Small Node.js library for settings/configuration. It uses dotenv with convict to provide a simple interface for getting config from the environment, including .env
files.
See convict for building your schema and create a .env
file in your project root (or elsewhere if you want to be explicit about it using an env var: DOTENV_CONFIG_PATH
).
Example:
const {getConfig} = require('convict-dotenv');
const schema = {
foo: {
env: 'FOO_EVAR',
format: String,
default: 'foodefault',
},
};
console.log(getConfig(schema).foo);
If you want to only parse your config if a specific enabled flag is set in your config, specify the prop, and it will be evaluated before parsing the rest of the config. If it's falsey, only the flag and any other defaults you pass will be returned:
const {getConfig} = require('convict-dotenv');
const schema = {
enabled: {
env: 'FOO_ENABLED',
format: String,
default: false,
},
somethingRequired: {
env: 'FOO_REQUIRED',
format: String,
default: null, // <== convicts way of making something required...
},
};
console.log(getConfig(schema, 'enabled', {theseAre: 'disabledDefaults'}));
/*
No error thrown and results in:
{
enabled: false,
theseAre: 'disabledDefaults'
}
*/
- If your
NODE_ENV
is set totest
, the default.env
location${process.cwd()}/.env
) will not be loaded (you have to explicitly setDOTENV_CONFIG_PATH
if you want to load env vars from a file in tests:DOTENV_CONFIG_PATH=/somewhere/test.env node index.js
). - The global
process.env
shouldn't be changed by a library, which means not using dotenv package in it's standard setup:require('dotenv').config()
.
Uses tap.
Run npm test
.