Extends the proven & trusted foundation of dotenv-kotlin, with .env.vault
file support.
The extended standard lets you load encrypted secrets from your .env.vault
file in production (and other) environments.
- 🌱 Install
- 🏗️ Usage (.env)
- 🚀 Deploying (.env.vault) 🆕
- 🌴 Multiple Environments
- 📚 Examples
- ❓ FAQ
- ⏱️ Changelog
Add jitpack repository to your build.gradle
or build.gradle.kts
and require the com.github.dotenv-org:dotenv-vault-kotlin:x.x.x
implementation dependency.
// build.gradle
...
repositories {
...
maven { url 'https://jitpack.io' }
}
dependencies {
...
implementation 'com.github.dotenv-org:dotenv-vault-kotlin:0.0.2'
}
or
// build.gradle.kts
...
repositories {
...
maven { url = uri("https://jitpack.io") }
}
dependencies {
...
implementation("com.github.dotenv-org:dotenv-vault-kotlin:0.0.2")
}
Development usage works just like dotenv-kotlin.
Add your application configuration to your .env
file in the root of your project:
S3_BUCKET=YOURS3BUCKET
SECRET_KEY=YOURSECRETKEYGOESHERE
As early as possible in your application code, load .env:
import org.dotenv.vault.dotenvVault
val dotenv = dotenvVault()
dotenv["S3_BUCKET"]
-
Create an assets folder in
app/src/main/assets
-
Add
env.vault
(no dot) to the assets folder -
Configure dotenv to search
/assets
for a file with nameenv.vault
and provide the key via BuildConfigval dotenv = dotenvVault(BuildConfig.DOTENV_KEY) { directory = "/assets" filename = "env.vault" // instead of '.env', use 'env' } dotenv["S3_BUCKET"]
Note: The above configuration is required because dot files in /assets
do not appear to resolve on Android. (Seeking recommendations from the Android community on how dotenv-kotlin
configuration should work in order to provide the best experience for Android developers)
Alternatively, if you are using Provider android.resource
you may specify
directory = "android.resource://com.example.myapp/raw"
Add DOTENV_KEY
to your build system environment variables.
Add key into your build config in your build.grade inside the android->built types
android {
buildTypes {
debug {
buildConfigField "String", "DOTENV_KEY", System.getenv("DOTENV_KEY") ?: ""
}
}
}
Install dotenv-vault.
See install instructions at https://www.dotenv.org/install
Then encrypt your environment variables by doing:
$ dotenv-vault local build
This will create an encrypted .env.vault
file along with a .env.keys
file containing the encryption keys.
Set the DOTENV_KEY
environment variable by copying and pasting the key value from the .env.keys
file onto your server or cloud provider. For example in heroku:
$ heroku config:set DOTENV_KEY=<key string from .env.keys>
Commit your .env.vault file safely to code and deploy. Your .env.vault fill be decrypted on boot, its environment variables injected, and your app work as expected.
You have two options for managing multiple environments - locally managed or vault managed - both use dotenv-vault.
Locally managed never makes a remote API call. It is completely managed on your machine. Vault managed adds conveniences like backing up your .env file, secure sharing across your team, access permissions, and version history. Choose what works best for you.
Create a .env.production
file in the root of your project and put your production values there.
# .env.production
S3_BUCKET="PRODUCTION_S3BUCKET"
SECRET_KEY="PRODUCTION_SECRETKEYGOESHERE"
Rebuild your .env.vault
file.
$ dotenv-vault local build
Check your .env.keys
file. There is a production DOTENV_KEY
that coincides with the additional DOTENV_VAULT_PRODUCTION
cipher in your .env.vault
file.
Set the production DOTENV_KEY
on your server, recommit your .env.vault
file to code, and deploy. That's it!
Sync your .env file. Run the push command and follow the instructions. learn more
$ dotenv-vault push
Manage multiple environments with the included UI. learn more
$ dotenv-vault open
Build your .env.vault
file with multiple environments.
$ dotenv-vault build
Access your DOTENV_KEY
.
$ dotenv-vault keys
Set the production DOTENV_KEY
on your server, recommit your .env.vault
file to code, and deploy. That's it!
Dotenv Vault gracefully falls back to dotenv-kotlin when DOTENV_KEY
is not set. This is the default for development so that you can focus on editing your .env
file and save the build
command until you are ready to deploy those environment variables changes.
No. We strongly recommend against committing your .env
file to version control. It should only include environment-specific values such as database passwords or API keys. Your production database should have a different password than your development database.
Yes. It is safe and recommended to do so. It contains your encrypted envs, and your vault identifier.
No. It is the key that unlocks your encrypted environment variables. Be very careful who you share this key with. Do not let it leak.
See CHANGELOG.md
Apache License 2.0