[TUHS] Shell Level...

Terry Jones terry at jon.es
Tue Jan 21 09:51:33 AEST 2020


I also make new shells fairly regularly, about half the time because I wan
to set some variables that I don't want to have to reset.  Then if/when I
forget which window I was in, I can check with SHLVL (at least when using
bash, which I normally don't do).  But I'm normally in & out of the
sub-shells very quickly so don't often need to check.

Terry


On Mon, Jan 20, 2020 at 8:43 PM Theodore Y. Ts'o <tytso at mit.edu> wrote:

> On Mon, Jan 20, 2020 at 09:15:56AM +0100, markus schnalke wrote:
> > Hoi.
> >
> > [2020-01-19 14:22] Grant Taylor via TUHS <tuhs at minnie.tuhs.org>
> > >
> > > Have you ever used shell level, $SHLVL, in your weekly ~> daily use of
> Unix?
> >
> > What's the use of it? The only use of $SHLVL I can think of is the
> > answer to the question if ^D will close the last shell or just a
> > sub shell. I hardly ever ask myself this question. Probably that
> > starts to become relevant when you open sub shells frequently.
>
> <Raises hand>
>
> The normal reason why I'm starting subshells is because I need to
> control various environment variables on an ad-hoc basis.  It might be
> PYTHONPATH, KRB5CCNAME, GPG_AGENT_INFO, LD_LIBRARY_PATH, or some
> combination of the above.  Back when I was regularly using Kerberos
> root/admin bits, I had some hard-coded shell aliases to indicate
> explicitly I was in a shell that was using my
> tytso/root at ATHENA.MIT.EDU or tytso/admin at ATHENA.MIT.EDU kerberos
> tickets.
>
> But for ad-hoc use cases, SHLVL is great way to track whether I'm a
> non-standard shell environment.  For me, some use case probably comes
> up at least week or two.
>
> > With tmux or screen at hand, this use case is obsolete for me.
> > (Besides, my shell doesn't know about $SHLVL.)
>
> Before I was using bash regularly, I had hard-coded something like
> SHLVL in my .tcshrc.
>
>                                                 - Ted
>
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