I have an AWS credentials file that looks like this:
cat ~/.aws/credentials
[default]
aws_access_key_id = M0NKEY2TH3B1RD
aws_secret_access_key = yabbadabbadabbadabbadabbadabbadabbasaidthe
and an app on Linux that instead wants these credentials in the environment vars:
AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID=M0NKEY2TH3B1RD
AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY=yabbadabbadabbadabbadabbadabbadabbasaidthe
I understand it is trivial to make these vars always available by copy/paste to .bashrc
or some similar place, but I'd rather read the file that is there already and then only just-in-time, when needed.
This suggests possibly, as a small script or alias:
env $(sed -e 's/ //g' .aws/credentials | tail -n +2 | sed -e 's/[^=]+/\U&/') app
which unfortunately still sets lowercase env vars, and not UPPERCASE ENV VARS as needed.
aws_access_key_id=M0NKEY2TH3B1RD
aws_secret_access_key=yabbadabbadabbadabbadabbadabbadabbasaidthe
The commands within $()
first trims the spaces out of the credentials, then skips the line "[default]"
, but then unfortunately doesn't uppercase everything to the left to the equals.
The "make uppercase"\U&
part of the regexp, borrowed from an earlier SO answer, works fine if given something simpler to munch on.
echo aws_secret | sed -e 's/.*/\U&/'
AWS_SECRET
I thought there might be an escape issue and tried [^\=]+
instead of [^=]+
but that did not help. It would appear that the capturing regexp is not correct yet it should match every char up to the equals sign.
What's wrong with this regexp? Also, is there a simpler approach?