Provided by: environment-modules_5.5.0-1_amd64 bug

NAME

       modulefile - files containing Tcl code for the Modules package

DESCRIPTION

       modulefiles  are  written  in  the Tool Command Language, Tcl(n) and are interpreted by the modulecmd.tcl
       program via the module user interface. modulefiles can be loaded, unloaded, or switched on-the-fly  while
       the  user  is  working;  and  can  be  used  to  implement  site policies regarding the access and use of
       applications.

       A modulefile begins with the #%Module file signature, also called the Modules  magic  cookie.  A  version
       number  may be placed after this string. The version number is useful as the modulefile format may change
       thus it reflects the minimum version of modulecmd.tcl required to interpret the modulefile. If a  version
       number  doesn't  exist,  then  modulecmd.tcl  will assume the modulefile is compatible. Files without the
       magic cookie or with a version number greater than the current  version  of  modulecmd.tcl  will  not  be
       interpreted.  If  the  mcookie_version_check  configuration  is  disabled  the  version number set is not
       checked.

       Each modulefile contains the changes to a user's environment needed to access an application.  Tcl  is  a
       simple  programming  language  which  permits  modulefiles  to be arbitrarily complex, depending upon the
       application's and the modulefile writer's needs. If support for extended tcl (tclX) has  been  configured
       for  your  installation  of  the Modules package, you may use all the extended commands provided by tclX,
       too.

       A typical modulefile is a simple bit of code that set or add entries  to  the  PATH,  MANPATH,  or  other
       environment  variables.  A  Modulefile  is  evaluated against current modulecmd.tcl's mode which leads to
       specific evaluation results. For instance if the modulefile sets a value to an environment variable, this
       variable is set when modulefile is loaded and unset when modulefile is unloaded.

       Tcl has conditional statements that are evaluated when  the  modulefile  is  interpreted.  This  is  very
       effective  for  managing  path  or environment changes due to different OS releases or architectures. The
       user environment information is encapsulated into a single modulefile kept in  a  central  location.  The
       same  modulefile  is  used  by  every  user  on any machine. So, from the user's perspective, starting an
       application is exactly the same irrespective of the machine or platform they are on.

       modulefiles also hide the notion of different types of shells. From the user's perspective, changing  the
       environment  for  one shell looks exactly the same as changing the environment for another shell. This is
       useful for new or novice users and eliminates the need for statements such as  "if  you're  using  the  C
       Shell  do this ..., otherwise if you're using the Bourne shell do this ...". Announcing and accessing new
       software is uniform and independent of the user's shell. From the modulefile writer's  perspective,  this
       means one set of information will take care of every type of shell.

MODULES SPECIFIC TCL COMMANDS

       The  Modules  Package  uses  commands which are extensions to the "standard" Tool Command Language Tcl(n)
       package. Unless otherwise specified, the Module commands return the empty string.  Some  commands  behave
       differently  when  a  modulefile is loaded or unloaded. The command descriptions assume the modulefile is
       being loaded.

       always-load [options] modulefile...
              Load modulefile and apply the keep-loaded tag to it in order to avoid the automatic unload of this
              modulefile when modules dependent of it are unloaded.

              always-load command accepts the following options:

              • --modulepath modulepathlist--optional--tag taglist

              modulefile is declared as a requirement of currently loading module. This command acts as an alias
              of module load command. If more than one modulefile are  specified,  then  this  list  acts  as  a
              Boolean AND operation, which means all specified modulefiles are required.

              When  the  --optional  option  is  set,  each  specified  modulefile  is  declared  as an optional
              requirement. A modulefile that cannot be loaded, will not stop the evaluation.

              The --tag option accepts a list of module tags to apply to modulefile once loaded in  addition  to
              the  keep-loaded tag. taglist corresponds to the concatenation of multiple tags separated by colon
              character. taglist should  not  contain  tags  inherited  from  modulefile  state  or  from  other
              modulefile  commands. If module is already loaded, tags from taglist are added to the list of tags
              already applied to this module.

              The  --modulepath  option  accepts  a  list  of  modulepath.  modulepathlist  corresponds  to  the
              concatenation  of  multiple  modulepaths  separated  by  colon character. When this option is set,
              required modulefile should be located within one of the listed modulepaths. A path  in  this  list
              may  correspond  to  the  first  path  elements of an actual modulepath (e.g., /path/to will match
              modulefiles located into the /path/to/modulefiles modulepath directory).

              If an attempt to load modulefile is performed and --modulepath option is set, modulefile  will  be
              searched  in  the  enabled  modulepaths  whose  start  match one of the specified paths and in the
              specified paths not matching any enabled modulepaths. For  instance  if  this  option  is  set  to
              /path/to:/another/path   and  /path/to/modulefiles  is  currently  the  sole  enabled  modulepath,
              modulefile will be searched into /path/to/modulefiles and /another/path directories.

       append-path [-d C|--delim C|--delim=C] [--duplicates] variable value...
              See prepend-path.

       break  This is not a Modules-specific command, it's actually part  of  Tcl,  which  has  been  overloaded
              similar  to  the  continue  and  exit  commands to have the effect of causing the module not to be
              listed as loaded and not affect other  modules  being  loaded  concurrently.  All  non-environment
              commands  within the module will be performed up to this point. Processing will continue on to the
              next module on the command line unless if  abort_on_error  configuration  option  is  enabled  for
              running  module sub-command. The break command will only have this effect if not used within a Tcl
              loop though.

              An example: Suppose that a  full  selection  of  modulefiles  are  needed  for  various  different
              architectures,  but  some of the modulefiles are not needed and the user should be alerted. Having
              the unnecessary modulefile be a link to the following notavail modulefile will perform the task as
              required.

                 #%Module

                 proc ModulesHelp {} {
                     puts stderr {This module does nothing but alert the user}
                     puts stderr "that the [module-info name] module is not available"
                 }

                 module-whatis {Notifies user that module is not available.}

                 set curMod [module-info name]
                 if {[module-info mode load]} {
                     puts stderr "Note: '$curMod' is not available for [uname sysname]."
                 }
                 break

              Modulefile using break command when unloading may be unloaded anyway if --force option is set.  To
              forbid  the  unload  of  a  modulefile,  it  is recommended to tag it super-sticky with module-tag
              command.

       chdir directory
              Set the current working directory to directory.

       complete shell name body
              Define shell completion for command name with specified body if shell is the current  shell  under
              which  modulecmd.tcl  was  invoked.  Body  corresponds  to  argument options accepted by the shell
              command which defines completion. When a modulefile is unloaded, complete becomes uncomplete.

              The following shells are supported: bash, tcsh, bash and fish. Please refer to  the  documentation
              of  these shells to learn how to define completion. The command is ignored if an unsupported shell
              is specified.

       conflict modulefile...
              conflict controls whether or not the modulefile  will  be  loaded.   The  conflict  command  lists
              modulefiles  which  conflict  with  the  current  modulefile.  If  a  list  contains more than one
              modulefile, then each member of the list  acts  as  a  Boolean  OR  operation.  Multiple  conflict
              commands  may  be used to create a Boolean AND operation. If one of the requirements have not been
              satisfied, an error is reported and  the  current  modulefile  makes  no  changes  to  the  user's
              environment.

              If  an  argument for conflict is a directory and any other modulefile from that directory has been
              loaded, then a conflict will occur.  For example, specifying X11 as a conflict  will  stop  X11/R4
              and X11/R5 from being loaded at the same time.

              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 specifiers
              section below).

              If  the conflict_unload and auto_handling configuration options are enabled, conflict will attempt
              to unload all loaded modules that match specification. (see MODULES_AUTO_HANDLING in module).

       continue
              This is not a modules specific command but another overloaded Tcl command and is  similar  to  the
              break  or  exit  commands  except  the  module  will be listed as loaded as well as performing any
              environment or Tcl commands up to this point and then continuing on to  the  next  module  on  the
              command  line.  The  continue  command  will  only  have this effect if not used within a Tcl loop
              though.

       depends-on [options] modulefile...
              Alias of prereq-all command.

       exit [N]
              This is not a modules specific command but another overloaded Tcl command and is  similar  to  the
              break  or  continue  commands.  However,  this  command will cause the immediate cessation of this
              module.  Any  additional  modules  on  the  command  line  will  not  be  evaluated  even  if  the
              abort_on_error  configuration  option  is disabled for running module sub-command. This module and
              the subsequent modules will not be listed as loaded. No environment commands will be performed  in
              the current module.

       family name
              Defines  loading  modulefile  as  a  member  of  family name. Only one member of a family could be
              loaded. Error is raised when attempting to load another member of the same family name.

              family corresponds to the definition of a conflict on name and the definition  of  a  module-alias
              name targeting currently loading module.

              In  addition,  the  MODULES_FAMILY_<NAME> environment variable is defined and set to the currently
              loading module name minus version. This variable helps to know what module provides for the family
              name in the currently loaded environment. For instance if loading modulefile foo/1.0 defines being
              member of the bar family, the MODULES_FAMILY_BAR will be set to the foo value. For  compatibility,
              the  LMOD_FAMILY_<NAME>  environment  variable  is  also  defined  and  set to the same value than
              MODULES_FAMILY_<NAME>.

              name should be a non-empty string only containing characters that could be part of an  environment
              variable name (i.e., [a-zA-Z0-9_]).

              If  the  conflict_unload and auto_handling configuration options are enabled, an attempt to unload
              loaded module that defines the same family is made. (see MODULES_AUTO_HANDLING in module).

       getenv [--return-value] variable [value]
              Returns value of environment variable. If variable is not defined, value is returned  if  set,  an
              empty  string  is  returned  otherwise. The getenv command should be preferred over the Tcl global
              variable env to query environment variables.

              When modulefile is evaluated in display mode, getenv returns variable name  prefixed  with  dollar
              sign  (e.g.,  $variable)  unless  if the --return-value option is set. When this option is set the
              value of environment variable or defined fallback value is returned in display mode.

       getvariant [--return-value] variant [value]
              Returns value of designated variant. If variant is not defined, value is returned if set, an empty
              string is returned otherwise. The getvariant command should be preferred  over  the  ModuleVariant
              Tcl array to query a variant value.

              When  modulefile  is  evaluated in display mode, getvariant returns variant name enclosed in curly
              braces (e.g., {variant}) unless if the --return-value option is set. When this option is  set  the
              value of variant or defined fallback value is returned in display mode.

       hide-modulefile modulefile
              Alias of module-hide command.

       hide-version modulefile
              Alias of module-hide command.

       is-avail modulefile...
              The  is-avail  command  returns  a  true  value if any of the listed modulefiles exists in enabled
              MODULEPATH. If a list contains more than one modulefile, then each member acts  as  a  boolean  OR
              operation.  If  an  argument  for is-avail is a directory and a modulefile exists in the directory
              is-avail would return a true value.

              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 specifiers
              section below).

       is-loaded [modulefile...]
              The is-loaded command 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. If a list contains more than one
              modulefile, then each member acts as a boolean OR operation. If an argument  for  is-loaded  is  a
              directory  and  any  modulefile  from  the directory has been loaded is-loaded would return a true
              value.

              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 specifiers
              section below).

       is-saved [collection...]
              The is-saved command returns a true value if any of  the  listed  collections  exists  or  if  any
              collection  exists  in  case no argument is provided. If a list contains more than one collection,
              then each member acts as a boolean OR operation.

              If MODULES_COLLECTION_TARGET is set, a suffix equivalent to the value of this variable is appended
              to the passed collection name. In case no collection argument is provided, a true value will  only
              be returned if a collection matching currently set target exists.

       is-used [directory...]
              The  is-used  command  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. If a list contains more
              than one directory, then each member acts as a boolean OR operation.

       lsb-release field
              Provide certain Linux Standard Base (LSB) information. lsb-release will invoke the  lsb_release(1)
              command to get each field information.

              field values are:

              • id: string id of distributor

              • release: release number of distribution

              • codename: codename according to distribution release

       module [sub-command] [sub-command-options] [sub-command-args]
              This  command  permits  a  modulefile  to  load  or  unload  other  modulefiles or to use or unuse
              modulepaths. No checks are made to ensure that the modulefile does not try to load itself.   Often
              it  is  useful  to  have  a  single modulefile that performs a number of module load commands. For
              example, if every user on the system requires a basic set of  applications  loaded,  then  a  core
              modulefile would contain the necessary module load commands.

              The  --not-req  option may be set for the load, try-load, load-any, unload and switch sub-commands
              to inhibit the definition of an implicit prereq or conflict requirement onto specified modules.

              On try-load sub-command, modulefiles are considered optional prereq requirement. However an  error
              is raised if they cannot be loaded unless if they are not found or forbidden.

              The load-any sub-command loads one modulefile from the specified list.  An error is obtained if no
              modulefile from the list can be loaded. No operation is performed if a modulefile from the list is
              found already loaded.

              The  unload  sub-command unloads one matching modulefile for each module specification provided as
              argument if auto_handling or conflict_unload configuration options are disabled. When both options
              are enabled, unload removes all loaded modules  matching  each  module  specification.  When  both
              options  are  enabled,  modules  dependent of the unloaded modules are also unloaded. Otherwise an
              error is raised if module to unload has a dependent module loaded.

              The unuse sub-command accepts the  --remove-on-unload,  --noop-on-unload,  --append-on-unload  and
              --prepend-on-unload  options  to  control  the  behavior to apply when modulefile is unloaded. See
              remove-path for further explanation.

              The load, try-load, load-any and switch sub-commands accept the --tag option  to  apply  specified
              tags  to modulefile once loaded.  Option accepts a concatenation of multiple module tags separated
              by colon character. taglist should not contain tags inherited from modulefile state or from  other
              modulefile  commands. If module is already loaded, tags from taglist are added to the list of tags
              already applied to this module.

              Command line switches --auto, --no-auto and --force are ignored when passed to  a  module  command
              set in a modulefile.

              Not  all  the sub-commands described in the Module Sub-Commands section of the module man page are
              available when module is used as a Modules specific Tcl command. The  following  table  summarizes
              the different sub-commands available for each interpretation context.
               ┌──────────────────────────────┬──────────────────────────────┬──────────────────────────────┐
               │ Sub-commands  available from │ Sub-commands available  from │ Sub-commands available  from │
               │ modulefile interpretation    │ initrc   configuration  file │ run-command     (rc)    file │
               │                              │ and sourced script file      │ interpretation               │
               ├──────────────────────────────┼──────────────────────────────┼──────────────────────────────┤
               │ load,   load-any,    switch, │ Same  sub-commands available │ None                         │
               │ try-load,   unload,   unuse, │ than  for   modulefile   and │                              │
               │ use.  Also available but not │ config sub-command.          │                              │
               │ recommended  for  use   from │                              │                              │
               │ regular modulefile: aliases, │                              │                              │
               │ avail,   display,   initadd, │                              │                              │
               │ initclear,         initlist, │                              │                              │
               │ initprepend,         initrm, │                              │                              │
               │ initswitch,   list,   purge, │                              │                              │
               │ reload,    restore,    save, │                              │                              │
               │ savelist, saverm,  saveshow, │                              │                              │
               │ search, test, whatis         │                              │                              │
               └──────────────────────────────┴──────────────────────────────┴──────────────────────────────┘

       module-alias name modulefile
              Assigns  the  modulefile  to  the  alias  name.  This  command  should  be  placed  in  one of the
              modulecmd.tcl rc files in order to provide shorthand invocations  of  frequently  used  modulefile
              names.

              The parameter modulefile may be either

              • a fully qualified modulefile with name and version

              • a symbolic modulefile name

              • another modulefile alias

       module-forbid [options] modulefile...
              Forbid  use  of  modulefile. An error is obtained when trying to evaluate a forbidden module. This
              command should be placed in one of the modulecmd.tcl rc files.

              module-forbid command accepts the following options:

              • --after datetime--before datetime--not-user {user...}--not-group {group...}--user {user...}--group {group...}--message {text message}--nearly-message {text message}

              If --after option is set, forbidding is only effective after specified date  time.  Following  the
              same  principle,  if  --before  option  is set, forbidding is only effective before specified date
              time. Accepted date time format is YYYY-MM-DD[THH:MM]. If no time (HH:MM) is specified,  00:00  is
              assumed. --after and --before options are not supported on Tcl versions prior to 8.5.

              If  --not-user  option  is  set,  forbidding  is not applied if the username of the user currently
              running modulecmd.tcl is part of the list of username specified. Following the same  approach,  if
              --not-group  option  is  set, forbidding is not applied if current user is member of one the group
              specified. When both options are set, forbidding is not applied if a match is found for --not-user
              or --not-group.

              If --user option is set, forbidding is applied only if the username of the user currently  running
              modulecmd.tcl  is  part of the list of username specified. Following the same approach, if --group
              option is set, forbidding is applied only if current user is member of one  the  group  specified.
              When  both options are set, forbidding is applied if a match is found for --user or --group. These
              two options prevail over --not-user and --not-group options.

              Error message returned when trying to evaluate a forbidden module can  be  supplemented  with  the
              text message set through --message option.

              If  --after option is set, modules are considered nearly forbidden during a number of days defined
              by      the      nearly_forbidden_days      modulecmd.tcl      configuration      option      (see
              MODULES_NEARLY_FORBIDDEN_DAYS),  prior  reaching  the  expiry date fixed by --after option. When a
              nearly forbidden module is evaluated a warning message is issued to inform  module  will  soon  be
              forbidden.   This  warning  message  can  be  supplemented  with  the  text  message  set  through
              --nearly-message option.

              If a module-forbid command applies to a modulefile also targeted by a module-hide --hard  command,
              this module is unveiled when precisely named to return an access error.

              Forbidden modules included in the result of an avail sub-command are reported with a forbidden tag
              applied to them. Nearly forbidden modules included in the result of an avail or a list sub-command
              are reported with a nearly-forbidden tag applied to them. See Module tags section in module.

              The  parameter  modulefile  may  leverage  a  specific syntax to finely select module version (see
              Advanced module version specifiers section below). It may  also  be  a  full  path  file  name  to
              precisely designate one module in a specific modulepath.

       module-hide [options] modulefile...
              Hide modulefile to exclude it from available module search or module selection unless query refers
              to  modulefile  by  its  exact  name. This command should be placed in one of the modulecmd.tcl rc
              files.

              module-hide command accepts the following options:

              • --soft|--hard--hidden-loaded--after datetime--before datetime--not-user {user...}--not-group {group...}--user {user...}--group {group...}

              When --soft option is set, modulefile is also set hidden, but hiding is disabled  when  search  or
              selection  query's  root  name  matches  module's root name. This soft hiding mode enables to hide
              modulefiles from bare module availability listing yet keeping the ability to  select  such  module
              for  load  with the regular resolution mechanism (i.e., no need to use module exact name to select
              it)

              When --hard option is set, modulefile is also set hidden  and  stays  hidden  even  if  search  or
              selection query refers to modulefile by its exact name.

              When --hidden-loaded option is set, hidden state also applies to the modulefile when it is loaded.
              Hidden loaded modules do not appear on list sub-command output, unless --all option is set.  Their
              loading  or  unloading  informational messages are not reported unless the verbosity of Modules is
              set to a level higher than verbose. Hidden loaded modules are detected in any cases by state query
              commands like is-loaded.

              If --after option is set, hiding is only effective after specified date time. Following  the  same
              principle,  if  --before  option  is  set,  hiding  is  only effective before specified date time.
              Accepted date time format is YYYY-MM-DD[THH:MM].  If  no  time  (HH:MM)  is  specified,  00:00  is
              assumed. --after and --before options are not supported on Tcl versions prior to 8.5.

              If  --not-user  option is set, hiding is not applied if the username of the user currently running
              modulecmd.tcl is part of  the  list  of  username  specified.  Following  the  same  approach,  if
              --not-group  option  is  set,  hiding  is  not  applied if current user is member of one the group
              specified.  When both options are set, hiding is not applied if a match is found for --not-user or
              --not-group.

              If --user option is set, hiding is applied only if the username  of  the  user  currently  running
              modulecmd.tcl  is  part of the list of username specified. Following the same approach, if --group
              option is set, hiding is applied only if current user is member of one the group  specified.  When
              both  options  are  set,  hiding  is  applied if a match is found for --user or --group. These two
              options prevail over --not-user and --not-group options.

              If the --all option is set on avail, aliases, whatis or search sub-commands,  hiding  is  disabled
              thus  hidden modulefiles are included in module search. Hard-hidden modules (i.e., declared hidden
              with --hard option) are not affected by --all and stay hidden even if option is set. --all  option
              does  not  apply  to module selection sub-commands like load. Thus in such context a hidden module
              should always be referred by its exact full name (e.g., foo/1.2.3 not foo) unless if it  has  been
              hidden in --soft mode. A hard-hidden module cannot be unveiled or selected in any case.

              If several module-hide commands target the same modulefile, the strongest hiding level is retained
              which  means  if both a regular, a --soft hiding command match a given module, regular hiding mode
              is considered. If both a regular and a --hard hiding command match a  given  module,  hard  hiding
              mode  is  retained.  A set --hidden-loaded option is retained even if the module-hide statement on
              which it is declared is superseded by a stronger module-hide  statement  with  no  --hidden-loaded
              option set.

              Hidden  modules  included  in  the  result  of an avail sub-command are reported with a hidden tag
              applied to them. Hidden loaded modules included in the result of a list sub-command  are  reported
              with  a  hidden-loaded tag applied to them. This tag is not reported on avail sub-command context.
              See Module tags section in module.

              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 specifiers
              section below).  Moreover it may also be a full path file name to precisely designate  one  module
              in a specific modulepath.

       module-info option [info-args]
              Provide  information  about the modulecmd.tcl program's state. Some of the information is specific
              to the internals of modulecmd.tcl.  option  is  the  type  of  information  to  be  provided,  and
              info-args are any arguments needed.

              module-info alias name
                 Returns the full modulefile name to which the modulefile alias name is assigned

              module-info command [commandname]
                 Returns the currently running modulecmd.tcl's command as a string if no commandname is given.

                 Returns  1  if  modulecmd.tcl's  command  is  commandname.   commandname  can be: load, unload,
                 refresh, reload, source, switch, display, avail, aliases, list, whatis, search, purge, restore,
                 help, test, try-load, load-any, mod-to-sh, reset, stash or stashpop.

              module-info loaded modulefile
                 Returns the names of currently  loaded  modules  matching  passed  modulefile.   The  parameter
                 modulefile  might  either  be  a  fully  qualified  modulefile  with name and version or just a
                 directory which in case all loaded  modulefiles  from  the  directory  will  be  returned.  The
                 parameter modulefile may also be a symbolic modulefile name or a modulefile alias.

                 This  command  only  returns  the  name  and  version of designated loaded module.  The defined
                 variants of the loaded module are not included in the returned string.

              module-info mode [modetype]
                 Returns the current modulecmd.tcl's mode as a string if no modetype is given.

                 Returns 1 if modulecmd.tcl's mode is modetype. modetype can be: load, unload, remove (alias  of
                 unload), switch, refresh, nonpersist (alias of refresh), display, help, test, whatis or scan.

              module-info name
                 Return  the  name  of  the  modulefile.  This  is not the full pathname for modulefile. See the
                 Modules Variables section for information on the full pathname.

                 This command only returns the name and version of currently evaluating modulefile. The  defined
                 variants  are  not  included  in  the returned string.  See getvariant command or ModuleVariant
                 array variable to get defined variant values for currently evaluating modulefile.

              module-info shell [shellname]
                 Return the current shell under which modulecmd.tcl was invoked if no shellname  is  given.  The
                 current  shell  is the first parameter of modulecmd.tcl, which is normally hidden by the module
                 alias.

                 If a shellname is given, returns 1 if modulecmd.tcl's current shell  is  shellname,  returns  0
                 otherwise. shellname can be: sh, bash, ksh, zsh, csh, tcsh, fish, cmd, pwsh, tcl, perl, python,
                 ruby, lisp, cmake, r.

              module-info shelltype [shelltypename]
                 Return the family of the shell under which modulefile was invoked if no shelltypename is given.
                 As  of  module-info  shell  this  depends  on  the first parameter of modulecmd.tcl. The output
                 reflects a shell type determining the shell syntax of the commands produced by modulecmd.tcl.

                 If a shelltypename is given, returns 1 if modulecmd.tcl's current shell type is  shelltypename,
                 returns  0 otherwise.  shelltypename can be: sh, csh, fish, cmd, pwsh, tcl, perl, python, ruby,
                 lisp, cmake, r.

              module-info specified
                 Return the module designation (name, version  and  variants)  specified  that  led  to  current
                 modulefile evaluation.

              module-info symbols modulefile
                 Returns  a  list  of  all  symbolic  versions  assigned to the passed modulefile. The parameter
                 modulefile might either be a full qualified modulefile with name and version, another  symbolic
                 modulefile name or a modulefile alias.

              module-info tags [tag]
                 Returns all tags assigned to currently evaluated modulefile as a list of strings if no tag name
                 is given (see Module tags section in module)

                 When  tags  are assigned to specific module variants, they are returned only if this variant is
                 the one currently evaluated.

                 Returns 1 if one of the tags applying to currently  evaluated  modulefile  is  tag.  Returns  0
                 otherwise.

              module-info type
                 Returns  either  C  or  Tcl  to  indicate  which module command is being executed, either the C
                 version or the Tcl-only version, to allow the  modulefile  writer  to  handle  any  differences
                 between the two.

              module-info usergroups [name]
                 Returns  all  the  groups  the  user  currently running modulecmd.tcl is member of as a list of
                 strings if no name is given.

                 Returns 1 if one of the group current user running modulecmd.tcl is member of is name.  Returns
                 0 otherwise.

                 If  the Modules Tcl extension library is disabled, the id(1) command is invoked to fetch groups
                 of current user.

              module-info username [name]
                 Returns the username of the user currently running modulecmd.tcl as a  string  if  no  name  is
                 given.

                 Returns 1 if username of current user running modulecmd.tcl is name. Returns 0 otherwise.

                 If  the  Modules  Tcl  extension  library  is  disabled,  the id(1) command is invoked to fetch
                 username of current user.

              module-info version modulefile
                 Returns the physical module name and version of the passed  symbolic  version  modulefile.  The
                 parameter modulefile might either be a full qualified modulefile with name and version, another
                 symbolic modulefile name or a modulefile alias.

       module-tag [options] tag modulefile...
              Associate  tag to designated modulefile. This tag information will be reported along modulefile on
              avail and list sub-commands (see Module tags section in module). Tag information  can  be  queried
              during  modulefile  evaluation  with the module-info tags modulefile command.  module-tag commands
              should be placed in one of the modulecmd.tcl rc files.

              module-tag command accepts the following options:

              • --not-user {user...}--not-group {group...}--user {user...}--group {group...}

              If --not-user option is set, the tag is not applied if the username of the user currently  running
              modulecmd.tcl  is  part  of  the  list  of  username  specified.  Following  the same approach, if
              --not-group option is set, the tag is not applied if current user  is  member  of  one  the  group
              specified. When both options are set, the tag is not applied if a match is found for --not-user or
              --not-group.

              If  --user  option  is  set, the tag is applied only if the username of the user currently running
              modulecmd.tcl is part of the list of username specified. Following the same approach,  if  --group
              option  is set, the tag is applied only if current user is member of one the group specified. When
              both options are set, the tag is applied if a match is found for  --user  or  --group.  These  two
              options prevail over --not-user and --not-group options.

              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 specifiers
              section  below).   Moreover it may also be a full path file name to precisely designate one module
              in a specific modulepath.

              Tags inherited from other modulefile commands or module states  cannot  be  set  with  module-tag.
              Otherwise  an  error  is  returned.  Those  special  tags  are:  auto-loaded,  forbidden,  hidden,
              hidden-loaded, loaded and nearly-forbidden.

              When tag equals sticky or super-sticky, designated modulefile is defined Sticky modules.

              When tag equals keep-loaded, designated modulefile is not automatically unloaded when it has  been
              auto-loaded and its dependent modules are getting unloaded.

       module-version modulefile version-name...
              Assigns  the  symbolic version-name to the modulefile. This command should be placed in one of the
              modulecmd.tcl rc files in order to provide shorthand invocations  of  frequently  used  modulefile
              names.

              The  special version-name default specifies the default version to be used for module commands, if
              no specific version is given. This replaces the definitions made in the .version  file  in  former
              modulecmd.tcl releases.

              The parameter modulefile may be either

              • a  fully  or  partially  qualified  modulefile  with name / version. If name is . (dot) then the
                current directory name is assumed  to  be  the  module  name.  (Use  this  for  deep  modulefile
                directories.)

              • a symbolic modulefile name

              • another modulefile alias

       module-virtual name modulefile
              Assigns  the  modulefile  to the virtual module name. This command should be placed in rc files in
              order to define virtual modules.

              A virtual module stands for a module name associated to a modulefile. The modulefile is the script
              interpreted when loading or unloading the virtual module which appears or can be  found  with  its
              virtual name.

              The parameter modulefile corresponds to the relative or absolute file location of a modulefile.

       module-whatis string
              Defines  a string which is displayed in case of the invocation of the module whatis command. There
              may be more than one module-whatis line in a modulefile. This command takes no actions in case  of
              load, display, etc. invocations of modulecmd.tcl.

              The  string parameter has to be enclosed in double-quotes if there's more than one word specified.
              Words are defined to be separated by whitespace characters (space, tab, cr).

       modulepath-label directory label
              Assigns label string to modulepath directory. This label is used on avail output to refer  to  the
              modulepath.

              The  parameter directory corresponds to a fully or partially qualified modulepath. If directory is
              . (dot) then the current directory of the modulerc file defining this command is assumed.

       prepend-path [-d C|--delim C|--delim=C] [--duplicates] variable value...
              Append or prepend value to environment variable. The variable is a colon, or delimiter,  separated
              list  such  as  PATH=directory:directory:directory.  The  default  delimiter  is a colon :, but an
              arbitrary one can be given by the --delim option. For example a space can be used  instead  (which
              will need to be handled in the Tcl specially by enclosing it in " " or { }). A space, however, can
              not be specified by the --delim=C form.

              A  reference  counter  environment variable is also set to know the number of times value has been
              added to environment variable when it  is  added  more  than  one  time.  This  reference  counter
              environment variable is named by prefixing variable by __MODULES_SHARE_.

              When  value  is already defined in environment variable, it is not added again or moved at the end
              or at the beginning of variable. Exception is made when the --duplicates option is  set  in  which
              case value is added again to variable.

              If  the  variable  is  not  set,  it  is  created.  When a modulefile is unloaded, append-path and
              prepend-path become remove-path.

              If value corresponds to the concatenation of multiple elements separated by colon,  or  delimiter,
              character, each element is treated separately.

       prereq [options] modulefile...
              prereq controls whether or not the modulefile will be loaded. The prereq command lists modulefiles
              which  must  have  been  previously loaded before the current modulefile will be loaded. If a list
              contains more than one modulefile, then each member of the list acts as a  Boolean  OR  operation.
              Multiple prereq commands may be used to create a Boolean AND operation. If one of the requirements
              have  not  been satisfied, an error is reported and the current modulefile makes no changes to the
              user's environment.

              If an argument for prereq is a directory and any modulefile from the directory  has  been  loaded,
              then  the  prerequisite  is met. For example, specifying X11 as a prereq means that any version of
              X11, X11/R4 or X11/R5, must be loaded before proceeding.

              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 specifiers
              section below).

              prereq command accepts the following options:

              • --modulepath modulepathlist--optional--tag taglist

              When the --optional option is set, the whole list of  specified  modulefiles  is  declared  as  an
              optional requirement list. Evaluation is not stopped if no modulefile from the list is loaded.

              If  the  auto_handling  configuration  option  is  enabled  prereq  will attempt to load specified
              modulefile if not found loaded yet (see MODULES_AUTO_HANDLING in module).

              The --tag option accepts a list of module  tags  to  apply  to  modulefile  once  loaded.  taglist
              corresponds to the concatenation of multiple tags separated by colon character. taglist should not
              contain  tags  inherited  from  modulefile  state  or from other modulefile commands. If module is
              already loaded, tags from taglist are added to the list of tags already applied to this module.

              The  --modulepath  option  accepts  a  list  of  modulepath.  modulepathlist  corresponds  to  the
              concatenation  of  multiple  modulepaths  separated  by  colon character. When this option is set,
              required modulefile should be located within one of the listed modulepaths. A path  in  this  list
              may  correspond  to  the  first  path  elements of an actual modulepath (e.g., /path/to will match
              modulefiles located into the /path/to/modulefiles modulepath directory).

              If an attempt to load modulefile is performed and --modulepath option is set, modulefile  will  be
              searched  in  the  enabled  modulepaths  whose  start  match one of the specified paths and in the
              specified paths not matching any enabled modulepaths. For  instance  if  this  option  is  set  to
              /path/to:/another/path   and  /path/to/modulefiles  is  currently  the  sole  enabled  modulepath,
              modulefile will be searched into /path/to/modulefiles and /another/path directories.

       prereq-all [options] modulefile...
              Declare modulefile as a requirement of currently loading module. This command acts as an alias  of
              prereq  command.  If  more than one modulefile are specified, then this list acts as a Boolean AND
              operation, which means all specified modulefiles are required.

              prereq-all command accepts the following options:

              • --modulepath modulepathlist--optional--tag taglist

              When the --optional  option  is  set,  each  specified  modulefile  is  declared  as  an  optional
              requirement. A modulefile that cannot be loaded, will not stop the evaluation.

       prereq-any [options] modulefile...
              Alias of prereq command.

       pushenv variable value
              Set  environment  variable  to  value  and  save  previous  value  of  variable to restore it when
              modulefile is unloaded. Like for setenv modulefile command, changes made to variable with  pushenv
              are  applied  to  variable  in  Tcl's  env  array  to update environment variable value in current
              evaluation context.

              When modulefile is unloaded, the value saved from  the  pushenv  command  of  this  modulefile  is
              removed  from  saved  value  stack list. variable is then set to the remaining value on top of the
              stack or it is unset if stack becomes empty.

              Saved value stack list for variable is stored  in  an  environment  variable  which  is  named  by
              prefixing variable by __MODULES_PUSHENV_.

       puts [-nonewline] [channelId] string
              Writes  the characters given by string to the channel given by channelId.  This command is part of
              the regular set of Tcl commands but it is  enhanced  with  specific  features  in  the  modulefile
              evaluation  context.  See  the  puts(n)  Tcl  man  page for the basic description of this command.
              Specific features for modulefile evaluation  context  are  described  in  the  remainder  of  this
              section.

              Content  written  to  the  stderr  channel  is  rendered as output message produced by modulefile.
              Content written to the stdout channel is rendered as shell command evaluated in the  user  current
              shell  environment. Content sent to stdout is spooled to be rendered after the environment changes
              made by modulefile.

              When channelId equals prestdout, content is rendered as shell command evaluated in  current  shell
              environment. This content is spooled and rendered prior any other environment changes.

              When channelId equals log, content is sent to the log system through the defined logger command.

       remove-path [options] variable value... [--append-on-unload|--prepend-on-unload value...]
              Remove value from the colon, or delimiter, separated list in variable.

              remove-path command accepts the following options:

              • -d C|--delim C|--delim=C--index--glob--remove-on-unload|--noop-on-unload|--append-on-unload|--prepend-on-unload

              See  prepend-path  or  append-path  for further explanation of using an arbitrary delimiter. Every
              string between colons, or delimiters, in variable is compared to value. If the two match, value is
              removed from variable if its reference counter is equal to 1 or unknown.

              When --index option is set, value refers to an index in variable list. The string element  pointed
              by this index is set for removal.

              When --glob option is set, value refers to a glob-style pattern which is matched against values in
              variable  to  find  those  to  remove.  *  character  in value matches any sequence of characters,
              including a null string. ? character in value matches any  single  character.  See  string(n)  Tcl
              command for the full list of special characters.

              When  modulefile  is  unloaded,  no  operation  is performed by default or if the --noop-on-unload
              option  is  set.  If  the  --remove-on-unload  option  is  set,   value   is   removed.   If   the
              --append-on-unload  option is set, append back value removed at load time or specific value if any
              set. If the --prepend-on-unload option is set, prepend back value removed at load time or specific
              value  if  any  set.  These  options  cannot  be  set  if  --index  option  is   also   set.   The
              --append-on-unload and --prepend-on-unload options cannot be set if --glob option is also set.

              Reference  counter  of  value  in  variable  denotes  the  number of times value has been added to
              variable. This information is stored in environment __MODULES_SHARE_variable. When  attempting  to
              remove  value  from  variable,  relative reference counter is checked and value is removed only if
              counter is equal to 1 or not defined.  Otherwise value is kept in variable and  reference  counter
              is  decreased  by  1. If counter equals 1 after being decreased, value and its counter are removed
              from reference counter variable.

              If value corresponds to the concatenation of multiple elements separated by colon,  or  delimiter,
              character, each element is treated separately.

              An error is raised if value equals delimiter character.

       reportError string
              Output  string as an error message during modulefile evaluation and raise error count. reportError
              does not abort modulefile evaluation. Use the error(n) Tcl command to abort evaluation in addition
              to emit an error message.

       reportWarning string
              Output string as a warning message during modulefile evaluation.

       require-fullname
              Abort load evaluation of modulefile if name specified to designate it is not the  fully  qualified
              one. Module alias or a symbolic version names are considered fully qualified names, exception made
              for the default symbol.

       set-alias alias-name alias-string
              Sets  an  alias with the name alias-name in the user's environment to the string alias-string. For
              some shells, aliases are not possible and the command has no effect (see Shell  support  section).
              When a modulefile is unloaded, set-alias becomes unset-alias.

       set-function function-name function-string
              Creates  a  function  with the name function-name in the user's environment with the function body
              function-string. For some shells, functions are not possible and the command has  no  effect  (see
              Shell support section). When a modulefile is unloaded, set-function becomes unset-function.

       setenv [--set-if-undef] variable value
              Set environment variable to value. The setenv command will also change the process' environment. A
              reference  using  Tcl's env associative array will reference changes made with the setenv command.
              Changes made using Tcl's env associative array will NOT change  the  user's  environment  variable
              like  the  setenv command. An environment change made this way will only affect the module parsing
              process. The setenv command is also useful for changing the  environment  prior  to  the  exec  or
              system  command.  When  a  modulefile  is  unloaded,  setenv  becomes unsetenv. If the environment
              variable had been defined it will be overwritten while loading the modulefile. A subsequent unload
              will unset the environment variable - the previous value cannot be restored! (Unless you handle it
              explicitly or if you use the pushenv modulefile command instead of setenv)

              When the --set-if-undef option is set, environment variable is defined when modulefile  is  loaded
              only if not yet defined.

       source-sh [--ignore eltlist] shell script [arg...]
              Evaluate  with  shell  the  designated  script  with defined arguments to find out the environment
              changes it does. Those changes obtained by comparing environment prior and after script evaluation
              are then translated  into  corresponding  modulefile  commands,  which  are  then  applied  during
              modulefile evaluation as if they were directly written in it.

              When  modulefile  is  unloaded,  environment changes done are reserved by evaluating in the unload
              context the resulting  modulefile  commands,  which  were  recorded  in  the  __MODULES_LMSOURCESH
              environment variable at load time.

              Changes  on  environment  variables, shell aliases, shell functions, shell completions and current
              working directory are tracked.

              Changes made on environment variable  intended  for  Modules  private  use  (e.g.,  LOADEDMODULES,
              _LMFILES_, __MODULES_*) are ignored.

              Shell  could  be  specified as a command name or a fully qualified pathname.  The following shells
              are supported: sh, dash, csh, tcsh, bash, ksh, ksh93, zsh and fish.

              Shell could also be set to bash-eval. In this mode, bash shell  script  is  not  sourced  but  the
              output resulting from its execution is evaluated to determine the environment changes it does.

              The  --ignore  option  accepts  a  list  of  shell elements whose changes made by script should be
              ignored. eltlist corresponds to the concatenation of multiple shell  element  separated  by  colon
              character. Accepted shell elements are: envvar, alias, function, chdir and complete.

       system string
              Run  string  command  through  shell.  On  Unix, command is passed to the /bin/sh shell whereas on
              Windows it is passed to cmd.exe.  modulecmd.tcl redirects stdout to stderr since stdout  would  be
              parsed by the evaluating shell. The exit status of the executed command is returned.

       uname field
              Provide  lookup  of system information. Most field information are retrieved from the tcl_platform
              array (see the tclvars(n) man page).  Uname will return  the  string  unknown  if  information  is
              unavailable for the field.

              uname  will  invoke  the  uname(1)  command  in  order  to  get  the  operating system version and
              domainname(1) to figure out the name of the domain.

              field values are:

              • sysname: the operating system name

              • nodename: the hostname

              • domain: the name of the domain

              • release: the operating system release

              • version: the operating system version

              • machine: a standard name that identifies the system's hardware

       uncomplete name
              Unsets completion for command name in the user's environment. When a modulefile  is  unloaded,  no
              operation is performed.

              The following shells are supported: bash, tcsh and fish.

       unset-alias alias-name
              Unsets an alias with the name alias-name in the user's environment.

       unset-function function-name
              Removes a function with the name function-name from the user's environment.

       unsetenv [options] variable [value]
              Unsets environment variable. When a modulefile is unloaded, no operation is performed unless if an
              optional  value  is  defined, in which case variable is to value. The unsetenv command changes the
              process' environment like setenv.

              If the --noop-on-unload option is set, no operation is performed when modulefile is  unloaded.  If
              the  --unset-on-unload  option  is  set,  environment  variable  is  also unset when modulefile is
              unloaded. These behaviors are applied even if an optional value is defined.

       variant [--boolean] [--default value] name [value...]
              Declare module variant name with list of accepted value and instantiate it  in  the  ModuleVariant
              array variable.

              Variant's  value  is  selected  through  the  module  designation  that  leads  to  the modulefile
              evaluation. See Advanced module  version  specifiers  section  to  learn  how  variants  could  be
              specified.

              Selected  variant value is transmitted to the evaluating modulefile. A value must be specified for
              variant name and it must corresponds to a value in  the  accepted  value  list  if  such  list  is
              defined.  Otherwise an error is raised. An exception is made if modulefile is evaluated in display
              mode: no error is raised if no value  is  specified  for  a  given  variant  and  variant  is  not
              instantiated  in  the  ModuleVariant  array  variable.  When no list of accepted value is defined,
              variant could be set to any value.

              When the --default option is set, variant name is set to the value associated with this option  in
              case no value is specified for variant in module designation.

              If  the --boolean option is set, variant name is defined as a Boolean variant. No list of accepted
              value should be defined in this case. All values recognized as Boolean value in Tcl  are  accepted
              (i.e.,  1,  true,  t, yes, y, on, 0, false, f, no, n or off). Boolean variants are instantiated in
              ModuleVariant using Tcl canonical form of Boolean value (i.e., 0 or 1).

              A variant which is not defined as a Boolean variant cannot define Boolean values in  its  accepted
              value list, exception made for the 0 and 1 integers. An error is raised otherwise.

              Variant  name should only be composed of characters part of the A-Za-z0-9_- range. Also, a variant
              name cannot start with - (minus) character and the overall name cannot just be a number. An  error
              is raised if specified name does not match these rules.

              A variant cannot be named version. An error is raised otherwise.

       versioncmp version1 version2
              Compare  version  string version1 against version string version2. Returns -1, 0 or 1 respectively
              if version1 is less than, equal to or greater than version2.

       x-resource [resource-string|filename]
              Merge resources into the X11 resource database.  The  resources  are  used  to  control  look  and
              behavior  of  X11  applications.  The command will attempt to read resources from filename. If the
              argument isn't a valid file name, then string will be interpreted as a resource.  Either  filename
              or resource-string is then passed down to be xrdb(1) command.

              modulefiles that use this command, should in most cases contain one or more x-resource lines, each
              defining  one  X11  resource.  The DISPLAY environment variable should be properly set and the X11
              server should be accessible. If  x-resource  can't  manipulate  the  X11  resource  database,  the
              modulefile will exit with an error message.

              Examples:

              x-resource /u2/staff/leif/.xres/Ileaf
                 The content of the Ileaf file is merged into the X11 resource database.

              x-resource [glob ~/.xres/ileaf]
                 The  Tcl  glob  function  is  used  to  have  the  modulefile read different resource files for
                 different users.

              x-resource {Ileaf.popup.saveUnder: True}
                 Merge the Ileaf resource into the X11 resource database.

       Modulefiles and run-command (rc) files are differently interpreted.  A  limited  number  of  the  Modules
       specific  Tcl  commands  are  available  for rc files interpretation since such files are intended to set
       parameters for  modulefiles  (like  defining  alias,  hiding,  tagging,  etc)  and  not  to  change  user
       environment.  The  following  table  summarizes  the different commands available for each interpretation
       context.
                  ┌───────────────────────────────────────┬───────────────────────────────────────┐
                  │ Commands  available  from  modulefile │ Commands  available  from run-command │
                  │ interpretation                        │ (rc) file interpretation              │
                  ├───────────────────────────────────────┼───────────────────────────────────────┤
                  │ All the Modules specific and standard │ hide-modulefile,        hide-version, │
                  │ Tcl commands                          │ is-loaded,    is-used,   lsb-release, │
                  │                                       │ module-alias,          module-forbid, │
                  │                                       │ module-hide, module-info, module-tag, │
                  │                                       │ module-version,       module-virtual, │
                  │                                       │ modulepath-label,   system,    uname, │
                  │                                       │ versioncmp and standard Tcl commands  │
                  └───────────────────────────────────────┴───────────────────────────────────────┘

       NOTE:
          Global  and  user  run-command  files  are  interpreted  like modulefiles and benefit from all Modules
          specific Tcl commands. However it not advised to perform environment changes from such files.

MODULES VARIABLES

       ModulesCurrentModulefile
              The  ModulesCurrentModulefile  variable  contains  the  full  pathname  of  the  modulefile  being
              interpreted.

       ModulesVersion
              The  ModulesVersion  variable  can be set in .version file to designate the name of the modulefile
              version which should be considered as default  in  current  directory  (see  Locating  Modulefiles
              section below).

       ModuleTool
              The ModuleTool variable contains the name of the module implementation currently in use. The value
              of this variable is set to Modules for this implementation.

       ModuleToolVersion
              The ModuleToolVersion variable contains the version of the module implementation currently in use.
              The value of this variable is set to 5.5.0 for this version of Modules.

       ModuleVariant
              The  ModuleVariant array variable contains an element entry for each defined variant associated to
              the value of this variant (e.g., the  $ModuleVariant(foo)  syntax  corresponds  to  the  value  of
              variant foo if defined). A Tcl evaluation error is obtained when accessing an undefined variant in
              ModuleVariant  array.  Use preferably the getvariant command to retrieve a variant value when this
              variant state is not known.

              The list of the currently defined variants can be retrieved with [array names  ModuleVariant]  Tcl
              code.

LOCATING MODULEFILES

       Every  directory  in MODULEPATH is searched to find the modulefile. A directory in MODULEPATH can have an
       arbitrary number of sub-directories. If the user names a modulefile to be  loaded  which  is  actually  a
       directory,  the  directory  is  opened and a search begins for an actual modulefile. First, modulecmd.tcl
       looks for a file with the name .modulerc in the directory. If this file  exists,  its  contents  will  be
       evaluated  as  if  it  was  a  modulefile  to  be  loaded. You may place module-version, module-alias and
       module-virtual commands inside this file.

       Additionally, before seeking for .modulerc files in the module directory, the global  modulerc  file  and
       the  .modulerc  file  found  at the root of the modulepath directory are sourced, too. If a named version
       default now exists for the modulefile to  be  loaded,  the  assigned  modulefile  now  will  be  sourced.
       Otherwise the file .version is looked up in the module directory.

       If  the  .version  file  exists,  it  is  opened  and interpreted as Tcl code and takes precedence over a
       .modulerc file in the same directory. If the Tcl variable ModulesVersion is set  by  the  .version  file,
       modulecmd.tcl  will  use the name as if it specifies a modulefile in this directory. This will become the
       default modulefile in this case.  ModulesVersion cannot refer to a  modulefile  located  in  a  different
       directory.

       If  ModulesVersion is a directory, the search begins anew down that directory. If the name does not match
       any files located in the current directory, the search continues through  the  remaining  directories  in
       MODULEPATH.

       Every  .version and .modulerc file found is interpreted as Tcl code. The difference is that .version only
       applies to  the  current  directory,  and  the  .modulerc  applies  to  the  current  directory  and  all
       subdirectories. Changes made in these files will affect the subsequently interpreted modulefile.

       If  a  .modulecache  file is found at the root of a modulepath directory, this file is interpreted as Tcl
       code to learn all .modulerc, .version and modulefiles available. Modulepath content is read  from  module
       cache  file.  Modulepath  directory  is  only  walked  through  to check if limited access modulefiles or
       directories are available to current user.

       If no default version may be figured out, an implicit default is selected when this behavior  is  enabled
       (see  MODULES_IMPLICIT_DEFAULT  in  module).  If disabled, module names should be fully qualified when no
       explicit default is defined for them, otherwise no default version is found and an error is returned.  If
       enabled,  then  the  highest  numerically  sorted  modulefile,  virtual  module or module alias under the
       directory will be used.  The dictionary comparison method of the lsort(n) Tcl command is used to  achieve
       this sort. If highest numerically sorted element is an alias, search continues on its modulefile target.

       For  example,  it  is  possible for a user to have a directory named X11 which simply contains a .version
       file specifying which version of X11 is to be loaded. Such a file would look like:

          #%Module
          set ModulesVersion R4

       The equivalent .modulerc would look like:

          #%Module
          module-version ./R4 default

       If the extended default mechanism is enabled (see MODULES_EXTENDED_DEFAULT in module) the module  version
       specified  is  matched against starting portion of existing module versions, where portion is a substring
       separated from the rest of version string by a . character.

       When the implicit default mechanism and the Advanced  module  version  specifiers  are  both  enabled,  a
       default  and  latest  symbolic  versions  are  automatically  defined  for each module name (also at each
       directory level in case of deep modulefile). Unless a symbolic version, alias, or regular module  version
       already exists for these version names.

       Every  file  in  searched directories is checked to see if it begins with the Modules magic cookie (i.e.,
       #%Module file signature) to determine  if  it  is  a  modulefile  (see  DESCRIPTION  section).  When  the
       mcookie_check configuration is set to eval, this check is skipped and all files in search directories are
       considered modulefiles.

       If  user  names  a  modulefile that cannot be found in the first modulepath directory, modulefile will be
       searched in next modulepath directory and so on until a matching modulefile  is  found.  If  search  goes
       through  a  module  alias or a symbolic version, this alias or symbol is resolved by first looking at the
       modulefiles in the modulepath where this alias or symbol is defined. If not found,  resolution  looks  at
       the other modulepaths in their definition order.

       When  locating modulefiles, if a .modulerc, a .version, a directory or a modulefile cannot be read during
       the search it is simply ignored with no error message produced. Visibility of  modulefiles  can  thus  be
       adapted  to  the  rights  the  user  has been granted. Exception is made when trying to directly access a
       directory or a modulefile. In this case, the access issue is returned as an error message.

       Depending on their name, their file permissions or the use of specific modulefile  commands,  modulefile,
       virtual module, module alias or symbolic version may be set hidden which impacts available modules search
       or module selection processes (see Hiding modulefiles section below).

HIDING MODULEFILES

       A modulefile, virtual module, module alias or symbolic version whose name or element in their name starts
       with  a  dot  character  (.)  or  who are targeted by a module-hide command are considered hidden. Hidden
       modules are not displayed or taken into account except if they are explicitly named (e.g.,  foo/1.2.3  or
       foo/.2.0 not foo). If module has been hidden with the --soft option of the module-hide command set, it is
       not  considered  hidden  if  the  root  name  of  the  query to search it matches module root name (e.g.,
       searching foo will return a foo/1.2.3 modulefile targeted by a module-hide --soft command). If module has
       been hidden with the --hard option of the module-hide command set, it is always considered hidden thus it
       is never displayed nor taken into account even if it is explicitly named.

       A modulefile, virtual module, module alias or symbolic version who are targeted by a  module-hide  --hard
       command  and  a  module-forbid  command  or  whose  file access permissions are restricted are considered
       hard-hidden and forbidden. Such modules are not displayed or taken into account.  When  explicitly  named
       for evaluation selection, such modules are unveiled to return an access error.

       NOTE:
          When  the  mcookie_check  configuration  is  set to eval, file access permissions are not checked thus
          files with restricted permissions are included in search results but still lead to error if evaluated.

       A symbolic version-name assigned to a hidden module is displayed or taken into account only if explicitly
       named and if module is not hard-hidden. Non-hidden module alias targeting  a  hidden  modulefile  appears
       like  any other non-hidden module alias. Finally, a hidden symbolic version targeting a non-hidden module
       is displayed or taken into account only  if  not  hard-hidden  and  explicitly  named  to  refer  to  its
       non-hidden target.

       The  automatic  version  symbols  (e.g.,  default  and  latest) are unaffected by hiding. Moreover when a
       regular default or latest version is set hidden, the corresponding automatic  version  symbol  takes  the
       left spot. For instance, if foo/default which targets foo/1.2.3 is set hard-hidden, the default automatic
       version symbol will be set onto foo/2.1.3, the highest available version of foo.

       When  loading  a  modulefile  or a virtual module targeted by a module-hide --hidden-loaded command, this
       module inherits the hidden-loaded tag. Hidden loaded modules are  not  reported  among  list  sub-command
       results.

       If  the  --all  is  set  on  avail, aliases, whatis or search sub-commands, hidden modules are taken into
       account in search. Hard-hidden modules are unaffected by this option.

       If the --all is set on list sub-command, hidden loaded modules are included in result output.

ADVANCED MODULE VERSION SPECIFIERS

       When the advanced module version specifiers mechanism is enabled  (see  MODULES_ADVANCED_VERSION_SPEC  in
       module),  the  specification  of  modulefile  passed on Modules specific Tcl commands changes.  After the
       module name a version constraint and variants may be added.

   Version specifiers
       After the module name a version constraint prefixed by the @ character may be added. It could be directly
       appended to the module name or separated from it with a space character.

       Constraints can be expressed to refine the selection of module version to:

       • a single version with the @version syntax, for instance foo@1.2.3 syntax will select module foo/1.2.3

       • a list of versions with the @version1,version2,...  syntax,  for  instance  foo@1.2.3,1.10  will  match
         modules foo/1.2.3 and foo/1.10

       • a  range  of  versions  with  the  @version1:, @:version2 and @version1:version2 syntaxes, for instance
         foo@1.2: will select all versions 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@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  benefit  from  the  activation  of  the
       extended  default  mechanism (see MODULES_EXTENDED_DEFAULT in module) 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.

       Range   of  versions  can  be  specified  in  version  list,  for  instance  foo@:1.2,1.4:1.6,1.8:.  Such
       specification helps to exclude specific versions, like versions 1.3 and 1.7 in previous example.

       If the implicit default mechanism is also enabled (see MODULES_IMPLICIT_DEFAULT in module), 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.

   Variants
       After the module name, variants can be specified. Module variants are alternative evaluation of the  same
       modulefile.  A  variant  is  specified  by  associating  a  value to its name. This specification is then
       transmitted to the evaluating modulefile which  instantiates  the  variant  in  the  ModuleVariant  array
       variable when reaching the variant modulefile command declaring this variant.

       Variant  can  be  specified with the name=value syntax where name is the declared variant name and value,
       the value this variant is set to when evaluating the modulefile.

       Boolean variants can be specified with the +name syntax to set this variant on  and  with  the  -name  or
       ~name syntaxes to set this variant off. The -name syntax is not supported on ml command as the minus sign
       already means to unload designated module. The ~name and +name syntaxes could also be defined appended to
       another  specification  word  (e.g.,  the module name, version or another variant specification), whereas
       -name syntax must be the start of a new specification word.

       Boolean variants may also be specified with the name=value syntax. value should be set  to  1,  true,  t,
       yes,  y  or  on  to  enable  the  variant or it should be set to 0, false, f, no, n or off to disable the
       variant.

       Shortcuts may be used to abbreviate variant  specification.  The  variant_shortcut  configuration  option
       associates  shortcut  character to variant name. With a shortcut defined, variant could be specified with
       the <shortcut>value syntax. For instance if character % is set as a shortcut for variant foo, the  %value
       syntax is equivalent to the foo=value syntax.

       Variant  name  should  only be composed of characters part of the A-Za-z0-9_- range. Also, a variant name
       cannot start with - (minus) character and the overall name cannot just be a number.

       Specific characters used in variant specification syntax cannot be used as part of the name or version of
       a module. These specific characters are +, ~, = and all characters set as variant shortcut. Exception  is
       made  for  +  and  ~  characters if string that follows after does not correspond to a valid variant name
       (e.g., name+, name++, name/version+1).

DEPENDENCIES BETWEEN MODULEFILES

       A modulefile may express dependencies on other modulefiles. Two kind of dependency exist: pre-requirement
       and conflict. The former means specified modulefiles should be loaded prior the modulefile  that  express
       the  requirement.  The  latter  means  specified modulefiles should not be loaded for the modulefile that
       express the conflict to be loaded too.

       Pre-requirement could be expressed with prereq, prereq-any, prereq-all, depends-on,  always-load,  module
       load,  module  switch,  module  try-load  or  module load-any modulefile commands. When the auto_handling
       configuration option is disabled, required modulefile should be manually  loaded  prior  their  dependent
       modulefile  when expressed with the prereq, prereq-any, prereq-all or depends-on modulefile commands. For
       other commands or when auto_handling is enabled, pre-required modulefiles are automatically loaded.

       Conflict is expressed with conflict, family or module unload modulefile commands. When the  auto_handling
       or conflict_unload configuration options are disabled, a conflicting loaded modulefile should be manually
       unloaded prior loading the modulefile that express such conflict when defined with conflict or family. It
       is  automatically unloaded when expressed with module unload (unless dependent modulefiles are loaded) or
       if auto_handling and conflict_unload options are enabled. An error is raised when trying to load a module
       that is already loaded but with a different variant set or coming from a different  modulepath.  If  both
       options  are  enabled  the  loaded  module is automatically unloaded to satisfy the new set of variant or
       modulepath asked.

       It is strongly advised to define dependencies prior  environment  changes  in  a  modulefile.  Dependency
       resolution  should  be done before any environment change to ensure the environment is getting set in the
       same order whether pre-requirements are already loaded, or if they are automatically loaded when  loading
       the  modulefile  which  depends  on  them,  or  if  all loaded modules are reloaded or refreshed. This is
       especially important  when  the  modulefile  updates  an  environment  variable  also  altered  by  other
       modulefiles  like  PATH.  As  the  order  of  the  path elements in such variable defines priority, it is
       important that this order does not change depending on the way the modulefiles are loaded.

       module keeps environment consistent which means a modulefile cannot be loaded if its requirements are not
       loaded or if a conflicting module is loaded. In addition a loaded module  cannot  be  unloaded  if  other
       loaded  modules depends on it. The automated module handling mechanisms attempt to solve the dependencies
       expressed by loading or unloading additional modulefiles. When the --no-auto  option  is  set  on  module
       command  when  loading  or  unload  modulefile,  automated  module  handling  mechanisms are disabled and
       dependencies have to be solved manually. When dependencies are not satisfied, modulefile fails to load or
       unload.

       Adding the --not-req option when expressing dependencies in  modulefile  with  the  module  command  will
       attempt  to  load  or  unload  the  designated modulefile but it will not mark them as pre-requirement or
       conflict.

       Adding the --optional option on prereq, prereq-any,  prereq-all,  depends-on  or  always-load  modulefile
       commands  declares the pre-requirement as optional. If an optional pre-requirement is not found loaded or
       cannot be automatically loaded, the dependency expressed is yet considered satisfied.  When  an  optional
       requirement   is  loaded  afterward,  the  dependent  module  will  get  automatically  reloaded  if  the
       auto_handling configuration option is enabled.

       By adding the --force option to the module command when loading or unloading modulefile, the  consistency
       checks are by-passed. This option cannot be used when expressing dependencies in modulefiles. If a module
       has  been  force  loaded  whereas its requirements are not loaded or whereas a conflicting module is also
       loaded, the user environment is said inconsistent.

       Note that a pre-requirement should be found in the loaded module list prior its  dependent  module.  User
       environment  is considered inconsistent if pre-requirement module is found loaded after dependent module,
       as the environment changes may have been done in the wrong priority order.

       When user environment is considered inconsistent global operations achieved by refresh, reload  and  save
       sub-commands  cannot  perform.  This mechanism is there to avoid the situation to worsen by re-evaluating
       all loaded modules or recording this environment.

       When the auto_handling configuration option is enabled, if missing pre-requirement modulefile gets loaded
       or conflicting modulefile gets unloaded the inconsistent loaded module will be automatically reloaded  to
       make user environment consistent again.

MODULEFILE SPECIFIC HELP

       Users  can  request help about a specific modulefile through the module command. The modulefile can print
       helpful information or start help oriented programs by defining a ModulesHelp subroutine. The  subroutine
       will be called when the module help modulefile command is used.

MODULEFILE SPECIFIC TEST

       Users  can  request  test of a specific modulefile through the module command. The modulefile can perform
       some sanity checks on its definition or on its underlying programs by defining a ModulesTest  subroutine.
       The  subroutine  will  be  called  when the module test modulefile command is used. The subroutine should
       return 1 in case of success. If no or any other value is returned, test is considered failed.

MODULEFILE DISPLAY

       The module display modulefile command will detail all changes that will be made to the environment. After
       displaying all of the environment changes modulecmd.tcl will  call  the  ModulesDisplay  subroutine.  The
       ModulesDisplay subroutine is a good place to put additional descriptive information about the modulefile.

COMPATIBILITY WITH LMOD TCL MODULEFILE

       The  modulecmd.tcl  program  supports Tcl modulefile or modulerc written for Lmod, the alternative module
       implementation developed in Lua.  Such modulefiles can be evaluated by  Modules  without  raising  error.
       Differences between the two implementations are listed below.

       The  add-property,  remove-property  and  extensions  modulefile commands are evaluated as a no-operation
       command. No error is obtained if these commands are used in modulefiles but no change occurs.

       The break command does not accept any argument. A msg argument can be set on Lmod to provide a customized
       break error message.

       Use of reportError command aborts modulefile evaluation on Lmod.  This  command  only  reports  an  error
       message on Modules.

       The  require-fullname command only aborts load modulefile evaluation whereas the Lmod implementation also
       aborts unload and display evaluations.

       When processing a family command, the LMOD_FAMILY_<NAME> environment  variable  is  also  defined  to  be
       compatible with modulefiles or scripts relying on such variable.

       When unloading a modulefile, the pushenv command does not update the value of the environment variable if
       this modulefile was not defining the value currently in use.

       The  third  optional  argument  of  append-path  and  prepend-path  commands  corresponds  to  a priority
       specification on Lmod whereas these two commands accept multiple path element arguments on Modules.

       The prereq command is equivalent to the prereq-any command on Modules whereas on Lmod it is equivalent to
       the prereq-all command.

       If the auto_handling configuration option is disabled,  the  requirements  defined  with  the  depends-on
       command  are  not  automatically  loaded  and  an error is raised if none of these requirements are found
       loaded.

       If the auto_handling or conflict_unload configuration options are disabled, the  conflicts  defined  with
       the  family  command  are  not automatically unloaded and an error is raised when trying to load a module
       defining a family already defined by a loaded module.

       On module load-any sub-command and modulefile command, a modulefile evaluation error is not reported  and
       module  load-any  continues  to  the next modulefile instead of aborting the whole process. No attempt to
       load listed modulefiles is made if one of these modulefiles is found already loaded.

       On  module  try-load  modulefile  command,  each  modulefile  specified   is   considered   an   optional
       pre-requirement.  If it is loaded afterward and if the auto_handling configuration option is enabled, the
       dependent module will get automatically reloaded.

SHELL SUPPORT

       The modulecmd.tcl program that evaluates modulefiles supports a variety of shells or languages: sh family
       shells (sh, bash, ksh and zsh), csh family shells (csh and tcsh), fish, cmd, pwsh,  python,  perl,  ruby,
       tcl, cmake, r, and lisp.

       Modulefiles  produce  environment  changes  when  evaluated,  like  defining an environment variable. The
       modulecmd.tcl program outputs the corresponding code for the selected "shell". Thereafter  this  code  is
       evaluated by the module alias or function to update the current environment.

       Depending  on  the  "shell"  kind, not all the environment changes that can be defined in modulefiles are
       supported. The following table summarizes the changes that are  supported  by  the  shells  supported  by
       modulecmd.tcl.
         ┌────────┬────────────────┬────────────────┬─────────────────┬────────────────┬───────┬────────────┐
         │        │ Environment    │ Shell alias (‐ │ Shell           │ Command        │ chdirx-resource │
         │        │ variables   (‐ │ set-alias,     │ functions   (‐  │ completion  (‐ │       │            │
         │        │ setenv,        │ unset-alias)   │ set-function,   │ complete,      │       │            │
         │        │ unsetenv,      │                │ unset-function) │ uncomplete)    │       │            │
         │        │ pushenv,       │                │                 │                │       │            │
         │        │ append-path,   │                │                 │                │       │            │
         │        │ prepend-path,  │                │                 │                │       │            │
         │        │ remove-path)   │                │                 │                │       │            │
         ├────────┼────────────────┼────────────────┼─────────────────┼────────────────┼───────┼────────────┤
         │ sh     │ ⦁              │ ⦁              │ ⦁               │                │ ⦁     │ ⦁          │
         ├────────┼────────────────┼────────────────┼─────────────────┼────────────────┼───────┼────────────┤
         │ bash   │ ⦁              │ ⦁              │ ⦁               │ ⦁              │ ⦁     │ ⦁          │
         ├────────┼────────────────┼────────────────┼─────────────────┼────────────────┼───────┼────────────┤
         │ ksh    │ ⦁              │ ⦁              │ ⦁               │                │ ⦁     │ ⦁          │
         ├────────┼────────────────┼────────────────┼─────────────────┼────────────────┼───────┼────────────┤
         │ zsh    │ ⦁              │ ⦁              │ ⦁               │                │ ⦁     │ ⦁          │
         ├────────┼────────────────┼────────────────┼─────────────────┼────────────────┼───────┼────────────┤
         │ csh    │ ⦁              │ ⦁              │                 │                │ ⦁     │ ⦁          │
         ├────────┼────────────────┼────────────────┼─────────────────┼────────────────┼───────┼────────────┤
         │ tcsh   │ ⦁              │ ⦁              │                 │ ⦁              │ ⦁     │ ⦁          │
         ├────────┼────────────────┼────────────────┼─────────────────┼────────────────┼───────┼────────────┤
         │ fish   │ ⦁              │ ⦁              │ ⦁               │ ⦁              │ ⦁     │ ⦁          │
         ├────────┼────────────────┼────────────────┼─────────────────┼────────────────┼───────┼────────────┤
         │ cmd    │ ⦁              │ ⦁              │                 │                │ ⦁     │            │
         ├────────┼────────────────┼────────────────┼─────────────────┼────────────────┼───────┼────────────┤
         │ pwsh   │ ⦁              │ ⦁              │ ⦁               │ ⦁              │ ⦁     │            │
         ├────────┼────────────────┼────────────────┼─────────────────┼────────────────┼───────┼────────────┤
         │ python │ ⦁              │                │                 │                │ ⦁     │ ⦁          │
         ├────────┼────────────────┼────────────────┼─────────────────┼────────────────┼───────┼────────────┤
         │ perl   │ ⦁              │                │                 │                │ ⦁     │ ⦁          │
         ├────────┼────────────────┼────────────────┼─────────────────┼────────────────┼───────┼────────────┤
         │ ruby   │ ⦁              │                │                 │                │ ⦁     │ ⦁          │
         ├────────┼────────────────┼────────────────┼─────────────────┼────────────────┼───────┼────────────┤
         │ tcl    │ ⦁              │                │                 │                │ ⦁     │ ⦁          │
         ├────────┼────────────────┼────────────────┼─────────────────┼────────────────┼───────┼────────────┤
         │ cmake  │ ⦁              │                │                 │                │       │ ⦁          │
         ├────────┼────────────────┼────────────────┼─────────────────┼────────────────┼───────┼────────────┤
         │ r      │ ⦁              │                │                 │                │ ⦁     │ ⦁          │
         ├────────┼────────────────┼────────────────┼─────────────────┼────────────────┼───────┼────────────┤
         │ lisp   │ ⦁              │                │                 │                │ ⦁     │ ⦁          │
         └────────┴────────────────┴────────────────┴─────────────────┴────────────────┴───────┴────────────┘

       The source-sh command evaluates a shell script and produces the modulefile commands corresponding to  the
       environment  changes made by this script. source-sh is able to evaluate sh, bash, ksh, zsh, csh, tcsh and
       fish shell scripts. source-sh produces environment changes corresponding to the kinds listed in the above
       table.  Based on the evaluated script, refer to the above table to know the environment changes that will
       be rendered for the shell specified to modulecmd.tcl program.

ENVIRONMENT

       See the ENVIRONMENT section in the module man page.

SEE ALSO

       module, ml, Tcl(n), TclX(n), id(1), xrdb(1),  exec(n),  uname(1),  domainname(1),  tclvars(n),  lsort(n),
       string(n)

NOTES

       Tcl was developed by John Ousterhout at the University of California at Berkeley.

       TclX was developed by Karl Lehenbauer and Mark Diekhans.

COPYRIGHT

       1996-1999  John  L.  Furlani  &  Peter W. Osel, 1998-2017 R.K.Owen, 2002-2004 Mark Lakata, 2004-2017 Kent
       Mein, 2016-2024 Xavier Delaruelle

5.5.0                                              2024-11-11                                      MODULEFILE(5)