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SC2155
export foo="$(mycmd)"
foo="$(mycmd)"
export foo
In the original code, the return value of mycmd
is ignored, and export
will instead always return true. This may prevent conditionals, set -e
and traps from working correctly.
When first marked for export and assigned separately, the return value of the assignment will be that of mycmd
. This avoids the problem.
Note that ShellCheck does not warn about masking of local read-only variables, such as local -r foo=$(cmd)
, even though this also masks the return value. This is because the alternative local foo; foo=$(cmd); local -r foo
is repetitive and cumbersome. To see warnings for this and many other additional cases of suppressed exit codes, enable check-extra-masked-returns
.
If you intend to ignore the return value of an assignment, you can either ignore this warning or use
foo=$(mycmd) || true
export foo
Shellcheck does not warn about export foo=bar
because bar
is a literal and not a command substitution with an independent return value.
local foo="$(mycmd)"
local foo
foo=$(mycmd)
The exit status of the command is overridden by the exit status of the creation of the local variable. For example:
$ f() { local foo=$(false) && echo "error was hidden"; }; f
error was hidden
$ f() { local foo; foo=$(false) && echo "error was hidden"; }; f
readonly foo="$(mycmd)"
foo="$(mycmd)"
readonly foo
A serious quoting problem with dash is another reason to declare and assign separately. Dash is the default, /bin/sh
shell on Ubuntu. More specifically, dash version 0.5.8-2.10 and others cannot run these two examples:
f(){ local e=$1; }
f "1 2"
export g=$(printf '%s' "foo 2")
While this runs fine in other shells, dash doesn't treat any of these as assignments and fails both like this:
local: 2: bad variable name
export: 2: bad variable name
The direct workaround to this bug is to quote the right-hand-side of the assignment. Separating declaraction and assignment also makes this runs fine in any shell.
(A rule to catch this problem is in the works at #1556).