env(1) | run a program in a modified environment |
env(1P, 1p) | set the environment for command invocation |
ENV(1) | User Commands | ENV(1) |
env - run a program in a modified environment
env [OPTION]... [-] [NAME=VALUE]... [COMMAND [ARG]...]
Set each NAME to VALUE in the environment and run COMMAND.
Mandatory arguments to long options are mandatory for short options too.
A mere - implies -i. If no COMMAND, print the resulting environment.
SIG may be a signal name like 'PIPE', or a signal number like '13'. Without SIG, all known signals are included. Multiple signals can be comma-separated. An empty SIG argument is a no-op.
The -S option allows specifying multiple parameters in a script. Running a script named 1.pl containing the following first line:
#!/usr/bin/env -S perl -w -T ...
Will execute perl -w -T 1.pl .
Without the '-S' parameter the script will likely fail with:
/usr/bin/env: 'perl -w -T': No such file or directory
See the full documentation for more details.
This option allows setting a signal handler to its default action, which is not possible using the traditional shell trap command. The following example ensures that seq will be terminated by SIGPIPE no matter how this signal is being handled in the process invoking the command.
sh -c 'env --default-signal=PIPE seq inf | head -n1'
POSIX's exec(3p) pages says:
Written by Richard Mlynarik, David MacKenzie, and Assaf Gordon.
GNU coreutils online help:
<https://www.gnu.org/software/coreutils/>
Report any translation bugs to
<https://translationproject.org/team/>
Copyright © 2023 Free Software Foundation, Inc. License
GPLv3+: GNU GPL version 3 or later
<https://gnu.org/licenses/gpl.html>.
This is free software: you are free to change and redistribute it. There is NO
WARRANTY, to the extent permitted by law.
sigaction(2), sigprocmask(2), signal(7)
Full documentation
<https://www.gnu.org/software/coreutils/env>
or available locally via: info '(coreutils) env invocation'
February 2024 | GNU coreutils 9.4 |