17

Using os module I can get the values of the environment variables. For example:

os.environ['HOME']

However, I cannot set the environment variables:

os.environ['BLA'] = "FOO"

It works in the current session of the program but when I python program is finished, I do not see that it changed (or set) values of the environment variables. Is there a way to do it from Python?

1
  • For windows I can recommend a module to set variables through registry. Also has CLI app: github.com/beliaev-maksim/py_setenv this has good control on user/system level and does not have limit in length as setx Feb 12, 2021 at 19:34

6 Answers 6

12

If what you want is to make your environment variables persist accross sessions, you could

For unix

do what we do when in bash shell. Append you environment variables inside the ~/.bashrc.

import os
with open(os.path.expanduser("~/.bashrc"), "a") as outfile:
    # 'a' stands for "append"  
    outfile.write("export MYVAR=MYVALUE")

or for Windows:

setx /M MYVAR "MYVALUE"

in a *.bat that is in Startup in Program Files

4
  • 1
    Just by curiosity, is there a way to accomplish this on Windows?
    – Alexis
    Jul 16, 2013 at 9:14
  • @Alexis I'm not very familiar with Windows, but according to superuser.com/questions/79612/…, you could use the setx command from inside python. Or you could access the win registry directly with the _winreg python module docs.python.org/2/library/_winreg.html
    – rantanplan
    Jul 16, 2013 at 9:47
  • For windows I can recommend a module to set variables through registry. Also has CLI app: github.com/beliaev-maksim/py_setenv this has good control on user/system level and does not have limit in length as setx Feb 12, 2021 at 19:33
  • 1
    This answer is not true to the spirit of the question. The requestor asked how to set an environment variable via Python, not how to set the environment variable via Python for the next login, or after source ~/.bashrc is run. Jun 7, 2022 at 4:11
6

if you want to do it and set them up forever into a user account you can use setx but if you want as global you can use setx /M but for that you might need elevation, (i am using windows as example, (for linux you can use export )

import subprocess
if os.name == 'posix':  # if is in linux
    exp = 'export hi2="youAsWell"'
if os.name == 'nt':  # if is in windows
    exp = 'setx hi2 "youAsWell"'
subprocess.Popen(exp, shell=True).wait()

after running that you can go to the environments and see how they been added into my user environments

enter image description here

3

@rantanplan's answer is correct. For Unix however, if you wish to set multiple environment variables i suggest you add a \n at the end of outfile line as following:

outfile.write("export MYVAR=MYVALUE\n")

So the code looks like the following:

import os
with open(os.path.expanduser("~/.bashrc"), "a") as outfile:
    # 'a' stands for "append"  
    outfile.write("export MYVAR1=MYVALUE1\n")
    outfile.write("export MYVAR2=MYVALUE2\n")

This will prevent appending "export" word at the end of the value of the environment variable.

1

I am not sure. You can return the variable and set it that way. To do this print it.

(python program)

...
print foo

(bash)

set -- $(python test.py)
foo=$1
0

you can use py-setenv to do that job. It will access windows registry and do a change for you, install via python -m pip install py-setenv

0

A good Solution for people looking to apply this solution for windows can be the following

For user specific,

from os import path
with open(path.join(path.expanduser('~'),"AppData","Roaming","Microsoft","Windows"
                    ,"Start Menu","Programs","Startup","script.ps1"), 'w') as fp:
        fp.write('[Environment]::SetEnvironmentVariable("THIS_IS_NAME", "THIS_IS_VALUE", "User") ')

Ref to the command that is being excecuted for set environment. lmk if there are any typos ;)

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