Socket
Socket
Sign inDemoInstall

env-cmd

Package Overview
Dependencies
9
Maintainers
1
Versions
21
Alerts
File Explorer

Advanced tools

Install Socket

Detect and block malicious and high-risk dependencies

Install

    env-cmd

Executes a command using the environment variables in an env file


Version published
Maintainers
1
Install size
235 kB
Created

Changelog

Source

10.0.1

  • Fix: Fixed bug introduced by strict equal checking for undefined when the value was null. This bug caused most executions of env-cmd to fail with an error, when in fact no error had occurred.

Readme

Source

Travis Coverage Status npm npm npm TS-Standard - Typescript Standard Style Guide Greenkeeper badge

env-cmd

A simple node program for executing commands using an environment from an env file.

Install

npm install env-cmd or npm install -g env-cmd

Basic Usage

Environment file ./.env

# This is a comment
ENV1=THANKS
ENV2=FOR ALL
ENV3=THE FISH

Package.json

{
  "scripts": {
    "test": "env-cmd mocha -R spec"
  }
}

Terminal

./node_modules/.bin/env-cmd node index.js

Using custom env file path

To use a custom env filename or path, pass the -f flag. This is a major breaking change from prior versions < 9.0.0

Terminal

./node_modules/.bin/env-cmd -f ./custom/path/.env node index.js

📜 Help

Usage: _ [options] <command> [...args]

Options:
  -v, --version                       output the version number
  -f, --file [path]                   Custom env file path (default path: ./.env)
  -r, --rc-file [path]                Custom rc file path (default path: ./.env-cmdrc(|.js|.json)
  -e, --environments [env1,env2,...]  The rc file environment(s) to use
  --fallback                          Fallback to default env file path, if custom env file path not found
  --no-override                       Do not override existing environment variables
  --use-shell                         Execute the command in a new shell with the given environment
  -h, --help                          output usage information

🔬 Advanced Usage

.rc file usage

For more complex projects, a .env-cmdrc file can be defined in the root directory and supports as many environments as you want. Simply use the -e flag and provide which environments you wish to use from the .env-cmdrc file. Using multiple environment names will merge the environment variables together. Later environments overwrite earlier ones in the list if conflicting environment variables are found.

.rc file ./.env-cmdrc

{
  "development": {
    "ENV1": "Thanks",
    "ENV2": "For All"
  },
  "test": {
    "ENV1": "No Thanks",
    "ENV3": "!"
  },
  "production": {
    "ENV1": "The Fish"
  }
}

Terminal

./node_modules/.bin/env-cmd -e production node index.js
# Or for multiple environments (where `production` vars override `test` vars,
# but both are included)
./node_modules/.bin/env-cmd -e test,production node index.js

--no-override option

Prevents overriding of existing environment variables on process.env and within the current environment.

--fallback file usage option

If the .env file does not exist at the provieded custom path, then use the default fallback location ./.env env file instead.

--use-shell

Executes the command within a new shell environment. This is useful if you want to string multiple commands together that share the same environment variables.

Terminal

./node_modules/.bin/env-cmd -f ./test/.env --use-shell "npm run lint && npm test"

Asynchronous env file support

EnvCmd supports reading from asynchronous .env files. Instead of using a .env file, pass in a .js file that exports either an object or a Promise resolving to an object ({ ENV_VAR_NAME: value, ... }). Asynchronous .rc files are also supported using .js file extension and resolving to an object with top level environment names ({ production: { ENV_VAR_NAME: value, ... } }).

Terminal

./node_modules/.bin/env-cmd -f ./async-file.js node index.js

Examples

You can find examples of how to use the various options above by visiting the examples repo env-cmd-examples.

Environment File Formats

These are the currently accepted environment file formats. If any other formats are desired please create an issue.

  • .env as key=value
  • .env.json Key/value pairs as JSON
  • .env.js JavaScript file exporting an object or a Promise that resolves to an object
  • .env-cmdrc as valid json or .env-cmdrc.json in execution directory with at least one environment { "dev": { "key1": "val1" } }
  • .env-cmdrc.js JavaScript file exporting an object or a Promise that resolves to an object that contains at least one environment

Path Rules

This lib attempts to follow standard bash path rules. The rules are as followed:

Home Directory = /Users/test

Working Directory = /Users/test/Development/app

TypeInput PathExpanded Path
Absolute/some/absolute/path.env/some/absolute/path.env
Home Directory with ~~/starts/on/homedir/path.env/Users/test/starts/on/homedir/path.env
Relative./some/relative/path.env or some/relative/path.env/Users/test/Development/app/some/relative/path.env
Relative with parent dir../some/relative/path.env/Users/test/Development/some/relative/path.env

⚒ API Usage

EnvCmd

A function that executes a given command in a new child process with the given environment and options

  • options { object }
    • command { string }: The command to execute (node, mocha, ...)
    • commandArgs { string[] }: List of arguments to pass to the command (['-R', 'Spec'])
    • envFile { object }
      • filePath { string }: Custom path to .env file to read from (defaults to: ./.env)
      • fallback { boolean }: Should fall back to default ./.env file if custom path does not exist
    • rc { object }
      • environments { string[] }: List of environment to read from the .rc file
      • filePath { string }: Custom path to the .rc file (defaults to: ./.env-cmdrc(|.js|.json))
    • options { object }
      • noOverride { boolean }: Prevent .env file vars from overriding existing process.env vars (default: false)
      • useShell { boolean }: Runs command inside a new shell instance (default: false)
    • Returns { Promise<object> }: key is env var name and value is the env var value

GetEnvVars

A function that parses environment variables from a .env or a .rc file

  • options { object }
    • envFile { object }
      • filePath { string }: Custom path to .env file to read from (defaults to: ./.env)
      • fallback { boolean }: Should fall back to default ./.env file if custom path does not exist
    • rc { object }
      • environments { string[] }: List of environment to read from the .rc file
      • filePath { string }: Custom path to the .rc file (defaults to: ./.env-cmdrc(|.js|.json))
  • Returns { Promise<object> }: key is env var name and value is the env var value

Why

Because sometimes it is just too cumbersome passing a lot of environment variables to scripts. It is usually just easier to have a file with all the vars in them, especially for development and testing.

🚨Do not commit sensitive environment data to a public git repo! 🚨

cross-env - Cross platform setting of environment scripts

🎊 Special Thanks

Special thanks to cross-env for inspiration (uses the same cross-spawn lib underneath too).

🎉 Contributors

  • Eric Lanehart
  • Jon Scheiding
  • Alexander Praetorius
  • Anton Versal

📋 Contributing Guide

I welcome all pull requests. Please make sure you add appropriate test cases for any features added. Before opening a PR please make sure to run the following scripts:

  • npm run lint checks for code errors and format according to js-standard
  • npm test make sure all tests pass
  • npm run test-cover make sure the coverage has not decreased from current master

Keywords

FAQs

Last updated on 30 Aug 2019

Did you know?

Socket for GitHub automatically highlights issues in each pull request and monitors the health of all your open source dependencies. Discover the contents of your packages and block harmful activity before you install or update your dependencies.

Install

Related posts

SocketSocket SOC 2 Logo

Product

  • Package Alerts
  • Integrations
  • Docs
  • Pricing
  • FAQ
  • Roadmap

Stay in touch

Get open source security insights delivered straight into your inbox.


  • Terms
  • Privacy
  • Security

Made with ⚡️ by Socket Inc