release/vendor/github.com/sethvargo/go-envconfig
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Envconfig

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Envconfig populates struct field values based on environment variables or arbitrary lookup functions. It supports pre-setting mutations, which is useful for things like converting values to uppercase, trimming whitespace, or looking up secrets.

Note: Versions prior to v0.2 used a different import path. This README and examples are for v0.2+.

Usage

Define a struct with fields using the env tag:

type MyConfig struct {
  Port     int    `env:"PORT"`
  Username string `env:"USERNAME"`
}

Set some environment variables:

export PORT=5555
export USERNAME=yoyo

Process it using envconfig:

package main

import (
  "context"
  "log"

  "github.com/sethvargo/go-envconfig"
)

func main() {
  ctx := context.Background()

  var c MyConfig
  if err := envconfig.Process(ctx, &c); err != nil {
    log.Fatal(err)
  }

  // c.Port = 5555
  // c.Username = "yoyo"
}

You can also use nested structs, just remember that any fields you want to process must be public:

type MyConfig struct {
  Database *DatabaseConfig
}

type DatabaseConfig struct {
  Port     int    `env:"PORT"`
  Username string `env:"USERNAME"`
}

Configuration

Use the env struct tag to define configuration.

Overwrite

If overwrite is set, the value will be overwritten if there is an environment variable match regardless if the value is non-zero.

type MyStruct struct {
  Port int `env:"PORT,overwrite"`
}

Required

If a field is required, processing will error if the environment variable is unset.

type MyStruct struct {
  Port int `env:"PORT,required"`
}

It is invalid to have a field as both required and default.

Default

If an environment variable is not set, the field will be set to the default value. Note that the environment variable must not be set (e.g. unset PORT). If the environment variable is the empty string, that counts as a "value" and the default will not be used.

type MyStruct struct {
  Port int `env:"PORT,default=5555"`
}

You can also set the default value to another field or value from the environment, for example:

type MyStruct struct {
  DefaultPort int `env:"DEFAULT_PORT,default=5555"`
  Port        int `env:"OVERRIDE_PORT,default=$DEFAULT_PORT"`
}

The value for Port will default to the value of DEFAULT_PORT.

It is invalid to have a field as both required and default.

Prefix

For shared, embedded structs, you can define a prefix to use when processing struct values for that embed.

type SharedConfig struct {
  Port int `env:"PORT,default=5555"`
}

type Server1 struct {
  // This processes Port from $FOO_PORT.
  *SharedConfig `env:",prefix=FOO_"`
}

type Server2 struct {
  // This processes Port from $BAR_PORT.
  *SharedConfig `env:",prefix=BAR_"`
}

It is invalid to specify a prefix on non-struct fields.

Delimiter

When parsing maps and slices, a comma (,) is the default element delimiter. Define a custom delimiter with delimiter:

type MyStruct struct {
  MyVar map[string]string `env:"MYVAR,delimiter=;"`
export MYVAR="a:1;b:2"
# map[string]string{"a":"1", "b":"2"}

This is especially helpful when your values include the default delimiter character.

export MYVAR="a:1,2,3;b:4,5"
# map[string]string{"a":"1,2,3", "b":"4,5"}

Separator

When parsing maps, a colon (:) is the default key-value separator. Define a separator with separator:

type MyStruct struct {
  MyVar map[string]string `env:"MYVAR,separator=="`
}
export MYVAR="a=b,c=d"
# map[string]string{"a":"b", "c":"d"}

This is especially helpful when your keys or values include the default separator character.

export MYVAR="client=abcd::1/128,backend=abcd::2/128"
# map[string]string{"client":"abcd::1/128", "backend":"abcd::2/128"}

Complex Types

Durations

In the environment, time.Duration values are specified as a parsable Go duration:

type MyStruct struct {
  MyVar time.Duration `env:"MYVAR"`
}
export MYVAR="10m" # 10 * time.Minute

TextUnmarshaler / BinaryUnmarshaler

Types that implement TextUnmarshaler or BinaryUnmarshaler are processed as such.

json.Unmarshaler

Types that implement json.Unmarshaler are processed as such.

gob.Decoder

Types that implement gob.Decoder are processed as such.

Slices

Slices are specified as comma-separated values:

type MyStruct struct {
  MyVar []string `env:"MYVAR"`
}
export MYVAR="a,b,c,d" # []string{"a", "b", "c", "d"}

Note that byte slices are special cased and interpreted as strings from the environment.

Maps

Maps are specified as comma-separated key:value pairs:

type MyStruct struct {
  MyVar map[string]string `env:"MYVAR"`
}
export MYVAR="a:b,c:d" # map[string]string{"a":"b", "c":"d"}

Structs

Envconfig walks the entire struct, including nested structs, so deeply-nested fields are also supported.

If a nested struct is a pointer type, it will automatically be instantianted to the non-nil value. To change this behavior, see (Initialization)[#Initialization].

Custom

You can also define your own decoder for structs (see below).

Prefixing

You can define a custom prefix using the PrefixLookuper. This will lookup values in the environment by prefixing the keys with the provided value:

type MyStruct struct {
  MyVar string `env:"MYVAR"`
}
// Process variables, but look for the "APP_" prefix.
l := envconfig.PrefixLookuper("APP_", envconfig.OsLookuper())
if err := envconfig.ProcessWith(ctx, &c, l); err != nil {
  panic(err)
}
export APP_MYVAR="foo"

Initialization

By default, all pointer fields are initialized (allocated) so they are not nil. To disable this behavior, use the tag the field as noinit:

type MyStruct struct {
  // Without `noinit`, DeleteUser would be initialized to the default boolean
  // value. With `noinit`, if the environment variable is not given, the value
  // is kept as uninitialized (nil).
  DeleteUser *bool `env:"DELETE_USER, noinit"`
}

This also applies to nested fields in a struct:

type ParentConfig struct {
  // Without `noinit` tag, `Child` would be set to `&ChildConfig{}` whether
  // or not `FIELD` is set in the env var.
  // With `noinit`, `Child` would stay nil if `FIELD` is not set in the env var.
  Child *ChildConfig `env:",noinit"`
}

type ChildConfig struct {
  Field string `env:"FIELD"`
}

The noinit tag is only applicable for pointer fields. Putting the tag on a non-struct-pointer will return an error.

Extension

All built-in types are supported except Func and Chan. If you need to define a custom decoder, implement the Decoder interface:

type MyStruct struct {
  field string
}

func (v *MyStruct) EnvDecode(val string) error {
  v.field = fmt.Sprintf("PREFIX-%s", val)
  return nil
}

var _ envconfig.Decoder = (*MyStruct)(nil) // interface check

If you need to modify environment variable values before processing, you can specify a custom Mutator:

type Config struct {
  Password `env:"PASSWORD"`
}

func resolveSecretFunc(ctx context.Context, key, value string) (string, error) {
  if strings.HasPrefix(value, "secret://") {
    return secretmanager.Resolve(ctx, value) // example
  }
  return value, nil
}

var config Config
envconfig.ProcessWith(ctx, &config, envconfig.OsLookuper(), resolveSecretFunc)

Testing

Relying on the environment in tests can be troublesome because environment variables are global, which makes it difficult to parallelize the tests. Envconfig supports extracting data from anything that returns a value:

lookuper := envconfig.MapLookuper(map[string]string{
  "FOO": "bar",
  "ZIP": "zap",
})

var config Config
envconfig.ProcessWith(ctx, &config, lookuper)

Now you can parallelize all your tests by providing a map for the lookup function. In fact, that's how the tests in this repo work, so check there for an example.

You can also combine multiple lookupers with MultiLookuper. See the GoDoc for more information and examples.

Inspiration

This library is conceptually similar to kelseyhightower/envconfig, with the following major behavioral differences:

  • Adds support for specifying a custom lookup function (such as a map), which is useful for testing.

  • Only populates fields if they contain zero or nil values if overwrite is unset. This means you can pre-initialize a struct and any pre-populated fields will not be overwritten during processing.

  • Support for interpolation. The default value for a field can be the value of another field.

  • Support for arbitrary mutators that change/resolve data before type conversion.