The Skogsrå was a mythical creature of the forest that appears in the form of a small, beautiful woman with a seemingly friendly temperament. However, those who are enticed into following her into the forest are never seen again.
This library attempts to improve the use of OS environment variables for application configuration:
- Variable defaults.
- Automatic type casting of values.
- Automatic docs and spec generation.
- OS environment template generation.
- Posibility to override Elixir configuration.
- Runtime reloading.
- Setting variable's values at runtime.
- Fast cached values access by using
:persistent_term
as temporal storage. - Custom variable bindings.
- YAML and JSON configuration providers for Elixir releases.
You would create a config module e.g:
defmodule MyApp.Config do
use Skogsra
@envdoc "My hostname"
app_env :my_hostname, :myapp, :hostname,
default: "localhost",
env_overrides: [
prod: [default: "example.com"]
]
end
Calling MyApp.Config.my_hostname()
will retrieve the value for the
hostname in the following order:
- From the OS environment variable
$MYAPP_HOSTNAME
(can be overriden by the optionos_env
). - From the configuration file e.g:
config :myapp, hostname: "my.custom.host"
- From the default value if it exists. In this case, it would return
"localhost"
for all environments exceptprod
. Forprod
, it will returnexample.com
.
There are several options for configuring an environment variables:
Option | Type | Default | Description |
---|---|---|---|
default |
any |
nil |
Sets the Default value for the variable. |
type |
Skogsra.Env.type() |
:any |
Sets the explicit type for the variable. |
os_env |
binary |
autogenerated | Overrides automatically generated OS environment variable name. |
binding_order |
Skogra.Env.bindings() |
[:system, :config] |
Sets the load order for variable binding. |
binding_skip |
Skogra.Env.bindings() |
[] |
Which variable bindings should be skipped. |
required |
boolean |
false |
Whether the variable is required or not. |
cached |
boolean |
true |
Whether the variable should be cached or not. |
env_overrides |
keyword |
[] |
Overrides default and required properties for a specific environment. |
IMPORTANT: Options
skip_system: true
andskip_config: true
have been deprecated in favour ofbinding_skip: [:system]
andbinding_skip: [:config]
respectively.
Additional topics:
- Types
- Automatic type casting.
- Explicit type casting.
- Custom types.
- Explicit OS environment variable names.
- Required variables.
- Overriding Elixir Configuration.
- Overriding Environment Configuration.
- Caching variables.
- Handling different environments.
- Setting and reloading variables.
- Automatic docs generation.
- Automatic spec generation.
- Automatic template generation.
- Custom variable bindings.
- Elixir release YAML and JSON config providers.
- Using with Hab.
- Installation.
Skogsrå implements several built-in types. Some of them can be inferred from the default value while others must be set explicitly:
Type | Can be inferred? | Description |
---|---|---|
:any |
Yes | Any Elixir term. |
:binary |
Yes | A string e.g. "localhost" . |
:integer |
Yes | An integer e.g. 42 . |
:neg_integer |
No | A negative integer. |
:non_neg_integer |
No | A non negative integer. |
:pos_integer |
No | A positive integer. |
:float |
Yes | A float e.g. 42.0 . |
:boolean |
Yes | A boolean e.g. false . |
:atom |
Yes | An atom e.g. :ok . |
:module |
No | An existent module e.g. Enum . |
:unsafe_module |
No | A module e.g. SomeModule . |
Skogsra.Type implementation |
No | See Custom types section. |
If the default
value is set (and no explicit type
is found), the variable
value will be casted as the same type of the default value. For this to work,
the default value should be of the following types:
:any
:binary
:integer
:float
:boolean
:atom
e.g. in the following example, the value will be casted to :atom
automatically:
defmodule MyApp.Config do
use Skogsra
@envdoc "My environment"
app_env :my_environment, :myapp, :environment,
default: :prod
end
If either of the system OS or the application environment variables are defined,
Skogsrå will try to cast their values to the default value's type which it
atom
e.g:
iex(1)> System.get_env("MYAPP_ENVIRONMENT")
"staging"
iex(2)> MyApp.Config.my_environment()
{:ok, :staging}
or
iex(1)> Application.get_env(:myapp, :environment)
"staging"
iex(2)> MyApp.Config.my_environment()
{:ok, :staging}
Note: If the variable is already of the desired type, it won't be casted.
A type can be explicitly set. The available types are the following:
:any
(default).:binary
.:integer
.:neg_integer
.:non_neg_integer
.:pos_integer
.:float
.:boolean
.:atom
.:module
(modules loaded in the system).:unsafe_module
(modules that might or might not be loaded in the system)- A module name with an implementation for the behaviour
Skogsra.Type
.
e.g. in the following example, the value will be casted to :pos_integer
according to the variable definition:
defmodule MyApp.Config do
use Skogsra
@envdoc "Port"
app_env :my_port, :myapp, :port,
default: 4000,
type: :pos_integer
end
If either of the system OS or the application environment variables are defined, Skogsrå will try to cast their values to a positive integer.
iex(1)> System.get_env("MYAPP_PORT")
"42"
iex(2)> MyApp.Config.my_port()
{:ok, 42}
or
iex(1)> Application.get_env(:myapp, :port)
42
iex(2)> MyApp.Config.my_port()
{:ok, 42}
Skogsrå's types can be extented by implementing Skogra.Type
behaviour e.g. a
possible implementation for casting "1, 2, 3, 4"
to [integer()]
would be:
defmodule MyList do
use Skogsra.Type
@impl Skogsra.Type
def cast(value)
def cast(value) when is_binary(value) do
list =
value
|> String.split(~r/,/)
|> Stream.map(&String.trim/1)
|> Enum.map(&String.to_integer/1)
{:ok, list}
end
def cast(value) when is_list(value) do
if Enum.all?(value, &is_integer/1), do: {:ok, value}, else: :error
end
def cast(_) do
:error
end
end
If then we define the following enviroment variable with Skogsrå:
defmodule MyApp.Config do
use Skogsra
app_env :my_integers, :myapp, :integers,
type: MyList
end
If either of the system OS or the application environment variables are defined, Skogsrå will try to cast their values using our implementation e.g:
iex(1)> System.get_env("MYAPP_INTEGERS")
"1, 2, 3"
iex(2)> MyApp.Config.my_integers()
{:ok, [1, 2, 3]}
or
iex(1)> Application.get_env(:myapp, :integers)
[1, 2, 3]
iex(2)> MyApp.Config.my_integers()
{:ok, [1, 2, 3]}
Important: The
default
value is not cast according totype
.
Though Skogsrå automatically generates the names for the OS environment
variables, they can be overriden by using the option os_env
e.g:
defmodule MyApp.Config do
use Skogsra
app_env :db_hostname, :myapp, [:postgres, :hostname],
os_env: "PGHOST"
end
This will override the value $MYAPP_POSTGRES_HOSTNAME
with $PGHOST
e.g:
iex(1)> System.get_env("MYAPP_POSTGRES_HOSTNAME")
"unreachable"
iex(2)> System.get_env("PGHOST")
"reachable"
iex(3)> MyApp.Config.db_hostname()
{:ok, "reachable"}
It is possible to set a environment variable as required with the required
option e.g:
defmodule MyApp.Config do
use Skogsra
@envdoc "My port"
app_env :my_port, :myapp, :port,
required: true
end
If none of the system OS or the application environment variables are defined, Skogsrå will return an error e.g:
iex(1)> System.get_env("MYAPP_PORT")
nil
iex(2)> Application.get_env(:myapp, :port)
nil
iex(3)> MyApp.Config.my_port()
{:error, "Variable port in app myapp is undefined"}
The module will also provide validate
and validate!
functions that can be
used in your application startup phase to verify that all required variables
are present e.g:
iex(1)> System.get_env("MYAPP_PORT")
nil
iex(2)> Application.get_env(:myapp, :port)
nil
iex(3)> MyApp.Config.validate!()
** (RuntimeError) Variable port in app myapp is undefined
If it's necessary to keep several environments, it's possible to use a
namespace
e.g. given the following variable:
defmodule MyApp.Config do
use Skogsra
@envdoc "My port"
app_env :my_port, :myapp, :port,
default: 4000
end
Calling MyApp.Config.my_port(Test)
will retrieve the value for the hostname
in the following order:
- From the OS environment variable
$TEST_MYAPP_PORT
. - From the configuration file e.g:
config :myapp, Test, port: 4001
- From the OS environment variable
$MYAPP_PORT
. - From the configuraton file e.g:
config :myapp, port: 80
- From the default value if it exists. In our example,
4000
.
The ability of loading different environments allows us to do the following with our configuration file:
# file: config/config.exs
use Mix.Config
config :myapp, Prod
port: 80
config :myapp, Test,
port: 4001
config :myapp,
port: 4000
While our Skogsrå module would look like:
defmodule MyApp.Config do
use Skogsra
@envdoc "Application environment"
app_env :env, :myapp, :environment,
type: :unsafe_module
@envdoc "Application port"
app_env :port, :myapp, :port,
default: 4000
end
The we can retrieve the values depending on the value of the OS environment
variable $MYAPP_ENVIRONMENT
:
...
with {:ok, env} <- MyApp.Config.env(),
{:ok, port} <- Myapp.Config.port(env) do
... do something with the port ...
end
...
Not all the libraries will use Skogsrå and, though is a shame, we can always
override a config value using the function preload/0
e.g.
Let's say we have a Phoenix application and we want to configure our endpoint with the following variables.
- The OS environment variable
PORT
for our app's HTTP port. - The OS environment variable
SECRET_KEY_BASE
for our secret key base.
A regular Phoenix configuration will look like the following:
use Mix.Config
secret_key_base =
System.get_env("SECRET_KEY_BASE") ||
raise """
environment variable SECRET_KEY_BASE is missing.
You can generate one by calling: mix phx.gen.secret
"""
config :myapp_web, MyappWeb.Endpoint,
http: [
port: String.to_integer(System.get_env("PORT") || "4000"),
transport_options: [socket_opts: [:inet6]]
],
secret_key_base: secret_key_base
With Skogsrå, we can reduce the config to the following:
use Mix.Config
config :myapp_web, Myapp.Endpoint,
http: [
transport_options: [socket_opts: [:inet6]]
]
Then, handle our variables in our Skogsrå config module:
defmodule MyappWeb.Config do
use Skogsra
@envdoc """
App port.
"""
app_env :port, :myapp, [:http, :port],
os_env: "PORT",
default: 4000
@envdoc """
Secret key base.
"""
app_env :secret_key_base, :myapp, :secret_key_base,
os_env: "SECRET_KEY_BASE",
default: "+/JwMGGtsTVOoX5gQrCMn8aHKfKDdUK8GeAKJ2fIUabUnmWTwg+zsCy4pAOmOdTs"
end
And finally calling the preload function in our application init:
defmodule MyappWeb.Application do
use Application
def start(_type, _args) do
MyappWeb.Config.preload(MyappWeb.Endpoint)
children = [
MyappWeb.Endpoint
]
...
end
end
The function MyappWeb.Config.preload/1
will override any configuration for
MyappWeb.Endpoint
as long as is a runtime config.
Our app now will try to get the port and secret key from the OS environment variables first and it will fallback to the defaults.
Sometimes we need different requirements for different environments (e.g. dev
,
test
, prod
). With Skogsrå you can define both default
and required
attributes for each environment using env_overrides
:
- First searches the environment using
Mix.env()
. - If
Mix
is not present, it tries to get the value from theMIX_ENV
OS environment variable. - Finally, if all fails, defaults to
prod
.
If for certain environment there are no default
and/or required
attributes
defined, then it'll use the global default
and/or required
attributes.
E.g. let's say our database configuration requires username
, password
,
hostname
, port
and database
for dev
and test
environments, but not for
our prod
environment where we use a url
instead. Then we would do the
following:
defmodule Myapp.Config do
use Skogsra
@envdoc "DB username"
app_env :db_username, :myapp, [Myapp.Repo, :username],
env_overrides: [
dev: [default: "postgres"],
test: [default: "postgres"]
]
@envdoc "DB password"
app_env :db_password, :myapp, [Myapp.Repo, :password],
env_overrides: [
dev: [default: "postgres"],
test: [default: "postgres"]
]
@envdoc "DB hostname"
app_env :db_hostname, :myapp, [Myapp.Repo, :hostname],
env_overrides: [
dev: [default: "localhost"],
test: [default: "localhost"]
]
@envdoc "DB port"
app_env :db_port, :myapp, [Myapp.Repo, :port],
env_overrides: [
dev: [default: 5432],
test: [default: 5432]
]
@envdoc "DB name"
app_env :db_name, :myapp, [Myapp.Repo, :database],
env_overrides: [
dev: [default: "myapp_dev"],
test: [default: "myapp_test"]
]
@envdoc "DB URL"
app_env :db_url, :myapp, [Myapp.Repo, :url],
os_env: "DATABASE_URL",
env_overrides: [
prod: [required: true]
]
end
Both dev
and test
environments have default values for the username
,
password
, hostname
, port
and database
configuration variables while
the url
value is nil
by default.
However, for prod
enviroment, there are no defaults and all of them are
actually nil
. Instead, prod
requires for the url
to be defined and it
doesn't provide any default
value.
If the OS environment variable DATABASE_URL
is not defined and the following
is called before our application start:
Myapp.Config.preload()
Myapp.Config.validate()
then our application will fail to start on prod
environment, but not for dev
or test
.
By default, Skogsrå caches the values of the variables using
:persistent_term
Erlang module. This makes reads very fast, but writes are
very slow.
So avoid setting or reloading values to avoid performance issues (see Setting and reloading variables).
If you don't want to cache the values, you can set it to false
:
defmodule MyApp.Config do
use Skogsra
app_env :value, :myapp, :value,
cached: false
end
Every variable definition will generate two additional functions for setting and reloading the values e.g:
defmodule MyApp.Config do
use Skogsra
@envdoc "My port"
app_env :my_port, :myapp, :port,
default: 4000
end
will have the functions:
MyApp.Config.put_my_port/1
for setting the value of the variable at runtime.MyApp.Config.reload_my_port/
for reloading the value of the variable at runtime.
It's possible to document a configuration variables using the module attribute
@envdoc
e.g:
defmodule MyApp.Config do
use Skogsra
@envdoc "My port"
app_env :my_port, :myapp, :port,
default: 4000
end
Skogsra then will automatically generate instructions on how to use the variable. This extra documentation can be disable with the following:
config :skogsra,
generate_docs: false
Note: for "private" configuration variables you can use
@envdoc false
.
Skogsra will try to generate the appropriate spec for every function generated. In our example, given the default value is an integer, the function spec will be the following:
@spec my_port() :: {:ok, integer()} | {:error, binary()}
@spec my_port(Skogsra.Env.namespace()) ::
{:ok, integer()} | {:error, binary()}
Note: The same applies for
my_port!/0
,reload_my_port/0
andput_my_port/1
.
Specs are generated following the following table:
Assuming the type is set to :integer
explicitly (type: :integer
) or
implicitly (default: 4000
), the specs should follow the following table:
Required | Has default | Spec |
---|---|---|
true |
true |
@spec my_port() :: {:ok, integer()} | {:error, binary()} |
true |
false |
@spec my_port() :: {:ok, integer()} | {:error, binary()} |
false |
true |
@spec my_port() :: {:ok, integer()} | {:error, binary()} |
false |
false |
@spec my_port() :: {:ok, nil | integer()} | {:error, binary()} |
Every Skogsra module includes the functions template/1
and template/2
for
generating OS environment variable files e.g. continuing our example:
defmodule MyApp.Config do
use Skogsra
@envdoc "My port"
app_env :my_port, :myapp, :port,
default: 4000
end
-
For Elixir releases:
iex(1)> Myapp.Config.template("env") :ok
will generate the file
env
with the following contents:# DOCS My port # TYPE integer MYAPP_PORT="Elixir.Application"
-
For Unix:
iex(1)> Myapp.Config.template("env", type: :unix) :ok
will generate the file
env
with the following contents:# DOCS My port # TYPE integer export MYAPP_PORT='Elixir.Application'
-
For Windows:
iex(1)> Myapp.Config.template("env.bat", type: :windows) :ok
will generate the file
env.bat
with the following contents::: DOCS My port :: TYPE integer SET MYAPP_PORT="Elixir.Application"
By default, Skogsrå loads variables in the following order:
- OS environment variables or
:system
. - Application configuratuon or
:config
.
This means that every variable has the following defaults:
- For
binding_order
is[:system, :config]
. - For
binding_skip
is[]
.
These two values can be modified globally via configuration e.g:
-
For globally changing the variable binding order:
config :skogsra, binding_order: [:config, :system]
-
For globally skipping
:system
:config :skogsra, binding_skip: [:system]
Or be modified per app_env
e.g:
-
For changing
MyApp.Config.my_port/0
binding order:defmodule MyApp.Config do use Skogsra @envdoc "My port" app_env :my_port, :myapp, :port, binding_order: [:config, :system] end
-
For skipping
:system
inMyApp.Config.my_port/0
:defmodule MyApp.Config do use Skogsra @envdoc "My port" app_env :my_port, :myapp, :port, binding_skip: [:system] end
Additionally, we can create new variable bindings by implementing
Skogsra.Binding
behaviour e.g. an implementation for loading JSON
configuration files would be:
defmodule MyApp.Json do
use Skogsra.Binding
alias Skogsra.Env
@impl true
def init(%Env{} = env) do
options = Env.extra_options(env)
case options[:config_path] do
nil ->
{:error, "JSON config path not specified"}
path ->
load(path)
end
end
@impl true
def get_env(%Env{} = env, config) when is_map(config) do
name = Env.os_env(env)
value = config[name]
{:ok, value}
end
# Helpers
# Loads JSON once and caches it in a :persistent_term using the path
# as the key.
@spec load(binary()) :: {:ok, map()} | {:error, term()}
defp load(path) do
with nil <- :persistent_term.get(path, nil),
{:ok, contents} <- File.read(path),
{:ok, config} <- Jason.decode(contents),
:ok <- :persistent_term.put(path, config) do
{:ok, config}
else
{:error, reason} ->
{:error, "Cannot load #{path} due to #{inspect(reason)}"}
config ->
{:ok, config}
end
end
end
The previous implementation expects variables to be named the same as the OS environment variables e.g:
{
"MYAPP_PORT": 5000
}
Then our variable declaration would look something like the following:
defmodule MyApp.Config do
use Skogsra
@envdoc "My port"
app_env :my_port, :myapp, :port,
binding_order: [:system, :config, MyApp.Json],
config_path: "#{Path.cwd!()}/priv/config.json",
default: 4000
end
If no :system
or :config
is found, it will try to load the variable from
the JSON file e.g:
iex> MyApp.Config.port()
{:ok, 5000}
Note: The same casting rules apply for all bindings.
Skogsrå includes two simple configuration providers compatible with
mix release
for Elixir ≥ 1.9:
-
YAML configuration provider:
- app: "my_app" # Name of the application. module: "MyApp.Repo" # Optional module/namespace. config: # Actual configuration. database: "my_app_db" username: "postgres" password: "postgres" hostname: "localhost" port: 5432
-
JSON configuration provider:
[ { "app": "my_app", "module": "MyApp.Repo", "config": { "database": "my_app_db", "username": "postgres", "password": "postgres", "hostname": "localhost", "port": 5432 } } ]
Both configurations would be equivalent to:
config :my_app, MyApp.Repo,
database: "my_App_db",
username: "postgres"
password: "postgres"
hostname: "localhost"
port: 5432
For using these config providers, just add the following to your release configuration:
-
For YAML configurations:
config_providers: [{Skogsra.Provider.Yaml, ["/path/to/config/file.yml"]}]
-
For JSON configurations:
config_providers: [{Skogsra.Provider.Json, ["/path/to/config/file.json"]}]
Note: If the
module
you're using in you're config does not exist, then change it tonamespace
e.g:namespace: "MyApp.Repo"
. Otherwise, it will fail loading it.
Hab is an Oh My ZSH plugin for loading OS environment variables automatically.
By default, Hab
will try to load .envrc
file, but it's possible to have
several of those files for different purposes e.g:
.envrc.prod
for production OS variables..envrc.test
for testing OS variables..envrc
for development variables.
Hab
will load the development variables by default, but it can load the
other files using the command hab_load <extension>
e.g. loading
.envrc.prod
would be as follows:
~/my_project $ hab_load prod
[SUCCESS] Loaded hab [/home/user/my_project/.envrc.prod]
The package can be installed by adding skogsra
to your list of dependencies
in mix.exs
(Elixir ≥ 1.11 and Erlang ≥ 22):
def deps do
[
{:skogsra, "~> 2.5"}
]
end
If you need YAML config provider support, add the following:
def deps do
[
{:skogsra, "~> 2.5"},
{:yamerl, "~> 0.10"}
]
end
If you need JSON config provider support, add the following:
def deps do
[
{:skogsra, "~> 2.5"},
{:jason, "~> 1.4"}
]
end
Alexander de Sousa.
Skogsrå is released under the MIT License. See the LICENSE file for further details.