How do I make environment variable changes stick in Python?

Question:

From what I’ve read, any changes to the environment variables in a Python instance are only available within that instance, and disappear once the instance is closed. Is there any way to make them stick by committing them to the system?

The reason I need to do this is because at the studio where I work, tools like Maya rely heavily on environment variables to configure paths across multiple platforms.

My test code is

import os
os.environ['FAKE'] = 'C:\'

Opening another instance of Python and requesting os.environ['FAKE'] yields a KeyError.

NOTE: Portability will be an issue, but the small API I’m writing will be able to check OS version and trigger different commands if necessary.

That said, I’ve gone the route of using the Windows registry technique and will simply write alternative methods that will call shell scripts on other platforms as they become requirements.

Asked By: Soviut

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Answers:

According to this discussion, you cannot do it. What are you trying to accomplish?

Answered By: Brian

You are forking a new process and cannot change the environment of the parent process as you cannot do if you start a new shell process from the shell

Answered By: leancz

I don’t believe you can do this; there are two work-arounds I can think of.

  1. The os.putenv function sets the environment for processes you start with, i.e. os.system, popen, etc. Depending on what you’re trying to do, perhaps you could have one master Python instance that sets the variable, and then spawns new instances.

  2. You could run a shell script or batch file to set it for you, but that becomes much less portable. See this article:

http://code.activestate.com/recipes/159462/

Answered By: DNS

Under Windows it’s possible for you to make changes to environment variables persistent via the registry with this recipe, though it seems like overkill.

To echo Brian’s question, what are you trying to accomplish? There is probably an easier way.

Answered By: Jeff Bauer

make them stick by committing them to
the system?

I think you are a bit confused here. There is no ‘system’ environment. Each process has their own environment as part its memory. A process can only change its own environment. A process can set the initial environment for processes it creates.

If you really do think you need to set environment variables for the system you will need to look at changing them in the location they get initially loaded from like the registry on windows or your shell configuration file on Linux.

Answered By: Zoredache

You might want to try Python Win32 Extensions, developed by Mark Hammond, which is included in the ActivePython (or can be installed separately). You can learn how to perform many Windows related tasks in Hammond’s and Robinson’s book.

Using PyWin32 to access windows COM objects, a Python program can use the Environment Property (a collection of environment variables) of the WScript.Shell object.

Answered By: gimel

Think about it this way.

You’re not setting shell environment variables.

You’re spawning a subshell with some given environment variable settings; this subshell runs your application with the modified environment.

Answered By: S.Lott

From within Python? No, it can’t be done!

If you are not bound to Python, you should consider using shell scripts (sh, bash, etc). The “source” command allows you to run a script that modifies the environment and will “stick” like you want to the shell you “sourced” the script in. What’s going on here is that the shell executes the script directly rather creating a sub-process to execute the script.

This will be quite portable – you can use cygwin on windows to do this.

Answered By: Daniel Paull

You can using SETX at the command-line.

By default these actions go on the USER env vars.
To set and modify SYSTEM vars use the /M flag

import os
env_var = "BUILD_NUMBER"
env_val = "3.1.3.3.7"
os.system("SETX {0} {1} /M".format(env_var,env_val))
Answered By: Jordan Stefanelli

Seems like there is simplier solution for Windows

import subprocess 
subprocess.call(['setx', 'Hello', 'World!'], shell=True)

In case someone might need this info. I realize this was asked 7 yrs ago, but even I forget how sometimes. .

Yes there is a way to make them “stick” in windows. Simply go control panel, system, advanced system settings,when the system properties window opens you should see an option (button) for Environment Variables. .The process for getting to this is a little different depending on what OS you’re using (google it).

Choose that (click button), then the Environment Variables window will open. It has 2 split windows, the top one should be your “User Variables For yourusername”. . .choose “new”, then simply set the variable. For instance one of mine is “Database_Password = mypassword”.

Then in your app you can access them like this: import os, os.environ.get(‘Database_Password’). You can do something like pass = os.environ.get('Database_Password').

Answered By: Chris Kavanagh

Try to use py-setenv that will allow you to set variable via registry

python -m pip install py-setenv

Answered By: Beliaev Maksim
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