Automatically keep env.sample
files in sync with .env
ess
transforms environment files containing secrets (e.g. .env
, .envrc
) into sample environment files (e.g.
env.sample
) that may be safely checked into git.
ess
may be run manually by running the cli executable, or automatically by installing the pre-commit hook with ess install
in any git repository. Installing ess
as a git hook ensures that project environment files are automatically and safely
revision controlled when they change.
Doing so allows environment configurations to be shared across teams without leaking secrets.
By default, ess
checks the local directory for environment files named .env
. The env file name is controlled by
the --env-file
switch. Next, the environment file is parsed for environment variables. Environment variables
may be of the following forms:
# Standard environment variables
FOO=bar baz
FOO="bar baz"
FOO='bar baz'
# Envrc environment variable
export FOO=bar baz
export FOO="bar baz"
export FOO='bar baz'
By default, variable values are replaced with innert values named after the variable, e.g. FOO=bar
is replaced by FOO=<FOO>
.
Example values may be provided with the --example
switch, e.g. --exmaple=FOO="enter your foo here"
will set FOO
's
value as follows FOO="enter your foo here"
in the sample file.
Finally, when all variables are replaced, the sample file is written with the sanitized variable values, along with all
non-variable strings from the file. By default the sample file is named env.sample
, which is controlled by the --env-sample
switch.
Because ess
permits non-variable strings in environment files, it means that both comments and script code (in the case
of .envrc
files) is included in environment sample files. This allows environment files to not only be checked into git, but
documented with comments.
ess
can be run in three ways:
- Manually
- As a native git-hook
- As a pre-commit plugin (a utility for organizing pre-commit hooks)
Installation is required to run ess
manually, or as a native git hook. See [pre-commit configuration]
(#running-as-a-pre-commit-plugin) for pre-commit usage.
Install from the releases page
Download the latest release and add it to your $PATH
.
Install with go install
go install github.com/acaloiaro/ess@latest
Nix Flake
This application may be added as a flake input
flake.nix
inputs.ess = {
url = "github:acaloiaro/ess";
inputs.nixpkgs.follows = "nixpkgs";
};
configuration.nix
users.users.<USERNAME>.packages = [
...
inputs.ess.packages.${system}.default
];
Or simply run directly
nix run github:acaloiaro/ess
ess
can be run with no arguments to use defaults.
Sync .env
with env.sample
ess
With a non-default .env
and env.sample
location
ess --env-file=.env-file-name --sample-file=env-sample-file-name
Provide example values for variables
By default, ess
uses the name of environment variables in <brackets>
as example values in env.sample
,
e.g. FOO=secret value
is replaced with FOO=<FOO>
. This behavior is customizable wit the --example
flag.
Add custom examples for variables FOO
and BAR
.
ess --example=FOO="must be a valid UUID" --example=BAR="bars must be a positive integer"
The above invocation yields the following env.sample
FOO=must be a valid UUID
BAR=bars must be a positive integer
To add ess
as a pre-commit git hook in a git repository, run:
ess install
This installs ess
as a pre-commit git hook with default arguments.
The install
command supports all command flags.
If you need to change ess
flags, simply run ess install
again with the desired flags and
choose the overwrite [o] option when prompted what to do with the existing pre-commit hook.
This utility can be used as a pre-commit plugin
cat <<EOF > .pre-commit-config.yaml
repos:
- repo: https://github.com/acaloiaro/ess.git
rev: v2.14.1
hooks:
- id: ess
EOF
pre-commit install
git add .pre-commit-config.yaml
See pre-commit configuration examples for additional pre-commit documentation.
It's important to document the environment variables required to run applications, both in production and development. A
great way to do so is with env.sample
files, but sample files tend to get out of date very quickly.
For example, let's say you're adding a new feature to your application, and it requires the variable FOO
to be set.
While you're developing locally, you likely have a .env
file that looks something like:
APPLICATION_SECRET=supersekrit
# I got this FOO from the detailed process documented at: http:://wiki.example.com/how_to_get_a_foo
FOO="My super secret value for foo"
Working on large teams, it's common to share these .env
files somewhere secure where all developers have access to
them. Retrieval is often integrated into application startup and/or bootstrap processes.
But working on open source projects or teams with less trust and less shared infrastructure, it's more common to share
an env.sample
. ess
automatically keeps the sample file in sync with .env
, so you don't have to. Your
.env
file stays the same, and is automatically converted to the following env.sample
:
APPLICATION_SECRET=<APPLICATION_SECRET>
# I got this FOO from the detailed process documented at: http:://wiki.example.com/how_to_get_a_foo
FOO=<FOO>
It's even possible to provide default/example values for every environment variables with the --example
flag.
Name | Description | Example | Default |
---|---|---|---|
--env-file |
The name of the environment file | --env-file=.secrets |
--env-file=.env |
--debug |
Enable debugging | --debug |
false |
--skip-git-add |
Skip performing git add after syncing |
--skip-git-add |
false |
--sample-file |
The name of the sample environment file | --sample-file=secrets.example |
--sample-file=env.sample |
--example |
Provide examples for specific environment variables | --example=FOO="Example FOO" --example=BAR="Example BAR" |
--example=VAR=<VAR> |
repos:
- repo: https://github.com/acaloiaro/ess.git
rev: v2.14.1
hooks:
- id: ess
repos:
- repo: https://github.com/acaloiaro/ess.git
rev: v2.14.1
hooks:
- id: ess
args: ['--env-file=.env_file', '--sample-file=env_file.sample']
Sometimes environment variables need to conform to specific formats, and it's necessary to provide better documentation.
For this reason, environment variable examples may be provided in lieu of the default behavior, which is to use the
environment variable name surrounded by <brackets like this>
in sample files.
repos:
- repo: https://github.com/acaloiaro/ess.git
rev: v2.14.1
hooks:
- id: ess
args: [--example=FOO="Provide your foo here", --example=BAR="You can fetch bars from https://example.com/bars"]
Example environment file
.env
FOO=the_value_of_my_secret_foo
BAR=the_value_of_my_secret_bar
Example sample file output
env.sample
FOO=Provide your foo here
BAR=You can fetch bars from https://example.com/bars