# GoDotEnv [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/joho/godotenv.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/joho/godotenv) [![Build status](https://ci.appveyor.com/api/projects/status/9v40vnfvvgde64u4?svg=true)](https://ci.appveyor.com/project/joho/godotenv) A Go (golang) port of the Ruby dotenv project (which loads env vars from a .env file) From the original Library: > Storing configuration in the environment is one of the tenets of a twelve-factor app. Anything that is likely to change between deployment environments–such as resource handles for databases or credentials for external services–should be extracted from the code into environment variables. > > But it is not always practical to set environment variables on development machines or continuous integration servers where multiple projects are run. Dotenv load variables from a .env file into ENV when the environment is bootstrapped. It can be used as a library (for loading in env for your own daemons etc) or as a bin command. There is test coverage and CI for both linuxish and windows environments, but I make no guarantees about the bin version working on windows. ## Installation As a library ```shell go get github.com/joho/godotenv ``` or if you want to use it as a bin command ```shell go get github.com/joho/godotenv/cmd/godotenv ``` ## Usage Add your application configuration to your `.env` file in the root of your project: ```shell S3_BUCKET=YOURS3BUCKET SECRET_KEY=YOURSECRETKEYGOESHERE ``` Then in your Go app you can do something like ```go package main import ( "github.com/joho/godotenv" "log" "os" ) func main() { err := godotenv.Load() if err != nil { log.Fatal("Error loading .env file") } s3Bucket := os.Getenv("S3_BUCKET") secretKey := os.Getenv("SECRET_KEY") // now do something with s3 or whatever } ``` If you're even lazier than that, you can just take advantage of the autoload package which will read in `.env` on import ```go import _ "github.com/joho/godotenv/autoload" ``` While `.env` in the project root is the default, you don't have to be constrained, both examples below are 100% legit ```go _ = godotenv.Load("somerandomfile") _ = godotenv.Load("filenumberone.env", "filenumbertwo.env") ``` If you want to be really fancy with your env file you can do comments and exports (below is a valid env file) ```shell # I am a comment and that is OK SOME_VAR=someval FOO=BAR # comments at line end are OK too export BAR=BAZ ``` Or finally you can do YAML(ish) style ```yaml FOO: bar BAR: baz ``` as a final aside, if you don't want godotenv munging your env you can just get a map back instead ```go var myEnv map[string]string myEnv, err := godotenv.Read() s3Bucket := myEnv["S3_BUCKET"] ``` ### Command Mode Assuming you've installed the command as above and you've got `$GOPATH/bin` in your `$PATH` ``` godotenv -f /some/path/to/.env some_command with some args ``` If you don't specify `-f` it will fall back on the default of loading `.env` in `PWD` ## Contributing Contributions are most welcome! The parser itself is pretty stupidly naive and I wouldn't be surprised if it breaks with edge cases. *code changes without tests will not be accepted* 1. Fork it 2. Create your feature branch (`git checkout -b my-new-feature`) 3. Commit your changes (`git commit -am 'Added some feature'`) 4. Push to the branch (`git push origin my-new-feature`) 5. Create new Pull Request ## CI Linux: [![wercker status](https://app.wercker.com/status/507594c2ec7e60f19403a568dfea0f78/m "wercker status")](https://app.wercker.com/project/bykey/507594c2ec7e60f19403a568dfea0f78) Windows: [![Build status](https://ci.appveyor.com/api/projects/status/9v40vnfvvgde64u4)](https://ci.appveyor.com/project/joho/godotenv) ## Who? The original library [dotenv](https://github.com/bkeepers/dotenv) was written by [Brandon Keepers](http://opensoul.org/), and this port was done by [John Barton](http://whoisjohnbarton.com) based off the tests/fixtures in the original library.