How do I determine the location of my script? I want to read some config files from the same place.

There are two prime reasons why this issue comes up: you either want to externalize data or configuration of your script and need a way to find these external resources, or your script is intended to act upon a bundle of some sort (eg. a build script), and needs to find the resources to act upon.

It is important to realize that in the general case, this problem has no solution. Any approach you might have heard of, and any approach that will be detailed below has flaws and will only work for their specific cases, so pay attention but first and foremost, try to avoid the problem entirely by not depending on the location of your script!

Before we dive into solutions, let's clear up some misunderstandings. It is important to understand that:

Accessing data/config files

Very often, people want to make their scripts configurable. And the separation principle teaches us that it's a good idea to keep configuration and code separate. The problem then ends up being: how does my script know where to find the user's configuration file for it?

Too often, people believe the configuration of a script should reside in the same directory as where they put their script. This is the root of the problem.

Interestingly, a UNIX paradigm exists to solve this problem for you: Configuration artifacts of your scripts should exist in either the user's HOME directory or /etc. That gives your script an absolute path to look for the file, solving your problem instantly: you no longer depend on the "location" of your script:

Acting on a bundle

More common yet, scripts are part of a bundle and perform certain actions within or upon it. Ideally, it is desired that the bundle works independently of where the user has unpacked it; whether that's somewhere in their home dir, in /var or in /usr/local.

When our script needs to act upon other files it's bundled with, independently of its absolute location, we have two options: Either we rely on PWD or we rely on BASH_SOURCE. Both approaches have certain issues, here's what you need to know.

The BASH_SOURCE internal bash variable is actually an array or pathnames. If you however expand it as a simple string, eg. "$BASH_SOURCE", you'll get the first element, which is the pathname of the currently executing function or script. The following caveats apply:

Another option is to rely on PWD, the current working directly. In this case, you can assume the user has first cd'ed into your bundle and make all your pathnames relative. To reduce fragility, you could even test whether, for example, the relative path to the script name is correct, to make sure the user has indeed cd'ed into the bundle:

If you ever do need an absolute path, you can always get one by prefixing the relative path with PWD: echo "Saved to: $PWD/result.csv"

The only difficulty here is that you're now forcing your user to first change into your bundle's directory before your script can function. Regardless, this may well be your best option!

If neither the BASH_SOURCE or the PWD option sound interesting, you might want to consider going the route of configuration files instead (see the previous section). In this case, you require that your user configure the location of your bundle in a configuration file and have him put that configuration file in a location you can easily find. For example:

Why is it so hard to find my script's location?

This is a complex question because there's no single right answer to it. Even worse: it's not possible to find the location reliably in 100% of all cases. Common ways of finding a script's location depend on the name of the script, as seen in the predefined variable $0 (don't do this!). But providing the script name in $0 is only a (very common) convention, not a requirement.

The suspect answer is "in some shells, $0 is always an absolute path, even if you invoke the script using a relative path, or no path at all". But this isn't reliable across shells; some of them (including BASH) return the actual command typed in by the user instead of the fully qualified path. And this is just the tip of the iceberg!

Your script may not actually be on a locally accessible disk at all. Consider this:

  ssh remotehost bash < ./myscript

The shell running on remotehost is getting its commands from a pipe. There's no script anywhere on any disk that bash can see.

Moreover, even if your script is stored on a local disk and executed, it could move. Someone could mv the script to another location in between the time you type the command and the time your script checks $0. Or someone could have unlinked the script during that same time window, so that it doesn't actually have a link within a file system any more.

Even in the cases where the script is in a fixed location on a local disk, the $0 approach still has some major drawbacks. The most important is that the script name (as seen in $0) may not be relative to the current working directory, but relative to a directory from the program search path $PATH (this is often seen with KornShell). Or (and this is most likely problem by far...) there might be multiple links to the script from multiple locations, one of them being a simple symlink from a common PATH directory like /usr/local/bin, which is how it's being invoked. Your script might be in /opt/foobar/bin/script but the naive approach of reading $0 won't tell you that -- it may say /usr/local/bin/script instead.

(For a more general discussion of the Unix file system and how symbolic links affect your ability to know where you are at any given moment, see this Plan 9 paper.)

Non-bash solutions

  case $0 in /*) echo "$0";; *) echo "`pwd`/$0";; esac

Or a shell-independent variant (needs a readlink(1) supporting -f, though, so it's OS-dependent):

  readlink -f "$0"


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