Fastify plugin to check environment variables
npm i @fastify/env
const fastify = require('fastify')()
const fastifyEnv = require('@fastify/env')
const schema = {
type: 'object',
required: [ 'PORT' ],
properties: {
PORT: {
type: 'string',
default: 3000
}
}
}
const options = {
confKey: 'config', // optional, default: 'config'
schema: schema,
data: data // optional, default: process.env
}
fastify
.register(fastifyEnv, options)
.ready((err) => {
if (err) console.error(err)
console.log(fastify.config) // or fastify[options.confKey]
console.log(fastify.getEnvs())
// output: { PORT: 3000 }
})
You can also use the function getEnvs()
of the Request from within a handler function:
fastify.get('/', (request, reply) => {
console.log(request.getEnvs())
// output: { PORT: 3000 }
})
Note that the getEnvs
decorators will not be added if they already exist.
This module is a wrapper around env-schema.
To read an .env
file you must set dotenv
in the options:
const options = {
dotenv: true // will read .env in root folder
}
// or, pass config options available on dotenv module
const options = {
dotenv: {
path: `${__dirname}/.env`,
debug: true
}
}
The @fastify/env
plugin loads asynchronously. If you wish to use its values in a different plugin before the boot sequence, you need to make sure that:
@fastify/env
is registered first.await fastify.register(fastifyEnv)
// fastify.config can be used in here
OR
fastify.register(fastifyEnv)
await fastify
// fastify.config can be used in here
NB Support for additional properties in the schema is disabled for this plugin, with the additionalProperties
flag set to false
internally.
In order to have typing for the fastify instance, you should either:
declaration merging
technique to enhance the FastifyInstance
type with the property and its keys you have defined in the options:declare module 'fastify' {
interface FastifyInstance {
config: { // this should be same as the confKey in options
// specify your typing here
FOO: string
};
}
}
const fastify = Fastify()
fastify.register(fastifyEnv)
fastify.config.FOO // will be a string
fastify.config.BAR // error: Property BAR does not exist on type { FOO: string }
getEnvs()
to get the already typed object:type Envs = {
FOO: string
}
const fastify = Fastify()
await fastify.register(fastifyEnv)
const envs = fastify.getEnvs<Envs>() // envs will be of type Envs
envs.FOO // will be a string
envs.BAR // error: Property BAR does not exist on type Envs
If this is the case it is suggested to use json-schema-to-ts to have the type always synchronized with the actual schema.
Kindly sponsored by Mia Platform