Envalid is a small library for validating and accessing environment variables in Node.js (v8.12 or later) programs, aiming to:
- ensure that your program only runs when all of its environment dependencies are met
- give you executable documentation about the environment your program expects to run in
- give you an immutable API for your environment variables, so they don't change from under you while the program is running
Version 7 is a major update, with several breaking changes. Please review the breaking changes below before upgrading:
- Rewritten in TypeScript
- Removed all runtime dependencies except for tslib
- The mode-currently-known-as-
strict
is removed, and its behavior is enabled by default. This means:- The env object will only contain the env vars that were specified by your
validators
. - Any attempt to access an invalid/missing property on the env object will cause a thrown error.
- Any attempt to mutate the cleaned env object will cause a thrown error.
You can still opt-out of strict mode by disabling the
strictProxyMiddleware
, but it's not recommended (see "Custom Middleware", below).
- The env object will only contain the env vars that were specified by your
- The
dotenv
package is no longer shipped as part of this library. You can easily use it directly by installing it and runningrequire('dotenv').config()
before you invoke envalid'scleanEnv()
- The
transformer
validator option is gone, replaced by the ability to add custom middleware - The
host
andip
validators are now slightly less exhaustive. If you need these to be airtight, use your own custom validator instead - When you try to access an invalid property on the cleaned env object, the error will no longer suggest an env variable that you may have intended. You can re-implement the old behavior with a custom middleware if you wish
NODE_ENV
support is now less opinionated, and an error is no longer thrown if a value other thanproduction
/development
/test
is passed in. You can provide your own validator forNODE_ENV
to get exactly the behavior you want. TheisDev
,isProduction
, etc properties still work as before, and are implemented as middleware so you can override their behavior as needed.devDefault
values are no longer used ifNODE_ENV
was not set in the environment (a case where Envalid otherwise assumes'production'
mode). Fixes #65
cleanEnv()
returns a sanitized, immutable environment object, and accepts three
positional arguments:
environment
- An object containing your env vars (eg.process.env
)validators
- An object that specifies the format of required vars.options
- An (optional) object, which supports the following key:reporter
- Pass in a function to override the default error handling and console output. Seesrc/reporter.ts
for the default implementation.
By default, cleanEnv()
will log an error message and exit (in Node) or throw (in browser) if any required
env vars are missing or invalid. You can override this behavior by writing your own reporter.
import { cleanEnv, str, email, json } from 'envalid'
const env = cleanEnv(process.env, {
API_KEY: str(),
ADMIN_EMAIL: email({ default: 'admin@example.com' }),
EMAIL_CONFIG_JSON: json({ desc: 'Additional email parameters' }),
NODE_ENV: str({ choices: ['development', 'test', 'production', 'staging']}),
})
// Read an environment variable, which is validated and cleaned during
// and/or filtering that you specified with cleanEnv().
env.ADMIN_EMAIL // -> 'admin@example.com'
// Envalid checks for NODE_ENV automatically, and provides the following
// shortcut (boolean) properties for checking its value:
env.isProduction // true if NODE_ENV === 'production'
env.isTest // true if NODE_ENV === 'test'
env.isDev // true if NODE_ENV === 'development'
For an example you can play with, clone this repo and see the example/
directory.
git clone https://github.com/af/envalid
cd envalid
yarn prepare
node example/server.js
Node's process.env
only stores strings, but sometimes you want to retrieve other types
(booleans, numbers), or validate that an env var is in a specific format (JSON,
url, email address). To these ends, the following validation functions are available:
str()
- Passes string values through, will ensure an value is present unless adefault
value is given. Note that an empty string is considered a valid value - if this is undesirable you can easily create your own validator (see below)bool()
- Parses env var strings"1", "0", "true", "false", "t", "f"
into booleansnum()
- Parses an env var (eg."42", "0.23", "1e5"
) into a Numberemail()
- Ensures an env var is an email addresshost()
- Ensures an env var is either a domain name or an ip address (v4 or v6)port()
- Ensures an env var is a TCP port (1-65535)url()
- Ensures an env var is a url with a protocol and hostnamejson()
- Parses an env var withJSON.parse
Each validation function accepts an (optional) object with the following attributes:
choices
- An Array that lists the admissable parsed values for the env var.default
- A fallback value, which will be present in the output if the env var wasn't specified. Providing a default effectively makes the env var optional. Note thatdefault
values are not passed through validation logic.devDefault
- A fallback value to use only whenNODE_ENV
is not'production'
. This is handy for env vars that are required for production environments, but optional for development and testing.desc
- A string that describes the env var.example
- An example value for the env var.docs
- A url that leads to more detailed documentation about the env var.
You can easily create your own validator functions with envalid.makeValidator()
. It takes
a function as its only parameter, and should either return a cleaned value, or throw if the
input is unacceptable:
import { makeValidator, cleanEnv } from 'envalid'
const twochars = makeValidator(x => {
if (/^[A-Za-z]{2}$/.test(x)) return x.toUpperCase()
else throw new Error('Expected two letters')
})
const env = cleanEnv(process.env, {
INITIALS: twochars()
});
By default, if any required environment variables are missing or have invalid
values, envalid will log a message and call process.exit(1)
. You can override
this behavior by passing in your own function as options.reporter
. For example:
const env = cleanEnv(process.env, myValidators, {
reporter: ({ errors, env }) => {
emailSiteAdmins('Invalid env vars: ' + Object.keys(errors))
}
})
Additionally, envalid exposes EnvError
and EnvMissingError
, which can be checked in case specific error handling is desired:
const env = cleanEnv(process.env, myValidators, {
reporter: ({ errors, env }) => {
for (const [envVar, err] of Object.entries(errors)) {
if (err instanceof envalid.EnvError) {
...
} else if (err instanceof envalid.EnvMissingError) {
...
} else {
...
}
}
}
})
In addition to cleanEnv()
, as of v7 there is a new customCleanEnv()
function,
which allows you to completely replace the processing that Envalid applies after applying
validations. You can use this custom escape hatch to transform the output however you wish.
customCleanEnv()
uses the same API as cleanEnv()
, but with an additional applyMiddleware
argument required in the third position:
applyMiddleware
- A functions that can modify the env object after it's validated and cleaned. Envalid ships (and exports) its own default middleware (see src/middleware.ts), which you can mix and match with your own custom logic to get the behavior you desire.
A helper function called testOnly
is available, in case you need an default env var value only when
NODE_ENV=test
. It should be used along with devDefault
, for example:
const env = cleanEnv(process.env, {
SOME_VAR: envalid.str({devDefault: testOnly('myTestValue')})
})
For more context see this issue.
-
dotenv is a very handy tool for loading env vars from
.env
files. It was previously used as a dependency of Envalid's. To use them together, simply callrequire('dotenv').config()
before you passprocess.env
to yourenvalid.cleanEnv()
. -
react-native-config can be useful for React Native projects for reading env vars from a
.env
file -
fastify-envalid is a wrapper for using Envalid within Fastify
-
nestjs-envalid is a wrapper for using Envalid with NestJS