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How to programmatically set a permanent environment variable in Linux?

I am writing a little install script for some software. All it does is unpack a target tar, and then i wa开发者_C百科nt to permanently set some environment variables - principally the location of the unpacked libs and updating $PATH. Do I need to programmatically edit the .bashrc file, adding the appropriate entries to the end for example, or is there another way? What's standard practice?

Edit: The package includes a number of run scripts (20+) that all use these named environment variables, so I need to set them somehow (the variable names have been chosen such that a collision is extremely unlikely)


LSB-compliant (see spec) practice is to create a shell script in /etc/profile.d/ folder.

Name it after your application (and make sure that the name is unique), make sure that the name ends with .sh (you might want to add scripts for other shells as well) and export the variables you need in the script. All *.sh scripts from that directory are read at user login--the same time /etc/profile is sourced.

Note that this is not enforced by bash; rather, it's an agreement of sorts.


Standard practice is to install into directories already in the path and in the standard library directory, so there is no need to update these variables.

Updating .bashrc is a bit failure-prone, among other things; what if a user uses a different file or shell?


You can also generate and install a script that sets those variables. Users of your package then source that script or copy its contents to their own shell init file.

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