Unix environment variables
Environment variables are local to each shell session and influence the way your system and the installed software behaves. The PATH variable, for example, contains a colon-separated list of directories (such as /usr/bin) that are searched for executable programs.
In order to access the value of an environment variable, prepend a $-sign. To print, e.g., the value of PATH we run:
echo $PATH
If we want to change the value of an environment variable we have to use the command export
.
To prepend, e.g., the directory /home/user/bin
to PATH, we run:
export PATH=/home/user/bin:$PATH
One can list all environment variables of the active shell by running:
printenv
If you want to set the value for an environment variable automatically, it is the best practice
to add the corresponding export
command to the file ~/.bash_profile (or ~/.zprofile)
Note
Some environment variables on Mac OS differ slightly from the ones on conventional UNIX systems (e.g. LD_LIBRARY_PATH)
Common environment variables
Environment Variable |
Brief Description |
---|---|
PATH |
List of directories searched for executables |
USER |
The current username |
HOME |
Home directory of the current user |
PWD |
Path to the current working directory |
Environment variables for software developement
Environment Variable |
Brief Description |
---|---|
CC |
The C-compiler executable |
CXX |
The C++-compiler executable |
CFLAGS |
Additional compiler flags for C |
CXXFLAGS |
Additional compiler flags for C++ |
LDFLAGS |
Additional flags for the linker |
LIBRARY_PATH |
List of directories searched for libraries by the linker |
LD_LIBRARY_PATH |
List of directories searched for dynamic libraries |
CPATH |
List of directories searched for C/C++ header files (treated like -I includes) |
CPLUS_INCLUDE_PATH |
List of directories searched for C/C++ header files (treated like -isystem includes) |
PYTHONPATH |
List of directories searched for python modules/packages |
Environment variables affecting OpenMP
Certain environment variables will affect the behavior of OpenMP. In particular they allow you to set the number of OpenMP threads that will be spawned.
Warning
This is of particular importance when using MPI, as each MPI rank will potentially spawn an equal number of OpenMP threads. If you intend to use as many MPI ranks as cores are available you should export OMP_NUM_THREADS=1
Environment Variable |
Brief Description |
---|---|
OMP_NUM_THREADS |
Specifies globally the number of OpenMP threads to use |
MKL_NUM_THREADS |
Specifies the number of OpenMP threads to use only within the Intel MKL library |
OPENBLAS_NUM_THREADS |
Specifies the number of OpenMP threads to use within the OpenBlas library |