A simple node program for executing commands using an environment from an env file.
npm install env-cmd
or npm install -g env-cmd
Environment file ./test/.env
# This is a comment
ENV1=THANKS
ENV2=FOR ALL
ENV3=THE FISH
Package.json
{
"scripts": {
"test": "env-cmd ./test/.env mocha -R spec"
}
}
or
Terminal
./node_modules/.bin/env-cmd ./test/.env node index.js
You can specify an .env.local
(or any name) env file, add that to your .gitignore
and use that in your local development environment. Then you can use a regular .env
file in root directory with production configs that can get committed to a private/protected repo. When env-cmd
cannot find the .env.local
file it will fallback to looking for a regular .env
file.
Environment file ./.env.local
# This is a comment
ENV1=THANKS
ENV2=FOR ALL
ENV3=THE FISH
Fallback Environment file ./.env
# This can be used as an example fallback
ENV1=foo
ENV2=bar
ENV3=baz
ENV4=quux
ENV5=gorge
Package.json
uses ./.env
as a fallback
{
"scripts": {
"test": "env-cmd ./.env.local mocha -R spec"
}
}
or
Terminal
# uses ./.env as a fallback, because it can't find `./.env.local`
./node_modules/.bin/env-cmd ./.env.local node index.js
For more complex projects, a .env-cmdrc
file can be defined in the root directory and supports as many environments as you want. Instead of passing the path to a .env
file to env-cmd
, simply pass the name of the environment you want to use thats in your .env-cmdrc
file.
.rc file .env-cmdrc
{
"development": {
"ENV1": "Thanks",
"ENV2": "For All"
},
"production": {
"ENV1": "The Fish"
}
}
Terminal
./node_modules/.bin/env-cmd production node index.js
Sometimes you want to set env variables from a file without overriding existing process env vars.
Terminal
ENV1=welcome ./node_modules/.bin/env-cmd --no-override ./test/.env node index.js
These are the currently accepted environment file formats. If any other formats are desired please create an issue.
key=value
- Key/value pairs as JSON
- JavaScript file exporting an object
.env-cmdrc
file (as valid json) in execution directory
Because sometimes its just too cumbersome passing lots of environment variables to scripts. Its 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 to cross-env
for inspiration (use's the same cross-spawn
lib underneath too).
- Eric Lanehart
- Jon Scheiding
- Alexander Praetorius
- Anton Versal
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 formats according to js-standardnpm test
make sure all tests passnpm run test-cover
make sure the coverage has not decreased from current master