The error message is rather helpful - it's telling you that conda is not properly set up from within the subshell that your script is running in. To be able to use conda within a script, you will need to (as the error message says) run conda init bash
(or whatever your shell is) first. The behaviour of conda and how it's set up depends on your conda version, but the reason for the version 4.4+ behaviour is that conda
is dependent on certain environment variables that are normally set up by the conda shell itself. Most importantly, this changelog entry explains why your conda activate
and deactivate
commands no longer behave as you expect in versions 4.4 and above.
For more discussion of this, see the official conda issue on GitHub.
Edit: Some more research tells me that the conda init
function mentioned in the error message is actually a new v4.6.0 feature that allows a quick environment setup so that you can use conda activate
instead of the old source activate
. However, the reason why this works is that it adds/changes several environment variables of your current shell and also makes changes to your RC file (e.g.: .bashrc
), and RC file changes are never picked up in the current shell - only in newly created shells. (Unless of course you source .bashrc again). In fact, conda init --help
says as much:
IMPORTANT: After running conda init
, most shells will need to be closed and restarted for changes to take effect
However, you've clearly already run conda init
, because you are able to use conda activate
interactively. In fact, if you open up your .bashrc, you should be able to see a few lines added by conda teaching your shell where to look for conda commands. The problem with your script, though, lies in the fact that the .bashrc is not sourced by the subshell that runs shell scripts (see this answer for more info). This means that even though your non-login interactive shell sees the conda commands, your non-interactive script subshells won't - no matter how many times you call conda init
.
This leads to a conjecture (I don't have conda on Linux myself, so I can't test it) that by running your script like so:
bash -i shell_script.sh
you should see conda activate
work correctly. Why? -i
is a bash flag that tells the shell you're starting to run in interactive mode, which means it will automatically source your .bashrc. This should be enough to enable you to use conda within your script as if you were using it normally.
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