envied
                                
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                        Ensures presence and type of your app's ENV-variables (mirror)
ENVied  
 
Canonical Repository: https://gitlab.com/envied/envied/tree/master#envied
TL;DR ensure presence and type of your app's ENV-variables.
For the rationale behind this project, see this blogpost.
Features
- check for presence and correctness of ENV-variables
- access to typed ENV-variables (integers, booleans etc. instead of just strings)
- check the presence and correctness of a Heroku config
Non-features
- provide or load ENV-values
Contents
- Quickstart
- Installation
- Configuration
- Types
- Key alias
- env-type
 
- Groups
 
- Command-line interface
- Best Practices
- FAQ
- Testing
- Development
- Contributing
Quickstart
1) Configure
After successful installation, define some variables in Envfile:
# file: Envfile
variable :FORCE_SSL, :boolean
variable :PORT, :integer
2) Check for presence and coercibility
# during initialization
ENVied.require
This will throw an error if:
- one of ENV['FORCE_SSL'],ENV['PORT']is absent.
- or: their values cannot be coerced (resp. to boolean and integer).
3) Use coerced variables
Variables accessed via ENVied are of the correct type:
ENVied.PORT # => 3001
ENVied.FORCE_SSL # => false
Installation
Add this line to your application's Gemfile:
gem 'envied'
...then bundle:
$ bundle
...then for Rails applications:
$ bundle exec envied init:rails
...or for non-Rails applications:
$ bundle exec envied init
Configuration
Types
The following types are supported:
- :array(e.g. 'tag1,tag2' becomes- ['tag1', 'tag2'])
- :boolean(e.g. '0'/'1', 'f'/'t', 'false'/'true', 'off'/'on', 'no'/'yes' for resp. false and true)
- :date(e.g. '2014-3-26')
- :env(similar to- :string, but accessible via ENV - see Key alias for details)
- :float
- :hash(e.g. 'a=1&b=2' becomes- {'a' => '1', 'b' => '2'})
- :integer
- :string(implied)
- :symbol
- :time(e.g. '14:00')
- :uri(e.g. 'http://www.google.com' becomes result of- URI.parse('http://www.google.com'))
Key alias (unreleased)
By default the value for variable FOO should be provided by ENV['FOO']. Sometimes though it's convenient to let a different key provide the value, based on some runtime condition. A key-alias will let you do this.
Consider for example local development where REDIS_URL differs between the development and test environment. Normally you'd prepare different shells with different values for REDIS_URL: one shell you can run tests in, and other shells where you'd run the console/server etc. This is cumbersome and easy to get wrong.
With a key alias that's calculated at runtime (e.g. Rails.env) you'd set values for both REDIS_URL_TEST and REDIS_URL_DEVELOPMENT and the right value will be used for test and development.
Full example:
# file: Envfile
key_alias! { Rails.env }
variable :REDIS_URL, :uri
Source the following in your environment:
# file: .envrc
export REDIS_URL_DEVELOPMENT=redis://localhost:6379/0
export REDIS_URL_TEST=redis://localhost:6379/1
Now commands like rails console and rails test automatically point to the right redis database.
Note that ENV['REDIS_URL'] is still considered but REDIS_URL_<key_alias> takes precedence.
Also: any truthy value provided as key_alias is converted to an upcased string.
Finally: this setting is optional.
env-type (unreleased)
Variables of type :env take the key alias into account when accessing ENV['FOO'].
Say, your application uses ENV['DATABASE_URL'] (wich you can't change to ENVied.DATABASE_URL). Normally this would mean that the key alias has no effect. For env-type variables however, the key alias is taken into account:
# file: Envfile
key_alias! { Rails.env }
variable :DATABASE_URL, :env
The following now works:
$ DATABASE_URL_DEVELOPMENT=postgres://localhost/blog_development rails runner "p ENV['DATABASE_URL']"
"postgres://localhost/blog_development"
Note: this also works for ENV.fetch('FOO').
Also: no coercion is done (like you would expect when accessing ENV-values directly).
This means that for Rails applications when you set values for DATABASE_URL_DEVELOPMENT and DATABASE_URL_TEST, you no longer need a config/database.yml.
Groups
Groups give you more flexibility to define when variables are needed. It's similar to groups in a Gemfile:
# file: Envfile
variable :FORCE_SSL, :boolean
group :production do
  variable :SECRET_KEY_BASE
end
group :development, :staging do
  variable :DEV_KEY
end
# For local development you would typically do:
ENVied.require(:default) #=> Only ENV['FORCE_SSL'] is required
# On the production server:
ENVied.require(:default, :production) #=> ...also ENV['SECRET_KEY_BASE'] is required
# You can also pass it a string with the groups separated by comma's:
ENVied.require('default, production')
# This allows for easily requiring groups using the ENV:
ENVied.require(ENV['ENVIED_GROUPS'])
# ...then from the prompt:
$ ENVIED_GROUPS='default,production' bin/rails server
# BTW the following are equivalent:
ENVied.require
ENVied.require(:default)
ENVied.require('default')
ENVied.require(nil)
Command-line interface
For help on a specific command, use envied help <command>.
$ envied help
Commands:
  envied check                   # Checks whether you environment contains required variables
  envied check:heroku            # Checks whether a Heroku config contains required variables
  envied check:heroku:binstub    # Generates a shell script for the check:heroku-task
  envied extract                 # Grep code to find ENV-variables
  envied help [COMMAND]          # Describe available commands or one specific command
  envied init                    # Generates a default Envfile in the current working directory
  envied init:rails              # Generate all files needed for a Rails project
  envied version, --version, -v  # Shows version number
Best Practices
Some best practices when using ENVied or working with env-configurable applications in general.
include a .envrc.sample
While ENVied will warn you when you start an application that is 'under-configured', it won't tell users what good default values are. To solve this add a file to the root of your project that contains sane defaults and instructions:
# file: .envrc.sample
# copy this file to .envrc and adjust values if needed
# then do `source .envrc` to load
export DATABASE_URL=postgres://localhost/blog_development
# export FORCE_SSL=true # only needed for production
# you can find this token on the Heroku-dashboard
export DEPLOY_TOKEN=1234-ABC-5678
let direnv manage your environment
direnv will auto-(un)load values from .envrc when you switch folders.
As a bonus it has some powerful commands in it's stdlib.
For example:
# this adds the project's bin-folder to $PATH
PATH_add bin
# so instead of `./bin/rails -h` you can do `rails -h` from anywhere (deep) in the project
# the following will use the .envrc.sample as a basis
# when new variables are introduced upstream, you'll automatically use these defaults
if [ -f .envrc.sample ]; then
  source_env .envrc.sample
fi
...your overrides
# a variant of this is source_up
# an .envrc in a subfolder can load the .envrc from the root of the project and override specific values
# this would allow e.g. for a specific test-environment in the subfolder:
# in my-project/test/.envrc
source_up .envrc
export DATABASE_URL=the-test-db-url
FAQ
How to find all ENV-variables my app is currently using?
$ bundle exec envied extract
This comes in handy when you're not using ENVied yet. It will find all ENV['KEY'] and ENV.fetch('KEY') statements in your project.
It assumes a standard project layout (see the default value for the globs-option).
How to check the config of a Heroku app?
The easiest/quickest is to run:
$ heroku config --json | bundle exec envied check:heroku
This is equivalent to having the heroku config as your local environment and running envied check:heroku --groups default production.
You want to run this right before a deploy to Heroku. This prevents that your app will crash during bootup because ENV-variables are missing from heroku config.
You can turn the above into a handy binstub like so:
$ bundle exec envied check:heroku:binstub
# created bin/heroku-env-check
This way you can do stuff like:
$ ./bin/heroku-env-check && git push live master
What happened to default values??
The short version: simplicity, i.e. the best tool for the job.
In the early days of ENVied it was possible to provide default values for a variable.
While convenient, it had several drawbacks:
- it would introduce a value for ENVied.FOO, while ENV['FOO'] was nil: confusing and a potential source of bugs.
- it hides the fact that an application can actually be configged via the environment.
- it creates an in-process environment which is hard to inspect (as opposed to doing printenv FOOin a shell, after or before starting the application).
- there are better ways: e.g. a sample file in a project with a bunch of exports (ie export FOO=sane-default # and even some documentation) that someone can source in their shell (see Best Practices).
- made the code quite complex.
As an alternative include a file .envrc.sample in the root of your project containing default values (ie export FOO=bar) that users can source in their shell. See also Best Practices.
Development
$ ./bin/setup
# run tests
$ ./bin/rspec
# hack with pry
$ ./bin/console
# run CLI:
$ ./bin/envied
There's a .envrc.sample included that can be used in combination with direnv.
Contributing
To suggest a new feature, open an Issue before opening a PR.
- Fork it: https://gitlab.com/envied/envied/-/forks/new
- Create your feature branch: git checkout -b my-new-feature
- Commit your changes: git commit -am 'Add some feature'
- Push to the branch: git push origin my-new-feature
- Create a new pull request for your feature branch