xref: /freebsd/lib/libc/stdlib/getenv.3 (revision 252884ae7e4760f0e3cb45fdc2fff8fb952251ae)
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32.\"     @(#)getenv.3	8.2 (Berkeley) 12/11/93
33.\" $FreeBSD$
34.\"
35.Dd June 20, 2007
36.Dt GETENV 3
37.Os
38.Sh NAME
39.Nm getenv ,
40.Nm putenv ,
41.Nm setenv ,
42.Nm unsetenv
43.Nd environment variable functions
44.Sh LIBRARY
45.Lb libc
46.Sh SYNOPSIS
47.In stdlib.h
48.Ft char *
49.Fn getenv "const char *name"
50.Ft int
51.Fn setenv "const char *name" "const char *value" "int overwrite"
52.Ft int
53.Fn putenv "char *string"
54.Ft int
55.Fn unsetenv "const char *name"
56.Sh DESCRIPTION
57These functions set, unset and fetch environment variables from the
58host
59.Em environment list .
60.Pp
61The
62.Fn getenv
63function obtains the current value of the environment variable,
64.Fa name .
65The application should not modify the string pointed
66to by the
67.Fn getenv
68function.
69.Pp
70The
71.Fn setenv
72function inserts or resets the environment variable
73.Fa name
74in the current environment list.
75If the variable
76.Fa name
77does not exist in the list,
78it is inserted with the given
79.Fa value .
80If the variable does exist, the argument
81.Fa overwrite
82is tested; if
83.Fa overwrite
84is zero, the
85variable is not reset, otherwise it is reset
86to the given
87.Fa value .
88.Pp
89The
90.Fn putenv
91function takes an argument of the form ``name=value'' and
92puts it directly into the current environment,
93so altering the argument shall change the environment.
94If the variable
95.Fa name
96does not exist in the list,
97it is inserted with the given
98.Fa value .
99If the variable
100.Fa name
101does exist, it is reset to the given
102.Fa value .
103.Pp
104The
105.Fn unsetenv
106function
107deletes all instances of the variable name pointed to by
108.Fa name
109from the list.
110.Pp
111If corruption (e.g., a name without a value) is detected while making a copy of
112environ for internal usage, then
113.Fn setenv ,
114.Fn unsetenv
115and
116.Fn putenv
117will output a warning to stderr about the issue, drop the corrupt entry and
118complete the task without error.
119.Sh RETURN VALUES
120The
121.Fn getenv
122function returns the value of the environment variable as a
123.Dv NUL Ns
124-terminated string.
125If the variable
126.Fa name
127is not in the current environment,
128.Dv NULL
129is returned.
130.Pp
131.Rv -std setenv putenv unsetenv
132.Sh ERRORS
133.Bl -tag -width Er
134.It Bq Er EINVAL
135The function
136.Fn getenv ,
137.Fn setenv
138or
139.Fn unsetenv
140failed because the
141.Fa name
142is a
143.Dv NULL
144pointer, points to an empty string, or points to a string containing an
145.Dq Li \&=
146character.
147.Pp
148The function
149.Fn putenv
150failed because
151.Fa string
152is a
153.Dv NULL
154pointer,
155.Fa string
156is without an
157.Dq Li \&=
158character or
159.Dq Li \&=
160is the first character in
161.Fa string .
162This does not follow the
163.Tn POSIX
164specification.
165.It Bq Er ENOMEM
166The function
167.Fn setenv ,
168.Fn unsetenv
169or
170.Fn putenv
171failed because they were unable to allocate memory for the environment.
172.El
173.Sh SEE ALSO
174.Xr csh 1 ,
175.Xr sh 1 ,
176.Xr execve 2 ,
177.Xr environ 7
178.Sh STANDARDS
179The
180.Fn getenv
181function conforms to
182.St -isoC .
183The
184.Fn setenv ,
185.Fn putenv
186and
187.Fn unsetenv
188functions conforms to
189.St -p1003.1-2001 .
190.Sh HISTORY
191The functions
192.Fn setenv
193and
194.Fn unsetenv
195appeared in
196.At v7 .
197The
198.Fn putenv
199function appeared in
200.Bx 4.3 Reno .
201.Pp
202Until
203.Fx 7.0 ,
204.Fn putenv
205would make a copy of
206.Fa string
207and insert it into the environment using
208.Fn setenv .
209This was changed to use
210.Fa string
211as the memory location of the ``name=value'' pair to follow the
212.Tn POSIX
213specification.
214.Sh BUGS
215Successive calls to
216.Fn setenv
217that assign a larger-sized
218.Fa value
219than any previous value to the same
220.Fa name
221will result in a memory leak.
222The
223.Fx
224semantics for this function
225(namely, that the contents of
226.Fa value
227are copied and that old values remain accessible indefinitely) make this
228bug unavoidable.
229Future versions may eliminate one or both of these
230semantic guarantees in order to fix the bug.
231