ChatGPT解决这个技术问题 Extra ChatGPT

Set environment variables on Mac OS X Lion

When someone says "edit your .plist file" or "your .profile" or ".bash_profile" etc, this just confuses me. I have no idea where these files are, how to create them if I have to do that, etc, and also why there seem to be so many different ones (why? Do they do different things?)

So could someone please explain very patiently to a previous Windows user (wanting desperately to become more familiar with the pleasant if initially somewhat confusing OS X world) how to do this step by step?

I need the variables to be set both for GUI applications and command line applications, and at the moment it's for an ant script that needs the variables, but there will most likely be other needs as well.

Please note that I have Lion too, since many of the answers you get Googling seem to be outdated for Lion...

Also note that I have practically zero experience using the Terminal. I'm willing to learn, but please explain for a novice...

Non of the answer will work if you try to read it from some application like spring.

C
Community

First, one thing to recognize about OS X is that it is built on Unix. This is where the .bash_profile comes in. When you start the Terminal app in OS X you get a bash shell by default. The bash shell comes from Unix and when it loads it runs the .bash_profile script. You can modify this script for your user to change your settings. This file is located at:

~/.bash_profile

Update for Mavericks

OS X Mavericks does not use the environment.plist - at least not for OS X windows applications. You can use the launchd configuration for windowed applications. The .bash_profile is still supported since that is part of the bash shell used in Terminal.

Lion and Mountain Lion Only

OS X windowed applications receive environment variables from the your environment.plist file. This is likely what you mean by the ".plist" file. This file is located at:

~/.MacOSX/environment.plist

If you make a change to your environment.plist file then OS X windows applications, including the Terminal app, will have those environment variables set. Any environment variable you set in your .bash_profile will only affect your bash shells.

Generally I only set variables in my .bash_profile file and don't change the .plist file (or launchd file on Mavericks). Most OS X windowed applications don't need any custom environment. Only when an application actually needs a specific environment variable do I change the environment.plist (or launchd file on Mavericks).

It sounds like what you want is to change the environment.plist file, rather than the .bash_profile.

One last thing, if you look for those files, I think you will not find them. If I recall correctly, they were not on my initial install of Lion.

Edit: Here are some instructions for creating a plist file.

Open Xcode Select File -> New -> New File... Under Mac OS X select Resources Choose a plist file Follow the rest of the prompts

To edit the file, you can Control-click to get a menu and select Add Row. You then can add a key value pair. For environment variables, the key is the environment variable name and the value is the actual value for that environment variable.

Once the plist file is created you can open it with Xcode to modify it anytime you wish.


Ok, thanks. I think I have understood that the tilde means my so called home folder, right (i.e. /Users/Anders in my case)? So if they do not exist, I should create a new empty text file, with the names you mentioned (will I be allowed to create a file that starts with a dot?)? And then add what in those files to set an environment variable? For instance, I need to add a variable AHF_OPT which should point to a folder needed by an ant script, how do I add that in these two files?
Two things to try: First, is your pasted string has an incorrect semicolon after ".dtd>" Maybe it is a copy and paste error, but I had to remove it to get Xcode to read the file. Second, you may need to log out and back in for the effects to take place.
Also it's useful to know about ~/.bashrc. ~/.bashrc file runs every time you open a new non-login bash shell such as xterm / aterm, and ~/.bash_profile runs only with login shells i.e when you first log in into system.
Found a nice clear explanation about adding environment.plist here developer.apple.com/library/mac/#qa/qa1067/_index.html.
Great answer, with the exception of the awkward phrase "OS X windows application." That's even worse than referring to X11 as "X Windows." Better to call it Aqua or just ".app applications".
K
Karl Hill

Your .profile or .bash_profile are simply files that are present in your "home" folder. If you open a Finder window and click your account name in the Favorites pane, you won't see them. If you open a Terminal window and type ls to list files you still won't see them. However, you can find them by using ls -a in the terminal. Or if you open your favorite text editor (say TextEdit since it comes with OS X) and do File->Open and then press Command+Shift+. and click on your account name (home folder) you will see them as well. If you do not see them, then you can create one in your favorite text editor.

Now, adding environment variables is relatively straightforward and remarkably similar to windows conceptually. In your .profile just add, one per line, the variable name and its value as follows:

export JAVA_HOME=/Library/Java/Home
export JRE_HOME=/Library/Java/Home

etc.

If you are modifying your "PATH" variable, be sure to include the system's default PATH that was already set for you:

export PATH=$PATH:/path/to/my/stuff

Now here is the quirky part, you can either open a new Terminal window to have the new variables take effect, or you will need to type .profile or .bash_profile to reload the file and have the contents be applied to your current Terminal's environment.

You can check that your changes took effect using the "set" command in your Terminal. Just type set (or set | more if you prefer a paginated list) and be sure what you added to the file is there.

As for adding environment variables to GUI apps, that is normally not necessary and I'd like to hear more about what you are specifically trying to do to better give you an answer for it.


Thanks, I didn't quite understand the last part though, I either have to open a Terminal window to have them set, or type .profile? But wouldn't I have to open a Terminal window to type .profile? And if they are automatically set just by opening a Terminal window, then why do I need to type that...? And when I have opened one, will they be set permanently then? I probably misunderstood you, because not even my question makes sense to me...
If you have a Terminal window open prior to changing your profile, those changes will not get reflected in the existing Terminal's environment. Your quick solution is to just open a new Terminal window. That's all. Every new window will have everything in the .profile set on it. Always. The way to fix old, already open windows is to type ". .profile" 2 periods, 1 space between them. The "set" command is to set environment variables that die when you end the session you set them in. Using "set" without arguments lists the variables currently set.
Ahhh, I see the confusion I created. If you had no terminal windows open, then each new window will load the .profile when it is opened and you need to do nothing. If on the other hand you had edited the .profile in your terminal window or had terminal windows open previously and wanted the changes in them, then you need to simply type . .profile to load them.
I can't make it work. I added a file .bash_profile under /Users/Anders, with the line export AXF_DIR=/Applications/Antenna/AHFormatterV53, but the ant process still doesn't find a variable AXF_DIR... Also, I tried the set command in Terminal, and got a lot of info, but nothing about this variable. Note that I also restarted the system just to be sure, and I also started a new Terminal window...
Try naming it just .profile. I just peeked at a machine I recently bought and they seem to be using .profile these days and not .bash_profile
j
jonphipps

Here's a bit more information specifically regarding the PATH variable in Lion OS 10.7.x:

If you need to set the PATH globally, the PATH is built by the system in the following order:

Parsing the contents of the file /private/etc/paths, one path per line Parsing the contents of the folder /private/etc/paths.d. Each file in that folder can contain multiple paths, one path per line. Load order is determined by the file name first, and then the order of the lines in the file. A setenv PATH statement in /private/etc/launchd.conf, which will append that path to the path already built in #1 and #2 (you must not use $PATH to reference the PATH variable that has been built so far). But, setting the PATH here is completely unnecessary given the other two options, although this is the place where other global environment variables can be set for all users.

These paths and variables are inherited by all users and applications, so they are truly global -- logging out and in will not reset these paths -- they're built for the system and are created before any user is given the opportunity to login, so changes to these require a system restart to take effect.

BTW, a clean install of OS 10.7.x Lion doesn't have an environment.plist that I can find, so it may work but may also be deprecated.


Yep, thanks a lot! This is a bit more involved than a simple .profile.
If you use the paths.d way and you have a path that contains folders containing spaces, just leave them unescaped. if you try to escape them (which is common practice i think?) it doesn't work (at least for me). i read this here:sweeting.org/mark/blog/2008/05/26/… (search for 'spaces'). Hope this helps anyone else!
@MichaelTrouw Your comment helped me a tonne! I was adding escapes for the spaces, but that wasn't required! I am on Mac OS 10.9.2
@jon, How does paths.d differ from paths? Also, does the former override the latter?
1
1.21 gigawatts
echo $PATH

it prints current path value

Then do vim ~/.bash_profile and write

export PATH=$PATH:/new/path/to/be/added

here you are appending to the old path, so preserves the old path and adds your new path to it

then do

source ~/.bash_profile

this will execute it and add the path

then again check with

echo $PATH

the "vim" command should be vim ~/.bash_profile I tried to edit the post but SO tells me edits must be 6 characters :/
why run source when open the terminal is not necessary
w
wired00

Unfortunately none of these answers solved the specific problem I had.

Here's a simple solution without having to mess with bash. In my case, it was getting gradle to work (for Android Studio).

Btw, These steps relate to OSX (Mountain Lion 10.8.5)

Open up Terminal.

Run the following command: sudo nano /etc/paths (or sudo vim /etc/paths for vim)

Go to the bottom of the file, and enter the path you wish to add.

Hit control-x to quit.

Enter 'Y' to save the modified buffer.

Open a new terminal window then type: echo $PATH

You should see the new path appended to the end of the PATH

I got these details from this post:

http://architectryan.com/2012/10/02/add-to-the-path-on-mac-os-x-mountain-lion/#.UkED3rxPp3Q

I hope that can help someone else


After 3 hours of trying to understand and make the export whatever work I tried this and it worked. One step is missing. I'll add it.
@1.21gigawatts ahh great, glad it helped you out, thanks for the edits
Update: This works but will have to restart system after editing.
Perfect for MacOS 10.12.X
C
Community

Simplified Explanation

This post/question is kind of old, so I will answer a simplified version for OS X Lion users. By default, OSX Lion does not have any of the following files:

~/.bashrc

~/.bash_profile

~/.profile

At most, if you've done anything in the terminal you might see ~/.bash_history

What It Means

You must create the file to set your default bash commands (commonly in ~/.bashrc). To do this, use any sort of editor, though it's more simple to do it within the terminal:

%> emacs .profile [from w/in emacs type:] source ~/.bashrc [from w/in emacs type:] Ctrl + x Ctrl + s (to save the file) [from w/in emacs type:] Ctrl + x Ctrl + c (to close emacs) %> emacs .bashrc [from w/in emacs type/paste all your bash commands, save, and exit]

The next time you quit and reload the terminal, it should load all your bash preferences. For good measure, it's usually a good idea to separate your commands into useful file names. For instance, from within ~/.bashrc, you should have a source ~/.bash_aliases and put all your alias commands in ~/.bash_aliases.


Why did they removed it btw?
@Pacerier I’m not sure if they removed it, but without customizations those files aren’t necessary. The issue is that for anyone new to the terminal/shell, OSX, or BSD, those files are not obvious and thus more difficult to learn about.
So what did they replaced it with?
They’re optional, so they didn’t replace it with anything; it’s an RC file
G
Gilimanjaro

What worked for me is to create a .launchd.conf with the variables I needed:

setenv FOO barbaz

This file is read by launchd at login. You can add a variable 'on the fly' to the running launchd using:

launchctl setenv FOO barbaz`

In fact, .launchd.cond simply contains launchctl commands.

Variables set this way seem to be present in GUI applications properly.

If you happen to be trying to set your LANG or LC_ variables in this way, and you happen to be using iTerm2, make sure you disable the 'Set locale variables automatically' setting under the Terminal tab of the Profile you're using. That seems to override launchd's environment variables, and in my case was setting a broken LC_CTYPE causing issues on remote servers (which got passed the variable).

(The environment.plist still seems to work on my Lion though. You can use the RCenvironment preference pane to maintain the file instead of manually editing it or required Xcode. Still seems to work on Lion, though it's last update is from the Snow Leopard era. Makes it my personally preferred method.)


By far the easiest answer. Note that you need to close the terminal app entirely and reopen it for any changes to take effect - not just close a single terminal window.
This answer is far too stripped down to be of use to OP. Create how? Create where?
a clearer and more up-to-date answer: stackoverflow.com/questions/135688/…
C
Charaf JRA

Setup your PATH environment variable on Mac OS

Open the Terminal program (this is in your Applications/Utilites folder by default). Run the following command

touch ~/.bash_profile; open ~/.bash_profile

This will open the file in the your default text editor.

For ANDROID SDK as example :

You need to add the path to your Android SDK platform-tools and tools directory. In my example I will use "/Development/android-sdk-macosx" as the directory the SDK is installed in. Add the following line:

export PATH=${PATH}:/Development/android-sdk-macosx/platform-tools:/Development/android-sdk-macosx/tools

Save the file and quit the text editor. Execute your .bash_profile to update your PATH.

source ~/.bash_profile

Now everytime you open the Terminal program you PATH will included the Android SDK.


Thanks. Don't know why, but only this solution worked for me, not the ones above.
I added environment variable as you said but i cannot use it in xcode, do you have an idea ? I need to use it in header search path. Thanks in advance.
C
Community

Adding Path Variables to OS X Lion

This was pretty straight forward and worked for me, in terminal:

$echo "export PATH=$PATH:/path/to/whatever" >> .bash_profile #replace "/path/to/whatever" with the location of what you want to add to your bash profile, i.e: $ echo "export PATH=$PATH:/usr/local/Cellar/nginx/1.0.12/sbin" >> .bash_profile 
$. .bash_profile #restart your bash shell

A similar response was here: http://www.mac-forums.com/forums/os-x-operating-system/255324-problems-setting-path-variable-lion.html#post1317516


It's worth noting that you'll need to run this from the root of your home directory. Make sure that's where your at by issuing cd with no arguments or cd ~/.
There's also no need to restart the shell. Use source .bash_profile.
I like this method because it's short. But it does not seem to work. I did echo "export PATH=$PATH:/Applications/XAMPP/xamppfiles/bin/mysql" >> .bash_profile Then the only time I can do mysql -u root -p is if I am already running at root. Whereas I can use Applications/XAMPP/xamppfiles/bin/mysql -u root -p anywhere. I tried both mentioned restart approach: Yaw's and @ephsmith's.
Also, if I do ech $PATH as root (i.e. sudo su) I get /usr/bin:/bin:/usr/sbin:/sbin:/usr/local/bin:/Applications/XAMPP/xamppfiles/bin. When I am not root I get /usr/bin:/bin:/usr/sbin:/sbin:/usr/local/bin
The $PATH variable is user specific (root is a user).
J
James Graham

Open Terminal:

vi ~/.bash_profile

Apply changing to system (no need restart computer):

source ~/.bash_profile

(Also work with macOS Sierra 10.12.1)


C
Community

I had problem with Eclipse (started as GUI, not from script) on Maverics that it did not take custom PATH. I tried all the methods mentioned above to no avail. Finally I found the simplest working answer based on hints from here:

Go to /Applications/eclipse/Eclipse.app/Contents folder Edit Info.plist file with text editor (or XCode), add LSEnvironment dictionary for environment variable with full path. Note that it includes also /usr/bin etc: LSEnvironment PATH /usr/bin:/bin:/usr/sbin:/sbin:/dev/android-ndk-r9b CFBundleDisplayName Eclipse ... Reload parameters for app with /System/Library/Frameworks/CoreServices.framework/Frameworks/LaunchServices.fra‌​mework/Support/lsregister -v -f /Applications/eclipse/Eclipse.app Restart Eclipse


S
Sumit Pokhrel

Let me illustrate you from my personal example in a very redundant way.

First after installing JDK, make sure it's installed. Sometimes macOS or Linux automatically sets up environment variable for you unlike Windows. But that's not the case always. So let's check it. The line immediately after echo $JAVA_HOME would be empty if the environment variable is not set. It must be empty in your case. Now we need to check if we have bash_profile file. You saw that in my case we already have bash_profile. If not we have to create a bash_profile file. Create a bash_profile file. Check again to make sure bash_profile file is there. Now let's open bash_profile file. macOS opens it using it's default TextEdit program. This is the file where environment variables are kept. If you have opened a new bash_profile file, it must be empty. In my case, it was already set for python programming language and Anaconda distribution. Now, i need to add environment variable for Java which is just adding the first line. YOU MUST TYPE the first line VERBATIM. JUST the first line. Save and close the TextEdit. Then close the terminal. Open the terminal again. Let's check if the environment variable is set up.


R
Rob in Katy

I took the idiot route. Added these to the end of /etc/profile

for environment in `find /etc/environments.d -type f`
do
     . $environment
done

created a folder /etc/environments create a file in it called "oracle" or "whatever" and added the stuff I needed set globally to it.

/etc$ cat /etc/environments.d/Oracle

export PATH=$PATH:/Library/Oracle/instantclient_11_2
export DYLD_LIBRARY_PATH=/Library/Oracle/instantclient_11_2
export SQLPATH=/Library/Oracle/instantclient_11_2
export PATH=$PATH:/Library/Oracle/instantclient_11_2
export TNS_ADMIN=/Library/Oracle/instantclient_11_2/network/admin

P
Photovore

More detail, which may perhaps be helpful to someone:

Due to my own explorations, I now know how to set environment variables in 7 of 8 different ways. I was trying to get an envar through to an application I'm developing under Xcode. I set "tracer" envars using these different methods to tell me which ones get it into the scope of my application. From the below, you can see that editing the "scheme" in Xcode to add arguments works, as does "putenv". What didn't set it in that scope: ~/.MACOS/environment.plist, app-specific plist, .profile, and adding a build phase to run a custom script (I found another way in Xcode [at least] to set one but forgot what I called the tracer and can't find it now; maybe it's on another machine....)

GPU_DUMP_DEVICE_KERNEL is 3

GPU_DUMP_TRK_ENVPLIST is (null)

GPU_DUMP_TRK_APPPLIST is (null)

GPU_DUMP_TRK_DOTPROFILE is (null)

GPU_DUMP_TRK_RUNSCRIPT is (null)

GPU_DUMP_TRK_SCHARGS is 1

GPU_DUMP_TRK_PUTENV is 1

... on the other hand, if I go into Terminal and say "set", it seems the only one it gets is the one from .profile (I would have thought it would pick up environment.plist also, and I'm sure once I did see a second tracer envar in Terminal, so something's probably gone wonky since then. Long day....)


J
Jerry Chong

It is recommended to check default terminal shell before setting any environment variables, via following commands:

$ echo $SHELL
/bin/zsh

If your default terminal is /bin/zsh (Z Shell) like in my case (Personally prefer Z Shell), then you should set these environment variable in ~/.zshenv file with following contents (In this example, setting JAVA_HOME environment variable, but same applies to others):

export JAVA_HOME="$(/usr/libexec/java_home)"

Similarly, any other terminal type not mentioned above, you should set environment variable in its respective terminal env file.


M
Muhammad Omer Aslam

Step1: open ~/.bash_profile

Now a text editor opens:

Step2: variable name should be in capitals. in this example variable is NODE_ENV

Step3: export NODE_ENV=development

Save it and close.

Restart your system.

Done.

To check env variable: open terminal and type

echo $NODE_ENV