When I try to run a script that contains the envsubst command, I get this error. Looking online, this seems to be a standard bash command, so I am not sure what to install in order to get it to work.
5 Answers
Edit: @cobberboy 's anwer is more correct. upvote him.
brew install gettext
brew link --force gettext
Following is my old answer:
envsubst is included in gettext package.
Therefore you may compile it by your own, using standard build tools such as make or using homebrew.
However, it seems to have little issue when installing gettext in MacOS.
See following url for details: How to install gettext on MacOS X
To clear up potential confusion:
envsubstis an external executable and thus not part of Bash; external executables are platform-dependent, both in terms of which ones are available as well as their specific behavior and the specific options they support (though, hopefully, there is a common subset based on the POSIX specifications)- Commands directly built into
bashare called builtins, and only they can be relied upon to be present on all platforms.
To test whether a given command is a builtin, use
type <cmdName>
In the case at hand, running type envsubst on macOS 10.13 returns -bash: type: envsubst: not found, from which you can infer:
envsubstis NOT a builtinenvsubstis not in your system's$PATH(and thus likely not present on your system)
(By contrast, running the same on command on, e.g., a Ubuntu 12.04 system returns envsubst is hashed (/usr/bin/envsubst), which tells you that the utility is present and where it is located.)
A makeshift alternative to envsubst is to use eval, although the usual caveat applies: use eval only on strings whose content you control or trust:
Assume a sample.txt file containing text with unexpanded variable references; e.g.:
cat > sample.txt <<'EOF'
Honey, I'm $USER
and I'm $HOME.
EOF
The equivalent of:
envsubst < sample.txt
is:
eval "echo \"$(sed 's/"/\\"/g' sample.txt)\""
There is a crucial difference, however:
envsubstexpands only environment variable references- whereas
evalwill expand shell variable references too - as well as embedded command substitutions, which is what makes use ofevala security concern.
I'm using this now in my bash script that requires envsubst:
if ! which envsubst > /dev/null 2>&1; then
envsubst() {
while read line; do
line=$( echo $line | sed 's/"/\\"/g' )
eval echo $line
done
}
fi
you can use it as the envsubst command - of course it's not feature complete or something else:
envsubst <<<'Honey, I am $HOME.'
envsubst < input > output 2> corrupt
envsubstis included ingettextpackage. you may compile by your own. see stackoverflow.com/questions/14940383/… - ymonad