I know that when programming in c++ I can access individual environment variables with getenv.
I also know that, in the os x terminal, I can list ALL of the current
Use the environ
global variable. It is a null-terminated pointer to an array of strings in the format name=value
. Here's a miniature clone of env
:
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <stdio.h>
extern char **environ;
int main(int argc, char **argv) {
for(char **current = environ; *current; current++) {
puts(*current);
}
return EXIT_SUCCESS;
}
You may be able to use the non-portable envp argument to main
:
int main(int argc,char* argv[], char** envp)
and as a bonus apparently on OSX
you have apple which gives you other OS supplied info:
int main(int argc, char **argv, char **envp, char **apple)
But what is it used for? Well, Apple can use the apple vector to pass whatever "hidden" parameters they want to any program. And they do actually use it, too. Currently, apple[0] contains the path where the executing binary was found on disk. What's that you say? How is apple[0] different from argv[0]? The difference is that argv[0] can be set to any arbitrary value when execve(2) is called. For example, shells often differentiate a login shell from a regular shell by starting login shells with the first character in argv[0] being a -
Whoops, I forgot that system lets you execute terminal commands.
This snippet gives me what I need:
std::cout << "List of environment variables: << std::endl;
system("env");