env

Env is an improved application configuration reader for Elixir.


License
Apache-2.0

Documentation

Env

Env is an improved application configuration reader for Elixir.

Env allows you to access easily the configuration of your application similar to what Application.get_env/3 does, but understands the {:system, "NAME"} convention of using system environment variables in application configuration.

When Env initially retrieves the configuration it will walk recursively any keyword lists and properly replace any occurrences of: {:system, "NAME"} or {:system, "NAME", default} with value extracted from the environment using System.get_env("NAME").

When a tuple without default value is used, but the environment variable is not set an exception will be raised.

Result of any lookups (both successful and not) is cached in an ETS table - the same mechanism that the Erlang VM uses internally for storing regular application configuration. This guarantees that subsequent lookups are as fast as are those using functions from Application module.

When you expect the configuration to change, you can use Env.refresh/3 to read the value again ignoring the cache or Env.clear/1 and Env.clear/2 in order to clear the cache.

WARNING: because Env uses ETS table to store it's cache it is not available at compile-time. When you need some compile-time configuration using regular Application.get_env/3 is probably the best option. This should not be a huge problem in practice, because configuration should be moved as much as possible to the runtime, allowing for easy changes, which is not possible with compile-time settings.

Installation

The package can be installed as:

  1. Add env to your list of dependencies in mix.exs:

    def deps do
      [{:env, "~> 0.1"}]
    end
    
  2. Ensure env is started before your application:

    def application do
      [applications: [:env]]
    end
    

Example

With configuration in config/config.exs as follows:

config :my_app, :key,
  enable_server: true,
  host: [port: {:system, "PORT", 80}],
  secret_key_base: {:system, "SECRET_KEY_BASE"}

And environment where PORT is not set, while SECRET_KEY_BASE has value foo

You can access it with Env using:

Env.fetch!(:my_app, :key)
[enable_server: true, host: [port: 80], secret_key_base: "foo"]

Transformer

All functions used for accessing the environment accept a :transformer option. This function can be used to parse any configuration read from system environment - all values access from the environment are strings. A binary function passes as the :transformer will receive path for the current key as the first argument, and the value from the environment as the second one. Using the example from above, we could use that mechanism to force port to always be an integer:

transformer = fn
  [:key, :host, :port], value -> String.to_integer(value)
  _,                    value -> value
end

And pass it to one of the reader functions:

Env.fetch(:my_app, :key, transformer: transformer)
{:ok, [enable_server: true, host: [port: 80], secret_key_base: "foo"]}

License

Copyright 2016 Michał Muskała

Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at

http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0

Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations under the License.