Since $0
holds the full path of the script that is running, you can use dirname
against it to get the path of the script:
#!/bin/bash
script_name=$0
script_full_path=$(dirname "$0")
echo "script_name: $script_name"
echo "full path: $script_full_path"
so if you for example store it in /tmp/a.sh
then you will see an output like:
$ /tmp/a.sh
script_name: /tmp/a.sh
full path: /tmp
so
- Knowing the current working directory is useless to me, because I don't know how the user is executing the first script (could be with
/usr/bin/script.sh
, with ./script.sh
, or it could be with
../Downloads/repo/scr/script.sh
)
Using dirname "$0"
will allow you to keep track of the original path.
- The script
script.sh
will be changing to a different directory before calling helper.sh
.
Again, since you have the path in $0
you can cd
back to it.
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