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Dotenv is a zero-dependency module that loads environment variables from a .env file into process.env. Storing configuration in the environment separate from code is based on The Twelve-Factor App methodology.
- 🌱 Install
- 🏗️ Usage (.env)
- 🌴 Multiple Environments 🆕
- 🚀 Deploying (encryption) 🆕
- 📚 Examples
- 📖 Docs
- ❓ FAQ
- ⏱️ Changelog
npm install dotenv --saveYou can also use an npm-compatible package manager like yarn, bun or pnpm:
yarn add dotenvbun add dotenvpnpm add dotenv
Create a .env file in the root of your project (if using a monorepo structure like apps/backend/app.js, put it in the root of the folder where your app.js process runs):
S3_BUCKET="YOURS3BUCKET"
SECRET_KEY="YOURSECRETKEYGOESHERE"As early as possible in your application, import and configure dotenv:
require('dotenv').config()
console.log(process.env) // remove this after you've confirmed it is workingimport 'dotenv/config'ES6 import if you need to set config options:
import dotenv from 'dotenv'
dotenv.config({ path: '/custom/path/to/.env' })That's it. process.env now has the keys and values you defined in your .env file:
require('dotenv').config()
// or import 'dotenv/config' if you're using ES6
...
s3.getBucketCors({Bucket: process.env.S3_BUCKET}, function(err, data) {})If you need multiline variables, for example private keys, those are now supported (>= v15.0.0) with line breaks:
PRIVATE_KEY="-----BEGIN RSA PRIVATE KEY-----
...
Kh9NV...
...
-----END RSA PRIVATE KEY-----"Alternatively, you can double quote strings and use the \n character:
PRIVATE_KEY="-----BEGIN RSA PRIVATE KEY-----\nKh9NV...\n-----END RSA PRIVATE KEY-----\n"Comments may be added to your file on their own line or inline:
# This is a comment
SECRET_KEY=YOURSECRETKEYGOESHERE # comment
SECRET_HASH="something-with-a-#-hash"Comments begin where a # exists, so if your value contains a # please wrap it in quotes. This is a breaking change from >= v15.0.0 and on.
The engine which parses the contents of your file containing environment variables is available to use. It accepts a String or Buffer and will return an Object with the parsed keys and values.
const dotenv = require('dotenv')
const buf = Buffer.from('BASIC=basic')
const config = dotenv.parse(buf) // will return an object
console.log(typeof config, config) // object { BASIC : 'basic' }Note: Consider using
dotenvxinstead of preloading. I am now doing (and recommending) so.It serves the same purpose (you do not need to require and load dotenv), adds better debugging, and works with ANY language, framework, or platform. – motdotla
You can use the --require (-r) command line option to preload dotenv. By doing this, you do not need to require and load dotenv in your application code.
$ node -r dotenv/config your_script.jsThe configuration options below are supported as command line arguments in the format dotenv_config_<option>=value
$ node -r dotenv/config your_script.js dotenv_config_path=/custom/path/to/.env dotenv_config_debug=trueAdditionally, you can use environment variables to set configuration options. Command line arguments will precede these.
$ DOTENV_CONFIG_<OPTION>=value node -r dotenv/config your_script.js$ DOTENV_CONFIG_ENCODING=latin1 DOTENV_CONFIG_DEBUG=true node -r dotenv/config your_script.js dotenv_config_path=/custom/path/to/.envUse dotenvx to use variable expansion.
Reference and expand variables already on your machine for use in your .env file.
# .env
USERNAME="username"
DATABASE_URL="postgres://${USERNAME}@localhost/my_database"// index.js
console.log('DATABASE_URL', process.env.DATABASE_URL)$ dotenvx run --debug -- node index.js
[dotenvx@0.14.1] injecting env (2) from .env
DATABASE_URL postgres://username@localhost/my_databaseUse dotenvx to use command substitution.
Add the output of a command to one of your variables in your .env file.
# .env
DATABASE_URL="postgres://$(whoami)@localhost/my_database"// index.js
console.log('DATABASE_URL', process.env.DATABASE_URL)$ dotenvx run --debug -- node index.js
[dotenvx@0.14.1] injecting env (1) from .env
DATABASE_URL postgres://yourusername@localhost/my_databaseYou need to keep .env files in sync between machines, environments, or team members? Use dotenvx to encrypt your .env files and safely include them in source control. This still subscribes to the twelve-factor app rules by generating a decryption key separate from code.
Use dotenvx to generate .env.ci, .env.production files, and more.
You need to deploy your secrets in a cloud-agnostic manner? Use dotenvx to generate a private decryption key that is set on your production server.
Use dotenvx
Run any environment locally. Create a .env.ENVIRONMENT file and use --env-file to load it. It's straightforward, yet flexible.
$ echo "HELLO=production" > .env.production
$ echo "console.log('Hello ' + process.env.HELLO)" > index.js
$ dotenvx run --env-file=.env.production -- node index.js
Hello production
> ^^or with multiple .env files
$ echo "HELLO=local" > .env.local
$ echo "HELLO=World" > .env
$ echo "console.log('Hello ' + process.env.HELLO)" > index.js
$ dotenvx run --env-file=.env.local --env-file=.env -- node index.js
Hello localUse dotenvx.
Add encryption to your .env files with a single command. Pass the --encrypt flag.
$ dotenvx set HELLO Production --encrypt -f .env.production
$ echo "console.log('Hello ' + process.env.HELLO)" > index.js
$ DOTENV_PRIVATE_KEY_PRODUCTION="<.env.production private key>" dotenvx run -- node index.js
[dotenvx] injecting env (2) from .env.production
Hello Production
See examples of using dotenv with various frameworks, languages, and configurations.
- nodejs
- nodejs (debug on)
- nodejs (override on)
- nodejs (processEnv override)
- esm
- esm (preload)
- typescript
- typescript parse
- typescript config
- webpack
- webpack (plugin)
- react
- react (typescript)
- express
- nestjs
- fastify
Dotenv exposes four functions:
configparsepopulate
config will read your .env file, parse the contents, assign it to
process.env,
and return an Object with a parsed key containing the loaded content or an error key if it failed.
const result = dotenv.config()
if (result.error) {
throw result.error
}
console.log(result.parsed)You can additionally, pass options to config.
Default: path.resolve(process.cwd(), '.env')
Specify a custom path if your file containing environment variables is located elsewhere.
require('dotenv').config({ path: '/custom/path/to/.env' })By default, config will look for a file called .env in the current working directory.
Pass in multiple files as an array, and they will be parsed in order and combined with process.env (or option.processEnv, if set). The first value set for a variable will win, unless the options.override flag is set, in which case the last value set will win. If a value already exists in process.env and the options.override flag is NOT set, no changes will be made to that value.
require('dotenv').config({ path: ['.env.local', '.env'] })Default: false
Suppress runtime logging message.
// index.js
require('dotenv').config({ quiet: false }) // change to true to suppress
console.log(`Hello ${process.env.HELLO}`)# .env
.env$ node index.js
[dotenv@17.0.0] injecting env (1) from .env
Hello WorldDefault: utf8
Specify the encoding of your file containing environment variables.
require('dotenv').config({ encoding: 'latin1' })Default: false
Turn on logging to help debug why certain keys or values are not being set as you expect.
require('dotenv').config({ debug: process.env.DEBUG })Default: false
Override any environment variables that have already been set on your machine with values from your .env file(s). If multiple files have been provided in option.path the override will also be used as each file is combined with the next. Without override being set, the first value wins. With override set the last value wins.
require('dotenv').config({ override: true })Default: process.env
Specify an object to write your environment variables to. Defaults to process.env environment variables.
const myObject = {}
require('dotenv').config({ processEnv: myObject })
console.log(myObject) // values from .env
console.log(process.env) // this was not changed or written toThe engine which parses the contents of your file containing environment variables is available to use. It accepts a String or Buffer and will return an Object with the parsed keys and values.
const dotenv = require('dotenv')
const buf = Buffer.from('BASIC=basic')
const config = dotenv.parse(buf) // will return an object
console.log(typeof config, config) // object { BASIC : 'basic' }Default: false
Turn on logging to help debug why certain keys or values are not being set as you expect.
const dotenv = require('dotenv')
const buf = Buffer.from('hello world')
const opt = { debug: true }
const config = dotenv.parse(buf, opt)
// expect a debug message because the buffer is not in KEY=VAL formThe engine which populates the contents of your .env file to process.env is available for use. It accepts a target, a source, and options. This is useful for power users who want to supply their own objects.
For example, customizing the source:
const dotenv = require('dotenv')
const parsed = { HELLO: 'world' }
dotenv.populate(process.env, parsed)
console.log(process.env.HELLO) // worldFor example, customizing the source AND target:
const dotenv = require('dotenv')
const parsed = { HELLO: 'universe' }
const target = { HELLO: 'world' } // empty object
dotenv.populate(target, parsed, { override: true, debug: true })
console.log(target) // { HELLO: 'universe' }Default: false
Turn on logging to help debug why certain keys or values are not being populated as you expect.
Default: false
Override any environment variables that have already been set.
Most likely your .env file is not in the correct place. See this stack overflow.
Turn on debug mode and try again..
require('dotenv').config({ debug: true })You will receive a helpful error outputted to your console.
No. We strongly recommend against committing your .env file to version
control. It should only include environment-specific values such as database
passwords or API keys. Your production database should have a different
password than your development database.
We recommend creating one .env file per environment. Use .env for local/development, .env.production for production and so on. This still follows the twelve factor principles as each is attributed individually to its own environment. Avoid custom set ups that work in inheritance somehow (.env.production inherits values form .env for example). It is better to duplicate values if necessary across each .env.environment file.
In a twelve-factor app, env vars are granular controls, each fully orthogonal to other env vars. They are never grouped together as “environments”, but instead are independently managed for each deploy. This is a model that scales up smoothly as the app naturally expands into more deploys over its lifetime.
The parsing engine currently supports the following rules:
BASIC=basicbecomes{BASIC: 'basic'}- empty lines are skipped
- lines beginning with
#are treated as comments #marks the beginning of a comment (unless when the value is wrapped in quotes)- empty values become empty strings (
EMPTY=becomes{EMPTY: ''}) - inner quotes are maintained (think JSON) (
JSON={"foo": "bar"}becomes{JSON:"{\"foo\": \"bar\"}") - whitespace is removed from both ends of unquoted values (see more on
trim) (FOO= some valuebecomes{FOO: 'some value'}) - single and double quoted values are escaped (
SINGLE_QUOTE='quoted'becomes{SINGLE_QUOTE: "quoted"}) - single and double quoted values maintain whitespace from both ends (
FOO=" some value "becomes{FOO: ' some value '}) - double quoted values expand new lines (
MULTILINE="new\nline"becomes
{MULTILINE: 'new
line'}
- backticks are supported (
BACKTICK_KEY=`This has 'single' and "double" quotes inside of it.`)
By default, we will never modify any environment variables that have already been set. In particular, if there is a variable in your .env file which collides with one that already exists in your environment, then that variable will be skipped.
If instead, you want to override process.env use the override option.
require('dotenv').config({ override: true })Your React code is run in Webpack, where the fs module or even the process global itself are not accessible out-of-the-box. process.env can only be injected through Webpack configuration.
If you are using react-scripts, which is distributed through create-react-app, it has dotenv built in but with a quirk. Preface your environment variables with REACT_APP_. See this stack overflow for more details.
If you are using other frameworks (e.g. Next.js, Gatsby...), you need to consult their documentation for how to inject environment variables into the client.
Yes! dotenv.config() returns an object representing the parsed .env file. This gives you everything you need to continue setting values on process.env. For example:
const dotenv = require('dotenv')
const variableExpansion = require('dotenv-expand')
const myEnv = dotenv.config()
variableExpansion(myEnv)Simply..
// index.mjs (ESM)
import 'dotenv/config' // see https://github.com/motdotla/dotenv#how-do-i-use-dotenv-with-import
import express from 'express'A little background..
When you run a module containing an
importdeclaration, the modules it imports are loaded first, then each module body is executed in a depth-first traversal of the dependency graph, avoiding cycles by skipping anything already executed.
What does this mean in plain language? It means you would think the following would work but it won't.
errorReporter.mjs:
class Client {
constructor (apiKey) {
console.log('apiKey', apiKey)
this.apiKey = apiKey
}
}
export default new Client(process.env.API_KEY)index.mjs:
// Note: this is INCORRECT and will not work
import * as dotenv from 'dotenv'
dotenv.config()
import errorReporter from './errorReporter.mjs' // process.env.API_KEY will be blank!process.env.API_KEY will be blank.
Instead, index.mjs should be written as..
import 'dotenv/config'
import errorReporter from './errorReporter.mjs'Does that make sense? It's a bit unintuitive, but it is how importing of ES6 modules work. Here is a working example of this pitfall.
There are two alternatives to this approach:
- Preload with dotenvx:
dotenvx run -- node index.js(Note: you do not need toimportdotenv with this approach) - Create a separate file that will execute
configfirst as outlined in this comment on #133
You are using dotenv on the front-end and have not included a polyfill. Webpack < 5 used to include these for you. Do the following:
npm install node-polyfill-webpack-pluginConfigure your webpack.config.js to something like the following.
require('dotenv').config()
const path = require('path');
const webpack = require('webpack')
const NodePolyfillPlugin = require('node-polyfill-webpack-plugin')
module.exports = {
mode: 'development',
entry: './src/index.ts',
output: {
filename: 'bundle.js',
path: path.resolve(__dirname, 'dist'),
},
plugins: [
new NodePolyfillPlugin(),
new webpack.DefinePlugin({
'process.env': {
HELLO: JSON.stringify(process.env.HELLO)
}
}),
]
};Alternatively, just use dotenv-webpack which does this and more behind the scenes for you.
Try dotenv-expand
Use dotenvx to unlock syncing encrypted .env files over git.
Remove it, remove git history and then install the git pre-commit hook to prevent this from ever happening again.
brew install dotenvx/brew/dotenvx
dotenvx precommit --install
Use the docker prebuild hook.
# Dockerfile
...
RUN curl -fsS https://dotenvx.sh/ | sh
...
RUN dotenvx prebuild
CMD ["dotenvx", "run", "--", "node", "index.js"]See CONTRIBUTING.md
See CHANGELOG.md
These npm modules depend on it.
Projects that expand it often use the keyword "dotenv" on npm.