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getenv

Searches the environment-variable table for a specified entry.

#include <stdlib.h>

char *getenv (const char *varname);

Parameters

varname
Name of environment variable being sought. The varname argument should match the case of the environment variable.

Remarks

getenv is case-sensitive.

getenv operates only on the local process. The process environment is pre-loaded from "global" values which are set in the registry. The registry INtime\RtKernelLoader\INTIME.INI\CLIB contains values which are loaded into the environment.

The first call to getenv sets up an environment-variable table shared by all threads using the C library. A prototype for the table is contained in the file :config:r?env. When getenv is called for the first time, the table is initialized from :config:r?env. You can create an environment-variable file locally, :prog:r?env, that getenv uses in addition to :config:r?env, as a basis for the table. The maximum allowable number of entries in the environment-variable table is 40. Entries in the r?env files are of this form:

varname = [ASCII string]

A space character is required on both sides of the equal sign for fscanf parsing. For example, a typical entry in :config:r?env appears like this:

TZ = PST8PDT

Return Values

A pointer to the environment-variable table entry containing the current string value of varname. To update the entry, pass this pointer to putenv.
Success.
A null pointer if the given variable is not currently defined.
Failure.

Requirements

Versions Defined in Include Link to
INtime 3.0 intime/rt/include/stdlib.h stdlib.h clib.lib

See Also

putenv, fscanf