exporting environment variable with python












0















I'm trying to export an environment variable using python, but I can't seem to figure it out.
This is what I'm trying to copy:



export SHELLCODE = $(python -c "print <shellcode here>")


This is my code:



subprocess.Popen('export Shellcode=$(python -c "print "{}" ')'.format(shellcode), shell=True)


But when I run it, it says



File "<string>", line 1
print 1�Ph//shh/bin
^









share|improve this question























  • Can you correct the double-quotes near print? You have three of them in your code example vs. only two in the shell example above it.

    – Gal Sivan
    Nov 18 '18 at 6:22
















0















I'm trying to export an environment variable using python, but I can't seem to figure it out.
This is what I'm trying to copy:



export SHELLCODE = $(python -c "print <shellcode here>")


This is my code:



subprocess.Popen('export Shellcode=$(python -c "print "{}" ')'.format(shellcode), shell=True)


But when I run it, it says



File "<string>", line 1
print 1�Ph//shh/bin
^









share|improve this question























  • Can you correct the double-quotes near print? You have three of them in your code example vs. only two in the shell example above it.

    – Gal Sivan
    Nov 18 '18 at 6:22














0












0








0








I'm trying to export an environment variable using python, but I can't seem to figure it out.
This is what I'm trying to copy:



export SHELLCODE = $(python -c "print <shellcode here>")


This is my code:



subprocess.Popen('export Shellcode=$(python -c "print "{}" ')'.format(shellcode), shell=True)


But when I run it, it says



File "<string>", line 1
print 1�Ph//shh/bin
^









share|improve this question














I'm trying to export an environment variable using python, but I can't seem to figure it out.
This is what I'm trying to copy:



export SHELLCODE = $(python -c "print <shellcode here>")


This is my code:



subprocess.Popen('export Shellcode=$(python -c "print "{}" ')'.format(shellcode), shell=True)


But when I run it, it says



File "<string>", line 1
print 1�Ph//shh/bin
^






python buffer-overflow shellcode






share|improve this question













share|improve this question











share|improve this question




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asked Nov 18 '18 at 5:53









user317204user317204

12




12













  • Can you correct the double-quotes near print? You have three of them in your code example vs. only two in the shell example above it.

    – Gal Sivan
    Nov 18 '18 at 6:22



















  • Can you correct the double-quotes near print? You have three of them in your code example vs. only two in the shell example above it.

    – Gal Sivan
    Nov 18 '18 at 6:22

















Can you correct the double-quotes near print? You have three of them in your code example vs. only two in the shell example above it.

– Gal Sivan
Nov 18 '18 at 6:22





Can you correct the double-quotes near print? You have three of them in your code example vs. only two in the shell example above it.

– Gal Sivan
Nov 18 '18 at 6:22












1 Answer
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oldest

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0














Correct way to add the linux environment variable



$(python -c 'print "export MY_DATA=my_export"')





share|improve this answer


























  • @cricket_007 Yes, I realised that now. Thanks for the suggestion

    – Vishvajit Pathak
    Nov 18 '18 at 9:56











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1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes








1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









0














Correct way to add the linux environment variable



$(python -c 'print "export MY_DATA=my_export"')





share|improve this answer


























  • @cricket_007 Yes, I realised that now. Thanks for the suggestion

    – Vishvajit Pathak
    Nov 18 '18 at 9:56
















0














Correct way to add the linux environment variable



$(python -c 'print "export MY_DATA=my_export"')





share|improve this answer


























  • @cricket_007 Yes, I realised that now. Thanks for the suggestion

    – Vishvajit Pathak
    Nov 18 '18 at 9:56














0












0








0







Correct way to add the linux environment variable



$(python -c 'print "export MY_DATA=my_export"')





share|improve this answer















Correct way to add the linux environment variable



$(python -c 'print "export MY_DATA=my_export"')






share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Nov 18 '18 at 9:55

























answered Nov 18 '18 at 9:45









Vishvajit PathakVishvajit Pathak

968813




968813













  • @cricket_007 Yes, I realised that now. Thanks for the suggestion

    – Vishvajit Pathak
    Nov 18 '18 at 9:56



















  • @cricket_007 Yes, I realised that now. Thanks for the suggestion

    – Vishvajit Pathak
    Nov 18 '18 at 9:56

















@cricket_007 Yes, I realised that now. Thanks for the suggestion

– Vishvajit Pathak
Nov 18 '18 at 9:56





@cricket_007 Yes, I realised that now. Thanks for the suggestion

– Vishvajit Pathak
Nov 18 '18 at 9:56


















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