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PROJECT_CONFIG.md

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Project Configuration

The application configuration has been centralised to live within the <projectroot>/config folder.

You read configuration values using the <projectroot>/config/index.js helper, and you edit the configuration values in the <projectroot>/config/values.js file.

TOC

Background and Usage

Below are some of the problems that we faced, and how we ended up with our current implementation...

As this is a universal application you are mostly creating code that is shared between your "client" and "server" bundles. The "client" is sent across the wire to be executed in the browser therefore you have to be extra careful in what you include in the bundle. Webpack by default bundles code if it is imported by your target entry file (or it's dependencies). Therefore if you were to import the application configuration values within a module, the entire application configuration would be included with your "client" bundle. This is extremely risky as the configuration exposes the internal structure of your application and may contain sensitive data such as database connection strings.

One possible solution to the above would be to use Webpack's DefinePlugin in order to statically inject/replace only the required configuration values into our client bundle. However, these configuration values are statically bound during our build step, meaning that we are unable to expose execution time provided values (e.g. FOO=bar npm run start) to our client bundle. Therefore we decided on a strategy of making the server be responsible for attaching a configuration object to window.__CLIENT_CONFIG__ within the HTML response that gets sent to the browser. This would then allow us to ensure that environment variables can be properly exposed. This works well, however, it introduces a new problem, we want a unified API to read configuration values without having to figure out if the code is in a browser/server context.

For this we created a helper function in the root of the config folder. It is located in <projectroot>/config/index.js. You can use it like so:

import config from '../config';

export function MyComponent() {
  return <h1>{config('welcomeMessage')}</h1>;
}

The config helper allows you to specify nested path structures in the form of a dot-notated string or array. For example the following resolve to the same config value:

config('messages.welcome');
config(['messages', 'welcome']);

The config helper is also configured to throw helpful error messages when trying to request configuration values that either do not exist or have not been exposed to the client bundles.

Declaring the configuration values that are safe for client bundles

Within the centralised config (<projectroot>/config/values.js) you will see that a clientConfigFilter property. This value is a ruleset/filter that details which of the configuration values you deem required (and safe) for inclusion within your client bundles. Please go to this section of the configuration file for more detail on how this filtering mechanism works.

When a server request is being processed this filtering configuration export will be serialised and attached to the window.__CLIENT_CONFIG__ within the HTML response, thereby allowing our browser executed code to have access to the respective configuration values.

Environment Specific Values

Environment specific values are support via host system environment variables (e.g. FOO=bar npm run start) and/or by providing an "env" file.

"env" files is an optional feature that is supported by the dotenv module. This module allows you to define files containing key/value pairs representing your required environment variables (e.g. PORT=1337). To use this feature create an .env file within the root of the project (we have provided an example file called .env_example, which contains all the environment variables this project currently relies on).

Note: The .env file has been ignored from the git repository in anticipation that it will most likely be used to house development specific configuration.

We generally recommend that you don't persist any "env" files within the repository, and instead rely on your target host environments and/or deployment servers to provide the necessary values per environment.

If you do however have the requirement to create and persist "env" files for multiple target environments, the system does support it. To do so create a ".env" file that is postfix'ed with the environment you are targeting. For e.g. .env.development or .env.staging or .env.production.

In order to target a specific environment configuration file you have to provide a matching DEPLOYMENT environment variable. For example:

npm run build
DEPLOYMENT=staging npm run start # This will look for a .env.staging file

Note: you may be used to using NODE_ENV to distinguish between environment configuration, however, when using the React ecosystem it is highly recommended that you set NODE_ENV=production any time you want an optimised version of React (and other libs). Given this requirement, we instead defer to the use of a "DEPLOYMENT" variable. See here for more info on this.

Note: if an environment specific configuration file exists, it will be used over the more generic .env file.

As stated before, the application has been configured to accept a mix-match of sources for the environment variables. i.e. you can provide some/all of the environment variables via a .env file, and others via the cli/host (e.g. FOO=bar npm run build). This gives you greater flexibility and grants you the opportunity to control the provision of sensitive values (e.g. db connection string). Please do note that "env" file values will take preference over any values provided by the host/CLI.

Note: It is recommended that you bind your environment configuration values to the global ./config/values.js. See the existing items within as an example.