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I am using powershell script to set some environment variable--

$env:FACTER_Variable_Name = $Variable_Value

FACTER is for using these in the puppet scripts.

My problem is - the variable name and variable value both are dynamic and getting read from a text file.

I am trying to use

$env:FACTER_$Variable_Name = $Variable_Value

But $ is not acceptable syntax. When I enclose it in double quotes, the variable value is not getting passed. Any suggestion how to use it dynamically.

Thanks in Advance

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3 Answers 3

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On Powershell 5, to set dynamically an environment variable in the current shell I use Set-Item:

>$VarName="hello"
>Set-Item "env:$VarName" world

once the variable is set, you can get its value like so:

>$env:hello
world

and of course to persist the variable I use C# [Environment]::SetEnvironmentVariable("$VarName", "world", "User")

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  • Using Set-Item is the best answer here. The advantage of Set-Item is that it is cross platform and will work on Linux machines running PowerShell 7. The [Environment]::SetEnvironmentVariable() approach will only work for windows machines since it relies on a .NET Framework class. Oct 29, 2022 at 0:02
  • But you could install .Net Framework on your linux tho? dotnet.microsoft.com/en-us/download idk if I should edit my answer. on linux env, I use zsh, and on mac fish shell :P Nov 3, 2022 at 17:32
  • How do you get this variable again then?
    – Cullub
    Sep 19, 2023 at 20:31
  • using $env:<var name> like in the example. I updated my answer to make it easier to read but the info was already there. I hope you found the solution already; I just saw your msg now Dec 3, 2023 at 23:56
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[Environment]::SetEnvironmentVariable("TestVariable", "Test value.", "User")

This syntax allows expressions in the place of "TestVariable", and should be enough to create a profile-local environment variable. The third parameter can be "Process", this makes new vars visible in Get-ChildItem env: or "Machine" - this required administrative rights to set the variable. To retrieve a variable set like this, use [Environment]::GetEnvironmentVariable("TestVariable", "User") (or matching scope if you choose another).

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  • Thanks for the reply Vesper.. But will it not create a permanent variable instead of temporary one?
    – Ankita13
    Jun 18, 2015 at 9:46
  • I guess process level should create a temoporary one ?
    – Ankita13
    Jun 18, 2015 at 9:47
  • If your variable would be of user scope, it'll be "permanent", at least reboot-presistent, until nullified. If your variable will be of process scope, it'll be temporary but available if you launch a process (cmd.exe tested) from within Powershell process where this variable was declared.
    – Vesper
    Jun 18, 2015 at 9:50
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In pure PowerShell, something like this:

$Variable_Name = "foo"
$FullVariable_Name = "FACTER_$Variable_Name"
$Variable_Value = "Hello World"
New-Item -Name $FullVariable_Name -value $Variable_Value -ItemType Variable -Path Env:

I'm using the New-Item cmdlet to add a new variable, just have to specify the -itemtype and -path

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  • This is also a good answer. due to its cross platform support Oct 29, 2022 at 0:07
  • using Set-Item is cross platforms too and it has the convenience of being shorter Dec 31, 2023 at 22:34

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