* Lesser General Public License for more details.
*
* You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public
- * License along with this library; if not, write to the
- * Free Software Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330,
- * Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA.
+ * License along with this library; if not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
*/
/*
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <string.h>
-#ifdef HAVE_UNISTD_H
-#include <unistd.h>
-#endif
#ifdef HAVE_CRT_EXTERNS_H
#include <crt_externs.h> /* for _NSGetEnviron */
#endif
#include <windows.h>
#endif
+#include "glib-private.h"
#include "gmem.h"
#include "gmessages.h"
#include "gstrfuncs.h"
* Returns the value of the environment variable @variable in the
* provided list @envp.
*
- * The name and value are in the GLib file name encoding.
- * On UNIX, this means the actual bytes which might or might not
- * be in some consistent character set and encoding. On Windows,
- * it is in UTF-8. On Windows, in case the environment variable's
- * value contains references to other environment variables, they
- * are expanded.
- *
- * Return value: the value of the environment variable, or %NULL if
+ * Returns: the value of the environment variable, or %NULL if
* the environment variable is not set in @envp. The returned
* string is owned by @envp, and will be freed if @variable is
* set or unset again.
/**
* g_environ_setenv:
- * @envp: (allow-none) (array zero-terminated=1) (transfer full): an environment
- * list that can be freed using g_strfreev() (e.g., as returned from g_get_environ()), or %NULL
- * for an empty environment list
+ * @envp: (allow-none) (array zero-terminated=1) (transfer full): an
+ * environment list that can be freed using g_strfreev() (e.g., as
+ * returned from g_get_environ()), or %NULL for an empty
+ * environment list
* @variable: the environment variable to set, must not contain '='
* @value: the value for to set the variable to
* @overwrite: whether to change the variable if it already exists
* Sets the environment variable @variable in the provided list
* @envp to @value.
*
- * Both the variable's name and value should be in the GLib
- * file name encoding. On UNIX, this means that they can be
- * arbitrary byte strings. On Windows, they should be in UTF-8.
- *
- * Return value: (array zero-terminated=1) (transfer full): the
+ * Returns: (array zero-terminated=1) (transfer full): the
* updated environment list. Free it using g_strfreev().
*
* Since: 2.32
g_return_val_if_fail (variable != NULL, NULL);
g_return_val_if_fail (strchr (variable, '=') == NULL, NULL);
+ g_return_val_if_fail (value != NULL, NULL);
index = g_environ_find (envp, variable);
if (index != -1)
}
*f = NULL;
- if (free_value_and_realloc)
- return g_renew (gchar *, envp, envc + 1);
- else
- return envp;
+ return envp;
}
* Removes the environment variable @variable from the provided
* environment @envp.
*
- * Return value: (array zero-terminated=1) (transfer full): the
+ * Returns: (array zero-terminated=1) (transfer full): the
* updated environment list. Free it using g_strfreev().
*
* Since: 2.32
* On Windows, in case the environment variable's value contains
* references to other environment variables, they are expanded.
*
- * Return value: the value of the environment variable, or %NULL if
+ * Returns: the value of the environment variable, or %NULL if
* the environment variable is not found. The returned string
* may be overwritten by the next call to g_getenv(), g_setenv()
* or g_unsetenv().
* Note that on some systems, when variables are overwritten, the memory
* used for the previous variables and its value isn't reclaimed.
*
- * <warning><para>
- * Environment variable handling in UNIX is not thread-safe, and your
- * program may crash if one thread calls g_setenv() while another
- * thread is calling getenv(). (And note that many functions, such as
- * gettext(), call getenv() internally.) This function is only safe to
- * use at the very start of your program, before creating any other
- * threads (or creating objects that create worker threads of their
- * own).
- * </para><para>
+ * You should be mindful of the fact that environment variable handling
+ * in UNIX is not thread-safe, and your program may crash if one thread
+ * calls g_setenv() while another thread is calling getenv(). (And note
+ * that many functions, such as gettext(), call getenv() internally.)
+ * This function is only safe to use at the very start of your program,
+ * before creating any other threads (or creating objects that create
+ * worker threads of their own).
+ *
* If you need to set up the environment for a child process, you can
* use g_get_environ() to get an environment array, modify that with
* g_environ_setenv() and g_environ_unsetenv(), and then pass that
* array directly to execvpe(), g_spawn_async(), or the like.
- * </para></warning>
*
* Returns: %FALSE if the environment variable couldn't be set.
*
g_return_val_if_fail (variable != NULL, FALSE);
g_return_val_if_fail (strchr (variable, '=') == NULL, FALSE);
+ g_return_val_if_fail (value != NULL, FALSE);
#ifdef HAVE_SETENV
result = setenv (variable, value, overwrite);
* Note that on some systems, when variables are overwritten, the
* memory used for the previous variables and its value isn't reclaimed.
*
- * <warning><para>
- * Environment variable handling in UNIX is not thread-safe, and your
- * program may crash if one thread calls g_unsetenv() while another
- * thread is calling getenv(). (And note that many functions, such as
- * gettext(), call getenv() internally.) This function is only safe
- * to use at the very start of your program, before creating any other
- * threads (or creating objects that create worker threads of their
- * own).
- * </para><para>
+ * You should be mindful of the fact that environment variable handling
+ * in UNIX is not thread-safe, and your program may crash if one thread
+ * calls g_unsetenv() while another thread is calling getenv(). (And note
+ * that many functions, such as gettext(), call getenv() internally.) This
+ * function is only safe to use at the very start of your program, before
+ * creating any other threads (or creating objects that create worker
+ * threads of their own).
+ *
* If you need to set up the environment for a child process, you can
* use g_get_environ() to get an environment array, modify that with
* g_environ_setenv() and g_environ_unsetenv(), and then pass that
* array directly to execvpe(), g_spawn_async(), or the like.
- * </para></warning>
*
* Since: 2.4
*/
void
g_unsetenv (const gchar *variable)
{
-#ifdef HAVE_UNSETENV
g_return_if_fail (variable != NULL);
g_return_if_fail (strchr (variable, '=') == NULL);
+#ifdef HAVE_UNSETENV
unsetenv (variable);
#else /* !HAVE_UNSETENV */
- g_return_if_fail (variable != NULL);
- g_return_if_fail (strchr (variable, '=') == NULL);
-
/* Mess directly with the environ array.
* This seems to be the only portable way to do this.
*/
if (len == 0)
{
g_free (wname);
- return NULL;
+ if (GetLastError () == ERROR_ENVVAR_NOT_FOUND)
+ return NULL;
+
+ quark = g_quark_from_static_string ("");
+ return g_quark_to_string (quark);
}
else if (len == 1)
len = 2;
g_return_val_if_fail (variable != NULL, FALSE);
g_return_val_if_fail (strchr (variable, '=') == NULL, FALSE);
+ g_return_val_if_fail (value != NULL, FALSE);
g_return_val_if_fail (g_utf8_validate (variable, -1, NULL), FALSE);
g_return_val_if_fail (g_utf8_validate (value, -1, NULL), FALSE);
gint i, n;
strings = GetEnvironmentStringsW ();
- for (n = 0; strings[n]; n += wcslen (strings + n) + 1);
- result = g_new (char *, n + 1);
- for (i = 0; strings[i]; i += wcslen (strings + i) + 1)
- result[i] = g_utf16_to_utf8 (strings + i, -1, NULL, NULL, NULL);
+ for (n = 0, i = 0; strings[n]; i++)
+ n += wcslen (strings + n) + 1;
+
+ result = g_new (char *, i + 1);
+ for (n = 0, i = 0; strings[n]; i++)
+ {
+ result[i] = g_utf16_to_utf8 (strings + n, -1, NULL, NULL, NULL);
+ n += wcslen (strings + n) + 1;
+ }
FreeEnvironmentStringsW (strings);
result[i] = NULL;