
Dotenv files for Haskell
In most applications,
configuration should be separated from code. While
it usually works well to keep configuration in the environment, there
are cases where you may want to store configuration in a file outside
of version control.
"Dotenv" files have become popular for storing configuration,
especially in development and test environments. In
Ruby,
Python and
Javascript there are libraries
to facilitate loading of configuration options from configuration
files. This library loads configuration to environment variables for
programs written in Haskell.
Installation
In most cases you will just add dotenv
to your cabal file. You can
also install the library and executable by invoking stack install dotenv
or
you can download the dotenv binaries from our
releases page.
Usage
Set configuration variables in a file following the format below:
S3_BUCKET=YOURS3BUCKET
SECRET_KEY=YOURSECRETKEYGOESHERE
Then, calling Dotenv.load
from your Haskell program reads the above
settings into the environment:
import Configuration.Dotenv (loadFile, defaultConfig)
loadFile defaultConfig
After calling Dotenv.load
, you are able to read the values set in your
environment using standard functions from System.Environment
or
System.Environment.Blank
(base
>= 4.11.0.0), such as getEnv
.
If your version of base
is < 4.11.0.0, then setting an environment variable value to
a blank string will remove the variable from the environment entirely.
Variable substitution
In order to use compound env vars use the following sintax within your env vars
${your_env_var}. For instance:
DATABASE=postgres://${USER}@localhost/database
Running it on the CLI:
$ dotenv "echo $DATABASE"
postgres://myusername@localhost/database
Command substitution
In order to use the standard output of a command in your env vars use the following
sintax $(your_command). For instance:
DATABASE=postgres://$(whoami)@localhost/database
Running it on the CLI:
$ dotenv "echo $DATABASE"
postgres://myusername@localhost/database
Configuration
The first argument to loadFile
specifies the configuration. You cans use
defaultConfig
which parses the .env
file in your current directory and
doesn't override your envs. You can also define your own configuration with
the Config
type.
False
in configOverride
means Dotenv will respect
already-defined variables, and True
means Dotenv will overwrite
already-defined variables.
In the configPath
you can write a list of all the dotenv files where are
envs defined (e.g [".env", ".tokens", ".public_keys"]
).
In the configExamplePath
you can write a list of all the dotenv example files
where you can specify which envs must be defined until running a program
(e.g [".env.example", ".tokens.example", ".public_keys.example"]
). If you don't
need this functionality you can set configExamplePath
to an empty list.
Advanced Dotenv File Syntax
You can add comments to your Dotenv file, on separate lines or after
values. Values can be wrapped in single or double quotes. Multi-line
values can be specified by wrapping the value in double-quotes, and
using the "\n" character to represent newlines.
The spec file is the best
place to understand the nuances of Dotenv file parsing.
Command-Line Usage
You can call dotenv from the command line in order to load settings
from one or more dotenv file before invoking an executable:
$ dotenv -f mydotenvfile myprogram
The -f
flag is optional, by default it looks for the .env
file in the current
working directory.
$ dotenv myprogram
Aditionally you can pass arguments and flags to the program passed to
Dotenv:
$ dotenv -f mydotenvfile myprogram -- --myflag myargument
or:
$ dotenv -f mydotenvfile "myprogram --myflag myargument"
Also, you can use a --example
flag to use dotenv-safe functionality
so that you can have a list of strict envs that should be defined in the environment
or in your dotenv files before the execution of your program. For instance:
$ cat .env.example
DOTENV=
FOO=
BAR=
$ cat .env
DOTENV=123
$ echo $FOO
123
This will fail:
$ dotenv -f .env --example .env.example "myprogram --myflag myargument"
> dotenv: Missing env vars! Please, check (this/these) var(s) (is/are) set: BAR
This will succeed:
$ export BAR=123 # Or you can do something like: "echo 'BAR=123' >> .env"
$ dotenv -f .env --example .env.example "myprogram --myflag myargument"
Hint: The env
program in most Unix-like environments prints out the
current environment settings. By invoking the program env
in place
of myprogram
above you can see what the environment will look like
after evaluating multiple Dotenv files.
Author
Justin Leitgeb
License
MIT
Copyright
(C) 2015-2020 Stack Builders Inc.