1.6 KiB
1.6 KiB
winpath
An example of getting, setting, and broadcasting PATHs on Windows.
This requires the unsafe
package to use a syscall with special message poitners to update PATH
without a reboot.
It will also build without unsafe
.
go build -tags unsafe -o winpath.exe
winpath show
%USERPROFILE%\AppData\Local\Microsoft\WindowsApps
C:\Users\me\AppData\Local\Programs\Microsoft VS Code\bin
%USERPROFILE%\go\bin
C:\Users\me\AppData\Roaming\npm
C:\Users\me\AppData\Local\Keybase\
winpath append C:\someplace\special
Run the following for changes to take affect immediately:
PATH %PATH%;C:\someplace\special
winpath prepend C:\someplace\special
Run the following for changes to take affect immediately:
PATH C:\someplace\special;%PATH%
winpath remove C:\someplace\special
Special Considerations
Giving away the secret sauce right here:
HWND_BROADCAST
WM_SETTINGCHANGE
This is essentially the snippet you need to have the HKCU and HKLM Environment registry keys propagated without rebooting:
HWND_BROADCAST := uintptr(0xffff)
WM_SETTINGCHANGE := uintptr(0x001A)
_, _, err := syscall.
NewLazyDLL("user32.dll").
NewProc("SendMessageW").
Call(HWND_BROADCAST, WM_SETTINGCHANGE, 0, uintptr(unsafe.Pointer(syscall.StringToUTF16Ptr("ENVIRONMENT"))))
os.Getenv("COMSPEC")
os.Getenv("SHELL")
If you check SHELL
and it isn't empty, then you're probably in MINGW or some such.
If that's empty but COMSPEC
isn't, you can be reasonably sure that you're in cmd.exe or Powershell.