Nicu Stiurca
Nicu Stiurca

Reputation: 8697

can't source script in a current directory

So apparently, I can't source a script if that script is in the current directory. For example,

# source some/dir/script.sh
Ok

works fine, but if I'm in the same dir as the script, it errors out:

# cd some/dir
# source script.sh
-sh: source: script.sh: file not found

What gives? Is the only way around this to change directory?

I'm using bash v4.2.10 on Angstrom Linux if that's relevant.

Upvotes: 11

Views: 7100

Answers (3)

Bryan H.
Bryan H.

Reputation: 86

This can happen when the file is in the wrong format. I FTP'd a Korn Shell script from Windows. I could edit it, but got "not found [No such file or directory]" when I tried to run it. It turned out it was in DOS format, which was indicated in the file name line when I edited it in vi. After I re-FTP'd it, making sure it was being transferred as ASCII, it ran fine.

Upvotes: 0

Davide Berra
Davide Berra

Reputation: 6568

Quoting the source man page:

source filename [arguments]

....

If filename does not contain a slash, file names in PATH are used to find the directory containing file- name.

So... source is trying to search your script.sh in the folders contained in PATH.

If you want to source a file in the current folder use

source ./script.sh

Upvotes: 20

hd1
hd1

Reputation: 34677

Use an absolute path -- source /root/path/to/some/dir/script.sh -- should sort you.

Upvotes: 1

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