flox activate
command
NAME
flox-activate - activate environments
SYNOPSIS
flox [<general-options>] activate
[-d=<path> | -r=<owner>/<name>]
[-t]
[--print-script]
[-- <command> [<arguments>]]
DESCRIPTION
Sets environment variables and aliases, runs hooks, starts services, and
adds bin
directories to your $PATH
.
flox activate
may run in one of three modes:
- interactive:
flox activate
when invoked from an interactive shell
Launches an interactive sub-shell. The shell to be launched is determined by$FLOX_SHELL
or$SHELL
. - command:
flox activate -- CMD
ExecutesCMD
in the same environment as if run inside an interactive shell produced by an interactiveflox activate
The shellCMD
is run by is determined by$FLOX_SHELL
or$SHELL
. - in-place:
flox activate
when invoked from an non-interactive shell with it’sstdout
redirected e.g.eval "$(flox activate)"
Produces commands to be sourced by the parent shell. Flox will determine the parent shell from$FLOX_SHELL
or otherwise automatically determine the parent shell and fall back to$SHELL
.
flox activate
currently supports bash
, fish
, tcsh
, and zsh
shells for any of the detection mechanisms described above.
When invoked interactively, the shell prompt will be modified to display the active environments, as shown below:
flox [env1 env2 env3] <normal prompt>
When multiple environments are activated each of their shell hooks
(profile
and hook
scripts) are executed in the context of the
environment that they come from. This means that for each shell hook
various environment variables such as PATH
, MANPATH
,
PKG_CONFIG_PATH
, PYTHONPATH
, etc, are set to the appropriate values
for the environment in which the shell hook was defined. See
manifest.toml(5)
for more details on shell
hooks.
OPTIONS
Activate Options
-- <command> [<arguments>]
Command to run in the environment. Spawns the command in a subshell that
does not leak into the calling process.
-t
, --trust
Trust a remote environment for this activation. Activating an
environment executes a shell hook which may execute arbitrary code. This
presents a security risk, so you will be prompted whether to trust the
environment. Environments owned by the current user and Flox are always
trusted. You may set certain environments to always be trusted using the
config key trusted_environments."<owner/name>" = (trust | deny)
, or
via the following command:
flox config --set trusted_environments.\"<owner/name>\" trust
.
--print-script
Prints an activation script to stdout
that’s suitable for sourcing in
a shell rather than activation via creating a subshell. flox
automatically knows when to print the activation script to stdout
, so
this command is just a debugging aid for users.
-s
, --start-services
Start the services listed in the manifest when activating the
environment. If no services are running, the services from the manifest
will be started, otherwise a warning will displayed and activation will
continue.
This flag is currently incompatible with “in-place” activations and remote environments, but these features will be added in the future.
The services started with this flag will be cleaned up once the last activation of this environment terminates.
A remote environment can only have a single set of running services, regardless of how many times the environment is activated concurrently.
Environment Options
If no environment is specified for an environment command, the environment in the current directory or the active environment that was last activated is used.
-d
, --dir
Path containing a .flox/ directory.
-r
, --remote
A remote environment on FloxHub, specified in the form <owner>/<name>
.
General Options
-h
, --help
Prints help information.
The following options can be passed when running any flox
subcommand
but must be specified before the subcommand.
-v
, --verbose
Increase logging verbosity. Invoke multiple times for increasing detail.
-q
, --quiet
Silence logs except for errors.
ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES
Variables set by flox activate
$FLOX_ENV
Contains the path to the built environment. This directory contains a
merged set of bin
, lib
, etc directories for all the packages in the
environment.
$FLOX_PROMPT_ENVIRONMENTS
Contains a space-delimited list of the active environments,
e.g. owner1/foo owner2/bar local_env
. If, hide_default_prompt
is set
to true
, environments named default
are excluded.
$FLOX_ENV_CACHE
activate
sets this variable to a directory that can be used by an
environment’s hook to store transient files. These files will persist
for environments used locally, but they will not be pushed, and they
will not persist when using a remote environment with -r
.
$FLOX_ENV_PROJECT
activate
sets this variable to the directory of the project using the
flox environment. For environments stored locally, this is the directory
containing the environment. When running flox activate -r
, this is set
to the current working directory. This variable can be used to find
project files in environment hooks.
$_FLOX_ACTIVE_ENVIRONMENTS
A JSON array containing one object per active environment. This is
currently an implementation detail and its contents are subject to
change.
$FLOX_ACTIVATE_START_SERVICES
"true"
if this activation started services, "false"
otherwise.
Variables used by flox activate
$FLOX_SHELL
When launching an interactive sub-shell, Flox launches the shell
specified in $FLOX_SHELL
if it is set. When printing a shell for
sourcing in the current shell, Flox will produce a script suitable for
$FLOX_SHELL
if it is set.
$SHELL
When launching an interactive sub-shell, Flox launches the shell
specified in $SHELL
if it is set and $FLOX_SHELL
is not set. When
printing a shell for sourcing in the current shell, Flox will produce a
script suitable for $SHELL
if it is set and $FLOX_SHELL
is not set
and Flox can’t detect the parent shell.
$FLOX_PROMPT_COLOR_{1,2}
Flox adds text to the beginning of the shell prompt to indicate which
environments are active. A set of default colors are used to color this
prompt, but the colors may be overridden with the $FLOX_PROMPT_COLOR_1
and $FLOX_PROMPT_COLOR_2
environment variables.
The values of these variables should be integers chosen from the 256-color palette as described in the xterm-256color chart.
EXAMPLES:
Activate an environment stored in the current directory:
$ flox activate
Activate an environment some_user/myenv
that’s been pushed to FloxHub:
$ flox activate -r some_user/myenv
Invoke a command inside an environment without entering its subshell:
$ flox activate -- cmd --some-arg arg1 arg2
Activate default
Flox environment only within the current shell (add
to the relevant “rc” file, e.g. ~/.bashrc
or ~/.zprofile
):
$ eval "$(flox activate)"