557

In a given shell, normally I'd set a variable or variables and then run a command. Recently I learned about the concept of prepending a variable definition to a command:

FOO=bar somecommand someargs

This works... kind of. It doesn't work when you're changing a LC_* variable (which seems to affect the command, but not its arguments, for example, [a-z] char ranges) or when piping output to another command thusly:

FOO=bar somecommand someargs | somecommand2  # somecommand2 is unaware of FOO

I can prepend somecommand2 with FOO=bar as well, which works, but which adds unwanted duplication, and it doesn't help with arguments that are interpreted depending on the variable (for example, [a-z]).

So, what's a good way to do this on a single line?

I'm thinking something on the order of:

FOO=bar (somecommand someargs | somecommand2)  # Doesn't actually work

I got lots of good answers! The goal is to keep this a one-liner, preferably without using export. The method using a call to Bash was best overall, though the parenthetical version with export in it was a little more compact. The method of using redirection rather than a pipe is interesting as well.

6
  • 2
    (T=$(date) echo $T) will work
    – vp_arth
    Nov 3, 2015 at 12:28
  • In the context of cross-platform (incl. windows) scripts or npm-based projects (js or else), you might want to take a look at the cross-env module.
    – Frank N
    Sep 19, 2017 at 7:34
  • 12
    I was hoping one of the answers would also explain why this only sort of works, i.e. why it's not equivalent to exporting the variable before the call. Oct 18, 2017 at 11:03
  • 5
    The why is explained here: stackoverflow.com/questions/13998075/… Oct 18, 2017 at 15:56
  • Why don't you want to use export provided that a side effect is not to pollute your environment? In other words, why does it matter if export is used if the variable is not set after the command(s) finish executing. eg: In a subshell. Nov 24, 2022 at 12:23

6 Answers 6

472
FOO=bar bash -c 'somecommand someargs | somecommand2'
10
  • 3
    This satisfies my criteria (one-liner without needing "export")... I take it there's no way to do this without calling "bash -c" (e.g., creative use of parentheses)? Jun 1, 2012 at 19:44
  • 2
    @MartyMacGyver: None that I can think of. It won't work with curly braces either. Jun 1, 2012 at 19:45
  • 8
    Note that if you need to run your somecommand as sudo, you need to pass sudo the -E flag to pass though variables. Because variables can introduce vulnerabilities. stackoverflow.com/a/8633575/1695680 Mar 24, 2015 at 20:17
  • 17
    Note that if your command already has two levels of quotes then this method becomes extremely unsatisfactory because of quote hell. In that situation exporting in subshell is much better.
    – Pushpendre
    Jan 22, 2016 at 19:07
  • 1
    Odd: on OSX, FOO_X=foox bash -c 'echo $FOO_X' works as expected but with specific var names it fails: DYLD_X=foox bash -c 'echo $DYLD_X' echos blank. both work using eval instead of bash -c
    – mwag
    Apr 24, 2019 at 22:49
322

How about exporting the variable, but only inside the subshell?:

(export FOO=bar && somecommand someargs | somecommand2)

Keith has a point, to unconditionally execute the commands, do this:

(export FOO=bar; somecommand someargs | somecommand2)
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    @MartyMacGyver: && executes the left command, then executes the right command only if the left command succeeded. ; executes both commands unconditionally. The Windows batch (cmd.exe) equivalent of ; is &. Jun 1, 2012 at 20:37
  • 2
    In zsh I don't seem to need the export for this version: (FOO=XXX ; echo FOO=$FOO) ; echo FOO=$FOO yields FOO=XXX\nFOO=\n.
    – rampion
    Apr 16, 2013 at 19:45
  • 4
    @PopePoopinpants: why not use source (aka .) in that case? Also, the backticks shouldn't be used anymore these days and this is one of the reasons why, using $(command) is waaaaay safer. Jan 8, 2014 at 1:04
  • 6
    So simple, yet so elegant. And I like your answer better than the accepted answer, as it will start a sub shell equal to my current one (which may not be bash but could be something else, e.g. dash) and I don't run into any trouble if I must use quotes within the command args (someargs).
    – Mecki
    May 1, 2014 at 20:18
  • 1
    If you want to set multiple env, you can run (export FOO1='bar1'; export FOO2='bar2'; command...)
    – Honghao Z
    Oct 18, 2020 at 8:04
79

Use env.

For example, env FOO=BAR command. Note that the environment variables will be restored/unchanged again when command finishes executing.

Just be careful about about shell substitution happening, i.e. if you want to reference $FOO explicitly on the same command line, you may need to escape it so that your shell interpreter doesn't perform the substitution before it runs env.

$ export FOO=BAR
$ env FOO=FUBAR bash -c 'echo $FOO'
FUBAR
$ echo $FOO
BAR
3
  • 2
    This is the exactly correct answer, the entire purpose of env is to solve the stated question.
    – bradw2k
    Jan 30, 2022 at 18:25
  • I tested it and it works for me, thanks! Jan 18 at 12:47
  • Using env to set vars for a command is kinda pointless if you are in a shell since you can remove env from the command and it will accomplish the same thing. Jun 6 at 13:50
61

You can also use eval:

FOO=bar eval 'somecommand someargs | somecommand2'

Since this answer with eval doesn't seem to please everyone, let me clarify something: when used as written, with the single quotes, it is perfectly safe. It is good as it will not launch an external process (like the accepted answer) nor will it execute the commands in an extra subshell (like the other answer).

As we get a few regular views, it's probably good to give an alternative to eval that will please everyone, and has all the benefits (and perhaps even more!) of this quick eval “trick”. Just use a function! Define a function with all your commands:

mypipe() {
    somecommand someargs | somecommand2
}

and execute it with your environment variables like this:

FOO=bar mypipe
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    @Alfe: Did you also downvote the accepted answer? because it exhibits the same “problems” as eval. Jan 28, 2016 at 12:51
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    @Alfe: unfortunately I don't agree with your critique. This command is perfectly safe. You really sound like a guy who once read eval is evil without understanding what's evil about eval. And maybe you're not really understanding this answer after all (and really there's nothing wrong with it). On the same level: would you say that ls is bad because for file in $(ls) is ,bad? (and yeah, you didn't downvote the accepted answer, and you didn't leave a comment either). SO is such a weird and absurd place sometimes. Jan 29, 2016 at 8:43
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    @Alfe: when I say You really sound like a guy who once read eval is evil without understanding what's evil about eval, I'm referring to your sentence: This answer lacks all the warnings and explanations necessary when talking about eval. eval is not bad or dangerous; no more than bash -c. Jan 29, 2016 at 8:54
  • 1
    Votes aside, the comment provided @Alfe does somehow imply that the accepted answer is somehow safer. What would have been more helpful would have been for you to describe what you believe to be unsafe about the usage of eval. In the answer provided the args have been single quoted protecting from variable expansion, so I see no problem with the answer.
    – Brett Ryan
    Jun 27, 2016 at 5:42
  • 1
    I removed my comments to concentrate my concern in one new comment: eval is a security issue in general (like bash -c but less obvious), so the dangers should be mentioned in an answer proposing its use. Careless users may take the answer (FOO=bar eval …) and apply it to their situation so that it raises problems. But it obviously was more important to the answerer to figure out whether I downvoted his and/or other answers than to improve anything. As I wrote before, fairness shouldn't be the main concern; being no worse than any other given answer also is irregardless.
    – Alfe
    Jun 27, 2016 at 12:39
26

A simple approach is to make use of ;

For example:

ENV=prod; ansible-playbook -i inventories/$ENV --extra-vars "env=$ENV"  deauthorize_users.yml --check

command1; command2 executes command2 after executing command1, sequentially. It does not matter whether the commands were successful or not.

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    It works because it defines ENV in the environment of the same shell in which the commands that follow the semicolon execute. How this differs from the other answers, though, is that this one defines ENV for all subsequent references in the shell and not just those on the same line. I believe that the original question intended to alter the environment only for the references on the same line. Aug 23, 2021 at 18:34
  • 1
    adding ;unset ENV to the same line will make it one liner. but I ignored it as it doesn't make sense.
    – Akhil
    Jan 18, 2022 at 17:04
-5

Use a shell script:

#!/bin/bash
# myscript
FOO=bar
somecommand someargs | somecommand2

> ./myscript
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  • 22
    You still need export; otherwise $FOO will be a shell variable, not an environment variable, and therefore not visible to somecommand or somecommand2. Jun 1, 2012 at 19:41
  • 1
    It'd work but it defeats the purpose of having a one-line command (I'm trying to learn more creative ways to avoid multi-liners and/or scripts for relatively simple cases). And what @Keith said, though at least the export would stay scoped to the script. Jun 1, 2012 at 19:47
  • @KeithThompson Your comment had something new to teach me. I never thought of shell vs environment variables. I used to think of global vs local environment variables. Now I know the correct terminology. May 9, 2022 at 19:50

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