Copyright | (c) The University of Glasgow 2002 |
---|---|
License | BSD-style (see the file libraries/base/LICENSE) |
Maintainer | [email protected] |
Stability | provisional |
Portability | non-portable (requires POSIX) |
Safe Haskell | Safe |
Language | Haskell2010 |
POSIX environment support
Synopsis
- getEnv :: String -> IO (Maybe String)
- getEnvDefault :: String -> String -> IO String
- getEnvironmentPrim :: IO [String]
- getEnvironment :: IO [(String, String)]
- setEnvironment :: [(String, String)] -> IO ()
- putEnv :: String -> IO ()
- setEnv :: String -> String -> Bool -> IO ()
- unsetEnv :: String -> IO ()
- clearEnv :: IO ()
Documentation
getEnv
looks up a variable in the environment.
getEnvDefault
is a wrapper around getEnv
where the
programmer can specify a fallback if the variable is not found
in the environment.
getEnvironmentPrim :: IO [String] Source #
getEnvironment
retrieves the entire environment as a
list of (key,value)
pairs.
setEnvironment
resets the entire environment to the given list of
(key,value)
pairs.
putEnv
function takes an argument of the form name=value
and is equivalent to setEnv(key,value,True{-overwrite-})
.
The setEnv
function inserts or resets the environment variable name in
the current environment list. If the variable name
does not exist in the
list, it is inserted with the given value. If the variable does exist,
the argument overwrite
is tested; if overwrite
is False
, the variable is
not reset, otherwise it is reset to the given value.
The unsetEnv
function deletes all instances of the variable name
from the environment.