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			1064 lines
		
	
	
		
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			Rust
		
	
	
	
	
	
			
		
		
	
	
			1064 lines
		
	
	
		
			33 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Rust
		
	
	
	
	
	
| //! Inspection and manipulation of the process's environment.
 | ||
| //!
 | ||
| //! This module contains functions to inspect various aspects such as
 | ||
| //! environment variables, process arguments, the current directory, and various
 | ||
| //! other important directories.
 | ||
| //!
 | ||
| //! There are several functions and structs in this module that have a
 | ||
| //! counterpart ending in `os`. Those ending in `os` will return an [`OsString`]
 | ||
| //! and those without will return a [`String`].
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| #![stable(feature = "env", since = "1.0.0")]
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| #[cfg(test)]
 | ||
| mod tests;
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| use crate::error::Error;
 | ||
| use crate::ffi::{OsStr, OsString};
 | ||
| use crate::fmt;
 | ||
| use crate::io;
 | ||
| use crate::path::{Path, PathBuf};
 | ||
| use crate::sys;
 | ||
| use crate::sys::os as os_imp;
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| /// Returns the current working directory as a [`PathBuf`].
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// # Platform-specific behavior
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// This function [currently] corresponds to the `getcwd` function on Unix
 | ||
| /// and the `GetCurrentDirectoryW` function on Windows.
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// [currently]: crate::io#platform-specific-behavior
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// # Errors
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// Returns an [`Err`] if the current working directory value is invalid.
 | ||
| /// Possible cases:
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// * Current directory does not exist.
 | ||
| /// * There are insufficient permissions to access the current directory.
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// # Examples
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// ```
 | ||
| /// use std::env;
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// fn main() -> std::io::Result<()> {
 | ||
| ///     let path = env::current_dir()?;
 | ||
| ///     println!("The current directory is {}", path.display());
 | ||
| ///     Ok(())
 | ||
| /// }
 | ||
| /// ```
 | ||
| #[doc(alias = "pwd")]
 | ||
| #[doc(alias = "getcwd")]
 | ||
| #[doc(alias = "GetCurrentDirectory")]
 | ||
| #[stable(feature = "env", since = "1.0.0")]
 | ||
| pub fn current_dir() -> io::Result<PathBuf> {
 | ||
|     os_imp::getcwd()
 | ||
| }
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| /// Changes the current working directory to the specified path.
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// # Platform-specific behavior
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// This function [currently] corresponds to the `chdir` function on Unix
 | ||
| /// and the `SetCurrentDirectoryW` function on Windows.
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// Returns an [`Err`] if the operation fails.
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// [currently]: crate::io#platform-specific-behavior
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// # Examples
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// ```
 | ||
| /// use std::env;
 | ||
| /// use std::path::Path;
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// let root = Path::new("/");
 | ||
| /// assert!(env::set_current_dir(&root).is_ok());
 | ||
| /// println!("Successfully changed working directory to {}!", root.display());
 | ||
| /// ```
 | ||
| #[doc(alias = "chdir", alias = "SetCurrentDirectory", alias = "SetCurrentDirectoryW")]
 | ||
| #[stable(feature = "env", since = "1.0.0")]
 | ||
| pub fn set_current_dir<P: AsRef<Path>>(path: P) -> io::Result<()> {
 | ||
|     os_imp::chdir(path.as_ref())
 | ||
| }
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| /// An iterator over a snapshot of the environment variables of this process.
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// This structure is created by [`env::vars()`]. See its documentation for more.
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// [`env::vars()`]: vars
 | ||
| #[stable(feature = "env", since = "1.0.0")]
 | ||
| pub struct Vars {
 | ||
|     inner: VarsOs,
 | ||
| }
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| /// An iterator over a snapshot of the environment variables of this process.
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// This structure is created by [`env::vars_os()`]. See its documentation for more.
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// [`env::vars_os()`]: vars_os
 | ||
| #[stable(feature = "env", since = "1.0.0")]
 | ||
| pub struct VarsOs {
 | ||
|     inner: os_imp::Env,
 | ||
| }
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| /// Returns an iterator of (variable, value) pairs of strings, for all the
 | ||
| /// environment variables of the current process.
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// The returned iterator contains a snapshot of the process's environment
 | ||
| /// variables at the time of this invocation. Modifications to environment
 | ||
| /// variables afterwards will not be reflected in the returned iterator.
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// # Panics
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// While iterating, the returned iterator will panic if any key or value in the
 | ||
| /// environment is not valid unicode. If this is not desired, consider using
 | ||
| /// [`env::vars_os()`].
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// # Examples
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// ```
 | ||
| /// use std::env;
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// // We will iterate through the references to the element returned by
 | ||
| /// // env::vars();
 | ||
| /// for (key, value) in env::vars() {
 | ||
| ///     println!("{key}: {value}");
 | ||
| /// }
 | ||
| /// ```
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// [`env::vars_os()`]: vars_os
 | ||
| #[must_use]
 | ||
| #[stable(feature = "env", since = "1.0.0")]
 | ||
| pub fn vars() -> Vars {
 | ||
|     Vars { inner: vars_os() }
 | ||
| }
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| /// Returns an iterator of (variable, value) pairs of OS strings, for all the
 | ||
| /// environment variables of the current process.
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// The returned iterator contains a snapshot of the process's environment
 | ||
| /// variables at the time of this invocation. Modifications to environment
 | ||
| /// variables afterwards will not be reflected in the returned iterator.
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// Note that the returned iterator will not check if the environment variables
 | ||
| /// are valid Unicode. If you want to panic on invalid UTF-8,
 | ||
| /// use the [`vars`] function instead.
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// # Examples
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// ```
 | ||
| /// use std::env;
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// // We will iterate through the references to the element returned by
 | ||
| /// // env::vars_os();
 | ||
| /// for (key, value) in env::vars_os() {
 | ||
| ///     println!("{key:?}: {value:?}");
 | ||
| /// }
 | ||
| /// ```
 | ||
| #[must_use]
 | ||
| #[stable(feature = "env", since = "1.0.0")]
 | ||
| pub fn vars_os() -> VarsOs {
 | ||
|     VarsOs { inner: os_imp::env() }
 | ||
| }
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| #[stable(feature = "env", since = "1.0.0")]
 | ||
| impl Iterator for Vars {
 | ||
|     type Item = (String, String);
 | ||
|     fn next(&mut self) -> Option<(String, String)> {
 | ||
|         self.inner.next().map(|(a, b)| (a.into_string().unwrap(), b.into_string().unwrap()))
 | ||
|     }
 | ||
|     fn size_hint(&self) -> (usize, Option<usize>) {
 | ||
|         self.inner.size_hint()
 | ||
|     }
 | ||
| }
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| #[stable(feature = "std_debug", since = "1.16.0")]
 | ||
| impl fmt::Debug for Vars {
 | ||
|     fn fmt(&self, f: &mut fmt::Formatter<'_>) -> fmt::Result {
 | ||
|         let Self { inner: VarsOs { inner } } = self;
 | ||
|         f.debug_struct("Vars").field("inner", &inner.str_debug()).finish()
 | ||
|     }
 | ||
| }
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| #[stable(feature = "env", since = "1.0.0")]
 | ||
| impl Iterator for VarsOs {
 | ||
|     type Item = (OsString, OsString);
 | ||
|     fn next(&mut self) -> Option<(OsString, OsString)> {
 | ||
|         self.inner.next()
 | ||
|     }
 | ||
|     fn size_hint(&self) -> (usize, Option<usize>) {
 | ||
|         self.inner.size_hint()
 | ||
|     }
 | ||
| }
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| #[stable(feature = "std_debug", since = "1.16.0")]
 | ||
| impl fmt::Debug for VarsOs {
 | ||
|     fn fmt(&self, f: &mut fmt::Formatter<'_>) -> fmt::Result {
 | ||
|         let Self { inner } = self;
 | ||
|         f.debug_struct("VarsOs").field("inner", inner).finish()
 | ||
|     }
 | ||
| }
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| /// Fetches the environment variable `key` from the current process.
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// # Errors
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// This function will return an error if the environment variable isn't set.
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// This function may return an error if the environment variable's name contains
 | ||
| /// the equal sign character (`=`) or the NUL character.
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// This function will return an error if the environment variable's value is
 | ||
| /// not valid Unicode. If this is not desired, consider using [`var_os`].
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// # Examples
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// ```
 | ||
| /// use std::env;
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// let key = "HOME";
 | ||
| /// match env::var(key) {
 | ||
| ///     Ok(val) => println!("{key}: {val:?}"),
 | ||
| ///     Err(e) => println!("couldn't interpret {key}: {e}"),
 | ||
| /// }
 | ||
| /// ```
 | ||
| #[stable(feature = "env", since = "1.0.0")]
 | ||
| pub fn var<K: AsRef<OsStr>>(key: K) -> Result<String, VarError> {
 | ||
|     _var(key.as_ref())
 | ||
| }
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| fn _var(key: &OsStr) -> Result<String, VarError> {
 | ||
|     match var_os(key) {
 | ||
|         Some(s) => s.into_string().map_err(VarError::NotUnicode),
 | ||
|         None => Err(VarError::NotPresent),
 | ||
|     }
 | ||
| }
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| /// Fetches the environment variable `key` from the current process, returning
 | ||
| /// [`None`] if the variable isn't set or if there is another error.
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// It may return `None` if the environment variable's name contains
 | ||
| /// the equal sign character (`=`) or the NUL character.
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// Note that this function will not check if the environment variable
 | ||
| /// is valid Unicode. If you want to have an error on invalid UTF-8,
 | ||
| /// use the [`var`] function instead.
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// # Examples
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// ```
 | ||
| /// use std::env;
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// let key = "HOME";
 | ||
| /// match env::var_os(key) {
 | ||
| ///     Some(val) => println!("{key}: {val:?}"),
 | ||
| ///     None => println!("{key} is not defined in the environment.")
 | ||
| /// }
 | ||
| /// ```
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// If expecting a delimited variable (such as `PATH`), [`split_paths`]
 | ||
| /// can be used to separate items.
 | ||
| #[must_use]
 | ||
| #[stable(feature = "env", since = "1.0.0")]
 | ||
| pub fn var_os<K: AsRef<OsStr>>(key: K) -> Option<OsString> {
 | ||
|     _var_os(key.as_ref())
 | ||
| }
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| fn _var_os(key: &OsStr) -> Option<OsString> {
 | ||
|     os_imp::getenv(key)
 | ||
| }
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| /// The error type for operations interacting with environment variables.
 | ||
| /// Possibly returned from [`env::var()`].
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// [`env::var()`]: var
 | ||
| #[derive(Debug, PartialEq, Eq, Clone)]
 | ||
| #[stable(feature = "env", since = "1.0.0")]
 | ||
| pub enum VarError {
 | ||
|     /// The specified environment variable was not present in the current
 | ||
|     /// process's environment.
 | ||
|     #[stable(feature = "env", since = "1.0.0")]
 | ||
|     NotPresent,
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|     /// The specified environment variable was found, but it did not contain
 | ||
|     /// valid unicode data. The found data is returned as a payload of this
 | ||
|     /// variant.
 | ||
|     #[stable(feature = "env", since = "1.0.0")]
 | ||
|     NotUnicode(#[stable(feature = "env", since = "1.0.0")] OsString),
 | ||
| }
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| #[stable(feature = "env", since = "1.0.0")]
 | ||
| impl fmt::Display for VarError {
 | ||
|     fn fmt(&self, f: &mut fmt::Formatter<'_>) -> fmt::Result {
 | ||
|         match *self {
 | ||
|             VarError::NotPresent => write!(f, "environment variable not found"),
 | ||
|             VarError::NotUnicode(ref s) => {
 | ||
|                 write!(f, "environment variable was not valid unicode: {:?}", s)
 | ||
|             }
 | ||
|         }
 | ||
|     }
 | ||
| }
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| #[stable(feature = "env", since = "1.0.0")]
 | ||
| impl Error for VarError {
 | ||
|     #[allow(deprecated)]
 | ||
|     fn description(&self) -> &str {
 | ||
|         match *self {
 | ||
|             VarError::NotPresent => "environment variable not found",
 | ||
|             VarError::NotUnicode(..) => "environment variable was not valid unicode",
 | ||
|         }
 | ||
|     }
 | ||
| }
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| /// Sets the environment variable `key` to the value `value` for the currently running
 | ||
| /// process.
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// # Safety
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// This function is safe to call in a single-threaded program.
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// This function is also always safe to call on Windows, in single-threaded
 | ||
| /// and multi-threaded programs.
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// In multi-threaded programs on other operating systems, we strongly suggest
 | ||
| /// not using `set_var` or `remove_var` at all. The exact requirement is: you
 | ||
| /// must ensure that there are no other threads concurrently writing or
 | ||
| /// *reading*(!) the environment through functions or global variables other
 | ||
| /// than the ones in this module. The problem is that these operating systems
 | ||
| /// do not provide a thread-safe way to read the environment, and most C
 | ||
| /// libraries, including libc itself, do not advertise which functions read
 | ||
| /// from the environment. Even functions from the Rust standard library may
 | ||
| /// read the environment without going through this module, e.g. for DNS
 | ||
| /// lookups from [`std::net::ToSocketAddrs`]. No stable guarantee is made about
 | ||
| /// which functions may read from the environment in future versions of a
 | ||
| /// library. All this makes it not practically possible for you to guarantee
 | ||
| /// that no other thread will read the environment, so the only safe option is
 | ||
| /// to not use `set_var` or `remove_var` in multi-threaded programs at all.
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// Discussion of this unsafety on Unix may be found in:
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| ///  - [Austin Group Bugzilla](https://austingroupbugs.net/view.php?id=188)
 | ||
| ///  - [GNU C library Bugzilla](https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=15607#c2)
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// [`std::net::ToSocketAddrs`]: crate::net::ToSocketAddrs
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// # Panics
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// This function may panic if `key` is empty, contains an ASCII equals sign `'='`
 | ||
| /// or the NUL character `'\0'`, or when `value` contains the NUL character.
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// # Examples
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// ```
 | ||
| /// use std::env;
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// let key = "KEY";
 | ||
| /// unsafe {
 | ||
| ///     env::set_var(key, "VALUE");
 | ||
| /// }
 | ||
| /// assert_eq!(env::var(key), Ok("VALUE".to_string()));
 | ||
| /// ```
 | ||
| #[cfg(not(bootstrap))]
 | ||
| #[rustc_deprecated_safe_2024]
 | ||
| #[stable(feature = "env", since = "1.0.0")]
 | ||
| pub unsafe fn set_var<K: AsRef<OsStr>, V: AsRef<OsStr>>(key: K, value: V) {
 | ||
|     _set_var(key.as_ref(), value.as_ref())
 | ||
| }
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| #[cfg(bootstrap)]
 | ||
| #[allow(missing_docs)]
 | ||
| #[stable(feature = "env", since = "1.0.0")]
 | ||
| pub fn set_var<K: AsRef<OsStr>, V: AsRef<OsStr>>(key: K, value: V) {
 | ||
|     unsafe { _set_var(key.as_ref(), value.as_ref()) }
 | ||
| }
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| unsafe fn _set_var(key: &OsStr, value: &OsStr) {
 | ||
|     os_imp::setenv(key, value).unwrap_or_else(|e| {
 | ||
|         panic!("failed to set environment variable `{key:?}` to `{value:?}`: {e}")
 | ||
|     })
 | ||
| }
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| /// Removes an environment variable from the environment of the currently running process.
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// # Safety
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// This function is safe to call in a single-threaded program.
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// This function is also always safe to call on Windows, in single-threaded
 | ||
| /// and multi-threaded programs.
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// In multi-threaded programs on other operating systems, we strongly suggest
 | ||
| /// not using `set_var` or `remove_var` at all. The exact requirement is: you
 | ||
| /// must ensure that there are no other threads concurrently writing or
 | ||
| /// *reading*(!) the environment through functions or global variables other
 | ||
| /// than the ones in this module. The problem is that these operating systems
 | ||
| /// do not provide a thread-safe way to read the environment, and most C
 | ||
| /// libraries, including libc itself, do not advertise which functions read
 | ||
| /// from the environment. Even functions from the Rust standard library may
 | ||
| /// read the environment without going through this module, e.g. for DNS
 | ||
| /// lookups from [`std::net::ToSocketAddrs`]. No stable guarantee is made about
 | ||
| /// which functions may read from the environment in future versions of a
 | ||
| /// library. All this makes it not practically possible for you to guarantee
 | ||
| /// that no other thread will read the environment, so the only safe option is
 | ||
| /// to not use `set_var` or `remove_var` in multi-threaded programs at all.
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// Discussion of this unsafety on Unix may be found in:
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| ///  - [Austin Group Bugzilla](https://austingroupbugs.net/view.php?id=188)
 | ||
| ///  - [GNU C library Bugzilla](https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=15607#c2)
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// [`std::net::ToSocketAddrs`]: crate::net::ToSocketAddrs
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// # Panics
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// This function may panic if `key` is empty, contains an ASCII equals sign
 | ||
| /// `'='` or the NUL character `'\0'`, or when the value contains the NUL
 | ||
| /// character.
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// # Examples
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// ```no_run
 | ||
| /// use std::env;
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// let key = "KEY";
 | ||
| /// unsafe {
 | ||
| ///     env::set_var(key, "VALUE");
 | ||
| /// }
 | ||
| /// assert_eq!(env::var(key), Ok("VALUE".to_string()));
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// unsafe {
 | ||
| ///     env::remove_var(key);
 | ||
| /// }
 | ||
| /// assert!(env::var(key).is_err());
 | ||
| /// ```
 | ||
| #[cfg(not(bootstrap))]
 | ||
| #[rustc_deprecated_safe_2024]
 | ||
| #[stable(feature = "env", since = "1.0.0")]
 | ||
| pub unsafe fn remove_var<K: AsRef<OsStr>>(key: K) {
 | ||
|     _remove_var(key.as_ref())
 | ||
| }
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| #[cfg(bootstrap)]
 | ||
| #[allow(missing_docs)]
 | ||
| #[stable(feature = "env", since = "1.0.0")]
 | ||
| pub fn remove_var<K: AsRef<OsStr>>(key: K) {
 | ||
|     unsafe { _remove_var(key.as_ref()) }
 | ||
| }
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| unsafe fn _remove_var(key: &OsStr) {
 | ||
|     os_imp::unsetenv(key)
 | ||
|         .unwrap_or_else(|e| panic!("failed to remove environment variable `{key:?}`: {e}"))
 | ||
| }
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| /// An iterator that splits an environment variable into paths according to
 | ||
| /// platform-specific conventions.
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// The iterator element type is [`PathBuf`].
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// This structure is created by [`env::split_paths()`]. See its
 | ||
| /// documentation for more.
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// [`env::split_paths()`]: split_paths
 | ||
| #[must_use = "iterators are lazy and do nothing unless consumed"]
 | ||
| #[stable(feature = "env", since = "1.0.0")]
 | ||
| pub struct SplitPaths<'a> {
 | ||
|     inner: os_imp::SplitPaths<'a>,
 | ||
| }
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| /// Parses input according to platform conventions for the `PATH`
 | ||
| /// environment variable.
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// Returns an iterator over the paths contained in `unparsed`. The iterator
 | ||
| /// element type is [`PathBuf`].
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// On most Unix platforms, the separator is `:` and on Windows it is `;`. This
 | ||
| /// also performs unquoting on Windows.
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// [`join_paths`] can be used to recombine elements.
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// # Panics
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// This will panic on systems where there is no delimited `PATH` variable,
 | ||
| /// such as UEFI.
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// # Examples
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// ```
 | ||
| /// use std::env;
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// let key = "PATH";
 | ||
| /// match env::var_os(key) {
 | ||
| ///     Some(paths) => {
 | ||
| ///         for path in env::split_paths(&paths) {
 | ||
| ///             println!("'{}'", path.display());
 | ||
| ///         }
 | ||
| ///     }
 | ||
| ///     None => println!("{key} is not defined in the environment.")
 | ||
| /// }
 | ||
| /// ```
 | ||
| #[stable(feature = "env", since = "1.0.0")]
 | ||
| pub fn split_paths<T: AsRef<OsStr> + ?Sized>(unparsed: &T) -> SplitPaths<'_> {
 | ||
|     SplitPaths { inner: os_imp::split_paths(unparsed.as_ref()) }
 | ||
| }
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| #[stable(feature = "env", since = "1.0.0")]
 | ||
| impl<'a> Iterator for SplitPaths<'a> {
 | ||
|     type Item = PathBuf;
 | ||
|     fn next(&mut self) -> Option<PathBuf> {
 | ||
|         self.inner.next()
 | ||
|     }
 | ||
|     fn size_hint(&self) -> (usize, Option<usize>) {
 | ||
|         self.inner.size_hint()
 | ||
|     }
 | ||
| }
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| #[stable(feature = "std_debug", since = "1.16.0")]
 | ||
| impl fmt::Debug for SplitPaths<'_> {
 | ||
|     fn fmt(&self, f: &mut fmt::Formatter<'_>) -> fmt::Result {
 | ||
|         f.debug_struct("SplitPaths").finish_non_exhaustive()
 | ||
|     }
 | ||
| }
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| /// The error type for operations on the `PATH` variable. Possibly returned from
 | ||
| /// [`env::join_paths()`].
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// [`env::join_paths()`]: join_paths
 | ||
| #[derive(Debug)]
 | ||
| #[stable(feature = "env", since = "1.0.0")]
 | ||
| pub struct JoinPathsError {
 | ||
|     inner: os_imp::JoinPathsError,
 | ||
| }
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| /// Joins a collection of [`Path`]s appropriately for the `PATH`
 | ||
| /// environment variable.
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// # Errors
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// Returns an [`Err`] (containing an error message) if one of the input
 | ||
| /// [`Path`]s contains an invalid character for constructing the `PATH`
 | ||
| /// variable (a double quote on Windows or a colon on Unix), or if the system
 | ||
| /// does not have a `PATH`-like variable (e.g. UEFI or WASI).
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// # Examples
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// Joining paths on a Unix-like platform:
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// ```
 | ||
| /// use std::env;
 | ||
| /// use std::ffi::OsString;
 | ||
| /// use std::path::Path;
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// fn main() -> Result<(), env::JoinPathsError> {
 | ||
| /// # if cfg!(unix) {
 | ||
| ///     let paths = [Path::new("/bin"), Path::new("/usr/bin")];
 | ||
| ///     let path_os_string = env::join_paths(paths.iter())?;
 | ||
| ///     assert_eq!(path_os_string, OsString::from("/bin:/usr/bin"));
 | ||
| /// # }
 | ||
| ///     Ok(())
 | ||
| /// }
 | ||
| /// ```
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// Joining a path containing a colon on a Unix-like platform results in an
 | ||
| /// error:
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// ```
 | ||
| /// # if cfg!(unix) {
 | ||
| /// use std::env;
 | ||
| /// use std::path::Path;
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// let paths = [Path::new("/bin"), Path::new("/usr/bi:n")];
 | ||
| /// assert!(env::join_paths(paths.iter()).is_err());
 | ||
| /// # }
 | ||
| /// ```
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// Using `env::join_paths()` with [`env::split_paths()`] to append an item to
 | ||
| /// the `PATH` environment variable:
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// ```
 | ||
| /// use std::env;
 | ||
| /// use std::path::PathBuf;
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// fn main() -> Result<(), env::JoinPathsError> {
 | ||
| ///     if let Some(path) = env::var_os("PATH") {
 | ||
| ///         let mut paths = env::split_paths(&path).collect::<Vec<_>>();
 | ||
| ///         paths.push(PathBuf::from("/home/xyz/bin"));
 | ||
| ///         let new_path = env::join_paths(paths)?;
 | ||
| ///         env::set_var("PATH", &new_path);
 | ||
| ///     }
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| ///     Ok(())
 | ||
| /// }
 | ||
| /// ```
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// [`env::split_paths()`]: split_paths
 | ||
| #[stable(feature = "env", since = "1.0.0")]
 | ||
| pub fn join_paths<I, T>(paths: I) -> Result<OsString, JoinPathsError>
 | ||
| where
 | ||
|     I: IntoIterator<Item = T>,
 | ||
|     T: AsRef<OsStr>,
 | ||
| {
 | ||
|     os_imp::join_paths(paths.into_iter()).map_err(|e| JoinPathsError { inner: e })
 | ||
| }
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| #[stable(feature = "env", since = "1.0.0")]
 | ||
| impl fmt::Display for JoinPathsError {
 | ||
|     fn fmt(&self, f: &mut fmt::Formatter<'_>) -> fmt::Result {
 | ||
|         self.inner.fmt(f)
 | ||
|     }
 | ||
| }
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| #[stable(feature = "env", since = "1.0.0")]
 | ||
| impl Error for JoinPathsError {
 | ||
|     #[allow(deprecated, deprecated_in_future)]
 | ||
|     fn description(&self) -> &str {
 | ||
|         self.inner.description()
 | ||
|     }
 | ||
| }
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| /// Returns the path of the current user's home directory if known.
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// # Unix
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// - Returns the value of the 'HOME' environment variable if it is set
 | ||
| ///   (including to an empty string).
 | ||
| /// - Otherwise, it tries to determine the home directory by invoking the `getpwuid_r` function
 | ||
| ///   using the UID of the current user. An empty home directory field returned from the
 | ||
| ///   `getpwuid_r` function is considered to be a valid value.
 | ||
| /// - Returns `None` if the current user has no entry in the /etc/passwd file.
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// # Windows
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// - Returns the value of the 'HOME' environment variable if it is set
 | ||
| ///   (including to an empty string).
 | ||
| /// - Otherwise, returns the value of the 'USERPROFILE' environment variable if it is set
 | ||
| ///   (including to an empty string).
 | ||
| /// - If both do not exist, [`GetUserProfileDirectory`][msdn] is used to return the path.
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// [msdn]: https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/win32/api/userenv/nf-userenv-getuserprofiledirectorya
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// # Deprecation
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// This function is deprecated because the behaviour on Windows is not correct.
 | ||
| /// The 'HOME' environment variable is not standard on Windows, and may not produce
 | ||
| /// desired results; for instance, under Cygwin or Mingw it will return `/home/you`
 | ||
| /// when it should return `C:\Users\you`.
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// # Examples
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// ```
 | ||
| /// use std::env;
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// match env::home_dir() {
 | ||
| ///     Some(path) => println!("Your home directory, probably: {}", path.display()),
 | ||
| ///     None => println!("Impossible to get your home dir!"),
 | ||
| /// }
 | ||
| /// ```
 | ||
| #[deprecated(
 | ||
|     since = "1.29.0",
 | ||
|     note = "This function's behavior may be unexpected on Windows. \
 | ||
|             Consider using a crate from crates.io instead."
 | ||
| )]
 | ||
| #[must_use]
 | ||
| #[stable(feature = "env", since = "1.0.0")]
 | ||
| pub fn home_dir() -> Option<PathBuf> {
 | ||
|     os_imp::home_dir()
 | ||
| }
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| /// Returns the path of a temporary directory.
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// The temporary directory may be shared among users, or between processes
 | ||
| /// with different privileges; thus, the creation of any files or directories
 | ||
| /// in the temporary directory must use a secure method to create a uniquely
 | ||
| /// named file. Creating a file or directory with a fixed or predictable name
 | ||
| /// may result in "insecure temporary file" security vulnerabilities. Consider
 | ||
| /// using a crate that securely creates temporary files or directories.
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// # Platform-specific behavior
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// On Unix, returns the value of the `TMPDIR` environment variable if it is
 | ||
| /// set, otherwise for non-Android it returns `/tmp`. On Android, since there
 | ||
| /// is no global temporary folder (it is usually allocated per-app), it returns
 | ||
| /// `/data/local/tmp`.
 | ||
| /// On Windows, the behavior is equivalent to that of [`GetTempPath2`][GetTempPath2] /
 | ||
| /// [`GetTempPath`][GetTempPath], which this function uses internally.
 | ||
| /// Note that, this [may change in the future][changes].
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// [changes]: io#platform-specific-behavior
 | ||
| /// [GetTempPath2]: https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/win32/api/fileapi/nf-fileapi-gettemppath2a
 | ||
| /// [GetTempPath]: https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/win32/api/fileapi/nf-fileapi-gettemppatha
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// ```no_run
 | ||
| /// use std::env;
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// fn main() {
 | ||
| ///     let dir = env::temp_dir();
 | ||
| ///     println!("Temporary directory: {}", dir.display());
 | ||
| /// }
 | ||
| /// ```
 | ||
| #[must_use]
 | ||
| #[doc(alias = "GetTempPath", alias = "GetTempPath2")]
 | ||
| #[stable(feature = "env", since = "1.0.0")]
 | ||
| pub fn temp_dir() -> PathBuf {
 | ||
|     os_imp::temp_dir()
 | ||
| }
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| /// Returns the full filesystem path of the current running executable.
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// # Platform-specific behavior
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// If the executable was invoked through a symbolic link, some platforms will
 | ||
| /// return the path of the symbolic link and other platforms will return the
 | ||
| /// path of the symbolic link’s target.
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// If the executable is renamed while it is running, platforms may return the
 | ||
| /// path at the time it was loaded instead of the new path.
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// # Errors
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// Acquiring the path of the current executable is a platform-specific operation
 | ||
| /// that can fail for a good number of reasons. Some errors can include, but not
 | ||
| /// be limited to, filesystem operations failing or general syscall failures.
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// # Security
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// The output of this function should not be trusted for anything
 | ||
| /// that might have security implications. Basically, if users can run
 | ||
| /// the executable, they can change the output arbitrarily.
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// As an example, you can easily introduce a race condition. It goes
 | ||
| /// like this:
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// 1. You get the path to the current executable using `current_exe()`, and
 | ||
| ///    store it in a variable.
 | ||
| /// 2. Time passes. A malicious actor removes the current executable, and
 | ||
| ///    replaces it with a malicious one.
 | ||
| /// 3. You then use the stored path to re-execute the current
 | ||
| ///    executable.
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// You expected to safely execute the current executable, but you're
 | ||
| /// instead executing something completely different. The code you
 | ||
| /// just executed run with your privileges.
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// This sort of behavior has been known to [lead to privilege escalation] when
 | ||
| /// used incorrectly.
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// [lead to privilege escalation]: https://securityvulns.com/Wdocument183.html
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// # Examples
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// ```
 | ||
| /// use std::env;
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// match env::current_exe() {
 | ||
| ///     Ok(exe_path) => println!("Path of this executable is: {}",
 | ||
| ///                              exe_path.display()),
 | ||
| ///     Err(e) => println!("failed to get current exe path: {e}"),
 | ||
| /// };
 | ||
| /// ```
 | ||
| #[stable(feature = "env", since = "1.0.0")]
 | ||
| pub fn current_exe() -> io::Result<PathBuf> {
 | ||
|     os_imp::current_exe()
 | ||
| }
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| /// An iterator over the arguments of a process, yielding a [`String`] value for
 | ||
| /// each argument.
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// This struct is created by [`env::args()`]. See its documentation
 | ||
| /// for more.
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// The first element is traditionally the path of the executable, but it can be
 | ||
| /// set to arbitrary text, and might not even exist. This means this property
 | ||
| /// should not be relied upon for security purposes.
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// [`env::args()`]: args
 | ||
| #[must_use = "iterators are lazy and do nothing unless consumed"]
 | ||
| #[stable(feature = "env", since = "1.0.0")]
 | ||
| pub struct Args {
 | ||
|     inner: ArgsOs,
 | ||
| }
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| /// An iterator over the arguments of a process, yielding an [`OsString`] value
 | ||
| /// for each argument.
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// This struct is created by [`env::args_os()`]. See its documentation
 | ||
| /// for more.
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// The first element is traditionally the path of the executable, but it can be
 | ||
| /// set to arbitrary text, and might not even exist. This means this property
 | ||
| /// should not be relied upon for security purposes.
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// [`env::args_os()`]: args_os
 | ||
| #[must_use = "iterators are lazy and do nothing unless consumed"]
 | ||
| #[stable(feature = "env", since = "1.0.0")]
 | ||
| pub struct ArgsOs {
 | ||
|     inner: sys::args::Args,
 | ||
| }
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| /// Returns the arguments that this program was started with (normally passed
 | ||
| /// via the command line).
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// The first element is traditionally the path of the executable, but it can be
 | ||
| /// set to arbitrary text, and might not even exist. This means this property should
 | ||
| /// not be relied upon for security purposes.
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// On Unix systems the shell usually expands unquoted arguments with glob patterns
 | ||
| /// (such as `*` and `?`). On Windows this is not done, and such arguments are
 | ||
| /// passed as-is.
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// On glibc Linux systems, arguments are retrieved by placing a function in `.init_array`.
 | ||
| /// glibc passes `argc`, `argv`, and `envp` to functions in `.init_array`, as a non-standard
 | ||
| /// extension. This allows `std::env::args` to work even in a `cdylib` or `staticlib`, as it
 | ||
| /// does on macOS and Windows.
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// # Panics
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// The returned iterator will panic during iteration if any argument to the
 | ||
| /// process is not valid Unicode. If this is not desired,
 | ||
| /// use the [`args_os`] function instead.
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// # Examples
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// ```
 | ||
| /// use std::env;
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// // Prints each argument on a separate line
 | ||
| /// for argument in env::args() {
 | ||
| ///     println!("{argument}");
 | ||
| /// }
 | ||
| /// ```
 | ||
| #[stable(feature = "env", since = "1.0.0")]
 | ||
| pub fn args() -> Args {
 | ||
|     Args { inner: args_os() }
 | ||
| }
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| /// Returns the arguments that this program was started with (normally passed
 | ||
| /// via the command line).
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// The first element is traditionally the path of the executable, but it can be
 | ||
| /// set to arbitrary text, and might not even exist. This means this property should
 | ||
| /// not be relied upon for security purposes.
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// On Unix systems the shell usually expands unquoted arguments with glob patterns
 | ||
| /// (such as `*` and `?`). On Windows this is not done, and such arguments are
 | ||
| /// passed as-is.
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// On glibc Linux systems, arguments are retrieved by placing a function in `.init_array`.
 | ||
| /// glibc passes `argc`, `argv`, and `envp` to functions in `.init_array`, as a non-standard
 | ||
| /// extension. This allows `std::env::args_os` to work even in a `cdylib` or `staticlib`, as it
 | ||
| /// does on macOS and Windows.
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// Note that the returned iterator will not check if the arguments to the
 | ||
| /// process are valid Unicode. If you want to panic on invalid UTF-8,
 | ||
| /// use the [`args`] function instead.
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// # Examples
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// ```
 | ||
| /// use std::env;
 | ||
| ///
 | ||
| /// // Prints each argument on a separate line
 | ||
| /// for argument in env::args_os() {
 | ||
| ///     println!("{argument:?}");
 | ||
| /// }
 | ||
| /// ```
 | ||
| #[stable(feature = "env", since = "1.0.0")]
 | ||
| pub fn args_os() -> ArgsOs {
 | ||
|     ArgsOs { inner: sys::args::args() }
 | ||
| }
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| #[stable(feature = "env_unimpl_send_sync", since = "1.26.0")]
 | ||
| impl !Send for Args {}
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| #[stable(feature = "env_unimpl_send_sync", since = "1.26.0")]
 | ||
| impl !Sync for Args {}
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| #[stable(feature = "env", since = "1.0.0")]
 | ||
| impl Iterator for Args {
 | ||
|     type Item = String;
 | ||
|     fn next(&mut self) -> Option<String> {
 | ||
|         self.inner.next().map(|s| s.into_string().unwrap())
 | ||
|     }
 | ||
|     fn size_hint(&self) -> (usize, Option<usize>) {
 | ||
|         self.inner.size_hint()
 | ||
|     }
 | ||
| }
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| #[stable(feature = "env", since = "1.0.0")]
 | ||
| impl ExactSizeIterator for Args {
 | ||
|     fn len(&self) -> usize {
 | ||
|         self.inner.len()
 | ||
|     }
 | ||
|     fn is_empty(&self) -> bool {
 | ||
|         self.inner.is_empty()
 | ||
|     }
 | ||
| }
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| #[stable(feature = "env_iterators", since = "1.12.0")]
 | ||
| impl DoubleEndedIterator for Args {
 | ||
|     fn next_back(&mut self) -> Option<String> {
 | ||
|         self.inner.next_back().map(|s| s.into_string().unwrap())
 | ||
|     }
 | ||
| }
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| #[stable(feature = "std_debug", since = "1.16.0")]
 | ||
| impl fmt::Debug for Args {
 | ||
|     fn fmt(&self, f: &mut fmt::Formatter<'_>) -> fmt::Result {
 | ||
|         let Self { inner: ArgsOs { inner } } = self;
 | ||
|         f.debug_struct("Args").field("inner", inner).finish()
 | ||
|     }
 | ||
| }
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| #[stable(feature = "env_unimpl_send_sync", since = "1.26.0")]
 | ||
| impl !Send for ArgsOs {}
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| #[stable(feature = "env_unimpl_send_sync", since = "1.26.0")]
 | ||
| impl !Sync for ArgsOs {}
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| #[stable(feature = "env", since = "1.0.0")]
 | ||
| impl Iterator for ArgsOs {
 | ||
|     type Item = OsString;
 | ||
|     fn next(&mut self) -> Option<OsString> {
 | ||
|         self.inner.next()
 | ||
|     }
 | ||
|     fn size_hint(&self) -> (usize, Option<usize>) {
 | ||
|         self.inner.size_hint()
 | ||
|     }
 | ||
| }
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| #[stable(feature = "env", since = "1.0.0")]
 | ||
| impl ExactSizeIterator for ArgsOs {
 | ||
|     fn len(&self) -> usize {
 | ||
|         self.inner.len()
 | ||
|     }
 | ||
|     fn is_empty(&self) -> bool {
 | ||
|         self.inner.is_empty()
 | ||
|     }
 | ||
| }
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| #[stable(feature = "env_iterators", since = "1.12.0")]
 | ||
| impl DoubleEndedIterator for ArgsOs {
 | ||
|     fn next_back(&mut self) -> Option<OsString> {
 | ||
|         self.inner.next_back()
 | ||
|     }
 | ||
| }
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| #[stable(feature = "std_debug", since = "1.16.0")]
 | ||
| impl fmt::Debug for ArgsOs {
 | ||
|     fn fmt(&self, f: &mut fmt::Formatter<'_>) -> fmt::Result {
 | ||
|         let Self { inner } = self;
 | ||
|         f.debug_struct("ArgsOs").field("inner", inner).finish()
 | ||
|     }
 | ||
| }
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| /// Constants associated with the current target
 | ||
| #[stable(feature = "env", since = "1.0.0")]
 | ||
| pub mod consts {
 | ||
|     use crate::sys::env::os;
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|     /// A string describing the architecture of the CPU that is currently
 | ||
|     /// in use.
 | ||
|     ///
 | ||
|     /// Some possible values:
 | ||
|     ///
 | ||
|     /// - x86
 | ||
|     /// - x86_64
 | ||
|     /// - arm
 | ||
|     /// - aarch64
 | ||
|     /// - loongarch64
 | ||
|     /// - m68k
 | ||
|     /// - csky
 | ||
|     /// - mips
 | ||
|     /// - mips64
 | ||
|     /// - powerpc
 | ||
|     /// - powerpc64
 | ||
|     /// - riscv64
 | ||
|     /// - s390x
 | ||
|     /// - sparc64
 | ||
|     #[stable(feature = "env", since = "1.0.0")]
 | ||
|     pub const ARCH: &str = env!("STD_ENV_ARCH");
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|     /// The family of the operating system. Example value is `unix`.
 | ||
|     ///
 | ||
|     /// Some possible values:
 | ||
|     ///
 | ||
|     /// - unix
 | ||
|     /// - windows
 | ||
|     #[stable(feature = "env", since = "1.0.0")]
 | ||
|     pub const FAMILY: &str = os::FAMILY;
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|     /// A string describing the specific operating system in use.
 | ||
|     /// Example value is `linux`.
 | ||
|     ///
 | ||
|     /// Some possible values:
 | ||
|     ///
 | ||
|     /// - linux
 | ||
|     /// - macos
 | ||
|     /// - ios
 | ||
|     /// - freebsd
 | ||
|     /// - dragonfly
 | ||
|     /// - netbsd
 | ||
|     /// - openbsd
 | ||
|     /// - solaris
 | ||
|     /// - android
 | ||
|     /// - windows
 | ||
|     #[stable(feature = "env", since = "1.0.0")]
 | ||
|     pub const OS: &str = os::OS;
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|     /// Specifies the filename prefix used for shared libraries on this
 | ||
|     /// platform. Example value is `lib`.
 | ||
|     ///
 | ||
|     /// Some possible values:
 | ||
|     ///
 | ||
|     /// - lib
 | ||
|     /// - `""` (an empty string)
 | ||
|     #[stable(feature = "env", since = "1.0.0")]
 | ||
|     pub const DLL_PREFIX: &str = os::DLL_PREFIX;
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|     /// Specifies the filename suffix used for shared libraries on this
 | ||
|     /// platform. Example value is `.so`.
 | ||
|     ///
 | ||
|     /// Some possible values:
 | ||
|     ///
 | ||
|     /// - .so
 | ||
|     /// - .dylib
 | ||
|     /// - .dll
 | ||
|     #[stable(feature = "env", since = "1.0.0")]
 | ||
|     pub const DLL_SUFFIX: &str = os::DLL_SUFFIX;
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|     /// Specifies the file extension used for shared libraries on this
 | ||
|     /// platform that goes after the dot. Example value is `so`.
 | ||
|     ///
 | ||
|     /// Some possible values:
 | ||
|     ///
 | ||
|     /// - so
 | ||
|     /// - dylib
 | ||
|     /// - dll
 | ||
|     #[stable(feature = "env", since = "1.0.0")]
 | ||
|     pub const DLL_EXTENSION: &str = os::DLL_EXTENSION;
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|     /// Specifies the filename suffix used for executable binaries on this
 | ||
|     /// platform. Example value is `.exe`.
 | ||
|     ///
 | ||
|     /// Some possible values:
 | ||
|     ///
 | ||
|     /// - .exe
 | ||
|     /// - .nexe
 | ||
|     /// - .pexe
 | ||
|     /// - `""` (an empty string)
 | ||
|     #[stable(feature = "env", since = "1.0.0")]
 | ||
|     pub const EXE_SUFFIX: &str = os::EXE_SUFFIX;
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|     /// Specifies the file extension, if any, used for executable binaries
 | ||
|     /// on this platform. Example value is `exe`.
 | ||
|     ///
 | ||
|     /// Some possible values:
 | ||
|     ///
 | ||
|     /// - exe
 | ||
|     /// - `""` (an empty string)
 | ||
|     #[stable(feature = "env", since = "1.0.0")]
 | ||
|     pub const EXE_EXTENSION: &str = os::EXE_EXTENSION;
 | ||
| }
 | 
