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Setting a system environment variable from a Windows batch file?

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How do I set System Variables in CMD?

To set an environment variable, use the command " export varname=value ", which sets the variable and exports it to the global environment (available to other processes). Enclosed the value with double quotes if it contains spaces. To set a local variable, use the command " varname =value " (or " set varname =value ").

How do I set global environment variables in Windows?

Search and select System (Control Panel). Click on the Advanced system settings link and then click Environment Variables. Under the section System Variables, select the environment variable you want to edit, and click Edit. If the environment variable you want doesn't exist, click New.


The XP Support Tools (which can be installed from your XP CD) come with a program called setx.exe:

C:\Program Files\Support Tools>setx /?

SETX: This program is used to set values in the environment
of the machine or currently logged on user using one of three modes.

1) Command Line Mode: setx variable value [-m]
   Optional Switches:
    -m  Set value in the Machine environment. Default is User.

...
For more information and example use: SETX -i

I think Windows 7 actually comes with setx as part of a standard install.


Simple example for how to set JAVA_HOME with setx.exe in command line:

setx JAVA_HOME "C:\Program Files (x86)\Java\jdk1.7.0_04"

This will set environment variable "JAVA_HOME" for current user. If you want to set a variable for all users, you have to use option "-m". Here is an example:

setx -m JAVA_HOME "C:\Program Files (x86)\Java\jdk1.7.0_04"

Note: you have to execute this command as Administrator.

Note: Make sure to run the command setx from an command-line Admin window


If you set a variable via SETX, you cannot use this variable or its changes immediately. You have to restart the processes that want to use it.

Use the following sequence to directly set it in the setting process too (works for me perfectly in scripts that do some init stuff after setting global variables):

SET XYZ=test
SETX XYZ test

For XP, I used a (free/donateware) tool called "RAPIDEE" (Rapid Environment Editor), but SETX is definitely sufficient for Win 7 (I did not know about this before).


System variables can be set through CMD and registry For ex. reg query "HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Control\Session Manager\Environment" /v PATH

All the commonly used CMD codes and system variables are given here: Set Windows system environment variables using CMD.

Open CMD and type Set

You will get all the values of system variable.

Type set java to know the path details of java installed on your window OS.