Environment variables are supported out of the box in Webpacker. For example if you run the webpack dev server like so:
FOO=hello BAR=world ./bin/webpack-dev-server
You can then reference these variables in your JavaScript app code with
process.env
:
console.log(process.env.FOO) // Compiles to console.log("hello")
You may want to store configuration in environment variables via .env
files,
similar to the dotenv Ruby gem.
In development, if you use Foreman or Invoker
to launch the webpack server, both of these tools have basic support for a
.env
file (Invoker also supports .env.local
), so no further configuration
is needed.
However, if you run the webpack server without Foreman/Invoker, or if you
want more control over what .env
files to load, you can use the
dotenv npm package. Here is what you could
do to support a "Ruby-like" dotenv:
yarn add dotenv
// config/webpack/environment.js
...
const { environment } = require('@rails/webpacker')
const webpack = require('webpack')
const dotenv = require('dotenv')
const dotenvFiles = [
`.env.${process.env.NODE_ENV}.local`,
'.env.local',
`.env.${process.env.NODE_ENV}`,
'.env'
]
dotenvFiles.forEach((dotenvFile) => {
dotenv.config({ path: dotenvFile, silent: true })
})
environment.plugins.insert(
"Environment",
new webpack.EnvironmentPlugin(process.env)
)
module.exports = environment
Warning: using Foreman/Invoker and npm dotenv at the same time can result in confusing behavior, in that Foreman/Invoker variables take precedence over npm dotenv variables.
If you'd like to pass custom variables to the on demand compiler, use Webpacker::Compiler.env
attribute.
Webpacker::Compiler.env['FRONTEND_API_KEY'] = 'your_secret_key'