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dotenv
Dotenv is a zero-dependency module that loads environment variables from a .env
file into process.env
. Storing configuration in the environment separate from code is based on The Twelve-Factor App methodology.
Install
npm install dotenv --save
Or installing with yarn? yarn add dotenv
Usage
Usage is easy!
1. Create a .env
file in the root directory of your project.
# .env file
#
# Add environment-specific variables on new lines in the form of NAME=VALUE
#
DB_HOST=localhost
DB_USER=root
DB_PASS=s1mpl3
2. As early as possible in your application, import and configure dotenv.
require('dotenv').config()
console.log(process.env)
.. or using ES6?
import 'dotenv/config'
import express from 'express'
3. That's it! 🎉
process.env
now has the keys and values you defined in your .env
file.
require('dotenv').config()
...
const db = require('db')
db.connect({
host: process.env.DB_HOST,
username: process.env.DB_USER,
password: process.env.DB_PASS
})
Examples
See examples of using dotenv with various frameworks, languages, and configurations.
Documentation
Dotenv exposes two functions:
Config
config
will read your .env
file, parse the contents, assign it to
process.env
,
and return an Object with a parsed
key containing the loaded content or an error
key if it failed.
const result = dotenv.config()
if (result.error) {
throw result.error
}
console.log(result.parsed)
You can additionally, pass options to config
.
Options
Path
Default: path.resolve(process.cwd(), '.env')
Specify a custom path if your file containing environment variables is located elsewhere.
require('dotenv').config({ path: '/custom/path/to/.env' })
Encoding
Default: utf8
Specify the encoding of your file containing environment variables.
require('dotenv').config({ encoding: 'latin1' })
Debug
Default: false
Turn on logging to help debug why certain keys or values are not being set as you expect.
require('dotenv').config({ debug: process.env.DEBUG })
Override
Default: false
Override any environment variables that have already been set on your machine with values from your .env file.
require('dotenv').config({ override: true })
Multiline
Default: false
Turn on multiline line break parsing.
require('dotenv').config({ multiline: true })
This allows specifying multiline values in this format:
PRIVATE_KEY="-----BEGIN PRIVATE KEY-----
MIGT...
7ure...
-----END PRIVATE KEY-----"
Ensure that the value begins with a single or double quote character, and it ends with the same character.
Parse
The engine which parses the contents of your file containing environment
variables is available to use. It accepts a String or Buffer and will return
an Object with the parsed keys and values.
const dotenv = require('dotenv')
const buf = Buffer.from('BASIC=basic')
const config = dotenv.parse(buf)
console.log(typeof config, config)
Options
Debug
Default: false
Turn on logging to help debug why certain keys or values are not being set as you expect.
const dotenv = require('dotenv')
const buf = Buffer.from('hello world')
const opt = { debug: true }
const config = dotenv.parse(buf, opt)
Multiline
Default: false
Turn on multiline line break parsing.
require('dotenv').config({ multiline: true })
This allows specifying multiline values in this format:
PRIVATE_KEY="-----BEGIN PRIVATE KEY-----
MIGT...
7ure...
-----END PRIVATE KEY-----"
Other Usage
Preload
You can use the --require
(-r
) command line option to preload dotenv. By doing this, you do not need to require and load dotenv in your application code. This is the preferred approach when using import
instead of require
.
$ node -r dotenv/config your_script.js
The configuration options below are supported as command line arguments in the format dotenv_config_<option>=value
$ node -r dotenv/config your_script.js dotenv_config_path=/custom/path/to/.env dotenv_config_debug=true
Additionally, you can use environment variables to set configuration options. Command line arguments will precede these.
$ DOTENV_CONFIG_<OPTION>=value node -r dotenv/config your_script.js
$ DOTENV_CONFIG_ENCODING=latin1 DOTENV_CONFIG_DEBUG=true node -r dotenv/config your_script.js dotenv_config_path=/custom/path/to/.env
FAQ
Why is the .env
file not loading my environment variables successfully?
Most likely your .env
file is not in the correct place. See this stack overflow.
Turn on debug mode and try again..
require('dotenv').config({ debug: true })
You will receive a helpful error outputted to your console.
Should I commit my .env
file?
No. We strongly recommend against committing your .env
file to version
control. It should only include environment-specific values such as database
passwords or API keys. Your production database should have a different
password than your development database.
Should I have multiple .env
files?
No. We strongly recommend against having a "main" .env
file and an "environment" .env
file like .env.test
. Your config should vary between deploys, and you should not be sharing values between environments.
In a twelve-factor app, env vars are granular controls, each fully orthogonal to other env vars. They are never grouped together as “environments”, but instead are independently managed for each deploy. This is a model that scales up smoothly as the app naturally expands into more deploys over its lifetime.
– The Twelve-Factor App
What rules does the parsing engine follow?
The parsing engine currently supports the following rules:
BASIC=basic
becomes {BASIC: 'basic'}
- empty lines are skipped
- lines beginning with
#
are treated as comments - empty values become empty strings (
EMPTY=
becomes {EMPTY: ''}
) - inner quotes are maintained (think JSON) (
JSON={"foo": "bar"}
becomes {JSON:"{\"foo\": \"bar\"}"
) - whitespace is removed from both ends of unquoted values (see more on
trim
) (FOO= some value
becomes {FOO: 'some value'}
) - single and double quoted values are escaped (
SINGLE_QUOTE='quoted'
becomes {SINGLE_QUOTE: "quoted"}
) - single and double quoted values maintain whitespace from both ends (
FOO=" some value "
becomes {FOO: ' some value '}
) - double quoted values expand new lines (
MULTILINE="new\nline"
becomes
{MULTILINE: 'new
line'}
What happens to environment variables that were already set?
By default, we will never modify any environment variables that have already been set. In particular, if there is a variable in your .env
file which collides with one that already exists in your environment, then that variable will be skipped.
If instead, you want to override process.env
use the override
option.
require('dotenv').config({ override: true })
How come my environment variables are not showing up for React?
React has dotenv built in but with a quirk. Preface your environment variables with REACT_APP_
. See this stack overflow for more details.
Can I customize/write plugins for dotenv?
Yes! dotenv.config()
returns an object representing the parsed .env
file. This gives you everything you need to continue setting values on process.env
. For example:
const dotenv = require('dotenv')
const variableExpansion = require('dotenv-expand')
const myEnv = dotenv.config()
variableExpansion(myEnv)
How do I use dotenv with import
?
Simply..
import 'dotenv/config'
import express from 'express'
A little background..
When you run a module containing an import
declaration, the modules it imports are loaded first, then each module body is executed in a depth-first traversal of the dependency graph, avoiding cycles by skipping anything already executed.
– ES6 In Depth: Modules
What does this mean in plain language? It means you would think the following would work but it won't.
import { Client } from 'best-error-reporting-service'
export default new Client(process.env.API_KEY)
import dotenv from 'dotenv'
dotenv.config()
import errorReporter from './errorReporter.mjs'
errorReporter.report(new Error('documented example'))
process.env.API_KEY
will be blank.
Instead the above code should be written as..
import { Client } from 'best-error-reporting-service'
export default new Client(process.env.API_KEY)
import 'dotenv/config'
import errorReporter from './errorReporter.mjs'
errorReporter.report(new Error('documented example'))
Does that make sense? It's a bit unintuitive, but it is how importing of ES6 modules work. Here is a working example of this pitfall.
There are also 2 alternatives to this approach:
- Preload dotenv:
node --require dotenv/config index.js
(Note: you do not need to import
dotenv with this approach) - Create a separate file that will execute
config
first as outlined in this comment on #133
What about variable expansion?
Try dotenv-expand
What about syncing .env files?
Try dotenv cli
Contributing Guide
See CONTRIBUTING.md
CHANGELOG
See CHANGELOG.md
Who's using dotenv?
These npm modules depend on it.
Projects that expand it often use the keyword "dotenv" on npm.