This module parses .env
files to make environment variables stored in them accessible via os.Getenv("key")
This is a port of the Symfony Dotenv Component
go get https://github.com/Valgard/godotenv
Sensitive information and environment-dependent settings should be defined as environment variables (as recommended for
twelve-factor applications). Using a .env
file to store those environment variables eases
development and CI management by keeping them in one "standard" place and agnostic of the technology stack you are
using.
Load a .env
file in your application via Dotenv::Load():
package main
import (
"github.com/Valgard/godotenv"
)
func main() {
dotenv := godotenv.New()
if err := dotenv.Load(".env"); err != nil {
panic(err)
}
// You can also load several files
if err := dotenv.Load(".env", ".env.dev"); err != nil {
panic(err)
}
}
Given the following .env
file content:
# .env
DB_USER=root
DB_PASS=pass
Access the value with os.Getenv() in your code:
dbUser := os.Getenv("DB_USER")
The Load()
method never overwrites existing environment variables. Use the Overload()
method if you need to
overwrite them:
if err := dotenv.Overload(".env"); err != nil {
panic(err)
}
As you're working with this module you'll notice that you might want to have different files depending on the
environment you're working in. Typically this happens for local development or Continuous Integration where you might
want to have different files for your test
and dev
environments.
You can use Dotenv::LoadEnv() to ease this process:
dotenv := godotenv.New()
if err := dotenv.LoadEnv(".env"); err != nil {
panic(err)
}
The Dotenv module will then look for the correct .env
file to load in the following order whereas the files loaded
later override the variables defined in previously loaded files:
- If
.env
exists, it is loaded first. In case there's no.env
file but a.env.dist
, this one will be loaded instead. - If one of the previously mentioned files contains the
APP_ENV
variable, the variable is populated and used to load environment-specific files hereafter. IfAPP_ENV
is not defined in either of the previously mentioned files,dev
is assumed forAPP_ENV
and populated by default. - If there's a
.env.local
representing general local environment variables it's loaded now. - If there's a
.env.{env}.local
file, this one is loaded. Otherwise, it falls back to.env.{env}
.
This might look complicated at first glance but it gives you the opportunity to commit multiple environment-specific
files that can then be adjusted to your local environment. Given you commit .env
, .env.test
and .env.dev
to represent
different configuration settings for your environments, each of them can be adjusted by using .env.local
,
.env.test.local
and .env.dev.local
respectively.
.env.local
is always ignored intest
environment because tests should produce the same results for everyone.
You can adjust the variable defining the environment, default environment and test environments by passing them as additional options to Dotenv::LoadEnv() (see LoadEnv() for details).
You should never store a .env.local
file in your code repository as it might contain sensitive information;
create a .env
file (or multiple environment-specific ones as shown above) with sensible defaults instead.
This dotenv module can be used in any environment of your application: development, testing, staging and even production. However, in production it's recommended to configure real environment variables to avoid the performance overhead of parsing the .env file for every request.
As a .env
file is a regular shell script, you can source it in your own shell scripts:
source .env
Add comments by prefixing them with #
:
# Database credentials
DB_USER=root
DB_PASS=pass # This is the secret password
Use environment variables in values by prefixing variables with $
:
DB_USER=root
DB_PASS=${DB_USER}pass # Include the user as a password prefix
The order is important when some env var depends on the value of other env vars. In the above example,
DB_PASS
must be defined afterDB_USER
. Moreover, if you define multiple.env
files and putDB_PASS
first, its value will depend on theDB_USER
value defined in other files instead of the value defined in this file.
Define a default value in case the environment variable is not set:
DB_USER=
DB_PASS=${DB_USER:-root}pass # results in DB_PASS=rootpass
Embed commands via $()
(not supported on Windows):
START_TIME=$(date)
Note that using
$()
might not work depending on your shell.
This work, including the code samples, is licensed under a Creative Commons BY-SA 3.0 license.