How can Bash execute a command in a different directory context?

(cd /path/to/your/special/place;/bin/your-special-command ARGS)

If you want to return to your current working directory:

current_dir=$PWD;cd /path/to/your/command/dir;special command ARGS;cd $current_dir;
  1. We are setting a variable current_dir equal to your pwd
  2. after that we are going to cd to where you need to run your command
  3. then we are running the command
  4. then we are going to cd back to our variable current_dir

Or

pushd && cd /path/to/your/command/dir && special command ARGS && popd

Courtesy of @apieceofbart and @Konstantin


You can use the cd builtin, or the pushd and popd builtins for this purpose. For example:

# do something with /etc as the working directory
cd /etc
:

# do something with /tmp as the working directory
cd /tmp
:

You use the builtins just like any other command, and can change directory context as many times as you like in a script.


Use cd in a subshell; the shorthand way to use this kind of subshell is parentheses.

(cd wherever; mycommand ...)

That said, if your command has an environment that it requires, it should really ensure that environment itself instead of putting the onus on anything that might want to use it (unless it's an internal command used in very specific circumstances in the context of a well defined larger system, such that any caller already needs to ensure the environment it requires). Usually this would be some kind of shell script wrapper.