Load environment variables using
import
statements.
$ npm install babel-plugin-dotenv-import
.babelrc
{
"plugins": [
["dotenv-import", {
"moduleName": "@env",
"path": ".env",
"blacklist": null,
"whitelist": null,
"safe": false,
"allowUndefined": false
}]
]
}
.env
API_URL=https://api.example.org
API_TOKEN=
In users.js
import {API_URL, API_TOKEN} from "@env"
fetch(`${API_URL}/users`, {
headers: {
'Authorization': `Bearer ${API_TOKEN}`
}
})
It is possible to limit the scope of env variables that will be imported by specifying a whitelist
and/or a blacklist
as an array of strings.
{
"plugins": [
["dotenv-import", {
"blacklist": [
"GITHUB_TOKEN"
]
}]
]
}
{
"plugins": [
["dotenv-import", {
"whitelist": [
"API_URL",
"API_TOKEN"
]
}]
]
}
Enable safe mode to only allow environment variables defined in the .env
file. This will completely ignore everything that is already defined in the environment.
The .env
file has to exist.
{
"plugins": [
["dotenv-import", {
"safe": true
}]
]
}
Allow importing undefined variables, their value will be undefined
.
{
"plugins": [
["dotenv-import", {
"allowUndefined": true
}]
]
}
import {UNDEFINED_VAR} from '@env'
console.log(UNDEFINED_VAR === undefined) // true
When false
(default behavior), an error will be thrown.
When using with babel-loader
with caching enabled you will run into issues where environment changes won’t be picked up.
This is due to the fact that babel-loader
computes a cacheIdentifier
that does not take your environment into account.
You can easily clear the cache:
rm -rf node_modules/.cache/babel-loader/*
Or you can override the default cacheIdentifier
to include some of your environment variables.
Based on David Chang’s works on babel-plugin-dotenv.
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