Provided by: direnv_2.25.2-2_amd64 bug

NAME

       direnv-stdlib - functions for the .envrc

SYNOPSIS

       direnv stdlib

DESCRIPTION

       Outputs a bash script called the stdlib. The following commands are included in that script and loaded in
       the context of an .envrc. In addition, it also loads the file in  /.direnvrc if it exists.

STDLIB

   has <command>
       Returns 0 if the command is available. Returns 1 otherwise. It can be a binary in the  PATH  or  a  shell
       function.

       Example:

              if has curl; then
                echo "Yes we do"
              fi

   expand_path <rel_path> [<relative_to>]
       Outputs the absolute path of rel_path relative to relative_to or the current directory.

       Example:

              cd /usr/local/games
              expand_path ../foo
              # output: /usr/local/foo

   dotenv [<dotenv_path>]
       Loads a ".env" file into the current environment

   user_rel_path <abs_path>
       Transforms an absolute path abs_path into a user-relative path if possible.

       Example:

              echo $HOME
              # output: /home/user
              user_rel_path /home/user/my/project
              # output:  /my/project
              user_rel_path /usr/local/lib
              # output: /usr/local/lib

   find_up <filename>
       Outputs  the path of filename when searched from the current directory up to /. Returns 1 if the file has
       not been found.

       Example:

              cd /usr/local/my
              mkdir -p project/foo
              touch bar
              cd project/foo
              find_up bar
              # output: /usr/local/my/bar

   source_env <file_or_dir_path>
       Loads another .envrc either by specifying its path or filename.

       NOTE: the other .envrc is not checked by the security framework.

   source_env_if_exists <filename>
       Loads another ".envrc", but only if it exists.

       NOTE: contrary to source_env, this only works when passing a path to a file,
             not a directory.

       Example:

              source_env_if_exists .envrc.private

   source_up [<filename>]
       Loads another .envrc if found when searching from the parent directory up to /.

       NOTE: the other .envrc is not checked by the security framework.

   source_url <url> <integrity-hash>
       Loads another script from the given url. Before loading it it will check the integrity using the provided
       integrity-hash.

       To  find  the  value  of  the  integrity-hash,  call  direnv fetchurl <url> and extract the hash from the
       outputted message.

       See also direnv-fetchurl(1) for more details.

   fetchurl <url> [<integrity-hash>]
       Fetches the given url onto disk and outputs it's path location on stdout.

       If the integrity-hash argument is provided, it will also check the integrity of the script.

       See also direnv-fetchurl(1) for more details.

   direnv_apply_dump <file>
       Loads the output of direnv dump that was stored in a file.

   direnv_load [<command-generating-dump-output>]
       Applies the environment generated by running  argv  as  a  command.  This  is  useful  for  adopting  the
       environment  of  a child process - cause that process to run "direnv dump" and then wrap the results with
       direnv_load.

       Example:

              direnv_load opam-env exec -- direnv dump

   PATH_add <path>
       Prepends the expanded path to the PATH environment variable. It prevents a common mistake where  PATH  is
       replaced by only the new path.

       Example:

              pwd
              # output: /home/user/my/project
              PATH_add bin
              echo $PATH
              # output: /home/user/my/project/bin:/usr/bin:/bin

   MANPATH_add <path>
       Prepends the expanded path to the MANPATH environment variable. It takes care of man-specific heuritic.

   path_add <varname> <path>
       Works like PATH_add except that it's for an arbitrary varname.

   PATH_rm <pattern> [<pattern> ...]
       Removes  directories that match any of the given shell patterns from the PATH environment variable. Order
       of the remaining directories is preserved in the resulting PATH.

       Bash pattern syntax:
         https://www.gnu.org/software/bash/manual/html_node/Pattern-Matching.html

       Example:

              echo $PATH
              # output: /dontremove/me:/remove/me:/usr/local/bin/:...
              PATH_rm '/remove/*'
              echo $PATH
              # output: /dontremove/me:/usr/local/bin/:...

   load_prefix <prefix_path>
       Expands some common path variables for the given prefix_path prefix. This  is  useful  if  you  installed
       something  in the prefix_path using ./configure --prefix=$prefix_path  make install and want to use it in
       the project.

       Variables set:

              CPATH
              LD_LIBRARY_PATH
              LIBRARY_PATH
              MANPATH
              PATH
              PKG_CONFIG_PATH

       Example:

              ./configure --prefix=$HOME/rubies/ruby-1.9.3
              make  make install
              # Then in the .envrc
              load_prefix  /rubies/ruby-1.9.3

   semver_search <directory> <folder_prefix> <partial_version>
       Search a directory for the highest version number in SemVer format (X.Y.Z).

       Examples:

              $ tree .
              |-- dir
                  |-- program-1.4.0
                  |-- program-1.4.1
                  |-- program-1.5.0
              $ semver_search "dir" "program-" "1.4.0"
              1.4.0
              $ semver_search "dir" "program-" "1.4"
              1.4.1
              $ semver_search "dir" "program-" "1"
              1.5.0

   layout <type>
       A semantic dispatch used to describe common project layouts.

   layout go
       Adds "$(direnv_layout_dir)/go" to the GOPATH environment variable.  And also adds "$PWD/bin" to the  PATH
       environment variable.

   layout julia
       Sets the JULIA_PROJECT environment variable to the current directory.

   layout node
       Adds "$PWD/node_modules/.bin" to the PATH environment variable.

   layout php
       Adds "$PWD/vendor/bin" to the PATH environment variable.

   layout perl
       Setup        environment        variables       required       by       perl's       local::lib       See
       http://search.cpan.org/dist/local-lib/lib/local/lib.pm for more details.

   layout python [<python_exe>]
       Creates and loads a virtualenv environment under  $PWD/.direnv/python-$python_version.  This  forces  the
       installation of any egg into the project's sub-folder.

       It's  possible  to  specify  the  python  executable if you want to use different versions of python (eg:
       layout python python3).

       Note that previously virtualenv was located under $PWD/.direnv/virtualenv and will be re-used  by  direnv
       if it exists.

   layout python3
       A shortcut for layout python python3

   layout ruby
       Sets the GEM_HOME environment variable to $PWD/.direnv/ruby/RUBY_VERSION. This forces the installation of
       any gems into the project's sub-folder. If you're using bundler it will create wrapper programs that  can
       be invoked directly instead of using the bundle exec prefix.

   use <program_name> [<version>]
       A semantic command dispatch intended for loading external dependencies into the environment.

       Example:

              use_ruby() {
                echo "Ruby $1"
              }
              use ruby 1.9.3
              # output: Ruby 1.9.3

   use julia <version>
       Loads the specified Julia version. You must specify a path to the directory with installed Julia versions
       using $JULIA_VERSIONS. You can optionally override the prefix for folders inside $JULIA_VERSIONS (default
       julia-) using $JULIA_VERSION_PREFIX.  If no exact match for <version> is found a search will be performed
       and the latest version will be loaded.

       Examples (.envrc):

              use julia 1.5.1   # loads $JULIA_VERSIONS/julia-1.5.1
              use julia 1.5     # loads $JULIA_VERSIONS/julia-1.5.1
              use julia master  # loads $JULIA_VERSIONS/julia-master

   use rbenv
       Loads rbenv which add the ruby wrappers available on the PATH.

   use nix [...]
       Load environment variables from nix-shell.

       If you have a default.nix or shell.nix these will be used by default, but you can also  specify  packages
       directly (e.g use nix -p ocaml).

       See http://nixos.org/nix/manual/#sec-nix-shell

   use guix [...]
       Load environment variables from guix environment.

       Any  arguments  given  will  be  passed  to  guix environment. For example, use guix hello would setup an
       environment with the dependencies of the hello package. To create an  environment  including  hello,  the
       --ad-hoc  flag  is  used  use  guix  --ad-hoc hello. Other options include --load which allows loading an
       environment from a file.

       See https://www.gnu.org/software/guix/manual/html_node/Invoking-guix-environment.html

   rvm [...]
       Should work just like in the shell if you have rvm installed.

   use node [<version>]:
       Loads NodeJS version from a .node-version or .nvmrc file.

       If you specify a partial NodeJS version (i.e. 4.2), a fuzzy match is performed and the  highest  matching
       version installed is selected.

       Example (.envrc):

              set -e
              use node

       Example (.node-version):

              4.2

   use node <version>
       Loads specified NodeJS version.

       Example (.envrc):

              set -e
              use node 4.2.2

   use vim [<vimrc_file>]
       Prepends  the  specified  vim  script  (or .vimrc.local by default) to the DIRENV_EXTRA_VIMRC environment
       variable.

       This variable is understood by the direnv/direnv.vim extension. When  found,  it  will  source  it  after
       opening files in the directory.

   watch_file <path> [<path> ...]
       Adds each file to direnv's watch-list. If the file changes direnv will reload the environment on the next
       prompt.

       Example (.envrc):

              watch_file Gemfile

   direnv_version <version_at_least>
       Checks that the direnv version is at least old as version_at_least. This can be useful  when  sharing  an
       .envrc and to make sure that the users are up to date.

   strict_env [<command> ...]
       Turns  on  shell  execution strictness. This will force the .envrc evaluation context to exit immediately
       if:

              • any command in a pipeline returns a non-zero exit status that is not otherwise handled  as  part
                of if, while, or until tests, return value negation (!), or part of a boolean ( or ||) chain.

              • any  variable  that  has  not  explicitly been set or declared (with either declare or local) is
                referenced.

       If followed by a command-line, the strictness applies for the duration of the command.

       Example (Whole Script):

              strict_env
              has curl

       Example (Command):

              strict_env has curl

   unstrict_env [<command> ...]
       Turns off shell execution strictness. If followed by a  command-line,  the  strictness  applies  for  the
       duration of the command.

       Example (Whole Script):

              unstrict_env
              has curl

       Example (Command):

              unstrict_env has curl

   on_git_branch [<branch_name>]
       Returns  0 if within a git repository with given branch_name. If no branch name is provided, then returns
       0 when within any branch. Requires the git command to be installed. Returns 1 otherwise.

       When a branch is specified, then .git/HEAD is watched  so  that  entering/exiting  a  branch  triggers  a
       reload.

       Example (.envrc):

              if on_git_branch child_changes; then
                export MERGE_BASE_BRANCH=parent_changes
              fi

              if on_git_branch; then
                echo "Thanks for contributing to a GitHub project!"
              fi

COPYRIGHT

       MIT licence - Copyright (C) 2019 @zimbatm and contributors

SEE ALSO

       direnv(1), direnv.toml(1)