Command-line tool to read
.env
files and execute scripts/commands after loading those environment variables
- Uses
dotenv
under the hood - Easy to configure
- Flexible command to execute
- Let's you override existing environment variables
I recommend installing this module as a devDependency
for the respective project.
Install via yarn
:
yarn add node-env-run --dev
Install via npm
:
npm install node-env-run --save-dev
You can alternatively install the module globally if you want to:
npm install node-env-run --global
Add a new scripts entry to your package.json
. Example:
{
"scripts": {
"dev": "nodenv .",
"test": "nodenv -E test/.env test/test.js"
}
}
Or use it with npx
:
npx node-env-run .
This module uses under the hood the dotenv
module to parse the .env
file. For more information about how to structure your .env
file, please refer to its documentation.
Start up the main
file in package.json
with the enviornment variables from .env
:
nodenv .
More examples:
Start Node.js REPL with set environment variables from .env.repl
:
nodenv -E .env.repl
Run Python file with overridden environment variables:
nodenv app.py --exec python --force
Run server.js
file using nodemon
:
nodenv server.js --exec nodemon
Pass --inspect
flag for debugging after --
:
nodenv someScript -- --inspect
You can pass node-env-run
a variety of arguments. These are the currently supported arguments:
Flag | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
--encoding |
string |
Lets you specify the encoding of the .env file. Defaults to utf8 encoding. |
--env or -E |
string |
Specifies the path to the .env file that should be read |
--exec or -e |
string |
This lets you specify a command other than node to execute the script with. More in the next section. |
--force or -f |
boolean |
Flag to temporarily override existing environment variables with the ones in the .env file |
--help |
boolean |
Displays the usage/help instructions |
--verbose |
boolean |
Flag to enable more verbose logging |
--version |
boolean |
Displays the current version of the package |
You can use node-env-run
with other executables. This is particularly useful if you try to combine it with things like babel-node
or ts-node
:
nodenv index.ts --exec "ts-node"
However, you can also use it with completely unrelated executables such as python:
nodenv app.py --exec python
If you want to pass additional flags/arguments to the script you are executing using node-env-run
, you can use the empty --
argument and follow it with any arguments you'd want to pass. For example:
nodenv index.js --exec "ts-node" -- --log-level debug
--log-level debug
will be passed to index.js
.
If you want to do the same with a REPL like node or python you'll have to specify REPL
explictly, due to some parsing behavior of yargs. For example:
nodenv REPL --exec node -- -e "console.log('hello world!')"
Using quotes for escaping special characters should generally work out of the box. However, there is one edge case if you are trying to use double quotes ("
) inside and want to preserve it. In that case you'll have to double escape it due to some inner workings of Node.js. For example:
nodenv REPL --exec echo -- 'A common greeting is "Hello World"'
# outputs: A common greeting is Hello World
nodenv REPL --exec echo -- 'A common greeting is \"Hello World\"'
# outputs: A common greeting is "Hello World"
Similarly if you want to avoid variables to be interpolated you'll have to escape the $
separately. For example:
nodenv REPL --exec echo -- '$PATH'
# outputs your actual values stored in $PATH
nodenv REPL --exec echo -- '\$PATH'
# outputs: $PATH
Dominik Kundel 💻 |
---|
MIT