MODULE(1) Modules MODULE(1)
NAME
module - command interface to the Modules package
SYNOPSIS
module [switches] [sub-command [sub-command-args]]
DESCRIPTION
module is a user interface to the Modules package. The Modules package
provides for the dynamic modification of the user's environment via
modulefiles.
Each modulefile contains the information needed to configure the shell
for an application. Once the Modules package is initialized, the envi-
ronment can be modified on a per-module basis using the module command
which interprets modulefiles. Typically modulefiles instruct the module
command to alter or set shell environment variables such as PATH, MAN-
PATH, etc. Modulefiles may be shared by many users on a system and
users may have their own set to supplement or replace the shared mod-
ulefiles.
The modulefiles are added to and removed from the current environment
by the user. The environment changes contained in a modulefile can be
summarized through the module command as well. If no arguments are
given, a summary of the module usage and sub-commands are shown.
The action for the module command to take is described by the sub-com-
mand and its associated arguments.
Package Initialization
The Modules package and the module command are initialized when a
shell-specific initialization script is sourced into the shell. The
script creates the module command as either an alias or function and
creates Modules environment variables.
The module alias or function executes the modulecmd.tcl program located
in /usr/share/Modules/libexec and has the shell evaluate the command's
output. The first argument to modulecmd.tcl specifies the type of
shell.
The initialization scripts are kept in /usr/share/Modules/init/<shell>
where <shell> is the name of the sourcing shell. For example, a C Shell
user sources the /usr/share/Modules/init/csh script. The sh, csh, tcsh,
bash, ksh, zsh and fish shells are supported by modulecmd.tcl. In addi-
tion, python, perl, ruby, tcl, cmake, r and lisp "shells" are supported
which writes the environment changes to stdout as python, perl, ruby,
tcl, lisp, r or cmake code.
Initialization may also be performed by calling the autoinit sub-com-
mand of the modulecmd.tcl program. Evaluation into the shell of the
result of this command defines the module alias or function.
A ml alias or function may also be defined at initialization time if
enabled (see MODULES_ML section). ml is a handy frontend leveraging all
module command capabilities with less character typed. See ml(1) for
detailed information.
Examples of initialization
C Shell initialization (and derivatives):
source /usr/share/Modules/init/csh
module load modulefile modulefile ...
Bourne Shell (sh) (and derivatives):
. /usr/share/Modules/init/sh
module load modulefile modulefile ...
Perl:
require "/usr/share/Modules/init/perl.pm";
&module('load', 'modulefile', 'modulefile', '...');
Python:
import os
exec(open('/usr/share/Modules/init/python.py').read())
module('load', 'modulefile', 'modulefile', '...')
Bourne Shell (sh) (and derivatives) with autoinit sub-command:
eval "`/usr/share/Modules/libexec/modulecmd.tcl sh autoinit`"
Modulecmd startup
Upon invocation modulecmd.tcl sources a site-specific configuration
script if it exists. The location for this script is /etc/environment-
modules/siteconfig.tcl. An additional siteconfig script may be speci-
fied with the MODULES_SITECONFIG environment variable, if allowed by
modulecmd.tcl configuration, and will be loaded if it exists after
/etc/environment-modules/siteconfig.tcl. Siteconfig is a Tcl script
that enables to supersede any global variable or procedure definition
of modulecmd.tcl.
Afterward, modulecmd.tcl sources rc files which contain global, user
and modulefile specific setups. These files are interpreted as module-
files. See modulefile(4) for detailed information.
Upon invocation of modulecmd.tcl module run-command files are sourced
in the following order:
1. Global RC file as specified by MODULERCFILE variable or /etc/envi-
ronment-modules/rc. If MODULERCFILE points to a directory, the mod-
ulerc file in this directory is used as global RC file.
2. User specific module RC file $HOME/.modulerc
3. All .modulerc and .version files found during modulefile seeking.
Command line switches
The module command accepts command line switches as its first parame-
ter. These may be used to control output format of all information dis-
played and the module behavior in case of locating and interpreting
modulefiles.
All switches may be entered either in short or long notation. The fol-
lowing switches are accepted:
--auto On load, unload and switch sub-commands, enable automated module
handling mode. See also MODULES_AUTO_HANDLING section.
--color=<WHEN>
Colorize the output. WHEN defaults to always or can be never or
auto. See also MODULES_COLOR section.
--contains, -C
On avail sub-command, return modules whose fully qualified name
contains search query string.
--debug, -D
Debug mode. Causes module to print debugging messages about its
progress.
--default, -d
On avail sub-command, display only the default version of each
module name. Default version is the explicitly set default ver-
sion or also the implicit default version if the configuration
option implicit_default is enabled (see Locating Modulefiles
section in the modulefile(4) man page for further details on
implicit default version).
--force, -f
On load, unload and switch sub-commands, by-pass any unsatisfied
modulefile constraint corresponding to the declared prereq and
conflict. Which means for instance that a modulefile will be
loaded even if it comes in conflict with another loaded module-
file or that a modulefile will be unloaded even if it is
required as a prereq by another modulefile.
On clear sub-command, skip the confirmation dialog and proceed.
--help, -h
Give some helpful usage information, and terminates the command.
--icase, -i
Match module specification arguments in a case insensitive man-
ner.
--indepth
On avail sub-command, include in search results the matching
modulefiles and directories and recursively the modulefiles and
directories contained in these matching directories.
--json, -j
Display avail, list, savelist, whatis and search output in JSON
format.
--latest, -L
On avail sub-command, display only the highest numerically
sorted version of each module name (see Locating Modulefiles
section in the modulefile(4) man page).
--long, -l
Display avail, list and savelist output in long format.
--no-auto
On load, unload and switch sub-commands, disable automated mod-
ule handling mode. See also MODULES_AUTO_HANDLING section.
--no-indepth
On avail sub-command, limit search results to the matching mod-
ulefiles and directories found at the depth level expressed by
the search query. Thus modulefiles contained in directories part
of the result are excluded.
--no-pager
Do not pipe message output into a pager.
--paginate
Pipe all message output into less (or if set, to the command
referred in MODULES_PAGER variable) if error output stream is a
terminal. See also MODULES_PAGER section.
--silent, -s
Turn off error, warning and informational messages. module com-
mand output result is not affected by silent mode.
--starts-with, -S
On avail sub-command, return modules whose name starts with
search query string.
--terse, -t
Display avail, list and savelist output in short format.
--verbose, -v
Enable verbose messages during module command execution.
--version, -V
Lists the current version of the module command. The command
then terminates without further processing.
Module Sub-Commands
add modulefile...
See load.
aliases
List all available symbolic version-names and aliases in the
current MODULEPATH. All directories in the MODULEPATH are
recursively searched in the same manner than for the avail
sub-command. Only the symbolic version-names and aliases found
in the search are displayed.
append-path [-d C|--delim C|--delim=C] [--duplicates] variable value...
Append value to environment variable. The variable is a colon,
or delimiter, separated list. See append-path in the module-
file(4) man page for further explanation.
apropos [-j] string
See search.
avail [-d|-L] [-t|-l|-j] [-S|-C] [--indepth|--no-indepth] [path...]
List all available modulefiles in the current MODULEPATH. All
directories in the MODULEPATH are recursively searched for files
containing the modulefile magic cookie. If an argument is given,
then each directory in the MODULEPATH is searched for module-
files whose pathname, symbolic version-name or alias match the
argument. Argument may contain wildcard characters. Multiple
versions of an application can be supported by creating a subdi-
rectory for the application containing modulefiles for each ver-
sion.
Symbolic version-names and aliases found in the search are dis-
played in the result of this sub-command. Symbolic version-names
are displayed next to the modulefile they are assigned to within
parenthesis. Aliases are listed in the MODULEPATH section where
they have been defined. To distinguish aliases from modulefiles
a @ symbol is added within parenthesis next to their name.
Aliases defined through a global or user specific module RC file
are listed under the global/user modulerc section.
When colored output is enabled and a specific graphical rendi-
tion is defined for module default version, the default symbol
is omitted and instead the defined graphical rendition is
applied to the relative modulefile. When colored output is
enabled and a specific graphical rendition is defined for module
alias, the @ symbol is omitted. The defined graphical rendition
applies to the module alias name. See MODULES_COLOR and
MODULES_COLORS sections for details on colored output.
The parameter path may also refer to a symbolic modulefile name
or a modulefile alias. It may also leverage a specific syntax to
finely select module version (see Advanced module version speci-
fiers section below).
clear [-f]
Force the Modules package to believe that no modules are cur-
rently loaded. A confirmation is requested if command-line
switch -f (or --force) is not passed. Typed confirmation should
equal to yes or y in order to proceed.
config [--dump-state|name [value]|--reset name]
Gets or sets modulecmd.tcl options. Reports the currently set
value of passed option name or all existing options if no name
passed. If a name and a value are provided, the value of option
name is set to value. If command-line switch --reset is passed
in addition to a name, overridden value for option name is
cleared.
When a reported option value differs from default value a men-
tion is added to indicate whether the overridden value is coming
from a command-line switch (cmd-line) or from an environment
variable (env-var). When a reported option value is locked and
cannot be altered a (locked) mention is added.
If no value is currently set for an option name, the mention
<undef> is reported.
When command-line switch --dump-state is passed, current mod-
ulecmd.tcl state and Modules-related environment variables are
reported in addition to currently set modulecmd.tcl options.
Existing option names are:
o advanced_version_spec: advanced module version specification
to finely select modulefiles (defines environment variable
MODULES_ADVANCED_VERSION_SPEC when set
o auto_handling: automated module handling mode (defines
MODULES_AUTO_HANDLING)
o avail_indepth: avail sub-command in depth search mode (defines
MODULES_AVAIL_INDEPTH)
o avail_report_dir_sym: display symbolic versions targeting
directories on avail sub-command
o avail_report_mfile_sym: display symbolic versions targeting
modulefiles on avail sub-command
o collection_pin_version: register exact modulefile version in
collection (defines MODULES_COLLECTION_PIN_VERSION)
o collection_target: collection target which is valid for cur-
rent system (defines MODULES_COLLECTION_TARGET)
o color: colored output mode (defines MODULES_COLOR)
o colors: chosen colors to highlight output items (defines
MODULES_COLORS)
o contact: modulefile contact address (defines MODULECONTACT)
o extended_default: allow partial module version specification
(defines MODULES_EXTENDED_DEFAULT)
o extra_siteconfig: additional site-specific configuration
script location (defines MODULES_SITECONFIG)
o home: location of Modules package master directory (defines
MODULESHOME)
o icase: enable case insensitive match (defines MODULES_ICASE)
o ignored_dirs: directories ignored when looking for modulefiles
o implicit_default: set an implicit default version for modules
(defines MODULES_IMPLICIT_DEFAULT)
o locked_configs: configuration options that cannot be super-
seded
o ml: define ml command at initialization time (defines
MODULES_ML)
o pager: text viewer to paginate message output (defines
MODULES_PAGER)
o rcfile: global run-command file location (defines
MODULERCFILE)
o run_quarantine: environment variables to indirectly pass to
modulecmd.tcl (defines MODULES_RUN_QUARANTINE)
o silent_shell_debug: disablement of shell debugging property
for the module command (defines MODULES_SILENT_SHELL_DEBUG)
o search_match: module search match style (defines
MODULES_SEARCH_MATCH)
o set_shell_startup: ensure module command definition by setting
shell startup file (defines MODULES_SET_SHELL_STARTUP)
o siteconfig: primary site-specific configuration script loca-
tion
o tcl_ext_lib: Modules Tcl extension library location
o term_background: terminal background color kind (defines
MODULES_TERM_BACKGROUND)
o unload_match_order: unload firstly loaded or lastly loaded
module matching request (defines MODULES_UNLOAD_MATCH_ORDER)
o verbosity: module command verbosity level (defines
MODULES_VERBOSITY)
o wa_277: workaround for Tcsh history issue (defines
MODULES_WA_277)
The options avail_report_dir_sym, avail_report_mfile_sym,
ignored_dirs, locked_configs, siteconfig and tcl_ext_lib cannot
be altered. Moreover all options referred in locked_configs
value are locked, thus they cannot be altered.
display modulefile...
Display information about one or more modulefiles. The display
sub-command will list the full path of the modulefile and the
environment changes the modulefile will make if loaded. (Note:
It will not display any environment changes found within condi-
tional statements.)
The parameter modulefile may also be a symbolic modulefile name
or a modulefile alias. It may also leverage a specific syntax to
finely select module version (see Advanced module version speci-
fiers section below).
help [modulefile...]
Print the usage of each sub-command. If an argument is given,
print the Module-specific help information for the modulefile.
The parameter modulefile may also be a symbolic modulefile name
or a modulefile alias. It may also leverage a specific syntax to
finely select module version (see Advanced module version speci-
fiers section below).
info-loaded modulefile
Returns the names of currently loaded modules matching passed
modulefile. Returns an empty string if passed modulefile does
not match any loaded modules. See module-info loaded in the mod-
ulefile(4) man page for further explanation.
initadd modulefile...
Add modulefile to the shell's initialization file in the user's
home directory. The startup files checked (in order) are:
C Shell
.modules, .cshrc, .csh_variables and .login
TENEX C Shell
.modules, .tcshrc, .cshrc, .csh_variables and .login
Bourne and Korn Shells
.modules, .profile
GNU Bourne Again Shell
.modules, .bash_profile, .bash_login, .profile and .bashrc
Z Shell
.modules, .zshrc, .zshenv and .zlogin
Friendly Interactive Shell
.modules, .config/fish/config.fish
If a module load line is found in any of these files, the mod-
ulefiles are appended to any existing list of modulefiles. The
module load line must be located in at least one of the files
listed above for any of the init sub-commands to work properly.
If the module load line is found in multiple shell initializa-
tion files, all of the lines are changed.
initclear
Clear all of the modulefiles from the shell's initialization
files.
initlist
List all of the modulefiles loaded from the shell's initializa-
tion file.
initprepend modulefile...
Does the same as initadd but prepends the given modules to the
beginning of the list.
initrm modulefile...
Remove modulefile from the shell's initialization files.
initswitch modulefile1 modulefile2
Switch modulefile1 with modulefile2 in the shell's initializa-
tion files.
is-avail modulefile...
Returns a true value if any of the listed modulefiles exists in
enabled MODULEPATH. Returns a false value otherwise. See
is-avail in the modulefile(4) man page for further explanation.
The parameter modulefile may also be a symbolic modulefile name
or a modulefile alias. It may also leverage a specific syntax to
finely select module version (see Advanced module version speci-
fiers section below).
is-loaded [modulefile...]
Returns a true value if any of the listed modulefiles has been
loaded or if any modulefile is loaded in case no argument is
provided. Returns a false value otherwise. See is-loaded in the
modulefile(4) man page for further explanation.
The parameter modulefile may also be a symbolic modulefile name
or a modulefile alias. It may also leverage a specific syntax to
finely select module version (see Advanced module version speci-
fiers section below).
is-saved [collection...]
Returns a true value if any of the listed collections exists or
if any collection exists in case no argument is provided.
Returns a false value otherwise. See is-saved in the module-
file(4) man page for further explanation.
is-used [directory...]
Returns a true value if any of the listed directories has been
enabled in MODULEPATH or if any directory is enabled in case no
argument is provided. Returns a false value otherwise. See
is-used in the modulefile(4) man page for further explanation.
keyword [-j] string
See search.
list [-t|-l|-j]
List loaded modules.
load [--auto|--no-auto] [-f] modulefile...
Load modulefile into the shell environment.
The parameter modulefile may also be a symbolic modulefile name
or a modulefile alias. It may also leverage a specific syntax to
finely select module version (see Advanced module version speci-
fiers section below).
path modulefile
Print path to modulefile.
The parameter modulefile may also be a symbolic modulefile name
or a modulefile alias. It may also leverage a specific syntax to
finely select module version (see Advanced module version speci-
fiers section below).
paths modulefile
Print path of available modulefiles matching argument.
The parameter modulefile may also be a symbolic modulefile name
or a modulefile alias. It may also leverage a specific syntax to
finely select module version (see Advanced module version speci-
fiers section below).
prepend-path [-d C|--delim C|--delim=C] [--duplicates] variable
value...
Prepend value to environment variable. The variable is a colon,
or delimiter, separated list. See prepend-path in the module-
file(4) man page for further explanation.
purge Unload all loaded modulefiles.
refresh
See reload.
reload Unload then load all loaded modulefiles.
No unload then load is performed and an error is returned if the
loaded modulefiles have unsatisfied constraint corresponding to
the prereq and conflict they declare.
remove-path [-d C|--delim C|--delim=C] [--index] variable value...
Remove value from the colon, or delimiter, separated list in
environment variable. See remove-path in the modulefile(4) man
page for further explanation.
restore [collection]
Restore the environment state as defined in collection. If col-
lection name is not specified, then it is assumed to be the
default collection. If collection is a fully qualified path, it
is restored from this location rather than from a file under the
user's collection directory. If MODULES_COLLECTION_TARGET is
set, a suffix equivalent to the value of this variable is
appended to the collection file name to restore.
When restoring a collection, the currently set MODULEPATH direc-
tory list and the currently loaded modulefiles are unused and
unloaded then used and loaded to exactly match the MODULEPATH
and loaded modulefiles lists saved in this collection file. The
order of the paths and modulefiles set in collection is pre-
served when restoring. It means that currently loaded modules
are unloaded to get the same LOADEDMODULES root than collection
and currently used module paths are unused to get the same MOD-
ULEPATH root. Then missing module paths are used and missing
modulefiles are loaded.
If a module, without a default version explicitly defined, is
recorded in a collection by its bare name: loading this module
when restoring the collection will fail if the configuration
option implicit_default is disabled.
rm modulefile...
See unload.
save [collection]
Record the currently set MODULEPATH directory list and the cur-
rently loaded modulefiles in a collection file under the user's
collection directory $HOME/.module. If collection name is not
specified, then it is assumed to be the default collection. If
collection is a fully qualified path, it is saved at this loca-
tion rather than under the user's collection directory.
If MODULES_COLLECTION_TARGET is set, a suffix equivalent to the
value of this variable will be appended to the collection file
name.
By default, if a loaded modulefile corresponds to the explicitly
defined default module version, the bare module name is
recorded. If the configuration option implicit_default is
enabled, the bare module name is also recorded for the implicit
default module version. If MODULES_COLLECTION_PIN_VERSION is set
to 1, module version is always recorded even if it is the
default version.
No collection is recorded and an error is returned if the loaded
modulefiles have unsatisfied constraint corresponding to the
prereq and conflict they declare.
savelist [-t|-l|-j]
List collections that are currently saved under the user's col-
lection directory. If MODULES_COLLECTION_TARGET is set, only
collections matching the target suffix will be displayed.
saverm [collection]
Delete the collection file under the user's collection direc-
tory. If collection name is not specified, then it is assumed to
be the default collection. If MODULES_COLLECTION_TARGET is set,
a suffix equivalent to the value of this variable will be
appended to the collection file name.
saveshow [collection]
Display the content of collection. If collection name is not
specified, then it is assumed to be the default collection. If
collection is a fully qualified path, this location is displayed
rather than a collection file under the user's collection direc-
tory. If MODULES_COLLECTION_TARGET is set, a suffix equivalent
to the value of this variable will be appended to the collection
file name.
search [-j] string
Seeks through the module-whatis informations of all modulefiles
for the specified string. All module-whatis informations match-
ing the string in a case insensitive manner will be displayed.
string may contain wildcard characters.
show modulefile...
See display.
source scriptfile...
Execute scriptfile into the shell environment. scriptfile must
be written with modulefile syntax and specified with a fully
qualified path. Once executed scriptfile is not marked loaded in
shell environment which differ from load sub-command.
swap [modulefile1] modulefile2
See switch.
switch [--auto|--no-auto] [-f] [modulefile1] modulefile2
Switch loaded modulefile1 with modulefile2. If modulefile1 is
not specified, then it is assumed to be the currently loaded
module with the same root name as modulefile2.
The parameter modulefile may also be a symbolic modulefile name
or a modulefile alias. It may also leverage a specific syntax to
finely select module version (see Advanced module version speci-
fiers section below).
test modulefile...
Execute and display results of the Module-specific tests for the
modulefile.
The parameter modulefile may also be a symbolic modulefile name
or a modulefile alias. It may also leverage a specific syntax to
finely select module version (see Advanced module version speci-
fiers section below).
unload [--auto|--no-auto] [-f] modulefile...
Remove modulefile from the shell environment.
The parameter modulefile may also be a symbolic modulefile name
or a modulefile alias. It may also leverage a specific syntax to
finely select module version (see Advanced module version speci-
fiers section below).
unuse directory...
Remove one or more directories from the MODULEPATH environment
variable if reference counter of these directories is equal to 1
or unknown.
Reference counter of directory in MODULEPATH denotes the number
of times directory has been enabled. When attempting to remove
directory from MODULEPATH, reference counter variable
MODULEPATH_modshare is checked and directory is removed only if
its relative counter is equal to 1 or not defined. Otherwise
directory is kept and reference counter is decreased by 1.
use [-a|--append] directory...
Prepend one or more directories to the MODULEPATH environment
variable. The --append flag will append the directory to MOD-
ULEPATH.
Reference counter environment variable MODULEPATH_modshare is
also set to increase the number of times directory has been
added to MODULEPATH.
whatis [-j] [modulefile...]
Display the information set up by the module-whatis commands
inside the specified modulefiles. These specified modulefiles
may be expressed using wildcard characters. If no modulefile is
specified, all module-whatis lines will be shown.
The parameter modulefile may also be a symbolic modulefile name
or a modulefile alias. It may also leverage a specific syntax to
finely select module version (see Advanced module version speci-
fiers section below).
Modulefiles
modulefiles are written in the Tool Command Language (Tcl) and are
interpreted by modulecmd.tcl. modulefiles can use conditional state-
ments. Thus the effect a modulefile will have on the environment may
change depending upon the current state of the environment.
Environment variables are unset when unloading a modulefile. Thus, it
is possible to load a modulefile and then unload it without having the
environment variables return to their prior state.
Advanced module version specifiers
When the advanced module version specifiers mechanism is enabled (see
MODULES_ADVANCED_VERSION_SPEC), the specification of modulefile passed
on Modules sub-commands changes. After the module name a version con-
straint prefixed by the @ character may be added. It could be directly
appended to the module name or separated from it with a space charac-
ter.
Constraints can be expressed to refine the selection of module version
to:
o a single version with the @version syntax, for instance foo AT 1.3
syntax will select module foo/1.2.3
o a list of versions with the @version1,version2,... syntax, for
instance foo AT 1.3,1.10 will match modules foo/1.2.3 and foo/1.10
o a range of versions with the @version1:, @:version2 and @ver-
sion1:version2 syntaxes, for instance foo AT 1.2: will select all ver-
sions of module foo greater than or equal to 1.2, foo@:1.3 will
select all versions less than or equal to 1.3 and foo AT 1.2:1.3 matches
all versions between 1.2 and 1.3 including 1.2 and 1.3 versions
Advanced specification of single version or list of versions may bene-
fit from the activation of the extended default mechanism (see
MODULES_EXTENDED_DEFAULT) to use an abbreviated notation like @1 to
refer to more precise version numbers like 1.2.3. Range of versions on
its side natively handles abbreviated versions.
In order to be specified in a range of versions or compared to a range
of versions, the version major element should corresponds to a number.
For instance 10a, 1.2.3, 1.foo are versions valid for range comparison
whereas default or foo.2 versions are invalid for range comparison.
If the implicit default mechanism is also enabled (see
MODULES_IMPLICIT_DEFAULT), a default and latest symbolic versions are
automatically defined for each module name (also at each directory
level for deep modulefiles). These automatic version symbols are
defined unless a symbolic version, alias, or regular module version
already exists for these default or latest version names. Using the
mod@latest (or mod/latest) syntax ensures highest available version
will be selected.
Collections
Collections describe a sequence of module use then module load commands
that are interpreted by modulecmd.tcl to set the user environment as
described by this sequence. When a collection is activated, with the
restore sub-command, module paths and loaded modules are unused or
unloaded if they are not part or if they are not ordered the same way
as in the collection.
Collections are generated by the save sub-command that dumps the cur-
rent user environment state in terms of module paths and loaded mod-
ules. By default collections are saved under the $HOME/.module direc-
tory.
Collections may be valid for a given target if they are suffixed. In
this case these collections can only be restored if their suffix corre-
spond to the current value of the MODULES_COLLECTION_TARGET environment
variable (see the dedicated section of this topic below).
EXIT STATUS
The module command exits with 0 if its execution succeed. Otherwise 1
is returned.
ENVIRONMENT
_LMFILES_
A colon separated list of the full pathname for all loaded mod-
ulefiles.
LOADEDMODULES
A colon separated list of all loaded modulefiles.
MODULECONTACT
Email address to contact in case any issue occurs during the
interpretation of modulefiles.
MODULEPATH
The path that the module command searches when looking for mod-
ulefiles. Typically, it is set to the master modulefiles direc-
tory, /usr/share/Modules/modulefiles, by the initialization
script. MODULEPATH can be set using module use or by the module
initialization script to search group or personal modulefile
directories before or after the master modulefile directory.
Path elements registered in the MODULEPATH environment variable
may contain reference to environment variables which are con-
verted to their corresponding value by module command each time
it looks at the MODULEPATH value. If an environment variable
referred in a path element is not defined, its reference is con-
verted to an empty string.
MODULERCFILE
The location of a global run-command file containing modulefile
specific setup. See Modulecmd startup section for detailed
information.
MODULES_ADVANCED_VERSION_SPEC
If set to 1, enable advanced module version specifiers (see
Advanced module version specifiers section). If set to 0, dis-
able advanced module version specifiers.
Advanced module version specifiers enablement is defined in the
following order of preference: MODULES_ADVANCED_VERSION_SPEC
environment variable then the default set in modulecmd.tcl
script configuration. Which means MODULES_ADVANCED_VERSION_SPEC
overrides default configuration.
MODULES_AUTO_HANDLING
If set to 1, enable automated module handling mode. If set to 0
disable automated module handling mode. Other values are
ignored.
Automated module handling mode consists in additional actions
triggered when loading or unloading a modulefile to satisfy the
constraints it declares. When loading a modulefile, following
actions are triggered:
o Requirement Load: load of the modulefiles declared as a prereq
of the loading modulefile.
o Dependent Reload: reload of the modulefiles declaring a prereq
onto loaded modulefile or declaring a prereq onto a modulefile
part of this reloading batch.
When unloading a modulefile, following actions are triggered:
o Dependent Unload: unload of the modulefiles declaring a
non-optional prereq onto unloaded modulefile or declaring a
non-optional prereq onto a modulefile part of this unloading
batch. A prereq modulefile is considered optional if the pre-
req definition order is made of multiple modulefiles and at
least one alternative modulefile is loaded.
o Useless Requirement Unload: unload of the prereq modulefiles
that have been automatically loaded for either the unloaded
modulefile, an unloaded dependent modulefile or a modulefile
part of this useless requirement unloading batch. Modulefiles
are added to this unloading batch only if they are not
required by any other loaded modulefiles.
o Dependent Reload: reload of the modulefiles declaring a con-
flict or an optional prereq onto either the unloaded module-
file, an unloaded dependent or an unloaded useless requirement
or declaring a prereq onto a modulefile part of this reloading
batch.
In case a loaded modulefile has some of its declared constraints
unsatisfied (pre-required modulefile not loaded or conflicting
modulefile loaded for instance), this loaded modulefile is
excluded from the automatic reload actions described above.
For the specific case of the switch sub-command, where a module-
file is unloaded to then load another modulefile. Dependent mod-
ulefiles to Unload are merged into the Dependent modulefiles to
Reload that are reloaded after the load of the switched-to mod-
ulefile.
Automated module handling mode enablement is defined in the fol-
lowing order of preference: --auto/--no-auto command line
switches, then MODULES_AUTO_HANDLING environment variable, then
the default set in modulecmd.tcl script configuration. Which
means MODULES_AUTO_HANDLING overrides default configuration and
--auto/--no-auto command line switches override every other ways
to enable or disable this mode.
MODULES_AVAIL_INDEPTH
If set to 1, enable in depth search results for avail sub-com-
mand. If set to 0 disable avail sub-command in depth mode. Other
values are ignored.
When in depth mode is enabled, modulefiles and directories con-
tained in directories matching search query are also included in
search results. When disabled these modulefiles and directories
contained in matching directories are excluded.
avail sub-command in depth mode enablement is defined in the
following order of preference: --indepth/--no-indepth command
line switches, then MODULES_AVAIL_INDEPTH environment variable,
then the default set in modulecmd.tcl script configuration.
Which means MODULES_AVAIL_INDEPTH overrides default configura-
tion and --indepth/--no-indepth command line switches override
every other ways to enable or disable this mode.
MODULES_CMD
The location of the active module command script.
MODULES_COLLECTION_PIN_VERSION
If set to 1, register exact version number of modulefiles when
saving a collection. Otherwise modulefile version number is
omitted if it corresponds to the explicitly set default version
and also to the implicit default when the configuration option
implicit_default is enabled.
MODULES_COLLECTION_TARGET
The collection target that determines what collections are valid
thus reachable on the current system.
Collection directory may sometimes be shared on multiple
machines which may use different modules setup. For instance
modules users may access with the same HOME directory multiple
systems using different OS versions. When it happens a collec-
tion made on machine 1 may be erroneous on machine 2.
When a target is set, only the collections made for that target
are available to the restore, savelist, saveshow and saverm
sub-commands. Saving a collection registers the target footprint
by suffixing the collection filename with .$MODULES_COLLEC-
TION_TARGET. The collection target is not involved when collec-
tion is specified as file path on the saveshow, restore and save
sub-commands.
For example, the MODULES_COLLECTION_TARGET variable may be set
with results from commands like lsb_release, hostname, dnsdo-
mainname, etc.
MODULES_COLOR
Defines if output should be colored or not. Accepted values are
never, auto and always.
When color mode is set to auto, output is colored only if the
standard error output channel is attached to a terminal.
Colored output enablement is defined in the following order of
preference: --color command line switch, then MODULES_COLOR
environment variable, then NO_COLOR, CLICOLOR and CLICOLOR_FORCE
environment variables, then the default set in modulecmd.tcl
script configuration. Which means MODULES_COLOR overrides
default configuration and the NO_COLOR and CLICOLOR/CLI-
COLOR_FORCE variables. --color command line switch overrides
every other ways to enable or disable this mode.
NO_COLOR, CLICOLOR and CLICOLOR_FORCE environment variables are
also honored to define color mode. The never mode is set if
NO_COLOR is defined (regardless of its value) or if CLICOLOR
equals to 0. If CLICOLOR is set to another value, it corresponds
to the auto mode. The always mode is set if CLICOLOR_FORCE is
set to a value different than 0. NO_COLOR variable prevails
over CLICOLOR and CLICOLOR_FORCE. Color mode set with these
three variables is superseded by mode set with MODULES_COLOR
environment variable.
MODULES_COLORS
Specifies the colors and other attributes used to highlight var-
ious parts of the output. Its value is a colon-separated list of
output items associated to a Select Graphic Rendition (SGR)
code. It follows the same syntax than LS_COLORS.
Output items are designated by keys. Items able to be colorized
are: highlighted element (hi), debug information (db), tag sepa-
rator (se); Error (er), warning (wa), module error (me) and info
(in) message prefixes; Modulepath (mp), directory (di), module
alias (al), module symbolic version (sy), module default version
(de) and modulefile command (cm).
See the Select Graphic Rendition (SGR) section in the documenta-
tion of the text terminal that is used for permitted values and
their meaning as character attributes. These substring values
are integers in decimal representation and can be concatenated
with semicolons. Modules takes care of assembling the result
into a complete SGR sequence (\33[...m). Common values to con-
catenate include 1 for bold, 4 for underline, 30 to 37 for fore-
ground colors and 90 to 97 for 16-color mode foreground colors.
See also
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ANSI_escape_code#SGR_(Select_Graphic_Rendition)_parameters
for a complete SGR code reference.
No graphical rendition will be applied to an output item that
could normaly be colored but which is not defined in the color
set. Thus if MODULES_COLORS is defined empty, no output will be
colored at all.
The color set is defined for Modules in the following order of
preference: MODULES_COLORS environment variable, then the
default set in modulecmd.tcl script configuration. Which means
MODULES_COLORS overrides default configuration.
MODULES_EXTENDED_DEFAULT
If set to 1, a specified module version is matched against
starting portion of existing module versions, where portion is a
substring separated from the rest of the version string by a .
character. For example specified modules mod/1 and mod/1.2 will
match existing modulefile mod/1.2.3.
In case multiple modulefiles match the specified module version
and a single module has to be selected, the explicitly set
default version is returned if it is part of matching module-
files. Otherwise the implicit default among matching modulefiles
is returned if defined (see MODULES_IMPLICIT_DEFAULT section)
This environment variable supersedes the value of the configura-
tion option extended_default set in modulecmd.tcl script.
MODULES_ICASE
When module specification are passed as argument to module
sub-commands or modulefile Tcl commands, defines the case sensi-
tiveness to apply to match them. When MODULES_ICASE is set to
never, a case sensitive match is applied in any cases. When set
to search, a case insensitive match is applied to the avail,
whatis and paths sub-commands. When set to always, a case insen-
sitive match is also applied to the other module sub-commands
and modulefile Tcl commands for the module specification they
receive as argument.
Case sensitiveness behavior is defined in the following order of
preference: --icase command line switch, which corresponds to
the always mode, then MODULES_ICASE environment variable, then
the default set in modulecmd.tcl script configuration. Which
means MODULES_ICASE overrides default configuration and --icase
command line switch overrides every other ways to set case sen-
sitiveness behavior.
MODULES_IMPLICIT_DEFAULT
Defines (if set to 1) or not (if set to 0) an implicit default
version for modules without a default version explicitly defined
(see Locating Modulefiles section in the modulefile(4) man
page).
Without either an explicit or implicit default version defined a
module must be fully qualified (version should be specified in
addition to its name) to get:
o targeted by module load, switch, display, help, test and path
sub-commands.
o restored from a collection, unless already loaded in collec-
tion-specified order.
o automatically loaded by automated module handling mechanisms
(see MODULES_AUTO_HANDLING section) when declared as module
requirement, with prereq or module load modulefile commands.
An error is returned in the above situations if either no
explicit or implicit default version is defined.
This environment variable supersedes the value of the configura-
tion option implicit_default set in modulecmd.tcl script. This
environment variable is ignored if implicit_default has been
declared locked in locked_configs configuration option.
MODULES_LMALTNAME
A colon separated list of the alternative names set through mod-
ule-version and module-alias statements corresponding to all
loaded modulefiles. Each element in this list starts by the name
of the loaded modulefile followed by all alternative names
resolving to it. The loaded modulefile and its alternative names
are separated by the ampersand character.
This environment variable is intended for module command inter-
nal use to get knowledge of the alternative names matching
loaded modulefiles in order to keep environment consistent when
conflicts or pre-requirements are set over these alternative
designations. It also helps to find a match after modulefiles
being loaded when unload, is-loaded or info-loaded actions are
run over these names.
MODULES_LMCONFLICT
A colon separated list of the conflict statements defined by all
loaded modulefiles. Each element in this list starts by the name
of the loaded modulefile declaring the conflict followed by the
name of all modulefiles it declares a conflict with. These
loaded modulefiles and conflicting modulefile names are sepa-
rated by the ampersand character.
This environment variable is intended for module command inter-
nal use to get knowledge of the conflicts declared by the loaded
modulefiles in order to keep environment consistent when a con-
flicting module is asked for load afterward.
MODULES_LMNOTUASKED
A colon separated list of all loaded modulefiles that were not
explicitly asked for load from the command-line.
This environment variable is intended for module command inter-
nal use to distinguish the modulefiles that have been loaded
automatically from modulefiles that have been asked by users.
MODULES_LMPREREQ
A colon separated list of the prereq statements defined by all
loaded modulefiles. Each element in this list starts by the name
of the loaded modulefile declaring the pre-requirement followed
by the name of all modulefiles it declares a prereq with. These
loaded modulefiles and pre-required modulefile names are sepa-
rated by the ampersand character. When a prereq statement is
composed of multiple modulefiles, these modulefile names are
separated by the pipe character.
This environment variable is intended for module command inter-
nal use to get knowledge of the pre-requirement declared by the
loaded modulefiles in order to keep environment consistent when
a pre-required module is asked for unload afterward.
MODULES_ML
If set to 1, define ml command when initializing Modules (see
Package Initialization section). If set to 0, ml command is not
defined.
ml command enablement is defined in the following order of pref-
erence: MODULES_ML environment variable then the default set in
modulecmd.tcl script configuration. Which means MODULES_ML over-
rides default configuration.
MODULES_PAGER
Text viewer for use to paginate message output if error output
stream is attached to a terminal. The value of this variable is
composed of a pager command name or path eventually followed by
command-line options.
Paging command and options are defined for Modules in the fol-
lowing order of preference: MODULES_PAGER environment variable,
then the default set in modulecmd.tcl script configuration.
Which means MODULES_PAGER overrides default configuration.
If MODULES_PAGER variable is set to an empty string or to the
value cat, pager will not be launched.
MODULES_RUN_QUARANTINE
A space separated list of environment variable names that should
be passed indirectly to modulecmd.tcl to protect its run-time
environment from side-effect coming from their current defini-
tion.
Each variable found in MODULES_RUN_QUARANTINE will have its
value emptied or set to the value of the corresponding
MODULES_RUNENV_<VAR> variable when defining modulecmd.tcl
run-time environment.
Original values of these environment variables set in quarantine
are passed to modulecmd.tcl via <VAR>_modquar variables.
MODULES_RUNENV_<VAR>
Value to set to environment variable <VAR> for modulecmd.tcl
run-time execution if <VAR> is referred in
MODULES_RUN_QUARANTINE.
MODULES_SEARCH_MATCH
When searching for modules with avail sub-command, defines the
way query string should match against available module names.
With starts_with value, returned modules are those whose name
begins by search query string. When set to contains, any modules
whose fully qualified name contains search query string are
returned.
Module search match style is defined in the following order of
preference: --starts-with and --contains command line switches,
then MODULES_SEARCH_MATCH environment variable, then the default
set in modulecmd.tcl script configuration. Which means
MODULES_SEARCH_MATCH overrides default configuration and
--starts-with/--contains command line switches override every
other ways to set search match style.
MODULES_SET_SHELL_STARTUP
If set to 1, defines when module command initializes the shell
startup file to ensure that the module command is still defined
in sub-shells. Setting shell startup file means defining the ENV
and BASH_ENV environment variable to the Modules bourne shell
initialization script. If set to 0, shell startup file is not
defined.
MODULES_SILENT_SHELL_DEBUG
If set to 1, disable any xtrace or verbose debugging property
set on current shell session for the duration of either the mod-
ule command or the module shell initialization script. Only
applies to Bourne Shell (sh) and its derivatives.
MODULES_SITECONFIG
Location of a site-specific configuration script to source into
modulecmd.tcl. See also Modulecmd startup section.
This environment variable is ignored if extra_siteconfig has
been declared locked in locked_configs configuration option.
MODULES_TERM_BACKGROUND
Inform Modules of the terminal background color to determine if
the color set for dark background or the color set for light
background should be used to color output in case no specific
color set is defined with the MODULES_COLORS variable. Accepted
values are dark and light.
MODULES_UNLOAD_MATCH_ORDER
When a module unload request matches multiple loaded modules,
unload firstly loaded module or lastly loaded module. Accepted
values are returnfirst and returnlast.
MODULES_USE_COMPAT_VERSION
If set to 1 prior to Modules package initialization, enable Mod-
ules compatibility version (3.2 release branch) rather main ver-
sion at initialization scripts running time. Modules package
compatibility version should be installed along with main ver-
sion for this environment variable to have any effect.
MODULES_VERBOSITY
Defines the verbosity level of the module command. Available
verbosity levels from the least to the most verbose are:
o silent: turn off error, warning and informational messages but
does not affect module command output result.
o concise: enable error and warning messages but disable infor-
mational messages.
o normal: turn on informational messages, like a report of the
additional module evaluations triggered by loading or unload-
ing modules, aborted evaluation issues or a report of each
module evaluation occurring during a restore or source
sub-commands.
o verbose: add additional informational messages, like a system-
atic report of the loading or unloading module evaluations.
o debug: print debugging messages about module command execu-
tion.
Module command verbosity is defined in the following order of
preference: --silent, --verbose and --debug command line
switches, then MODULES_VERBOSITY environment variable, then the
default set in modulecmd.tcl script configuration. Which means
MODULES_VERBOSITY overrides default configuration and --silent/-
--verbose/--debug command line switches overrides every other
ways to set verbosity level.
MODULES_WA_277
If set to 1 prior to Modules package initialization, enables
workaround for Tcsh history issue (see
https://github.com/cea-hpc/modules/issues/277). This issue
leads to erroneous history entries under Tcsh shell. When work-
around is enabled, an alternative module alias is defined which
fixes the history mechanism issue. However the alternative defi-
nition of the module alias weakens shell evaluation of the code
produced by modulefiles. Characters with a special meaning for
Tcsh shell (like { and }) may not be used anymore in shell alias
definition otherwise the evaluation of the code produced by mod-
ulefiles will return a syntax error.
MODULESHOME
The location of the master Modules package file directory con-
taining module command initialization scripts, the executable
program modulecmd.tcl, and a directory containing a collection
of master modulefiles.
<VAR>_modquar
Value of environment variable <VAR> passed to modulecmd.tcl in
order to restore <VAR> to this value once started.
<VAR>_modshare
Reference counter variable for path-like variable <VAR>. A colon
separated list containing pairs of elements. A pair is formed by
a path element followed its usage counter which represents the
number of times this path has been enabled in variable <VAR>. A
colon separates the two parts of the pair.
FILES
/usr/share/Modules
The MODULESHOME directory.
/etc/environment-modules/siteconfig.tcl
The site-specific configuration script of modulecmd.tcl. An addi-
tional configuration script could be defined using the
MODULES_SITECONFIG environment variable.
/etc/environment-modules/rc
The system-wide modules rc file. The location of this file can be
changed using the MODULERCFILE environment variable as described
above.
$HOME/.modulerc
The user specific modules rc file.
$HOME/.module
The user specific collection directory.
/usr/share/Modules/modulefiles
The directory for system-wide modulefiles. The location of the
directory can be changed using the MODULEPATH environment variable
as described above.
/usr/share/Modules/libexec/modulecmd.tcl
The modulefile interpreter that gets executed upon each invocation
of module.
/usr/share/Modules/init/<shell>
The Modules package initialization file sourced into the user's
environment.
SEE ALSO
ml(1), modulefile(4)
COPYRIGHT
1996-1999 John L. Furlani & Peter W. Osel, 1998-2017 R.K.Owen,
2002-2004 Mark Lakata, 2004-2017 Kent Mein, 2016-2020 Xavier Delaruelle
4.5.2 2020-07-30 MODULE(1)