A .env parser/loader improved for performance. Poncho Icon by lastspark from Noun Project.
Add this to your application's shard.yml
:
dependencies:
poncho:
github: icyleaf/poncho
Add your application configuration to your .env
file in the root of your project:
MYSQL_HOST=localhost
MYSQL_PORT=3306
MYSQL_DATABASE=poncho
MYSQL_USER=poncho
MYSQL_PASSWORD=74e10b72-33b1-434b-a476-cfee0faa7d75
Now you can parse or load it.
Poncho parses the contents of your file containing environment variables is available to use.
It accepts a String or IO and will return an Hash
with the parsed keys and values.
Poncho parser currently supports the following rules:
- Skipped the empty line and comment(
#
). - Ignore the comment which after (
#
). ENV=development
becomes{"ENV" => "development"}
.- Snakecase and upcase the key:
dbName
becomesDB_NAME
,DB_NAME
becomesDB_NAME
- Support variables in value.
$NAME
or${NAME}
. - Whitespace is removed from both ends of the value.
NAME = foo
becomes{"NAME" => "foo"}
- New lines are expanded if in double quotes.
MULTILINE="new\nline"
becomes{"MULTILINE" => "new\nline"}
- Inner quotes are maintained (such like
Hash
/JSON
).JSON={"foo":"bar"}
becomes{"JSON" => "{\"foo\":\"bar\"}"}
- Empty values become empty strings.
- Single and double quoted values are escaped.
- Overwrite optional (default is non-overwrite).
- Support variables in value.
WELCOME="hello $NAME"
becomes{"WELCOME" => "hello foo"}
By default, Poncho won't overwrite existing environment variables as dotenv assumes the deployment environment
has more knowledge about configuration than the application does.
To overwrite existing environment variables you can use Poncho.parse!(string_or_io)
/
Poncho.from_file(file, overwrite: true)
and Poncho.parse(string_or_io, overwrite: true)
.
require "poncho"
# Or only import parser
require "poncho/parser"
poncho = Poncho.from_file ".env"
# or
poncho = Poncho.parse("ENV=development\nENV=production")
poncho["ENV"] # => "development"
# Overwrite value with exists key
poncho = Poncho.parse!("ENV=development\nENV=production")
poncho["ENV"] # => "production"
Poncho loads the environment file is easy to use, based on parser above.
It accepts both single file (or path) and multiple files.
Poncho loads single file supports the following order with environment name (default is development
):
.env
- The Original®.env.development
- Environment-specific settings..env.local
- Local overrides. This file is loaded for all environments excepttest
..env.development.local
- Local overrides of environment-specific settings.
NO effect with multiple files, it only loads the given files.
By default, Poncho won't overwrite existing environment variables as dotenv assumes the deployment environment
has more knowledge about configuration than the application does.
To overwrite existing environment variables you can use Poncho.load!(*files)
or Poncho.load(*files, overwrite: true)
.
require "poncho"
# Or only import loader
require "poncho/loader"
# Load singe file
# Searching order: .env.development, .env.local, .env.development.local
Poncho.load ".env"
# Load from path
Poncho.load "config/"
# Load production file
# Searching order: .env, .env.production, .env.local, .env.production.local
Poncho.load ".env", env: "production"
# Load multiple files and overwrite value with exists key
# note: ignore enviroment name.
# Searching order: .env, .env.local
Poncho.load! ".env", ".env.local", env: "test"
Totem is here to help with that. Poncho was built-in to Totem to better with configuration. Configuration file formats is always the problem, you want to focus on building awesome things.
Your contributions are always welcome! Please submit a pull request or create an issue to add a new question, bug or feature to the list.
All Contributors are on the wall.
- halite - Crystal HTTP Requests Client with a chainable REST API, built-in sessions and middlewares.
- totem - Load and parse a configuration file or string in JSON, YAML, dotenv formats.
- markd - Yet another markdown parser built for speed, Compliant to CommonMark specification.
- popcorn - Easy and Safe casting from one type to another.
- fast-crystal - 💨 Writing Fast Crystal 😍 -- Collect Common Crystal idioms.
MIT License © icyleaf