Approach 1: bash, zsh and a few other shells read a file whose name is in the ENV
environment variable after the usual rc files and before the interactive commands or the script to run. However bash only does this if invoked as sh, and zsh only does this if invoked as sh or ksh, which is rather limiting.
temp_rc=$(mktemp)
cat <<'EOF' >"$temp_rc"
mycommand --option
rm -- "$0"
EOF
ENV=$temp_rc sh
Approach 2: make the shell read a different rc file, which sources the usual rc file and contains a call to the program you want to run. For example, for bash:
temp_rc=$(mktemp)
cat <<'EOF' >"$temp_rc"
mycommand --option
if [ -e ~/.bashrc ]; then . ~/.bashrc; fi
rm -- "$0"
EOF
bash --rcfile "$temp_rc"
For zsh, the file has to be called .zshrc
, you can only specify a different directory.
temp_dir=$(mktemp -d)
cat <<'EOF' >"$temp_dir/.zshrc"
mycommand --option
if [ -e ~/.zshrc ]; then . ~/.zshrc; fi
rm -- $0; rmdir ${0:h}
EOF
ZDOTDIR=$temp_dir zsh