GT.M requires the definition of certain environment variables as part of setting up the environment. These environment variables are used for the following purposes:

GT.M limits environment variables to 8192 bytes, but items they specify such as a path may have a lower limit.

The procedure below describes how to define an environment variable. Use this procedure to define an environment variable either at the shell prompt or in your shell startup file. If you define the variable at the shell prompt, it will be effective only until you logout. If you define it in your .profile file (.cshrc, if using a C shell variant), it will be in effect whenever you log in. Your system manager may have already defined some of these variables.

[Note]Note

Each environment variable required by GT.M is described and illustrated in individual sections following the procedure. Only gtm_dist, and in some cases gtmgbldir, gtm_principal and gtmroutines, are required by users who do not perform programming activities.

To define an environment variable type the following commands:

$ env_variable=env_variable_value
$ export env_variable

The example above may differ from the syntax supported by some shells

The following environment variables hold information that determines some details of GT.M run-time operation, over which the user has control.

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