$ npm install dotenv-expand
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Dotenv libraries are supported by the community.
Special thanks to:Dotenv-expand adds variable expansion on top of dotenv. If you find yourself needing to expand environment variables already existing on your machine, then dotenv-expand is your tool.
# Install locally (recommended)
npm install dotenv-expand --save
Or installing with yarn? yarn add dotenv-expand
Create a .env
file in the root of your project:
PASSWORD="s1mpl3"
DB_PASS=$PASSWORD
As early as possible in your application, import and configure dotenv and then expand dotenv:
const dotenv = require('dotenv')
const dotenvExpand = require('dotenv-expand')
dotenvExpand(dotenv.config())
console.log(process.env) // remove this after you've confirmed it is expanding
That's it. process.env
now has the expanded keys and values you defined in your .env
file.
dotenvExpand(dotenv.config())
...
connectdb(process.env.DB_PASS)
Note: Consider using
dotenvx
instead of preloading. I am now doing (and recommending) so.It serves the same purpose (you do not need to require and load dotenv), has built-in expansion support, adds better debugging, and works with ANY language, framework, or platform. – motdotla
You can use the --require
(-r
) command line option to preload dotenv & dotenv-expand. By doing this, you do not need to require and load dotenv or dotenv-expand in your application code. This is the preferred approach when using import
instead of require
.
$ node -r dotenv-expand/config your_script.js
The configuration options below are supported as command line arguments in the format dotenv_config_<option>=value
$ node -r dotenv-expand/config your_script.js dotenv_config_path=/custom/path/to/your/env/vars
Additionally, you can use environment variables to set configuration options. Command line arguments will precede these.
$ DOTENV_CONFIG_<OPTION>=value node -r dotenv-expand/config your_script.js
$ DOTENV_CONFIG_ENCODING=latin1 node -r dotenv-expand/config your_script.js dotenv_config_path=/custom/path/to/.env
See tests/.env.test for simple and complex examples of variable expansion in your .env
file.
dotenv-expand
exposes one function:
expand
will expand your environment variables.
const env = {
parsed: {
BASIC: 'basic',
BASIC_EXPAND: '${BASIC}',
BASIC_EXPAND_SIMPLE: '$BASIC'
}
}
console.log(dotenvExpand.expand(env))
Default: process.env
Specify an object to write your secrets to. Defaults to process.env
environment variables.
const myEnv = {}
const env = {
processEnv: myEnv,
parsed: {
HELLO: 'World'
}
}
dotenvExpand.expand(env)
console.log(myEnv.HELLO) // World
console.log(process.env.HELLO) // undefined
The expansion engine roughly has the following rules:
$KEY
will expand any env with the name KEY
${KEY}
will expand any env with the name KEY
\$KEY
will escape the $KEY
rather than expand${KEY:-default}
will first attempt to expand any env with the name KEY
. If not one, then it will return default
${KEY-default}
will first attempt to expand any env with the name KEY
. If not one, then it will return default
You can see a full list of rules here.
process.env
, for example pas$word
)?Modify your dotenv.config
to write to an empty object and pass that to dotenvExpand.processEnv
.
const dotenv = require('dotenv')
const dotenvExpand = require('dotenv-expand')
const myEnv = dotenv.config({ processEnv: {} }) // prevent writing to `process.env`
dotenvExpand.expand(myEnv)
See CONTRIBUTING.md
See CHANGELOG.md
These npm modules depend on it.
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