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35.5. Predefined Environment Variables

We've said that environment variables are used to store information that you'd rather not worry about, and that there are a number of standard environment variables that many Unix programs use. These are often called "predefined" environment variables -- not because their values are predefined, but because their names and uses are predefined. Here are some important ones:

PATH (Section 35.6)
contains your command search path (Section 27.6). This is a list of directories in which the shell looks to find commands. It's usually set in one of your shell setup files (Section 3.3).

EDITOR and VISUAL
can be loaded with the name of your favorite editor. They're usually set in one of your shell setup files. Some programs distinguish between EDITOR (usually set to a line editor (Section 20.1) such as ed) and VISUAL (set to a full-screen editor like vi). Many people don't follow that convention; they set both to the same editor. (The Korn shell checks VISUAL and EDITOR, in that order, to determine your command editing mode (Section 30.14).)

PRINTER (Section 45.4) or LPDEST
can be loaded with the name of your default printer. This is quite useful at a site with many printers -- you don't need to tell lpr or lp (Section 45.2) which printer to use. (PRINTER works on systems that print with lpr , and LPDEST is for lp.) This variable is usually set in one of your shell setup files.

PWD
may contain the absolute pathname of your current directory. It's set automatically by the cd command in some Unix shells. PWD may be fooled by cding through symbolic links.

HOME (Section 31.11) (called LOGDIR on some systems)
contains the absolute pathname of your home directory. It's set automatically when you log in.

SHELL
contains the absolute pathname of your login shell. It's set automatically whenever you log in.

USER or LOGNAME
contains your username. It's set automatically when you log in.

TERM
contains the name of your terminal type in the termcap or terminfo database. It's usually set in a shell setup file. On Darwin, in the Terminal program, the TERM_PROGRAM variable is also set.

TERMCAP
is an environment variable that can be loaded with the complete termcap database entry for the terminal you are using. This may make some programs start up more quickly, but it's not necessary. It's set (under some conditions) by the tset command, which is usually run in your shell setup file.

ENV
contains the name of an initialization file to be executed whenever a new Korn shell is started. (See Section 3.3.) Korn shell only.

BASH_ENV
contains the name of an initialization file to be executed whenever a new bash shell is started. (See Section 3.3.) bash only. Often set to .bashrc by default.

PAGER
can be set to the name of your favorite page-by-page screen display program like less (Section 12.3) or more. (Programs like man (Section 2.1) use PAGER to determine which paging program to use if their output is longer than a single screen.)

PS1
contains the primary prompt (i.e., interactive command prompt) for Bourne-type shells. You also can set it in a particular shell, as a shell variable with the same name, but it won't be passed to subshells automatically. (The C shell doesn't store the prompt in an environment variable. It uses a shell variable called prompt because the .cshrc file (Section 3.3) is read to set up each instance of the shell. See Section 4.4.)

PS2 (Section 28.12)
contains the secondary prompt (used within compound commands like while and for) for Bourne shells. Some Bourne-type shells also use PS3 and PS4. As with PS1, these don't have to be stored in the environment.

MANPATH (Section 3.21)
if your man (Section 2.1) command supports it, is a colon-separated list of directories to search for manual pages.

TZ
contains the time zone. This is the name of a file in the zoneinfo directory that provides time zone information for your locality. It is read by commands such as date.

DISPLAY
is used by the X Window System (Section 1.22) to identify the display server (keyboard and screen handling program) that will be used for input and output by X applications. It may be set by ssh when you log into a remote system, as well.

INPUTRC
lets you choose a setup filename for the Readline library instead of the default $HOME/.inputrc.

LS_COLORS (or LS_COLOURS)
lists the colors used by the color ls command (Section 8.6).

Because Bourne-type shells don't make as strict a distinction between environment variables and shell variables as the C shell does, we've included a few things here that might not be on other people's lists.

But we haven't even tried to include everything. Here are two good ways to see what's there. One is to look at the end of a command's manual page (Section 2.1) in the ENVIRONMENT section (if there is one). Another is to list your current environment variables (with env or printenv (Section 35.3)) and make some guesses from the names and corresponding values.

We may have implied that environment variables are relatively constant (like your favorite editor). That's not true. For example, in a windowing environment, the current length of your window might be kept in an environment variable. That can change as often as you resize your window. What is true (fortunately) is exactly what we've said: environment variables store information that you'd rather not have to worry about.

--ML, JP, and SJC



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