The Solution
Here is my approach: parse the bash file myself and process only variable assignment lines such as:
FOO="/path/to/foo"
Here is the code:
import shlex
def parse_shell_var(line):
"""
Parse such lines as:
FOO="My variable foo"
:return: a tuple of var name and var value, such as
('FOO', 'My variable foo')
"""
return shlex.split(line, posix=True)[0].split('=', 1)
if __name__ == '__main__':
with open('shell_vars.sh') as f:
shell_vars = dict(parse_shell_var(line) for line in f if '=' in line)
print(shell_vars)
How It Works
Take a look at this snippet:
shell_vars = dict(parse_shell_var(line) for line in f if '=' in line)
This line iterates through the lines in the shell script, only process those lines that has the equal sign (not a fool-proof way to detect variable assignment, but the simplest). Next, run those lines into the function parse_shell_var
which uses shlex.split
to correctly handle the quotes (or the lack thereof). Finally, the pieces are assembled into a dictionary. The output of this script is:
{'MOO': '/dont/have/a/cow', 'FOO': 'my variable foo', 'BAR': 'My variable bar'}
Here is the contents of shell_vars.sh:
FOO='my variable foo'
BAR="My variable bar"
MOO=/dont/have/a/cow
echo $FOO
Discussion
This approach has a couple of advantages:
- It does not execute the shell (either in bash or in Python), which avoids any side-effect
- Consequently, it is safe to use, even if the origin of the shell script is unknown
- It correctly handles values with or without quotes
This approach is not perfect, it has a few limitations: