Exenv provides an adapter-based solution to loading environment variables from external sources.
It comes with the following adapter:
Exenv.Adapters.Dotenv(load from .env files)
But has support from external adapters as well:
- Exenv.Adapters.Yaml (load from .yml files)
This package can be installed by adding exenv to your list of dependencies in mix.exs:
def deps do
[
{:exenv, "~> 0.3"}
]
endPlease see HexDocs for additional documentation. This readme provides a brief overview, but it is recommended that the docs are used.
If all you want is to load a .env file on application start - then you're already
done! Out of the box, Exenv is configured to start itself with the Exenv.Adapters.Dotenv
adapter configured with sane defaults. This means autoloading on application start - with
the .env file required to be within your projects root directory.
If you need finer grained control of things, Exenv provides extensive config mechansims.
We can pass configuration options to Exenv from application config.
config :exenv, [
adapters: [
{Exenv.Adapters.Dotenv, [file: "path/to/.env"]}
]
]You can also run Exenv via your own supervision tree. In this case, you must instruct
Exenv not to start itself.
config :exenv, start_on_application: falseWhich allows you to add Exenv to your own application.
defmodule MySupervisor do
use Supervisor
def start_link(opts) do
Supervisor.start_link(__MODULE__, :ok, opts)
end
def init(:ok) do
children = [
{Exenv, [adapters: [{Exenv.Adapters.Dotenv, [file: "path/to/.env"]}]]}
]
Supervisor.init(children, strategy: :one_for_one)
end
endOptions passed to the child_spec/1 callback take precedence over any application
config.
By default, all adapters will autoload their environment vars when Exenv starts up.
You can override this behaviour on a per-adapter basis, by simply passing the
autoload: false key within your adapter config.
[
adapters: [
{Exenv.Adapters.Dotenv, [autoload: false, file: "path/to/.env"]}
]
]You must then manually load all env vars from your defined adapters:
Exenv.load()Any location where you pass a file path you can choose to instead pass an mfa which will be run and should evaluate to a proper file path. This allows for easier runtime setup of files.
config :exenv, [
adapters: [
{Exenv.Adapters.Dotenv, [file: {MyApp, :get_dotenv, []}]}
]
]Exenv has secrets encryption out of the box. Support will depend on the whether the adapter provides it. Using secrets encryption allows you to keep an encrypted version of your secrets checked into your repository. As long as the master key is accessible, these secrets can then be decrypted.
To get started with secrets encryption, first generate a master key.
mix exenv.master_key /config/master.keyThis will generate a new master key at /config/master.key. You can then encrypt
your secrets file.
mix exenv.encrypt /config/master.key /config/.envThis will encrypt the contents of /config/.env using /config/master.key. A new
file will then be generated at /config/.env.enc with your encrypted secrets.
You must then provide the proper options to your adapters to enable encryption.
{Exenv.Adapters.Dotenv, [file: "path/to/.env.enc", encryption: true]}The above will attempt to decrypt "path/to/.env.enc" using the contents of the
"MASTER_KEY" env var. Alternatively, you can also provide a direct path to the
master key file.
{Exenv.Adapters.Dotenv, [file: "path/to/.env.enc", encryption: [master_key: "path/to/master.key"]]}To edit your secrets, you just need to decrypt the original encrypted secrets, and rencrypt the edited file.
mix exenv.decrypt /config/master.key /config/.env.enc
## Add to file
mix exenv.encrypt /config/master.key /config/.env