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//! Environment variables
use cfg_if::cfg_if;
use std::fmt;
/// Indicates that [`clearenv`] failed for some unknown reason
#[derive(Clone, Copy, Debug)]
pub struct ClearEnvError;
impl fmt::Display for ClearEnvError {
fn fmt(&self, f: &mut fmt::Formatter<'_>) -> fmt::Result {
write!(f, "clearenv failed")
}
}
impl std::error::Error for ClearEnvError {}
/// Clear the environment of all name-value pairs.
///
/// On platforms where libc provides `clearenv()`, it will be used. libc's
/// `clearenv()` is documented to return an error code but not set errno; if the
/// return value indicates a failure, this function will return
/// [`ClearEnvError`].
///
/// On platforms where libc does not provide `clearenv()`, a fallback
/// implementation will be used that iterates over all environment variables and
/// removes them one-by-one.
///
/// # Safety
///
/// This function is not threadsafe and can cause undefined behavior in
/// combination with `std::env` or other program components that access the
/// environment. See, for example, the discussion on `std::env::remove_var`; this
/// function is a case of an "inherently unsafe non-threadsafe API" dealing with
/// the environment.
///
/// The caller must ensure no other threads access the process environment while
/// this function executes and that no raw pointers to an element of libc's
/// `environ` is currently held. The latter is not an issue if the only other
/// environment access in the program is via `std::env`, but the requirement on
/// thread safety must still be upheld.
pub unsafe fn clearenv() -> std::result::Result<(), ClearEnvError> {
cfg_if! {
if #[cfg(any(target_os = "fuchsia",
target_os = "wasi",
target_env = "wasi",
target_env = "uclibc",
target_os = "linux",
target_os = "android",
target_os = "emscripten"))] {
let ret = libc::clearenv();
} else {
use std::env;
for (name, _) in env::vars_os() {
env::remove_var(name);
}
let ret = 0;
}
}
if ret == 0 {
Ok(())
} else {
Err(ClearEnvError)
}
}
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