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view lib-src/env.c @ 17692:426dde653028 gnumach-release-1-1 gnumach-release-1-1-1 libc-970508 libc-970509 libc-970510 libc-970511 libc-970512 libc-970513 libc-970514 libc-970515 libc-970516 libc-970517 libc-970518 libc-970519 libc-970520 libc-970521 libc-970522 libc-970523 libc-970524 libc-970525 libc-970526 libc-970527 libc-970528 libc-970529 libc-970530 libc-970531 libc-970601 libc-970602 libc-970603 libc-970604 libc-970605
Recognize either / or - as a machine/suptype separator from uname -m
to cope with older systems that have the older uname.
author | Thomas Bushnell, BSG <thomas@gnu.org> |
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date | Wed, 07 May 1997 19:19:04 +0000 |
parents | e9e928d02747 |
children |
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/* env - manipulate environment and execute a program in that environment Copyright (C) 1986, 1994 Free Software Foundation, Inc. This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2, or (at your option) any later version. This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details. You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA. */ /* Mly 861126 */ /* If first argument is "-", then a new environment is constructed from scratch; otherwise the environment is inherited from the parent process, except as modified by other options. So, "env - foo" will invoke the "foo" program in a null environment, whereas "env foo" would invoke "foo" in the same environment as that passed to "env" itself. Subsequent arguments are interpreted as follows: * "variable=value" (i.e., an arg containing a "=" character) means to set the specified environment variable to that value. `value' may be of zero length ("variable="). Note that setting a variable to a zero-length value is different from unsetting it. * "-u variable" or "-unset variable" means to unset that variable. If that variable isn't set, does nothing. * "-s variable value" or "-set variable value" same as "variable=value". * "-" or "--" are used to indicate that the following argument is the program to invoke. This is only necessary when the program's name begins with "-" or contains a "=". * anything else The first remaining argument specifies a program to invoke (it is searched for according to the specification of the PATH environment variable) and any arguments following that are passed as arguments to that program. If no program-name is specified following the environment specifications, the resulting environment is printed. This is like specifying a program-name of "printenv". Examples: If the environment passed to "env" is { USER=rms EDITOR=emacs PATH=.:/gnubin:/hacks } * "env DISPLAY=gnu:0 nemacs" calls "nemacs" in the environment { USER=rms EDITOR=emacs PATH=.:/gnubin:/hacks DISPLAY=gnu:0 } * "env - USER=foo /hacks/hack bar baz" calls the "hack" program on arguments "bar" and "baz" in an environment in which the only variable is "USER". Note that the "-" option clears out the PATH variable, so one should be careful to specify in which directory to find the program to call. * "env -u EDITOR USER=foo PATH=/energy -- e=mc2 bar baz" The program "/energy/e=mc2" is called with environment { USER=foo PATH=/energy } */ #ifdef EMACS #define NO_SHORTNAMES #include "../src/config.h" #endif /* EMACS */ #include <stdio.h> extern int execvp (); char *xmalloc (), *xrealloc (); char *concat (); extern char **environ; char **nenv; int nenv_size; char *progname; void setenv (); void fatal (); char *myindex (); extern char *strerror (); main (argc, argv, envp) register int argc; register char **argv; char **envp; { register char *tem; progname = argv[0]; argc--; argv++; nenv_size = 100; nenv = (char **) xmalloc (nenv_size * sizeof (char *)); *nenv = (char *) 0; /* "-" flag means to not inherit parent's environment */ if (argc && !strcmp (*argv, "-")) { argc--; argv++; } else /* Else pass on existing env vars. */ for (; *envp; envp++) { tem = myindex (*envp, '='); if (tem) { *tem = '\000'; setenv (*envp, tem + 1); } } while (argc > 0) { tem = myindex (*argv, '='); if (tem) /* If arg contains a "=" it specifies to set a variable */ { *tem = '\000'; setenv (*argv, tem + 1); argc--; argv++; continue; } if (**argv != '-') /* Remaining args are program name and args to pass it */ break; if (argc < 2) fatal ("no argument for `%s' option", *argv); if (!strcmp (*argv, "-u") || !strcmp (*argv, "-unset")) /* Unset a variable */ { argc--; argv++; setenv (*argv, (char *) 0); argc--; argv++; } else if (!strcmp (*argv, "-s") || !strcmp (*argv, "-set")) /* Set a variable */ { argc--; argv++; tem = *argv; if (argc < 2) fatal ("no value specified for variable \"%s\"", tem); argc--; argv++; setenv (tem, *argv); argc--; argv++; } else if (!strcmp (*argv, "-") || !strcmp (*argv, "--")) { argc--; argv++; break; } else { fatal ("unrecognized option `%s'", *argv); } } /* If no program specified print the environment and exit */ if (argc <= 0) { while (*nenv) printf ("%s\n", *nenv++); exit (0); } else { extern int errno; extern char *strerror (); environ = nenv; (void) execvp (*argv, argv); fprintf (stderr, "%s: cannot execute `%s': %s\n", progname, *argv, strerror (errno)); exit (errno != 0 ? errno : 1); } } void setenv (var, val) register char *var, *val; { register char **e; int len = strlen (var); { register char *tem = myindex (var, '='); if (tem) fatal ("environment variable names can not contain `=': %s", var); else if (*var == '\000') fatal ("zero-length environment variable name specified"); } for (e = nenv; *e; e++) if (!strncmp (var, *e, len) && (*e)[len] == '=') { if (val) goto set; else do { *e = *(e + 1); } while (*e++); return; } if (!val) return; /* Nothing to unset */ len = e - nenv; if (len + 1 >= nenv_size) { nenv_size += 100; nenv = (char **) xrealloc (nenv, nenv_size * sizeof (char *)); e = nenv + len; } set: val = concat (var, "=", val); if (*e) free (*e); else *(e + 1) = (char *) 0; *e = val; return; } void fatal (msg, arg1, arg2) char *msg, *arg1, *arg2; { fprintf (stderr, "%s: ", progname); fprintf (stderr, msg, arg1, arg2); putc ('\n', stderr); exit (1); } extern char *malloc (), *realloc (); void memory_fatal () { fatal ("virtual memory exhausted"); } char * xmalloc (size) int size; { register char *value; value = (char *) malloc (size); if (!value) memory_fatal (); return (value); } char * xrealloc (ptr, size) char *ptr; int size; { register char *value; value = (char *) realloc (ptr, size); if (!value) memory_fatal (); return (value); } /* Return a newly-allocated string whose contents concatenate those of S1, S2, S3. */ char * concat (s1, s2, s3) char *s1, *s2, *s3; { int len1 = strlen (s1), len2 = strlen (s2), len3 = strlen (s3); char *result = (char *) xmalloc (len1 + len2 + len3 + 1); strcpy (result, s1); strcpy (result + len1, s2); strcpy (result + len1 + len2, s3); result[len1 + len2 + len3] = 0; return result; } /* Return a pointer to the first occurrence in STR of C, or 0 if C does not occur. */ char * myindex (str, c) char *str; char c; { char *s = str; while (*s) { if (*s == c) return s; s++; } return 0; } #ifndef HAVE_STRERROR char * strerror (errnum) int errnum; { extern char *sys_errlist[]; extern int sys_nerr; if (errnum >= 0 && errnum < sys_nerr) return sys_errlist[errnum]; return (char *) "Unknown error"; } #endif /* ! HAVE_STRERROR */