As merlyn points out, perlfaq8 answers this. However, it then refers you to another FAQ - comp.unix.questions. That can be found via google easily enough. Just FYI - I use this at work all the time. I have a table that I transform into aliases at work such that I can have these aliases do the "right thing" on AIX, Sun, HP, and Linux boxes. I do that via perl - your path change would fit the same way.
And then the mkAliases perl script does something like this:eval `/common/tools/mkAliases`
Note that the most important thing, which I found by trial and error, is that semicolon at the end of each string. The \n's are there in case I want to look at the output, but are ignored by the shell. (Well, not strictly true, but for all practical purposes, it's close enough.)my $table = read_table(); foreach my $key (keys %$table) { print "alias $key '$table->{$key} $current_user';\n"; print "alias ${key}r '$table->{$key} root';\n"; # etc. }
What this is doing, then, is creating a shell script in perl that the shell can then run to make the changes to the current shell process.
In reply to Re: Setting Environment Variables in Linux
by Tanktalus
in thread Setting Environment Variables in Linux
by jungl3thug
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