ENVIRON
Section: Linux Programmer's Manual (7)
Updated: 2021-03-22
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NAME
environ - user environment
SYNOPSIS
extern char **environ;
DESCRIPTION
The variable
environ
points to an array of pointers to strings called the "environment".
The last pointer in this array has the value NULL.
This array of strings is made available to the process by the
execve(2)
call when a new program is started.
When a child process is created via
fork(2),
it inherits a
copy
of its parent's environment.
By convention, the strings in
environ
have the form "name=value".
The name is case-sensitive and may not contain
the character "=".
The value can be anything that can be represented as a string.
The name and the value may not contain an embedded null byte ('\0'),
since this is assumed to terminate the string.
Environment variables may be placed in the shell's environment by the
export
command in
sh(1),
or by the
setenv
command if you use
csh(1).
The initial environment of the shell is populated in various ways,
such as definitions from
/etc/environment
that are processed by
pam_env(8)
for all users at login time (on systems that employ
pam(8)).
In addition, various shell initialization scripts, such as the system-wide
/etc/profile
script and per-user initializations script may include commands
that add variables to the shell's environment;
see the manual page of your preferred shell for details.
Bourne-style shells support the syntax
NAME=value command
to create an environment variable definition only in the scope
of the process that executes
command.
Multiple variable definitions, separated by white space, may precede
command.
Arguments may also be placed in the
environment at the point of an
exec(3).
A C program can manipulate its environment using the functions
getenv(3),
putenv(3),
setenv(3),
and
unsetenv(3).
What follows is a list of environment variables typically seen on a
system.
This list is incomplete and includes only common variables seen
by average users in their day-to-day routine.
Environment variables specific to a particular program or library function
are documented in the ENVIRONMENT section of the appropriate manual page.
- USER
-
The name of the logged-in user (used by some BSD-derived programs).
Set at login time, see section NOTES below.
- LOGNAME
-
The name of the logged-in user (used by some System-V derived programs).
Set at login time, see section NOTES below.
- HOME
-
A user's login directory, set a login time.
Set at login time, see section NOTES below.
- LANG
-
The name of a locale to use for locale categories when not overridden
by
LC_ALL
or more specific environment variables such as
LC_COLLATE,
LC_CTYPE,
LC_MESSAGES,
LC_MONETARY,
LC_NUMERIC,
and
LC_TIME
(see
locale(7)
for further details of the
LC_*
environment variables).
- PATH
-
The sequence of directory prefixes that
sh(1)
and many other
programs employ when searching for an executable file that is specified
as a simple filename (i.a., a pathname that contains no slashes).
The prefixes are separated by colons (:).
The list of prefixes is searched from beginning to end,
by checking the pathname formed by concatenating
a prefix, a slash, and the filename,
until a file with execute permission is found.
-
As a legacy feature, a zero-length prefix
(specified as two adjacent colons, or an initial or terminating colon)
is interpreted to mean the current working directory.
However, use of this feature is deprecated,
and POSIX notes that a conforming application shall use
an explicit pathname (e.g.,
.)
to specify the current working directory.
-
Analogously to
PATH,
one has
CDPATH
used by some shells to find the target
of a change directory command,
MANPATH
used by
man(1)
to find manual pages, and so on.
- PWD
-
The current working directory.
Set by some shells.
- SHELL
-
The absolute pathname of the user's login shell.
Set at login time, see section NOTES below.
- TERM
-
The terminal type for which output is to be prepared.
- PAGER
-
The user's preferred utility to display text files.
Any string acceptable as a command-string operand to the
sh -c
command shall be valid.
If
PAGER
is null or is not set,
then applications that launch a pager will default to a program such as
less(1)
or
more(1).
- EDITOR/VISUAL
-
The user's preferred utility to edit text files.
Any string acceptable as a command_string operand to the
sh -c
command shall be valid.
Note that the behavior of many programs and library routines is
influenced by the presence or value of certain environment variables.
Examples include the following:
- *
-
The variables
LANG, LANGUAGE, NLSPATH, LOCPATH,
LC_ALL, LC_MESSAGES,
and so on influence locale handling; see
catopen(3),
gettext(3),
and
locale(7).
- *
-
TMPDIR
influences the path prefix of names created by
tempnam(3)
and other routines, and the temporary directory used by
sort(1)
and other programs.
- *
-
LD_LIBRARY_PATH, LD_PRELOAD,
and other
LD_*
variables influence the behavior of the dynamic loader/linker.
See also
ld.so(8).
- *
-
POSIXLY_CORRECT
makes certain programs and library routines follow
the prescriptions of POSIX.
- *
-
The behavior of
malloc(3)
is influenced by
MALLOC_*
variables.
- *
-
The variable
HOSTALIASES
gives the name of a file containing aliases
to be used with
gethostbyname(3).
- *
-
TZ and TZDIR
give timezone information used by
tzset(3)
and through that by functions like
ctime(3),
localtime(3),
mktime(3),
strftime(3).
See also
tzselect(8).
- *
-
TERMCAP
gives information on how to address a given terminal
(or gives the name of a file containing such information).
- *
-
COLUMNS and LINES
tell applications about the window size, possibly overriding the actual size.
- *
-
PRINTER or LPDEST
may specify the desired printer to use.
See
lpr(1).
NOTES
Historically and by standard,
environ
must be declared in the user program.
However, as a (nonstandard) programmer convenience,
environ
is declared in the header file
<unistd.h>
if the
_GNU_SOURCE
feature test macro is defined (see
feature_test_macros(7)).
The
prctl(2)
PR_SET_MM_ENV_START
and
PR_SET_MM_ENV_END
operations can be used to control the location of the process's environment.
The
HOME,
LOGNAME,
SHELL,
and
USER
variables are set when the user is changed via a
session management interface, typically by a program such as
login(1)
from a user database (such as
passwd(5)).
(Switching to the root user using
su(1)
may result in a mixed environment where
LOGNAME
and
USER
are retained from old user; see the
su(1)
manual page.)
BUGS
Clearly there is a security risk here.
Many a system command has been
tricked into mischief by a user who specified unusual values for
IFS or LD_LIBRARY_PATH.
There is also the risk of name space pollution.
Programs like
make
and
autoconf
allow overriding of default utility names from the
environment with similarly named variables in all caps.
Thus one uses
CC
to select the desired C compiler (and similarly
MAKE,
AR,
AS,
FC,
LD,
LEX,
RM,
YACC,
etc.).
However, in some traditional uses such an environment variable
gives options for the program instead of a pathname.
Thus, one has
MORE,
LESS,
and
GZIP.
Such usage is considered mistaken, and to be avoided in new
programs.
The authors of
gzip
should consider renaming their option to
GZIP_OPT.
SEE ALSO
bash(1),
csh(1),
env(1),
login(1),
printenv(1),
sh(1),
su(1),
tcsh(1),
execve(2),
clearenv(3),
exec(3),
getenv(3),
putenv(3),
setenv(3),
unsetenv(3),
locale(7),
ld.so(8),
pam_env(8)
COLOPHON
This page is part of release 5.11 of the Linux
man-pages
project.
A description of the project,
information about reporting bugs,
and the latest version of this page,
can be found at
https://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/.
Index
- NAME
-
- SYNOPSIS
-
- DESCRIPTION
-
- NOTES
-
- BUGS
-
- SEE ALSO
-
- COLOPHON
-
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Time: 06:22:50 GMT, May 09, 2021