Reputation: 2639
I am writing a bash script in which a small python script is embedded. I want to pass a variable from python to bash. After a few search I only found method based on os.environ
.
I just cannot make it work. Here is my simple test.
#!/bin/bash
export myvar='first'
python - <<EOF
import os
os.environ["myvar"] = "second"
EOF
echo $myvar
I expected it to output second
, however it still outputs first
. What is wrong with my script? Also is there any way to pass variable without export
?
summary
Thanks for all answers. Here is my summary.
A python script embedded inside bash will run as child process which by definition is not able to affect parent bash environment.
The solution is to pass assignment strings out from python and eval
it subsequently in bash.
An example is
#!/bin/bash
a=0
b=0
assignment_string=$(python -<<EOF
var1=1
var2=2
print('a={};b={}'.format(var1,var2))
EOF
)
eval $assignment_string
echo $a
echo $b
Upvotes: 10
Views: 9104
Reputation: 8406
Unless Python is used to do some kind of operation on the original data, there's no need to import anything. The answer could be as lame as:
myvar=$(python - <<< "print 'second'") ; echo "$myvar"
Suppose for some reason Python is needed to spit out a bunch of bash
variables and assignments, or (cautiously) compose code on-the-fly. An eval
method:
myvar=first
eval "$(python - <<< "print('myvar=second')" )"
echo "$myvar"
Upvotes: 5
Reputation: 3721
There are a few "dirty" ways of getting something like this done. Here is an example:
#!/bin/bash
myvar=$(python - <<EOF
print "second"
EOF
)
echo "$myvar"
The output of the python process is stored in a bash variable. It gets a bit messy if you want to return more complex stuff, though.
Upvotes: 2
Reputation: 31
You can make python return val and pass it to bash:
pfile.py
print(100)
bfile.sh
var=$(python pfile.py)
echo "$var"
output: 100
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 271
Well, this may not be what you want but one option could be running the other batch commands in python using subprocess
import subprocess
x =400
subprocess.call(["echo", str(x)])
But this is more of a temporary work around. The other solutions are more along what you are looking for. Hope I was able to help!
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 85683
Complementing the useful Cyrus's comment in question, you just can't do it. Here is why,
Setting an environment variable sets it only for the current process and any child processes it launches. os.environ
will set it only for the shell that is running to execute the command you provided. When that command finishes, the shell goes away, and so does the environment variable.
You can pretty much do that with a shell script itself and just source it to reflect it on the current shell.
Upvotes: 3