@jasonmit/ember-cli-dotenv

2.0.1 • Public • Published

Ember CLI Dotenv

Installation

ember install @jasonmit/ember-cli-dotenv

Upgrading to @jasonmit/ember-cli-dotenv@2.0.0

  • npm uninstall ember-cli-dotenv
  • ember install @jasonmit/ember-cli-dotenv
  • open dotenv.js and ember-cli-build.js
  • Move/convert the dotEnv application options from ember-cli-build.js to the function declared within dotenv.js

What is Ember CLI Dotenv?

This addon allows you to write environment variables in a .env file and expose them to your Ember app through the built-in config/environment.js that you can import in your app. For example, you might be building an app with Dropbox and don’t want to check your key into the repo. Put a .env file in the root of your repository:

DROPBOX_KEY=YOURKEYGOESHERE

Next, configure dotenv.js.

// dotenv.js
module.exports = function(env) {
  return {
    clientAllowedKeys: ['DROPBOX_KEY']
  };
};

All keys in .env are currently injected into node’s process.env. These will be available in your config/environment.js file:

// config/environment.js
module.exports = function(environment) {
  return {
    MY_OTHER_KEY: process.env.MY_OTHER_KEY
  };
};

You can then use the node process environment variables in other ember-cli-addons, such as express middleware or other servers/tasks.

Security: environment variables in config/environment.js are never filtered unlike using .env and clientAllowedKeys. Remember to use the environment variable passed into your config function to filter out secrets for production usage. Never include sensitive variables in clientAllowedKeys, as these will be exposed publicly via ember's <meta name="app/config/environment"> tag.

then, you can access the environment variables anywhere in your app like you usually would.

import ENV from "my-app/config/environment";

console.log(ENV.DROPBOX_KEY); // logs YOURKEYGOESHERE

You can read more about dotenv files on their dotenv repository.

All the work is done by ember-cli and dotenv. Thanks ember-cli team and dotenv authors and maintainers! Thanks Brandon Keepers for the original dotenv ruby implementation.

Multiple Environments

Sometime people may want to use different .env file than the one in project root. This can be configured as below:

// dotenv.js
module.exports = function(env) {
  return {
    clientAllowedKeys: ['DROPBOX_KEY'],
    path: './path/to/.env'
  };
};

In addition, you may also customize for different environments:

// dotenv.js
module.exports = function(env) {
  return {
    clientAllowedKeys: ['DROPBOX_KEY'],
    path: `./path/to/.env-${env}`
  };
};

With the above, if you run ember build --environment production, the file ./path/to/.env.production will be used instead.

Compatibility

This addon supports the Ember 2.x series, but it is also backwards-compatible down to Ember-CLI 0.1.2 and Ember 1.7.0.

Other Resources

Development Installation

  • git clone this repository
  • npm install
  • bower install

Running

Running Tests

  • npm test (Runs ember try:testall to test your addon against multiple Ember versions)
  • ember test
  • ember test --server

Building

  • ember build

For more information on using ember-cli, visit http://www.ember-cli.com/.

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Install

npm i @jasonmit/ember-cli-dotenv

Weekly Downloads

56

Version

2.0.1

License

MIT

Last publish

Collaborators

  • jasonmit