Envalid
THIS IS A FORK OF ENVALID FOR OLDER VERSIONS OF NODE. SEE https://www.npmjs.com/package/envalid FOR OFFICIAL CURRENT VERSION
Envalid is a small library for validating and accessing environment variables in Node.js (v6.0 or later) programs, aiming to:
- ensure that your program only runs when all of its environment dependencies are met
- give you executable documentation about the environment your program expects to run in
- give you an immutable API for your environment variables, so they don't change from under you while the program is running
API
envalid.cleanEnv(environment, validators, options)
cleanEnv() returns a sanitized, immutable environment object, and accepts three
positional arguments:
- environment- An object containing your env vars (eg.- process.env)
- validators- An object that specifies the format of required vars.
- options- An (optional) object, which supports the following keys:- strict- (default:- false) Enable more rigorous behavior. See "Strict Mode" below
- reporter- Pass in a function to override the default error handling and- console output. See `lib/reporter.js` for the default implementation.
- transformer- A function used to transform the cleaned environment object- before it is returned from `cleanEnv`
- dotEnvPath- (default:- '.env') Path to the file that is parsed by- [dotenv](https://github.com/motdotla/dotenv) to optionally load more env vars at runtime. Pass `null` if you want to skip `dotenv` processing entirely and only load from `process.env`.
 
By default, cleanEnv() will log an error message and exit if any required
env vars are missing or invalid.
const envalid = require('envalid')
const { str, email, json } = envalid
const env = envalid.cleanEnv(process.env, {
    API_KEY:            str(),
    ADMIN_EMAIL:        email({ default: 'admin@example.com' }),
    EMAIL_CONFIG_JSON:  json({ desc: 'Additional email parameters' })
})
// Read an environment variable, which is validated and cleaned during
// and/or filtering that you specified with cleanEnv().
env.ADMIN_EMAIL     // -> 'admin@example.com'
// Envalid parses NODE_ENV automatically, and provides the following
// shortcut (boolean) properties for checking its value:
env.isProduction    // true if NODE_ENV === 'production'
env.isTest          // true if NODE_ENV === 'test'
env.isDev           // true if NODE_ENV === 'development'For an example you can play with, clone this repo and see the example/ directory.
Validator types
Node's process.env only stores strings, but sometimes you want to retrieve other types
(booleans, numbers), or validate that an env var is in a specific format (JSON,
url, email address). To these ends, the following validation functions are available:
- str()- Passes string values through, will ensure an value is present unless a- `default` value is given. Note that an empty string is considered a valid value - if this is undesirable you can easily create your own validator (see below)
- bool()- Parses env var strings- "0", "1", "true", "false", "t", "f"into booleans
- num()- Parses an env var (eg.- "42", "0.23", "1e5") into a Number
- email()- Ensures an env var is an email address
- host()- Ensures an env var is either a domain name or an ip address (v4 or v6)
- port()- Ensures an env var is a TCP port (1-65535)
- url()- Ensures an env var is a url with a protocol and hostname
- json()- Parses an env var with- JSON.parse
Each validation function accepts an (optional) object with the following attributes:
- choices- An Array that lists the admissable parsed values for the env var.
- default- A fallback value, which will be used if the env var wasn't specified.- Providing a default effectively makes the env var optional.
- devDefault- A fallback value to use only when- NODE_ENVis not- 'production'. This is handy- for env vars that are required for production environments, but optional for development and testing.
- desc- A string that describes the env var.
- example- An example value for the env var.
- docs- A url that leads to more detailed documentation about the env var.
Custom validators
You can easily create your own validator functions with envalid.makeValidator(). It takes
a function as its only parameter, and should either return a cleaned value, or throw if the
input is unacceptable:
const { makeValidator, cleanEnv } = require('envalid')
const twochars = makeValidator(x => {
    if (/^[A-Za-z]{2}$/.test(x)) return x.toUpperCase()
    else throw new Error('Expected two letters')
})
const env = cleanEnv(process.env, {
    INITIALS: twochars()
});You can, and should, also provide a type with your validator. This can be exposed by tools
to help other developers better understand you configuration options.
To add it, pass a string with the name as the second argument to makeValidator.
const { makeValidator } = require('envalid')
const twochars = makeValidator(x => {
    if (/^[A-Za-z]{2}$/.test(x)) return x.toUpperCase()
    else throw new Error('Expected two letters')
}, 'twochars')Error Reporting
By default, if any required environment variables are missing or have invalid
values, envalid will log a message and call process.exit(1). You can override
this behavior by passing in your own function as options.reporter. For example:
const env = cleanEnv(process.env, myValidators, {
    reporter: ({ errors, env }) => {
        emailSiteAdmins('Invalid env vars: ' + Object.keys(errors))
    }
})Strict mode
By passing the { strict: true } option, envalid gives you extra tight guarantees
about the cleaned env object:
- The env object will only contain the env vars that were specified by your validators.
- Any attempt to access an invalid/missing property on the env object will cause a thrown error.
- Any attempt to mutate the cleaned env object will cause a thrown error.
.env File Support
Envalid wraps the very handy dotenv package,
so if you have a .env file in your project, envalid will read and validate the
env vars from that file as well.
Usage within React Native
Envalid can be used within React Native with a custom reporter. Also the usage of dotenv must be disabled by setting options.dotEnvPath to null.
Instead of dotenv react-native-config can be used to read the configuration.
Example:
const reactNativeConfig = require('react-native-config')
const rawConfig = reactNativeConfig.default
const validatedConfig = envalid.cleanEnv(
  rawConfig,
  {
    // validators
  },
  {
    dotEnvPath: null,
    reporter: ({ errors = {}, env = {} }) => {
      // handle errors
    },
  },
)Utils
testOnly
A helper function called testOnly is available, in case you need an default env var only when
NODE_ENV=test. It should be used along with devDefault, for example:
const env = cleanEnv(process.env, {
  SOME_VAR: envalid.str({devDefault: testOnly('myTestValue')})
})For more context see this issue.