unix-2.7.2.1: POSIX functionality

Copyright(c) The University of Glasgow 2002
LicenseBSD-style (see the file libraries/base/LICENSE)
Maintainerlibraries@haskell.org
Stabilityprovisional
Portabilitynon-portable (requires POSIX)
Safe HaskellTrustworthy
LanguageHaskell2010

System.Posix.Env.ByteString

Contents

Description

POSIX environment support

Synopsis

Environment Variables

getEnv Source #

Arguments

:: ByteString

variable name

-> IO (Maybe ByteString)

variable value

getEnv looks up a variable in the environment.

getEnvDefault Source #

Arguments

:: ByteString

variable name

-> ByteString

fallback value

-> IO ByteString

variable value or fallback value

getEnvDefault is a wrapper around getEnv where the programmer can specify a fallback if the variable is not found in the environment.

getEnvironment Source #

Arguments

:: IO [(ByteString, ByteString)]
[(key,value)]

getEnvironment retrieves the entire environment as a list of (key,value) pairs.

putEnv Source #

Arguments

:: ByteString

"key=value"

-> IO () 

putEnv function takes an argument of the form name=value and is equivalent to setEnv(key,value,True{-overwrite-}).

setEnv Source #

Arguments

:: ByteString

variable name

-> ByteString

variable value

-> Bool

overwrite

-> IO () 

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.

unsetEnv Source #

Arguments

:: ByteString

variable name

-> IO () 

The unsetEnv function deletes all instances of the variable name from the environment.

Program arguments

getArgs :: IO [ByteString] Source #

Computation getArgs returns a list of the program's command line arguments (not including the program name), as ByteStrings.

Unlike getArgs, this function does no Unicode decoding of the arguments; you get the exact bytes that were passed to the program by the OS. To interpret the arguments as text, some Unicode decoding should be applied.