Envy

Envy loads and sets environment variables from YAML. It supports all YAML data types, including arrays and hashes.

Envy uses the YAML key mapping of a value as the environment variable name. For example, the following YAML configuration...

---
app:
  database:
    host: localhost
    port: 4321
  server:
    hosts:
      - localhost
      - grottopress.localhost
    port: 8080
  webhooks:
    - url: "https://example.com"
      token: "a1b2c2"
    - url: "https://myapp.net"
      token: "d4e5f6"

...sets environment variables as follows:

ENV["APP_DATABASE_HOST"] = "localhost"
ENV["APP_DATABASE_PORT"] = "4321"

ENV["APP_SERVER_HOSTS_0"] = "localhost"
ENV["APP_SERVER_HOSTS_1"] = "grottopress.localhost"
ENV["APP_SERVER_PORT"] = "8080"

ENV["APP_WEBHOOKS_0_URL"] = "https://example.com"
ENV["APP_WEBHOOKS_0_TOKEN"] = "a1b2c2"
ENV["APP_WEBHOOKS_1_URL"] = "https://myapp.net"
ENV["APP_WEBHOOKS_1_TOKEN"] = "d4e5f6"

Envy loads environment variables only once per application life-cycle. This avoids the overhead of reading and parsing YAML files on every single request.

It sets file permission (0600 by default) for all config files.

Envy supports loading a file from a supplied list of files in decreasing order of priority; the first readable file is loaded.

Installation

  1. Add the dependency to your shard.yml:

    dependencies:
      envy:
        github: GrottoPress/envy
  2. Run shards install

Usage

Contributing

  1. Fork it
  2. Switch to the master branch: git checkout master
  3. Create your feature branch: git checkout -b my-new-feature
  4. Make your changes, updating changelog and documentation as appropriate.
  5. Commit your changes: git commit
  6. Push to the branch: git push origin my-new-feature
  7. Submit a new Pull Request against the GrottoPress:master branch.