A question on basics : While tuning environment variables for a program launched from a script, I ended up with somewhat strange behaviour with sh (which seems to be actually linked to bash) : variable setting seems to mess up with command-line parameters.
Could somebody explain why does this happen?
A simple script:
#! /bin/sh
# Messes with $1 ??
set ANT_OPTS=-Xmx512M
export ANT_OPTS
# Works
# export ANT_OPTS=-Xmx512M
echo "0 = $0"
echo "1 = $1"
When I run this with the upper alternative (set + export), the result is as following:
$ ./test.sh foo
0 = ./test.sh
1 = ANT_OPTS=-Xmx512M
But with lower alternative (export straight), the result is as I supposed:
$ ./test.sh foo
0 = ./test.sh
1 = foo
There is surely logical explanation, I just haven't figured it out yet. Somebody who does have idea?
br, Touko
ANT_OPTS=-Xmx512m\nexport ANT_OPTS– Paul Tomblin May 26 '10 at 13:42setis indeed a bash built-in (though you're of course right that it's not what you want to use here). gnu.org/software/bash/manual/bashref.html#The-Set-Builtin – Jefromi May 26 '10 at 13:43#!/bin/shthen you shouldn't be using things that are bash extensions, it should be straight Bourne Shell. If you want to use bash extensions, then you should state so up front with#!/bin/bash– Paul Tomblin May 26 '10 at 13:47