/*------------------------------------------------------------------------- * * unsetenv.c * unsetenv() emulation for machines without it * * Portions Copyright (c) 1996-2004, PostgreSQL Global Development Group * Portions Copyright (c) 1994, Regents of the University of California * * * IDENTIFICATION * $PostgreSQL: pgsql/src/port/unsetenv.c,v 1.2 2004/08/29 04:13:12 momjian Exp $ * *------------------------------------------------------------------------- */ #include "c.h" void unsetenv(const char *name) { char *envstr; if (getenv(name) == NULL) return; /* no work */ /* * The technique embodied here works if libc follows the Single Unix Spec * and actually uses the storage passed to putenv() to hold the environ * entry. When we clobber the entry in the second step we are ensuring * that we zap the actual environ member. However, there are some libc * implementations (notably recent BSDs) that do not obey SUS but copy * the presented string. This method fails on such platforms. Hopefully * all such platforms have unsetenv() and thus won't be using this hack. * * Note that repeatedly setting and unsetting a var using this code * will leak memory. */ envstr = (char *) malloc(strlen(name) + 2); if (!envstr) /* not much we can do if no memory */ return; /* Override the existing setting by forcibly defining the var */ sprintf(envstr, "%s=", name); putenv(envstr); /* Now we can clobber the variable definition this way: */ strcpy(envstr, "="); /* * This last putenv cleans up if we have multiple zero-length names * as a result of unsetting multiple things. */ putenv(envstr); }