Part of the problem is that %PATH%
contains spaces. When it's likely either side of the comparison operator in an if
statement contains spaces, you should quote both arguments.
if not "%PATH:substr=repl%"=="%PATH%" do stuff....
Next, you're trying to supply a variable as a substring to another variable. When you do this, you need delayed expansion on the outer variable.
setlocal enabledelayedexpansion
if not "!PATH:%IEDRIVER%=!"=="!PATH!" do stuff....
endlocal
Now. Rather than checking to see whether the absolute paths exist within PATH, it'd be better to check whether some file within your ie and chrome directories are accessible to PATH. You can do this with for
variable expansion syntax.
for %%I in (ie chrome) do set %%I=
for %%I in (fileInIE.ext) do set "ie=%%~$PATH:I"
for %%I in (fileInChrome.ext) do set "chrome=%%~$PATH:I"
if defined ie....
if defined chrome...
But the biggest issue is that using setx
to modify your %PATH%
is destructive and ought to be avoided. The registry value containing PATH intentionally uses unexpanded variables, and is held in a data type that expands them at runtime. Using setx
expands them all too early. It's better to modify the registry directly if you want to modify your path programmatically. It's not as easy, but it's less destructive.
@echo off
setlocal
for %%I in ("%~dp0..\ie") do set "IEDRIVER=%%~fI"
for %%I in ("%~dp0..\chrome") do set "CHROMEDRIVER=%%~fI"
for %%I in (ie chrome) do set %%I=
for %%I in (fileInIE.ext) do set "ie=%%~$PATH:I"
for %%I in (fileInChrome.ext) do set "chrome=%%~$PATH:I"
if not defined ie call :append_path "%IEDRIVER%"
if not defined chrome call :append_path "%CHROMEDRIVER%"
goto :EOF
:append_path <val>
set "env=HKLM\System\CurrentControlSet\Control\Session Manager\Environment"
for /f "tokens=2*" %%I in ('reg query "%env%" /v Path ^| find /i "REG_EXPAND_SZ"') do (
rem // make addition persistent through reboots
reg add "%env%" /f /v Path /t REG_EXPAND_SZ /d "%%J;%~1"
rem // apply change to the current process
for %%a in ("%%J;%~1") do (path %%~a)
)
rem // use setx to set a temporary throwaway value to trigger a WM_SETTINGCHANGE
rem // applies change to new console windows without requiring a reboot
(setx /m foo bar & reg delete "%env%" /f /v foo) >NUL 2>NUL
color 4E
echo Warning: %%PATH%% has changed. Reopen the console to inherit the changes.
goto :EOF