exec-path-from-shell
A GNU Emacs library to ensure environment variables inside Emacs look
the same as in the user's shell.
Motivation
Ever find that a command works in your shell, but not in Emacs?
This happens a lot on OS X, where an Emacs instance started from the GUI inherits a
default set of environment variables.
This library solves this problem by copying important environment
variables from the user's shell: it works by asking your shell to print out the
variables of interest, then copying them into the Emacs environment.
Compatibility
If the path printed by evaluating (getenv "SHELL")
in Emacs points at bash
or zsh
, this should work fine.
At a minimum, this package assumes that your shell is at least UNIX-y: if
(getenv "SHELL")
evaluates to something like ".../cmdproxy.exe"
, this
package probably isn't for you.
Further, if you use a non-POSIX-standard shell such as tcsh
or fish
, your
shell will be asked to execute sh
as a subshell in order to print
out the variables in a format which can be reliably parsed. sh
must
be a POSIX-compliant shell in this case.
Note that shell variables which have not been exported as environment
variables (e.g. using the "export" keyword) may not be visible to
`exec-path-from-shell'.
Installation
Installable packages are available via MELPA: do
M-x package-install RET exec-path-from-shell RET
.
Alternatively, download
the latest release or clone the repository, and install
exec-path-from-shell.el
with M-x package-install-file
.
Usage
Add the following to your init.el
(after calling package-initialize
):
(when (memq window-system '(mac ns x))
(exec-path-from-shell-initialize))
This sets $MANPATH
, $PATH
and exec-path
from your shell, but only on OS X
and Linux.
You can copy values of other environment variables by customizing
exec-path-from-shell-variables
before invoking
exec-path-from-shell-initialize
, or by calling
exec-path-from-shell-copy-env
, e.g.:
(exec-path-from-shell-copy-env "PYTHONPATH")
This function may also be called interactively.
Setting up your shell startup files correctly
Note that your shell will inherit Emacs's environment variables when
it is run by exec-path-from-shell
-- to avoid surprises your config
files should therefore set the environment variables to their exact
desired final values, i.e. don't do this:
export PATH=/usr/local/bin:$PATH
but instead do this:
export PATH=/usr/local/bin:/usr/bin:/bin
You should also set your environment variables so that they are
available to both interactive and non-interactive shells. In practical
terms, for most people this means setting them in ~/.profile
,
~/.bash_profile
, ~/.zshenv
instead of ~/.bashrc
and
~/.zshrc
. By default, exec-path-from-shell
checks for this
mistake, at the cost of some execution time. If your config files are
set up properly, you can set exec-path-from-shell-arguments
appropriately (often to nil
) before calling
exec-path-from-shell-initialize
to avoid this overhead.
Further help
C-h f exec-path-from-shell-initialize
C-h f exec-path-from-shell-copy-env