ENVied
A cleaner way to handle your environment variables in Dart/Flutter.
(GREATLY inspired by Envify)
Table of Contents
Overview
Using a .env file such as:
KEY=VALUE
or system environment variables such as:
export VAR=test
and a dart class:
import 'package:envied_flutter/envied.dart';
part 'env.g.dart'
@Envied()
abstract class Env {
@EnviedField(varName: 'KEY')
static const key = _Env.key;
}
Envied will generate the part file which contains the values from your .env file using build_runner
You can then use the Env class to access your environment variable:
print(Env.key); // "VALUE"
Install
Add both envied and envied_generator as dependencies,
If you are using creating a Flutter project:
$ flutter pub add envied
$ flutter pub add --dev envied_generator
$ flutter pub add --dev build_runner
If you are using creating a Dart project:
$ dart pub add envied
$ dart pub add --dev envied_generator
$ dart pub add --dev build_runner
This installs three packages:
- build_runner, the tool to run code-generators
- envied_generator, the code generator
- envied, a package containing the annotations.
Usage
Add a .env file at the root of the project. The name of this file can be specified in your Envied class if you call it something else such as .env.dev.
KEY1=VALUE1
KEY2=VALUE2
Create a class to ingest the environment variables (lib/env/env.dart). Add the annotations for Envied on the class and EnviedField for any environment variables you want to be pulled from your .env file.
IMPORTANT! Add both
.envandenv.g.dartfiles to your.gitignorefile, otherwise, you might expose your environment variables.
// lib/env/env.dart
import 'package:envied_flutter/envied.dart';
part 'env.g.dart';
@Envied(path: '.env.dev')
abstract class Env {
@EnviedField(varName: 'KEY1')
static const key1 = _Env.key1;
@EnviedField()
static const KEY2 = _Env.KEY2;
@EnviedField(defaultValue: 'test_')
static const key3 = _Env.key3;
}
Then run the generator:
# dart
dart run build_runner build
# flutter
flutter pub run build_runner build
You can then use the Env class to access your environment variables:
print(Env.key1); // "VALUE1"
print(Env.KEY2); // "VALUE2"
Obfuscation
Add the ofuscate flag to EnviedField
@EnviedField(obfuscate: true)
License
MIT © Peter Cinibulk