Provided by: direnv_2.32.1-1_amd64 bug

NAME

       direnv - unclutter your .profile

SYNOPSIS

       direnv command ...

DESCRIPTION

       direnv  is an environment variable manager for your shell. It knows how to hook into bash,
       zsh and fish shell to load or unload  environment  variables  depending  on  your  current
       directory.  This allows you to have project-specific environment variables and not clutter
       the "~/.profile" file.

       Before each prompt it checks for the existence of an .envrc file in the current and parent
       directories.  If  the  file  exists,  it  is loaded into a bash sub-shell and all exported
       variables are then captured by direnv and then made available to your current shell, while
       unset variables are removed.

       Because  direnv  is  compiled  into  a  single  static  executable it is fast enough to be
       unnoticeable on each prompt. It is also  language  agnostic  and  can  be  used  to  build
       solutions similar to rbenv, pyenv, phpenv, ...

EXAMPLE

              $ cd ~/my_project
              $ echo ${FOO-nope}
              nope
              $ echo export FOO=foo > .envrc
              \.envrc is not allowed
              $ direnv allow .
              direnv: reloading
              direnv: loading .envrc
              direnv export: +FOO
              $ echo ${FOO-nope}
              foo
              $ cd ..
              direnv: unloading
              direnv export: ~PATH
              $ echo ${FOO-nope}
              nope

SETUP

       For  direnv to work properly it needs to be hooked into the shell. Each shell has it's own
       extension mechanism:

   BASH
       Add the following line at the end of the ~/.bashrc file:

              eval "$(direnv hook bash)"

       Make sure it appears even after rvm, git-prompt and other shell extensions that manipulate
       the prompt.

   ZSH
       Add the following line at the end of the ~/.zshrc file:

              eval "$(direnv hook zsh)"

   FISH
       Add the following line at the end of the $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/fish/config.fish file:

              direnv hook fish | source

       Fish   supports   3   modes  you  can  set  with  with  the  global  environment  variable
       direnv_fish_mode:

              set -g direnv_fish_mode eval_on_arrow    # trigger direnv at prompt, and on every arrow-based directory change (default)
              set -g direnv_fish_mode eval_after_arrow # trigger direnv at prompt, and only after arrow-based directory changes before executing command
              set -g direnv_fish_mode disable_arrow    # trigger direnv at prompt only, this is similar functionality to the original behavior

   TCSH
       Add the following line at the end of the ~/.cshrc file:

              eval `direnv hook tcsh`

   Elvish
       Run:

              $> direnv hook elvish > ~/.elvish/lib/direnv.elv

       and add the following line to your ~/.elvish/rc.elv file:

              use direnv

USAGE

       In some target folder,  create  an  .envrc  file  and  add  some  export(1)  and  unset(1)
       directives in it.

       On  the  next prompt you will notice that direnv complains about the .envrc being blocked.
       This is the security mechanism to avoid loading new files automatically. Otherwise any git
       repo  that you pull, or tar archive that you unpack, would be able to wipe your hard drive
       once you cd into it.

       So here we are pretty sure that it won't do anything bad. Type direnv allow .   and  watch
       direnv  loading  your  new  environment.  Note that direnv edit . is a handy shortcut that
       opens the file in your $EDITOR and automatically reloads it  if  the  file's  modification
       time has changed.

       Now that the environment is loaded you can notice that once you cd out of the directory it
       automatically gets unloaded. If you cd back into it it's loaded again. That's the base  of
       the mechanism that allows you to build cool things.

       Exporting  variables  by  hand  is  a  bit  repetitive so direnv provides a set of utility
       functions that are made available in the context of the .envrc file.   Check  the  direnv-
       stdlib(1)  man  page  for  more  details.  You  can also define your own extensions inside
       $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/direnv/direnvrc or $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/direnv/lib/*.sh files.

       Hopefully this is enough to get you started.

ENVIRONMENT

       XDG_CONFIG_HOME
              Defaults to $HOME/.config.

FILES

       $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/direnv/direnv.toml
              Direnv configuration. See direnv.toml(1).

       $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/direnv/direnvrc
              Bash code loaded before every .envrc. Good for personal extensions.

       $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/direnv/lib/*.sh
              Bash code loaded before every .envrc. Good for third-party extensions.

       $XDG_DATA_HOME/direnv/allow
              Records which .envrc files have been direnv allowed.

CONTRIBUTE

       Bug reports, contributions and forks are welcome.

       All bugs or other forms of  discussion  happen  on  http://github.com/direnv/direnv/issueshttp://github.com/direnv/direnv/issues⟩

       There  is  also a wiki available where you can share your usage patterns or other tips and
       tricks https://github.com/direnv/direnv/wiki ⟨https://github.com/direnv/direnv/wiki⟩

       Or drop by on the #direnv channel on FreeNode ⟨irc://#direnv@FreeNode⟩ to have a chat.

COPYRIGHT

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

SEE ALSO

       direnv-stdlib(1), direnv.toml(1), direnv-fetchurl(1)