BASH_SOURCE[0]}")" && pwd -P
– jwfearnOct 8, 2014 at 0:30
While you can often get the full path of a directory using stat
, you can also use pwd -P
... however, it isn't much help unless you actually cd
to the directory you are interested in.
To get around this limitation without actually changing the current working directory, I've found it fine to just run that cd
in a sub-shell, as in:
THIS=`dirname $0` # Which is often "."
PARENT=$(
cd $THIS # At this point, we are sure we're in script's directory
dirname `pwd -P`
)
echo "PARENT=$PARENT"
When using in cmd line:
dirname $(pwd)
When using in shell script:
PROJ_DIR=$(dirname $(pwd))