flutter_dotenv 5.1.0 flutter_dotenv: ^5.1.0 copied to clipboard
Easily configure any flutter application with global variables using a `.env` file.
flutter_dotenv #
Load configuration at runtime from a .env
file which can be used throughout the application.
The twelve-factor app stores config in environment variables (often shortened to env vars or env). Env vars are easy to change between deploys without changing any code... they are a language- and OS-agnostic standard.
About #
This library is a fork of mockturtl/dotenv dart library, initially with slight changes to make it work with flutter.
An environment is the set of variables known to a process (say, PATH
, PORT
, ...).
It is desirable to mimic the production environment during development (testing,
staging, ...) by reading these values from a file.
This library parses that file and merges its values with the built-in
Platform.environment
map.
Usage #
- Create a
.env
file in the root of your project with the example content:
FOO=foo
BAR=bar
FOOBAR=$FOO$BAR
ESCAPED_DOLLAR_SIGN='$1000'
# This is a comment
Note: If deploying to web server, ensure that the config file is uploaded and not ignored. (Whitelist the config file on the server, or name the config file without a leading
.
)
- Add the
.env
file to your assets bundle inpubspec.yaml
. Ensure that the path corresponds to the location of the .env file!
assets:
- .env
- Remember to add the
.env
file as an entry in your.gitignore
if it isn't already unless you want it included in your version control.
*.env
- Load the
.env
file inmain.dart
. Note thatflutter_dotenv >=5.0.0
has a slightly different syntax for consuming the DotEnv data.
v5.0.0 and later
import 'package:flutter_dotenv/flutter_dotenv.dart';
// DotEnv dotenv = DotEnv() is automatically called during import.
// If you want to load multiple dotenv files or name your dotenv object differently, you can do the following and import the singleton into the relavant files:
// DotEnv another_dotenv = DotEnv()
Future main() async {
// To load the .env file contents into dotenv.
// NOTE: fileName defaults to .env and can be omitted in this case.
// Ensure that the filename corresponds to the path in step 1 and 2.
await dotenv.load(fileName: ".env");
//...runapp
}
You can then access variables from .env
throughout the application
import 'package:flutter_dotenv/flutter_dotenv.dart';
dotenv.env['VAR_NAME'];
Before v5.0.0
import 'package:flutter_dotenv/flutter_dotenv.dart' as DotEnv;
Future main() async {
await DotEnv.load(fileName: ".env");
//...runapp
}
Access env using:
import 'package:flutter_dotenv/flutter_dotenv.dart';
env['VAR_NAME'];
Optionally you could map env
after load to a config model to access a config with types.
Advanced usage #
Refer to the test/dotenv_test.dart
file for a better idea of the behaviour of the .env
parser.
Referencing #
You can reference variables defined above other within .env
:
FOO=foo
BAR=bar
FOOBAR=$FOO$BAR
You can escape referencing by wrapping the value in single quotes:
ESCAPED_DOLLAR_SIGN='$1000'
Merging #
You can merge a map into the environment on load:
await DotEnv.load(mergeWith: { "FOO": "foo", "BAR": "bar"});
You can also reference these merged variables within .env
:
FOOBAR=$FOO$BAR
Using in tests #
There is a testLoad
method that can be used to load a static set of variables for testing.
// Loading from a static string.
dotenv.testLoad(fileInput: '''FOO=foo
BAR=bar
''');
// Loading from a file synchronously.
dotenv.testLoad(fileInput: File('test/.env').readAsStringSync());
Null safety #
To avoid null-safety checks for variables that are known to exist, there is a get()
method that
will throw an exception if the variable is undefined. You can also specify a default fallback
value for when the variable is undefined in the .env file.
Future<void> main() async {
await dotenv.load();
String foo = dotenv.get('VAR_NAME');
// Or with fallback.
String bar = dotenv.get('MISSING_VAR_NAME', fallback: 'sane-default');
// This would return null.
String? baz = dotenv.maybeGet('MISSING_VAR_NAME', fallback: null);
}
Usage with Platform Environment #
The Platform.environment map can be merged into the env:
// For example using Platform.environment that contains a CLIENT_ID entry
await DotEnv.load(mergeWith: Platform.environment);
print(env["CLIENT_ID"]);
Like other merged entries described above, .env
entries can reference these merged Platform.Environment entries if required:
CLIENT_URL=https://$CLIENT_ID.dev.domain.com
Discussion #
Use the issue tracker for bug reports and feature requests.
Pull requests are welcome.
Prior art #
- mockturtl/dotenv (dart)
- bkeepers/dotenv (ruby)
- motdotla/dotenv (node)
- theskumar/python-dotenv (python)
- joho/godotenv (go)
- slapresta/rust-dotenv (rust)
- chandu/dotenv (c#)
- tpope/lein-dotenv, rentpath/clj-dotenv (clojure)
- mefellows/sbt-dotenv (scala)
- greenspun/dotenv (half of common lisp)