Copyright | (c) The University of Glasgow 2001 |
---|---|
License | BSD-style (see the file libraries/base/LICENSE) |
Maintainer | [email protected] |
Stability | provisional |
Portability | portable |
Safe Haskell | Safe |
Language | Haskell2010 |
Miscellaneous information about the system environment.
Computation getArgs
returns a list of the program's command line arguments (not including the program name).
getProgName :: IO String Source
Computation getProgName
returns the name of the program as it was invoked.
However, this is hard-to-impossible to implement on some non-Unix OSes, so instead, for maximum portability, we just return the leafname of the program as invoked. Even then there are some differences between platforms: on Windows, for example, a program invoked as foo is probably really FOO.EXE
, and that is what getProgName
will return.
getExecutablePath :: IO FilePath Source
Returns the absolute pathname of the current executable.
Note that for scripts and interactive sessions, this is the path to the interpreter (e.g. ghci.)
Since base 4.11.0.0, getExecutablePath
resolves symlinks on Windows. If an executable is launched through a symlink, getExecutablePath
returns the absolute path of the original executable.
Since: base-4.6.0.0
getEnv :: String -> IO String Source
Computation getEnv
var
returns the value of the environment variable var
. For the inverse, the setEnv
function can be used.
This computation may fail with:
isDoesNotExistError
if the environment variable does not exist.lookupEnv :: String -> IO (Maybe String) Source
Return the value of the environment variable var
, or Nothing
if there is no such value.
For POSIX users, this is equivalent to getEnv
.
Since: base-4.6.0.0
setEnv :: String -> String -> IO () Source
setEnv name value
sets the specified environment variable to value
.
Early versions of this function operated under the mistaken belief that setting an environment variable to the empty string on Windows removes that environment variable from the environment. For the sake of compatibility, it adopted that behavior on POSIX. In particular
setEnv name ""
has the same effect as
unsetEnv name
If you'd like to be able to set environment variables to blank strings, use setEnv
.
Throws IOException
if name
is the empty string or contains an equals sign.
Since: base-4.7.0.0
unsetEnv :: String -> IO () Source
unsetEnv name
removes the specified environment variable from the environment of the current process.
Throws IOException
if name
is the empty string or contains an equals sign.
Since: base-4.7.0.0
withArgs :: [String] -> IO a -> IO a Source
withArgs
args act
- while executing action act
, have getArgs
return args
.
withProgName :: String -> IO a -> IO a Source
withProgName
name act
- while executing action act
, have getProgName
return name
.
getEnvironment :: IO [(String, String)] Source
getEnvironment
retrieves the entire environment as a list of (key,value)
pairs.
If an environment entry does not contain an '='
character, the key
is the whole entry and the value
is the empty string.
© The University of Glasgow and others
Licensed under a BSD-style license (see top of the page).
https://downloads.haskell.org/~ghc/8.8.3/docs/html/libraries/base-4.13.0.0/System-Environment.html