znv
Parse your environment with Zod.
Pass in a schema and your process.env
. Get back a validated, type-safe,
read-only environment object that you can export for use in your app. You can
optionally provide defaults (which can be matched against NODE_ENV
values like
production
or development
), as well as help strings that will be included in
the error thrown when an env var is missing.
Status
Unstable: znv has not yet hit v1.0.0, and per semver there may be breaking
changes in minor versions before the v1.0.0 release. Any (known) breaking
changes will be documented in release notes. znv is used in production in
several services at the primary author's workplace. Feedback and suggestions
about final API design are welcome.
Contents
Quickstart
npm i znv zod
yarn add znv zod
Create a file named something like env.ts
:
import { parseEnv } from "znv";
import { z } from "zod";
export const { NICKNAME, LLAMA_COUNT, COLOR, SHINY } = parseEnv(process.env, {
NICKNAME: z.string().min(1),
LLAMA_COUNT: z.number().int().positive(),
COLOR: z.enum(["red", "blue"]),
SHINY: z.boolean().default(true),
});
console.log([NICKNAME, LLAMA_COUNT, COLOR, SHINY].join(", "));
Let's run this with ts-node:
$ LLAMA_COUNT=huge COLOR=cyan ts-node env.ts
Oops! Let's fix those issues:
$ LLAMA_COUNT=24 COLOR=red NICKNAME=coolguy ts-node env.ts
Now we see the expected output:
coolguy, 24, red, true
Since parseEnv
didn't throw, our exported values are guaranteed to be defined.
Their TypeScript types will be inferred based on the schemas we used — COLOR
will be even be typed to the union of literal strings 'red' | 'blue'
rather
than just string
.
A more elaborate example:
import { parseEnv, z, port } from "znv";
export const { API_SERVER, HOST, PORT, EDITORS, POST_LIMIT, AUTH_SERVER } =
parseEnv(process.env, {
API_SERVER: z.string().url().default("https://api.llamafy.biz"),
HOST: {
schema: z.string().min(1),
description: "The hostname for this service.",
defaults: {
production: "my-cool-llama.website",
test: "cool-llama-staging.cloud-provider.zone",
_: "localhost",
},
},
PORT: port().default(8080),
EDITORS: z.array(z.string().min(1)),
POST_LIMIT: z.number().optional(),
AUTH_SERVER: z
.enum(["prod", "staging"])
.optional()
.transform((prefix) =>
prefix ? `http://auth-${prefix}.cool-llama.app` : "http://localhost:91"
),
});
If any env var fails validation, parseEnv()
will throw. All failing specs will
be aggregated in the error message, with each showing the received value, the
reason for the failure, and a hint about the var's purpose (if description
was
provided in the spec).
Motivation
Environment variables are one way to pass runtime configuration into your
application. As promoted by the Twelve-Factor App
methodology, this helps keep config (which can
vary by deployment) cleanly separated from code, encouraging maintainable
practices and better security hygiene. But passing in configuration via env vars
can often turn into an ad-hoc affair, with access and validation scattered
across your codebase. At worst, a misconfigured environment will launch and run
without apparent error, with issues only making themselves apparent later when a
certain code path is hit. A good way to avoid this is to declare and validate
environment variables in one place and export the validated result, so that
other parts of your code can make their dependencies on these vars explicit.
Env vars represent one of the boundaries of your application, just like file
I/O or a server request. In TypeScript, as in many other typed languages, these
boundaries present a challenge to maintaining a well-typed app.
Zod does an excellent job at parsing and
validating poorly-typed data at boundaries into clean, well-typed values. znv
facilitates its use for environment validation.
What does znv actually do?
znv is a small module that works hand-in-hand with Zod. Since env vars, when
defined, are always strings, Zod schemas like z.number()
will fail to parse
them out-of-the-box. Zod allows you to use a preprocess
schema to handle coercions, but
peppering your schemas with preprocessors to this end is verbose, error-prone,
and clunky. znv wraps each of the Zod schemas you pass to parseEnv
in a
preprocessor that tries to coerce a string to a type the schema expects.
These preprocessors don't do any validation of their own — in fact, they try to
do as little work as possible and defer to your schema to handle the validation.
In practice, this should be pretty much transparent to you, but you can check
out the coercion rules if you'd like more info.
znv also makes it easy to define defaults for env vars based on your
environment. Zod allows you to add a default value for a schema, but making a
given default vary by environment or only act as a fallback in certain
environments is not straightforward.
Usage
parseEnv(environment, schemas)
Parse the given environment
using the given schemas
. Returns a read-only
object that maps the keys of the schemas
object to their respective parsed
values.
Throws if any schema fails to parse its respective env var. The error aggregates
all parsing failures for the schemas.
environment: Record<string, string | undefined>
You usually want to pass in process.env
as the first argument.
It is not recommended to use znv for general-purpose schema validation —
just use Zod (with
preprocessors to handle
coercion, if necessary).
schemas: Record<string, ZodType | DetailedSpec>
Maps env var names to validators. You can either use a Zod schema directly, or
pass a DetailedSpec
object that has the following fields:
-
schema: ZodType
The Zod validator schema.
-
description?: string
Optional help text that will be displayed when this env var is missing or
fails to validate.
-
defaults?: Record<string, SchemaInput | undefined>
An object that maps from NODE_ENV
values to values that will be passed as
input to the schema if this var isn't present in the environment. For example:
const schemas = {
FRUIT: {
schema: z.string().min(1),
defaults: {
production: "orange",
development: "banana",
},
},
};
const { FRUIT } = parseEnv({ NODE_ENV: "development" }, schemas);
const { FRUIT } = parseEnv({ NODE_ENV: "production" }, schemas);
const { FRUIT } = parseEnv({ NODE_ENV: "production", FRUIT: "fig" }, schemas);
const { FRUIT } = parseEnv({ FRUIT: "apple" }, schemas);
const { FRUIT } = parseEnv({}, schemas);
defaults
accepts a special token as a key: _
. This is like the default
clause in a switch
case — its value will be used if NODE_ENV
doesn't match
any other key in defaults
.
(As an aside, it is not recommended to use staging
as a possible value
for NODE_ENV
. Your staging environment should be as similar to your
production environment as possible, and NODE_ENV=production
has special
meaning for several tools and libraries. For example,
npm install
and
yarn install
by default won't install devDependencies
if NODE_ENV=production
;
Express
and React will also
behave differently depending on whether NODE_ENV
is production
or not.
Instead, your staging environment should also set NODE_ENV=production
, and
you should define your own env var(s) for any special configuration that's
necessary for your staging environment.)
Caveats aside, _
lets you express a few interesting scenarios:
{ production: "prod default", _: "dev default" }
{ production: undefined, _: "dev default" }
{ _: "unconditional default" }
Some testing tools like Jest set NODE_ENV
to test
,
so you can also use defaults
to provide default env vars for testing.
parseEnv
doesn't restrict or validate NODE_ENV
to any particular values,
but you can add NODE_ENV
to your schemas like any other env var. For
example, you could use
NODE_ENV: z.enum(["production", "development", "test", "ci"])
to enforce
that NODE_ENV
is always defined and is one of those four expected values.
znv exports a very small number of extra schemas for common env var types.
port()
port()
is an alias for z.number().int().nonnegative().lte(65535)
.
deprecate()
deprecate()
is an alias for
z.undefined().transform(() => undefined as never)
. parseEnv
will throw if a
var using the deprecate()
schema is passed in from the environment.
Coercion rules
znv tries to do as little work as possible to coerce env vars (which are always
strings when they're present) to the input
types of your schemas.
If the env var doesn't look like the input type, znv will pass it to the
validator as-is with the assumption that the validator will throw. For example,
if your schema is z.number()
, znv will test it against a numeric regex first,
rather than unconditionally wrap it in Number()
or parseFloat()
(and thus
coerce it to NaN
).
By modifying as little as possible, znv tries to get out of Zod's way and let it
do the heavy lifting of validation. This also lets us produce less confusing
error messages: if you pass the string "banana" to your number schema, it should
be able to say "you gave me 'banana' instead of a number!" rather than "you gave
me NaN instead of a number!"
Coercions only happen at the top level of a schema. If you define an object
with nested schemas, no coercions will be applied to the keys.
Some notable coercion mechanics:
-
If your schema's input is a boolean, znv will coerce "true"
, "yes"
and
"1"
to true
, and "false"
, "no"
and "0"
to false
. All other values
will be passed through.
Some CLI tool conventions dictate that a variable simply being present in
the environment (even with no value, eg. setting MY_VALUE=
with no
right-hand side) should be interpreted as true
. However, this convention
doesn't seem to be in widespread use in Node, probably because it causes the
var to evaluate to the empty string (which is falsy). znv demands a little
more specificity by default, while still hedging a bit for some common
true/false equivalents. If you want the "any defined value" behaviour, you
can use
z.string().optional().transform(v => v === undefined ? false : true)
.
-
If your schema's input is an object or array (or record or tuple), znv will
attempt to JSON.parse
the input value if it's not undefined
or the empty
string.
Remember, with great power comes great responsibility! If you're using
an object or array schema to pass in dozens or hundreds of kilobytes of data
as an env var, you may be doing something wrong. (Certain platforms also
impose limits on environment variable
length.)
-
If your schema's input is a Date, znv will call new Date()
with the input
value. This has a number of pitfalls, since the Date()
constructor is
excessively forgiving. The value is passed in as a string, which means trying
to pass a Unix epoch will yield unexpected results. (Epochs need to be passed
in as number
: new Date()
with an epoch as a string will either give you
invalid date
or a completely nonsensical date.) You should only pass in ISO
8601 date strings, such as those returned by
Date.prototype.toISOString()
.
Improved validation for Date schemas could be added in a future version.
-
Zod defines "nullable" as distinct from "optional". If your schema is
nullable
, znv will coerce undefined
to null
. Generally it's preferred to
simply use optional
.
Comparison to other libraries
Envalid is a nice library that inspired znv's API design. Envalid is written in
TypeScript and performs some inference of the return value based on the
validator schema you pass in, but won't do things like narrow enumerated types
(str({ choices: ['a', 'b'] })
) to a union of literals. Expressing defaults is
more limited (you can't have different defaults for test
and development
environments, for example). Defaults are not passed through validators.
Envalid's validators are built-in and express a handful of types with limited
options and no ability to perform postprocessing. For other use cases you have
to write your own custom
validators.
Envalid wraps its return value in a proxy, which can't be opted out of and has
some surprising effects.
Joi is the Cadillac of schema validation libraries. Its default of coercing
strings to the target type makes it easy to adopt for environment validation.
Unfortunately, Joi is written in JavaScript and its type definitions support a
very limited form of inference when they work at all.
Complementary tooling
The eslint-plugin-node rule
no-process-env
is recommended to restrict usage of process.env
outside of the module that
parses your schema.
znv also works great with dotenv.
How do I pronounce znv?
If you usually pronounce "z" as "zed," then you could say "zenv." If you usually
pronounce "z" as "zee," you could say "zee en vee."
Or do your own thing. I'm not the boss of you.