4903d4baa8
Adding the packages the new donate stuff is using to the repository so that they do not need to be downloaded to run lektor. I had to make some modifications to the setup.py files for these modules in order to get them to work. Otherwise I was getting errors about invalid syntax in the requires.txt files and also one of the modules was requiring lektor which was pulling in a bunch of stuff that's not needed because we are running inside lektor. I put all these changes in patch files in a new patches subdirectory. |
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.. | ||
environs | ||
environs.egg-info | ||
CHANGELOG.md | ||
CONTRIBUTING.md | ||
LICENSE | ||
MANIFEST.in | ||
PKG-INFO | ||
pyproject.toml | ||
README.md | ||
setup.cfg | ||
setup.py |
environs: simplified environment variable parsing
environs is a Python library for parsing environment variables. It allows you to store configuration separate from your code, as per The Twelve-Factor App methodology.
Contents
- Features
- Install
- Basic usage
- Supported types
- Reading .env files
- Handling prefixes
- Proxied variables
- Validation
- Deferred validation
- Serialization
- Defining custom parser behavior
- Usage with Flask
- Usage with Django
- Why...?
- License
Features
- Type-casting
- Read
.env
files intoos.environ
(useful for local development) - Validation
- Define custom parser behavior
- Framework-agnostic, but integrates well with Flask and Django
Install
pip install environs
Basic usage
With some environment variables set...
export GITHUB_USER=sloria
export MAX_CONNECTIONS=100
export SHIP_DATE='1984-06-25'
export TTL=42
export ENABLE_LOGIN=true
export GITHUB_REPOS=webargs,konch,ped
export COORDINATES=23.3,50.0
export LOG_LEVEL=DEBUG
Parse them with environs...
from environs import Env
env = Env()
env.read_env() # read .env file, if it exists
# required variables
gh_user = env("GITHUB_USER") # => 'sloria'
secret = env("SECRET") # => raises error if not set
# casting
max_connections = env.int("MAX_CONNECTIONS") # => 100
ship_date = env.date("SHIP_DATE") # => datetime.date(1984, 6, 25)
ttl = env.timedelta("TTL") # => datetime.timedelta(0, 42)
log_level = env.log_level("LOG_LEVEL") # => logging.DEBUG
# providing a default value
enable_login = env.bool("ENABLE_LOGIN", False) # => True
enable_feature_x = env.bool("ENABLE_FEATURE_X", False) # => False
# parsing lists
gh_repos = env.list("GITHUB_REPOS") # => ['webargs', 'konch', 'ped']
coords = env.list("COORDINATES", subcast=float) # => [23.3, 50.0]
Supported types
The following are all type-casting methods of Env
:
env.str
env.bool
env.int
env.float
env.decimal
env.list
(accepts optionalsubcast
keyword argument)env.dict
(accepts optionalsubcast
keyword argument)env.json
env.datetime
env.date
env.timedelta
(assumes value is an integer in seconds)env.url
env.uuid
env.log_level
env.path
(casts to apathlib.Path
)
Reading .env
files
# .env
DEBUG=true
PORT=4567
Call Env.read_env
before parsing variables.
from environs import Env
env = Env()
# Read .env into os.environ
env.read_env()
env.bool("DEBUG") # => True
env.int("PORT") # => 4567
Reading a specific file
By default, Env.read_env
will look for a .env
file in current
directory and (if no .env exists in the CWD) recurse
upwards until a .env
file is found.
You can also read a specific file:
from environs import Env
with open(".env.test", "w") as fobj:
fobj.write("A=foo\n")
fobj.write("B=123\n")
env = Env()
env.read_env(".env.test", recurse=False)
assert env("A") == "foo"
assert env.int("B") == 123
Handling prefixes
# export MYAPP_HOST=lolcathost
# export MYAPP_PORT=3000
with env.prefixed("MYAPP_"):
host = env("HOST", "localhost") # => 'lolcathost'
port = env.int("PORT", 5000) # => 3000
# nested prefixes are also supported:
# export MYAPP_DB_HOST=lolcathost
# export MYAPP_DB_PORT=10101
with env.prefixed("MYAPP_"):
with env.prefixed("DB_"):
db_host = env("HOST", "lolcathost")
db_port = env.int("PORT", 10101)
Proxied variables
# export MAILGUN_LOGIN=sloria
# export SMTP_LOGIN={{MAILGUN_LOGIN}}
smtp_login = env("SMTP_LOGIN") # =>'sloria'
Validation
# export TTL=-2
# export NODE_ENV='invalid'
# export EMAIL='^_^'
from environs import Env
from marshmallow.validate import OneOf, Length, Email
env = Env()
# simple validator
env.int("TTL", validate=lambda n: n > 0)
# => Environment variable "TTL" invalid: ['Invalid value.']
# using marshmallow validators
env.str(
"NODE_ENV",
validate=OneOf(
["production", "development"], error="NODE_ENV must be one of: {choices}"
),
)
# => Environment variable "NODE_ENV" invalid: ['NODE_ENV must be one of: production, development']
# multiple validators
env.str("EMAIL", validate=[Length(min=4), Email()])
# => Environment variable "EMAIL" invalid: ['Shorter than minimum length 4.', 'Not a valid email address.']
Deferred validation
By default, a validation error is raised immediately upon calling a parser method for an invalid environment variable.
To defer validation and raise an exception with the combined error messages for all invalid variables, pass eager=False
to Env
.
Call env.seal()
after all variables have been parsed.
# export TTL=-2
# export NODE_ENV='invalid'
# export EMAIL='^_^'
from environs import Env
from marshmallow.validate import OneOf, Email, Length, Range
env = Env(eager=False)
TTL = env.int("TTL", validate=Range(min=0, max=100))
NODE_ENV = env.str(
"NODE_ENV",
validate=OneOf(
["production", "development"], error="NODE_ENV must be one of: {choices}"
),
)
EMAIL = env.str("EMAIL", validate=[Length(min=4), Email()])
env.seal()
# environs.EnvValidationError: Environment variables invalid: {'TTL': ['Must be greater than or equal to 0 and less than or equal to 100.'], 'NODE_ENV': ['NODE_ENV must be one of: production, development'], 'EMAIL': ['Shorter than minimum length 4.', 'Not a valid email address.']}
env.seal()
validates all parsed variables and prevents further parsing (calling a parser method will raise an error).
Serialization
# serialize to a dictionary of simple types (numbers and strings)
env.dump()
# {'COORDINATES': [23.3, 50.0],
# 'ENABLE_FEATURE_X': False,
# 'ENABLE_LOGIN': True,
# 'GITHUB_REPOS': ['webargs', 'konch', 'ped'],
# 'GITHUB_USER': 'sloria',
# 'MAX_CONNECTIONS': 100,
# 'MYAPP_HOST': 'lolcathost',
# 'MYAPP_PORT': 3000,
# 'SHIP_DATE': '1984-06-25',
# 'TTL': 42}
Defining custom parser behavior
# export DOMAIN='http://myapp.com'
# export COLOR=invalid
from furl import furl
# Register a new parser method for paths
@env.parser_for("furl")
def furl_parser(value):
return furl(value)
domain = env.furl("DOMAIN") # => furl('https://myapp.com')
# Custom parsers can take extra keyword arguments
@env.parser_for("enum")
def enum_parser(value, choices):
if value not in choices:
raise environs.EnvError("Invalid!")
return value
color = env.enum("COLOR", choices=["black"]) # => raises EnvError
Usage with Flask
# myapp/settings.py
from environs import Env
env = Env()
env.read_env()
# Override in .env for local development
DEBUG = env.bool("FLASK_DEBUG", default=False)
# SECRET_KEY is required
SECRET_KEY = env.str("SECRET_KEY")
Load the configuration after you initialize your app.
# myapp/app.py
from flask import Flask
app = Flask(__name__)
app.config.from_object("myapp.settings")
For local development, use a .env
file to override the default
configuration.
# .env
DEBUG=true
SECRET_KEY="not so secret"
Note: Because environs depends on python-dotenv,
the flask
CLI will automatically read .env and .flaskenv files.
Usage with Django
environs includes a number of helpers for parsing connection URLs. To install environs with django support:
pip install environs[django]
Use env.dj_db_url
, env.dj_cache_url
and env.dj_email_url
to parse the DATABASE_URL
, CACHE_URL
and EMAIL_URL
environment variables, respectively.
For more details on URL patterns, see the following projects that environs is using for converting URLs.
Basic example:
# myproject/settings.py
from environs import Env
env = Env()
env.read_env()
# Override in .env for local development
DEBUG = env.bool("DEBUG", default=False)
# SECRET_KEY is required
SECRET_KEY = env.str("SECRET_KEY")
# Parse database URLs, e.g. "postgres://localhost:5432/mydb"
DATABASES = {"default": env.dj_db_url("DATABASE_URL")}
# Parse email URLs, e.g. "smtp://"
email = env.dj_email_url("EMAIL_URL", default="smtp://")
EMAIL_HOST = email["EMAIL_HOST"]
EMAIL_PORT = email["EMAIL_PORT"]
EMAIL_HOST_PASSWORD = email["EMAIL_HOST_PASSWORD"]
EMAIL_HOST_USER = email["EMAIL_HOST_USER"]
EMAIL_USE_TLS = email["EMAIL_USE_TLS"]
# Parse cache URLS, e.g "redis://localhost:6379/0"
CACHES = {"default": env.dj_cache_url("CACHE_URL")}
For local development, use a .env
file to override the default
configuration.
# .env
DEBUG=true
SECRET_KEY="not so secret"
For a more complete example, see
django_example.py
in the examples/
directory.
Why...?
Why envvars?
See The 12-factor App section on configuration.
Why not os.environ
?
While os.environ
is enough for simple use cases, a typical application
will need a way to manipulate and validate raw environment variables.
environs abstracts common tasks for handling environment variables.
environs will help you
- cast envvars to the correct type
- specify required envvars
- define default values
- validate envvars
- parse list and dict values
- parse dates, datetimes, and timedeltas
- parse proxied variables
- serialize your configuration to JSON, YAML, etc.
Why another library?
There are many great Python libraries for parsing environment variables. In fact, most of the credit for environs' public API goes to the authors of envparse and django-environ.
environs aims to meet three additional goals:
- Make it easy to extend parsing behavior and develop plugins.
- Leverage the deserialization and validation functionality provided by a separate library (marshmallow).
- Clean up redundant API.
See this GitHub issue which details specific differences with envparse.
License
MIT licensed. See the LICENSE file for more details.