Is it possible to set an environment variable at runtime from a Java application? In Java 1.5 java.lang.System class there is the getenv() method, I would only need a setenv
I don't think so, at least not purely in Java, but why do you need to do this? In Java it's preferable to use properties via System.getProperties()
, which you can modify.
If you really must, I'm sure you could wrap the C setenv
function in a JNI call - in fact, I wouldn't be surprised if someone has done so already. I don't know the details of the code, though.
You can get a handle on the underlying map that java.lang.ProcessEnvironment
is holding on to, and then put new stuff and remove stuff all you want.
This works on java 1.8.0_144. Can't guarantee it works on any other version of java, but it's probably similar if you really need to change the environment at run time.
private static Map<String,String> getModifiableEnvironment() throws Exception{
Class pe = Class.forName("java.lang.ProcessEnvironment");
Method getenv = pe.getDeclaredMethod("getenv");
getenv.setAccessible(true);
Object unmodifiableEnvironment = getenv.invoke(null);
Class map = Class.forName("java.util.Collections$UnmodifiableMap");
Field m = map.getDeclaredField("m");
m.setAccessible(true);
return (Map) m.get(unmodifiableEnvironment);
}
After you get the reference to the map, just add whatever you want and you can now retrieve it using the regular old System.getenv("")
call.
I tried this its working in MAC not working in Windows in both os java version 1.8_161
@Narcoleptic Snowman's answer put me in the right track, however it was mysteriously not working with Oracle JDK 1.8.0_231 (he tested with minor version _144). Even though I was able to update the underlying Map (validated by printing out System.getenv()
before and after adding a new property to the Map), the changes were not reflected when the new property was retrieved using System.getenv("property")
.
After some investigation I found out that's because System.getenv()
and System.getenv("property")
end up using different static attributes of java.lang.ProcessEnvironment
, which are initialized in the class' static
block. So it doesn't matter if new properties are added to the Map retrieved using System.getenv()
; these properties will not be available in the other Map used by System.getenv("property")
.
So I changed @Narcoleptic Snowman's answer to deal with this scenario and came to the code below. Please note this will only work if you retrieve properties using System.getenv("property")
; if you use System.getenv().get("property")
then his answer is what you need. The usage is as follows:
@SuppressWarnings("unchecked")
private static Map<String, String> getModifiableEnvironment() throws Exception
{
Class<?> pe = Class.forName("java.lang.ProcessEnvironment");
Method getenv = pe.getDeclaredMethod("getenv", String.class);
getenv.setAccessible(true);
Field props = pe.getDeclaredField("theCaseInsensitiveEnvironment");
props.setAccessible(true);
return (Map<String, String>) props.get(null);
}
This method should be used as follows:
getModifiableEnvironment().put("propName", "propValue");
System.getenv("propName"); // this will return "propValue"
If my intuition is correct, and you actually want to modify the environment for the benefit of a spawned (forked) sub-process (Runtime.getRuntime().exec()
), then use ProcessBuilder instead of exec()
. You can build a custom environment via your ProcessBuilder
instance's environment() method.
If this is not what you are trying to achieve then kindly disregard this answer.
UPDATE
The answer to your three updated, specific questions is as follows:
System.getenv()
in the same JVM, or both.setenv
or its platform-specific equivalent via JNI. You may also employ the extremely convoluted method from point 2 below, which works for any process (provided you have the permissions.) However, be aware that in most JVMs this change might never be reflected in the values returned by System.getenv()
, as the environment is more often than not cached at virtual machine startup in a java.util.Map
(or equivalent.)System.java
in whichever JVM distribution you will be using to deploy), you may try hacking the implementation (via class loading order, reflection, or instrumentation.) In the case of SUN's v1.6 JVM, for example, the environment cache is managed by the undocumented ProcessEnvironment
class (which you can patch.)gdb
will be suspended for a non-zero amount of time.ProcessBuilder
when spawning the process.Note that all methods above, except for the one involving ProcessBuilder
, are brittle, error prone, non-portable to various degrees, and prone to race conditions in multi-threaded environments.
You can modify the environment of current and child processes but not of the parent process that spawned this process.
In response to your updated question:
setenv()
or something. You probably don't need to do this though, and it may not work in all situations.ProcessBuilder
.