Issue
How do I unset a readonly variable in Bash?
$ readonly PI=3.14
$ unset PI
bash: PI: readonly variable
or is it not possible?
Solution
Actually, you can unset a readonly variable. but I must warn that this is a hacky method. Adding this answer, only as information, not as a recommendation. Use it at your own risk. Tested on ubuntu 13.04, bash 4.2.45.
This method involves knowing a bit of bash source code & it's inherited from this answer.
$ readonly PI=3.14
$ unset PI
-bash: unset: PI: cannot unset: readonly variable
$ cat << EOF| sudo gdb
attach $$
call unbind_variable("PI")
detach
EOF
$ echo $PI
$
A oneliner answer is to use the batch mode and other commandline flags, as provided in F. Hauri's answer:
$ sudo gdb -ex 'call unbind_variable("PI")' --pid=$$ --batch
sudo
may or may not be needed based on your kernel's ptrace_scope settings. Check the comments on vip9937's answer for more details.
Answered By - anishsane Answer Checked By - David Goodson (WPSolving Volunteer)