This is a port of @bkeepers' dotenv project to Elixir. You can read more about dotenv on that project's page. The short version is that it simplifies developing projects where configuration is stored in environment variables (e.g. projects intended to be deployed to Heroku).
WARNING: Not compatible with Elixir releases
Elixir has an excellent configuration system and this dotenv implementation has a serious limitation in that it isn't available at compile time. It fits very poorly into a deployment setup using Elixir releases, distillery, or similar.
Configuration management should be built around Elixir's existing configuration system. A good example is Phoenix which generates a project where the production config imports the "secrets" from a file stored outside of version control. Even if you're using this for development, the same approach could be taken.
However, if you are using Heroku, Dokku, or another deployment process that does not use releases, read on!
The simplest way to use Dotenv is with the included OTP application. This will automatically load variables from a .env
file in the root of your project directory into the process environment when started.
First add :dotenv
to your dependencies.
For the latest release:
defp deps do
[
{:dotenv, "~> 3.0.0"}
]
end
Most likely, if you are deploying in a Heroku-like environment, you'll want to only load the package in a non-production environment:
{:dotenv, "~> 3.0.0", only: [:dev, :test]}
For master:
{:dotenv, github: "avdi/dotenv_elixir"}
Fetch your dependencies with mix deps.get
.
Now, when you load your app in a console with iex -S mix
, your environment variables will be set automatically.
Mix loads configuration before loading any application code. If you want to use .env
variables in your application configuration, you'll need to load dotenv manually on application start and reload your application config:
defmodule App.Application do
use Application
def start(_type, _args) do
unless Mix.env == :prod do
Dotenv.load
Mix.Task.run("loadconfig")
end
# ... the rest of your application startup
end
end
If you are running an old version of Elixir, you'll need to add the :dotenv
application to your applications list when running in the :dev
environment:
# Configuration for the OTP application
def application do
[
mod: { YourApp, [] },
applications: app_list(Mix.env)
]
end
defp app_list(:dev), do: [:dotenv | app_list]
defp app_list(_), do: app_list
defp app_list, do: [...]
The Dotenv.reload!/0
function will reload the variables defined in the .env
file.
More examples of the server API usage can be found in dotenv_app_test.exs.
If you would like finer-grained control over when variables are loaded, or would like to inspect them, Dotenv also provides a serverless API for interacting with .env
files.
The load!/1
function loads variables into the process environment, and can be passed a path or list of paths to read from.
Alternately, load/1
will return a data structure of the variables read from the .env
file:
iex> Dotenv.load
%Dotenv.Env{paths: ["/elixir/dotenv_elixir/.env"],
values: %{"APP_TEST_VAR" => "HELLO"}}
For further details, see the inline documentation. Usage examples can be found in dotenv_test.exs.
Copyright (c) 2014 Avdi Grimm
This library is released under the MIT License. See the LICENSE.md file for further details.