Dear Jim, It works, thanks. However, this seems to be a global setting only. Is there any equivalent of with-environment-variables for exec-path? For example, with regular shell, I can do something like: ``` (defun shell1 () (interactive) (let ((explicit-shell-file-name "cmdproxy") (current-prefix-arg 4)) (with-environment-variables (("PATH" (concat "C:/env1" path-separator (getenv "PATH")))) (call-interactively 'shell)) )) (defun shell2 () (interactive) (let ((explicit-shell-file-name "cmdproxy") (current-prefix-arg 4)) (with-environment-variables (("PATH" (concat "C:/env2" path-separator (getenv "PATH")))) (call-interactively 'shell)) )) ``` to create two *shell* buffers with different PATH "C:/env1" and "C:/env2". How to do the same thing in eshell? I have tried with the following code but it doesn't work as expected. ``` (defun eshell1() (interactive) (let ((exec-path (cons "C:/env1" (copy-sequence exec-path))) (current-prefix-arg "new")) (call-interactively 'eshell))) ``` ``` (defun eshell2() (interactive) (let ((exec-path (cons "C:/env2" (copy-sequence exec-path))) (current-prefix-arg "new")) (call-interactively 'eshell))) ``` M-x eshell1 and echo $PATH M-x eshell2 and echo $PATH The result is that the eshell1 buffer can show C:/env1, but eshell2 can not. Thanks. Best regards, Siyuan Chen On Wed, Nov 27, 2024 at 5:14 AM Jim Porter wrote: > On 11/26/2024 12:38 PM, Siyuan Chen wrote: > > Reproduce steps: > > > > 1. Emacs -Q > > > > 2. M-x eval-expression `(setenv "PATH" (concat "C:/env" path-separator > > (getenv "PATH")))` > > > > 3. M-x eshell > > > > 4. In the *eshell* window, type `echo $PATH`, but the path "C:/env" > > doesn't show in the result. > > Thanks for the bug report. This is an intentionally-incompatible change > in Eshell to improve behavior with remote systems via Tramp. Here's the > relevant section from the Emacs 29 NEWS: > > > *** Eshell's PATH is now derived from 'exec-path'. > > For consistency with remote connections, Eshell now uses 'exec-path' > > to determine the execution path on the local or remote system, instead > > of using the PATH environment variable directly. > > So instead, you want to do something like '(push "C:/env" exec-path)' in > order to update the PATH in a way where Eshell sees it. > >