An important Unix concept is the 
environment, which is defined  by environment variables. Some are set by the system, others by you,  yet others by the shell, or any program that loads another program.
Avariable is a character string to which we assign a value. The value  assigned could be a number, text, filename, device, or any other type  of data.
For example, first we set a variables TEST and then we access its  value using 
echo command:
| [amrood]$TEST="Unix Programming"
[amrood]$echo $TEST
Unix Programming | 
Note that environment variables are set without using $ sign but  while accessing them we use $sign as prefix. These variables retain  their values until we come out shell.
When you login to the system, the shell undergoes a phase called  initialization to set up various environment. This is usually a two step  process that involves the shell reading the following files:
The process is as follows:
- The shell checks to see whether the file /etc/profile  exists.
- If it exists, the shell reads it. Otherwise, this file is  skipped. No error message is displayed.
- The shell checks to see whether the file .profile exists  in your home directory. Your home directory is the directory that you  start out in after you log in.
- If it exists, the shell reads it; otherwise, the shell skips it.  No error message is displayed.
As soon as both of these files have been read, the shell displays a  prompt:
This is the prompt where you can enter commands in order to have them  execute.
Note - The shell initialization process detailed here applies  to all 
Bourne type shells, but some additional files are used by 
bash  and 
ksh.
The .profile File:
The file 
/etc/profile is maintained by the system  administrator of your UNIX machine and contains shell initialization  information required by all users on a system.
The file 
.profile is under your control. You can add as much  shell customization information as you want to this file. The minimum  set of information that you need to configure includes
- The type of terminal you are using
- A list of directories in which to locate commands
- A list of variables effecting look and feel of your terminal.
You can check your 
.profile available in your home directory.  Open it using 
vi editor and check all the variables set for your  environment.
Setting the Terminal Type:
Usually the type of terminal you are using is automatically  configured by either the 
login or 
getty programs.  Sometimes, the autoconfiguration process guesses your terminal  incorrectly.
If your terminal is set incorrectly, the output of commands might  look strange, or you might not be able to interact with the shell  properly.
To make sure that this is not the case, most users set their terminal  to the lowest common denominator as follows:
| [amrood]$TERM=vt100
[amrood]$ | 
Setting the PATH:
When you type any command on command prompt, the shell has to locate  the command before it can be executed.
The PATH variable specifies the locations in which the shell should  look for commands. Usually it is set as follows:
| [amrood]$PATH=/bin:/usr/bin
[amrood]$ | 
Here each of the individual entries separated by the colon character,  :, are directories. If you request the shell to execute a command and  it cannot find it in any of the directories given in the PATH variable, a  message similar to the following appears:
| [amrood]$hello
hello: not found
[amrood]$ | 
There are variables like PS1 and PS2 which are discussed in the next  section.
PS1 and PS2 Variables:
The characters that the shell displays as your command prompt are  stored in the variable PS1. You can change this variable to be anything  you want. As soon as you change it, it'll be used by the shell from that  point on.
For example, if you issued the command:
| [amrood]$PS1='=>'
=>
=>
=> | 
Your prompt would become =>. To set the value of PS1 so that it  shows the working directory, issue the command:
| =>PS1="[\u@\h \w]\$"
[root@ip-72-167-112-17 /var/www/tutorialspoint/unix]$
[root@ip-72-167-112-17 /var/www/tutorialspoint/unix]$ | 
The result of this command is that the prompt displays the user's  username, the machine's name (hostname), and the working directory.
There are quite a few escape sequences that can be used as value  arguments for PS1; try to limit yourself to the most critical so that  the prompt does not overwhelm you with information.
 | Escape Sequence | Description | 
| \t | Current time, expressed as HH:MM:SS. | 
| \d | Current date, expressed as Weekday Month Date | 
| \n | Newline. | 
| \s | Current shell environment. | 
| \W | Working directory. | 
| \w | Full path of the working directory. | 
| \u | Current user.s username. | 
| \h | Hostname of the current machine. | 
| \# | Command number of the current command.  Increases with each new command entered. | 
| \$ | If the effective UID is 0 (that is, if you are  logged in as root), end the prompt with the # character; otherwise, use the $. | 
You can make the change yourself every time you log in, or you can  have the change made automatically in PS1 by adding it to your 
.profile  file.
When you issue a command that is incomplete, the shell will display a  secondary prompt and wait for you to complete the command and hit Enter  again.
The default secondary prompt is > (the greater than sign), but can  be changed by re-defining the 
PS2 shell variable:
Following is the example which uses the default secondary prompt:
| $ echo "this is a
> test"
this is a
test
$ | 
Following is the example which re-define PS2 with a customized  prompt:
| $ PS2="secondary prompt->"
$ echo "this is a
secondary prompt->test"
this is a
test
$ | 
Environment Variables:
Following is the partial list of important environment variables.  These variables would be set and accessed as mentioned above:
 | Variable | Description | 
| DISPLAY | Contains the identifier for the display  that X11 programs should use by default. | 
| HOME | Indicates the home directory of the current  user: the default argument for the cd built-in command. | 
| IFS | Indicates the Internal Field Separator that  is used by the parser for word splitting after expansion. | 
| LANG | LANG expands to the default system locale;  LC_ALL can be used to override this. For example, if its value is pt_BR,  then the language is set to (Brazilian) Portuguese and the locale to  Brazil. | 
| LD_LIBRARY_PATH | On many Unix systems with a  dynamic linker, contains a colon-separated list of directories that the  dynamic linker should search for shared objects when building a process  image after exec, before searching in any other directories. | 
| PATH | Indicates search path for commands. It is a  colon-separated list of directories in which the shell looks for  commands. | 
| PWD | Indicates the current working directory as  set by the cd command. | 
| RANDOM | Generates a random integer between 0 and  32,767 each time it is referenced. | 
| SHLVL | Increments by one each time an instance of  bash is started. This variable is useful for determining whether the  built-in exit command ends the current session. | 
| TERM | Refers to the display type | 
| TZ | Refers to Time zone. It can take values like  GMT, AST, etc. | 
| UID | Expands to the numeric user ID of the current  user, initialized at shell startup. | 
Following is the sample example showing few envrionment variables:
[amrood]$ echo $HOME
/root
[amrood]$ echo $DISPLAY
[amrood]$ echo $TERM
xterm
[amrood]$ echo $PATH
/usr/local/bin:/bin:/usr/bin:/home/amrood/bin:/usr/local/bin
[amrood]$
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