jimzhan c20cf8bffc init import with travis supports | 9 anos atrás | |
---|---|---|
.gitignore | 9 anos atrás | |
.travis.yml | 9 anos atrás | |
LICENSE | 9 anos atrás | |
README.md | 9 anos atrás | |
deps.go | 9 anos atrás | |
doc.go | 9 anos atrás | |
env.go | 9 anos atrás | |
env_test.go | 9 anos atrás |
Ease of Accessing Environment Varaibles in Golang
$ go get -v github.com/goanywhere/env
PORT=9394
SECRET_KEY=YOURSECRETKEY
You can double/single quote string values:
PRIVATE_KEY="-----BEGIN RSA PRIVATE KEY-----HkVN9…-----END DSA PRIVATE KEY-----"
You can use export
in front of each line just like your shell settings, so that you can source
the file in your terminal directly:
export USERNAME=account@goanywhere.io
export PASSWORD=AccountPasswordGoesHere
Export these values, you can then access them using env now.
package main
import (
"github.com/goanywhere/env"
)
func main() {
env.Int("PORT") // 9394
env.String("SECRET_KEY") // YOURSECERTKEY
.......
}
env
also supports custom struct for you to access the reflected values.
package main
import (
"fmt"
"github.com/goanywhere/env"
)
type Spec struct {
App string
SecretKey string `env:"SECRET_KEY"`
}
func main() {
var spec Spec
env.Set("App", "myapplication")
env.Set("SECRET_KEY", "wGv7ELIx8P8qsUit9OuWw2zwPEF0nXtvjIKZQOioAVuI5GnHSwBAeWZ6l4-SpIPT")
env.Map(&spec)
fmt.Printf("App: %s", spec.App) // output: "App: myapplication"
fmt.Printf("Secret: %s", spec.SecretKey) // output: "Secret: wGv7ELIx8P8qsUit9OuWw2zwPEF0nXtvjIKZQOioAVuI5GnHSwBAeWZ6l4-SpIPT"
}
We also includes dotenv supports, simply add the application settings to file .env
right under the root of your project:
test1 = value1
test2 = 'value2'
test3 = "value3"
export test4=value4
package main
import (
"fmt"
"github.com/goanywhere/env"
)
func main() {
// Load '.env' from current working directory.
env.Load()
fmt.Printf("<test1: %s>", env.String("test1")) // output: "value1"
fmt.Printf("<test2: %s>", env.String("test2")) // output: "value2"
}
Sensitive settings should ONLY be accessible on the machines that need access to them. NEVER commit them to a repository (even a private one) that is not needed by every development machine and server.