With a few clicks, you can create and maintain you own environment variables which are both global on the system and survive reboots.
Creating a Custom System Environment Variable
Creating a new global system variable is quite simple and is one of those features hiding in plain sight. Please note the screenshots are for Windows Server 2008, however the process for most versions of Windows is almost identical with only a few of the screens different. In the Control Panel, open the System option (alternately, you can right-click on My Computer and select Properties). Select the “Advanced system settings” link.
In the System Properties dialog, click “Environment Variables”.
In the Environment Variables dialog, click the New button underneath the “System variables” section.
Enter the name of your new variable as well the value and click OK.
You should now see your new variable listed under the “System variables” section. Click OK to apply the changes.
You can now access your new system environment variable like you would any other. You can use it from the command line or batch scripts without having to define it.
Using the Custom Environment Variable
As stated above, your custom environment variable is no different than any other system variable as you can reference it from the command line and inside of scripts. For a quick example, consider this batch script:
When executed, the output is exactly what you would expect:
Usage Ideas
The real power of custom environment variables enters when you use them in your scripts. In our example, we set a variable called “NotifyEmail” which we could reference in any number of scripts without having to hard code the value. So in the event we need to change the email address, we simply update the system variable and the impacted scripts will use this new value without us having to update each script individually.
This is not only a time saver, but also protects against the situation where you forget to update a particular script and a “dead” value is being used. Additionally, in the event you need to override a system variable in a particular script, you can see in our example above this is fully supported.
Here are some ideas where you could apply system variables in place of local scope variables:
Email addresses (like in our example) Backup folder locations URL and FTP sites Metric and threshold values
Another great feature about using system variables is you have a single place where you can edit or view your variable values. Simply put, you could potentially apply updates to multiple scripts by editing the environment variables in a single location.