Defined in header <stdlib.h> | ||
|---|---|---|
char *getenv( const char *name ); | (1) | |
errno_t getenv_s( size_t *restrict len, char *restrict value,
rsize_t valuesz, const char *restrict name );
| (2) | (since C11) |
name in the host-specified environment list and returns a pointer to the string that is associated with the matched environment variable. The set of environmental variables and methods of altering it are implementation-defined.getenv, as well as a call to the POSIX functions setenv(), unsetenv(), and putenv() may invalidate the pointer returned by a previous call or modify the string obtained from a previous call.getenv invokes undefined behavior.value (unless null) and the number of bytes written is stored in the user-provided location *len (unless null). If the environment variable is not set in the environment, zero is written to *len (unless null) and '\0' is written to value[0] (unless null). In addition, the following errors are detected at runtime and call the currently installed constraint handler function: name is a null pointer valuesz is greater than RSIZE_MAX value is a null pointer and valuesz is not zero getenv_s only guaranteed to be available if __STDC_LIB_EXT1__ is defined by the implementation and if the user defines __STDC_WANT_LIB_EXT1__ to the integer constant 1 before including <stdlib.h>.| name | - | null-terminated character string identifying the name of the environmental variable to look for |
| len | - | pointer to a user-provided location where getenv_s will store the length of the environment variable |
| value | - | pointer to a user-provided character array where getenv_s will store the contents of the environment variable |
| valuesz | - | maximum number of characters that getenv_s is allowed to write to dest (size of the buffer) |
*len (unless len is a null pointer).On POSIX systems, the environment variables are also accessible through the global variable environ, declared as extern char **environ; in <unistd.h>, and through the optional third argument, envp, of the main function.
The call to getenv_s with a null pointer for value and zero for valuesz is used to determine the size of the buffer required to hold the entire result.
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
int main(void)
{
const char *name = "PATH";
const char *env_p = getenv(name);
if (env_p)
printf("Your %s is %s\n", name, env_p);
}Possible output:
Your PATH is /home/gamer/.local/bin:/usr/local/bin:/usr/bin:/bin:/usr/share/games
C++ documentation for getenv |
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