Setting Up the “gaffer” Command
After you have installed Gaffer, it will remain a collection of files and directories on your file system. Because it is not yet configured as a command, you must navigate to its directory every time. This could become very tedious, so we recommend that you modify your PATH
environment variable to allow access to the gaffer
command from anywhere in the terminal.
Note
For these instructions, we will assume you have Gaffer installed to the /opt/
directory. If you have installed it elsewhere, replace /opt/
with the directory you installed it to.
Environment variables
An environment variable is simply a value, such as a string, number, boolean, or location that your terminal is aware of. For instance, when you ran the tar
command to extract the downloaded Gaffer package, the tar
command was not located in your ~/Downloads
directory, but actually in /usr/bin/
. Whenever you open your terminal, several folders are added to your terminal’s PATH
environment variable, which provides it with a list of locations in the file system from which it can source commands.
In order for the gaffer
command to work in your terminal, you will need to add Gaffer’s directory to the PATH
environment variable.
Setting up the “gaffer” command in Linux
The particular terminal on your system depends on your Linux distribution and how it was configured. Most distributions of Linux use bash, but there are other common terminals available, like tcsh. Because we cannot accommodate every available terminal, we will only provide instructions for adding to the PATH
variable in bash and tcsh.
Tip
If you are not sure which terminal you have, you can find its name by opening a terminal and inputting echo $0
, which will return /bin/bash
, tcsh
, or some equivalent. If you are not using bash or tcsh, the same principles of environment variables will apply, and your terminal’s documentation should provide a comparable way of modifying the PATH
variable.
To set up the gaffer
command in Linux:
Open your terminal’s config file in a text editor.
bash config:
~/.bash_profile
tcsh config:
~/.tcsh_profile
Add the following line to the end of the file:
bash:
export PATH=$PATH\:/opt/gaffer-1.0.2.0-linux/bin
tcsh:
setenv PATH $PATH\:/opt/gaffer-1.0.2.0-linux/bin
Save the file.
Open a terminal.
Test that the
PATH
variable has been updated:user@desktop ~ $ echo $PATH # /usr/local/bin:/usr/bin:/bin:/opt/gaffer-1.0.2.0-linux/bin
Note
Depending on your system configuration, the beginning of your PATH
variable might not appear exactly as above. What’s important is whether /opt/gaffer-1.0.2.0-linux/bin
appears at the end of the path.
You can now execute gaffer
as a command from any directory in the terminal.
Setting up the “gaffer” command in macOS
The default terminal in macOS is bash, so you will need to add to the PATH
variable in the bash user config.
To set up the gaffer
command in macOS:
Open
~/.bash_profile
in a text editor.Add the line
export PATH=$PATH\:/opt/gaffer-1.0.2.0-macos/bin
and save.Open the terminal (Finder > Go > Utilities > Terminal).
Test that the
PATH
variable has been updated:MacBook:~ user$ echo $PATH # /usr/bin:/bin:/usr/sbin:/sbin:/usr/local/bin:/opt/X11/bin:/opt/gaffer-1.0.2.0-macos/bin
Note
Depending on your system configuration, the beginning of your PATH
variable might not appear exactly as above. What’s important is whether /opt/gaffer-1.0.2.0-macos/bin
appears at the end of the path.
You can now execute gaffer
as a command from any directory in the terminal.
Using the “gaffer” command
Once you have added the Gaffer directory to the PATH
variable, you can launch Gaffer anywhere in the terminal:
gaffer
You can also use the command to open Gaffer scripts, as outlined in the Command Line Reference.