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dotenvx/dotenvx: a secure dotenvโ€“from the creator of `dotenv`

a secure dotenvโ€“from the creator of dotenv.

Read the whitepaper

Install and use it in code just like dotenv.

npm install @dotenvx/dotenvx --save
// index.js
require('@dotenvx/dotenvx').config()
// or import '@dotenvx/dotenvx/config' // for esm

console.log(`Hello ${process.env.HELLO}`)

or install globally - unlocks dotenv for any language, framework, or platform!

with curl ๐ŸŒ
curl -sfS https://dotenvx.sh | sh
dotenvx help

with brew ๐Ÿบ
brew install dotenvx/brew/dotenvx
dotenvx help

with docker ๐Ÿณ
docker run -it --rm -v $(pwd):/app dotenv/dotenvx help

with github releases ๐Ÿ™
curl -L -o dotenvx.tar.gz "https://github.com/dotenvx/dotenvx/releases/latest/download/dotenvx-$(uname -s)-$(uname -m).tar.gz"
tar -xzf dotenvx.tar.gz
./dotenvx help

or windows ๐ŸชŸ
winget install dotenvx
dotenvx help
$ echo "HELLO=World" > .env
$ echo "console.log('Hello ' + process.env.HELLO)" > index.js

$ node index.js
Hello undefined # without dotenvx

$ dotenvx run -- node index.js
Hello World # with dotenvx
> :-D

see extended quickstart guide

More examples

TypeScript ๐Ÿ“˜
// package.json
{
  "type": "module",
  "dependencies": {
    "chalk": "^5.3.0"
  }
}
// index.ts
import chalk from 'chalk'
console.log(chalk.blue(`Hello ${process.env.HELLO}`))
$ npm install
$ echo "HELLO=World" > .env

$ dotenvx run -- npx tsx index.ts
Hello World
Deno ๐Ÿฆ•
$ echo "HELLO=World" > .env
$ echo "console.log('Hello ' + Deno.env.get('HELLO'))" > index.ts

$ deno run --allow-env index.ts
Hello undefined

$ dotenvx run -- deno run --allow-env index.ts
Hello World

[!WARNING] Some of you are attempting to use the npm module directly with deno run. Don't, because deno currently has incomplete support for these encryption ciphers.

$ deno run -A npm:@dotenvx/dotenvx encrypt
Unknown cipher

Instead, use dotenvx as designed, by installing the cli as a binary - via curl, brew, etc.

Bun ๐ŸฅŸ
$ echo "HELLO=Test" > .env.test
$ echo "console.log('Hello ' + process.env.HELLO)" > index.js

$ bun index.js
Hello undefined

$ dotenvx run -f .env.test -- bun index.js
Hello Test
Python ๐Ÿ
$ echo "HELLO=World" > .env
$ echo 'import os;print("Hello " + os.getenv("HELLO", ""))' > index.py

$ dotenvx run -- python3 index.py
Hello World

see extended python guide

PHP ๐Ÿ˜
$ echo "HELLO=World" > .env
$ echo '<?php echo "Hello {$_SERVER["HELLO"]}\n";' > index.php

$ dotenvx run -- php index.php
Hello World

see extended php guide

Ruby ๐Ÿ’Ž
$ echo "HELLO=World" > .env
$ echo 'puts "Hello #{ENV["HELLO"]}"' > index.rb

$ dotenvx run -- ruby index.rb
Hello World

see extended ruby guide

Go ๐Ÿน
$ echo "HELLO=World" > .env
$ echo 'package main; import ("fmt"; "os"); func main() { fmt.Printf("Hello %s\n", os.Getenv("HELLO")) }' > main.go

$ dotenvx run -- go run main.go
Hello World

see extended go guide

Rust ๐Ÿฆ€
$ echo "HELLO=World" > .env
$ echo 'fn main() {let hello = std::env::var("HELLO").unwrap_or("".to_string());println!("Hello {hello}");}' > src/main.rs

$ dotenvx run -- cargo run
Hello World

see extended rust guide

Java โ˜•๏ธ
$ echo "HELLO=World" > .env
$ echo 'public class Index { public static void main(String[] args) { System.out.println("Hello " + System.getenv("HELLO")); } }' > index.java

$ dotenvx run -- java index.java
Hello World
Clojure ๐ŸŒฟ
$ echo "HELLO=World" > .env
$ echo '(println "Hello" (System/getenv "HELLO"))' > index.clj

$ dotenvx run -- clojure -M index.clj
Hello World
Kotlin ๐Ÿ“
$ echo "HELLO=World" > .env
$ echo 'fun main() { val hello = System.getenv("HELLO") ?: ""; println("Hello $hello") }' > index.kt
$ kotlinc index.kt -include-runtime -d index.jar

$ dotenvx run -- java -jar index.jar
Hello World
.NET ๐Ÿ”ต
$ dotnet new console -n HelloWorld -o HelloWorld
$ cd HelloWorld
$ echo "HELLO=World" | Out-File -FilePath .env -Encoding utf8
$ echo 'Console.WriteLine($"Hello {Environment.GetEnvironmentVariable("HELLO")}");' > Program.cs

$ dotenvx run -- dotnet run
Hello World
Bash ๐Ÿ–ฅ๏ธ
$ echo "HELLO=World" > .env

$ dotenvx run --quiet -- sh -c 'echo Hello $HELLO'
Hello World
Fish ๐Ÿ 
$ echo "HELLO=World" > .env

$ dotenvx run --quiet -- sh -c 'echo Hello $HELLO'
Hello World
Cron โฐ
# run every day at 8am
0 8 * * * dotenvx run -- /path/to/myscript.sh
Frameworks โ–ฒ
$ dotenvx run -- next dev
$ dotenvx run -- npm start
$ dotenvx run -- bin/rails s
$ dotenvx run -- php artisan serve

see framework guides

Docker ๐Ÿณ
$ docker run -it --rm -v $(pwd):/app dotenv/dotenvx run -- node index.js

Or in any image:

FROM node:latest
RUN echo "HELLO=World" > .env && echo "console.log('Hello ' + process.env.HELLO)" > index.js
RUN curl -fsS https://dotenvx.sh/install.sh | sh
CMD ["dotenvx", "run", "--", "echo", "Hello $HELLO"]

see docker guide

CI/CDs ๐Ÿ™
name: build
on: [push]
jobs:
  build:
    runs-on: ubuntu-latest
    steps:
    - uses: actions/checkout@v3
    - uses: actions/setup-node@v3
      with:
        node-version: 16
    - run: curl -fsS https://dotenvx.sh/install.sh | sh
    - run: dotenvx run -- node build.js
      env:
        DOTENV_KEY: ${{ secrets.DOTENV_KEY }}

see github actions guide

Platforms
# heroku
heroku buildpacks:add https://github.com/dotenvx/heroku-buildpack-dotenvx

# docker
RUN curl -fsS https://dotenvx.sh/install.sh | sh

# vercel
npm install @dotenvx/dotenvx --save

see platform guides

Process Managers
// pm2
"scripts": {
  "start": "dotenvx run -- pm2-runtime start ecosystem.config.js --env production"
},

see process manager guides

npx
# alternatively use npx
$ npx @dotenvx/dotenvx run -- node index.js
$ npx @dotenvx/dotenvx run -- next dev
$ npx @dotenvx/dotenvx run -- npm start
npm
$ npm install @dotenvx/dotenvx --save
{
  "scripts": {
    "start": "./node_modules/.bin/dotenvx run -- node index.js"
  },
  "dependencies": {
    "@dotenvx/dotenvx": "^0.5.0"
  }
}
$ npm run start

> start
> ./node_modules/.bin/dotenvx run -- node index.js

[dotenvx@1.X.X] injecting env (1) from .env.production
Hello World
asdf
# use dotenvx with asdf
$ asdf plugin add dotenvx
$ asdf install dotenvx latest

thank you @jgburet of Paris ๐Ÿ‡ซ๐Ÿ‡ท

Git
# use as a git submodule
$ git dotenvx run -- node index.js
$ git dotenvx run -- next dev
$ git dotenvx run -- npm start
Variable Expansion

Reference and expand variables already on your machine for use in your .env file.

# .env
USERNAME="username"
DATABASE_URL="postgres://${USERNAME}@localhost/my_database"
// index.js
console.log('DATABASE_URL', process.env.DATABASE_URL)
$ dotenvx run --debug -- node index.js
[dotenvx@0.14.1] injecting env (2) from .env
DATABASE_URL postgres://username@localhost/my_database
Command Substitution

Add the output of a command to one of your variables in your .env file.

# .env
DATABASE_URL="postgres://$(whoami)@localhost/my_database"
// index.js
console.log('DATABASE_URL', process.env.DATABASE_URL)
$ dotenvx run --debug -- node index.js
[dotenvx@0.14.1] injecting env (1) from .env
DATABASE_URL postgres://yourusername@localhost/my_database

Create a .env.production file and use -f to load it. It's straightforward, yet flexible.

$ echo "HELLO=production" > .env.production
$ echo "console.log('Hello ' + process.env.HELLO)" > index.js

$ dotenvx run -f .env.production -- node index.js
[dotenvx@1.X.X] injecting env (1) from .env.production
Hello production
> ^^

More examples

multiple `.env` files
$ echo "HELLO=local" > .env.local

$ echo "HELLO=World" > .env

$ dotenvx run -f .env.local -f .env -- node index.js
[dotenvx@1.X.X] injecting env (1) from .env.local,.env
Hello local

Note subsequent files do NOT override pre-existing variables defined in previous files or env. This follows historic principle. For example, above local wins โ€“ from the first file.

`--overload` flag
$ echo "HELLO=local" > .env.local

$ echo "HELLO=World" > .env

$ dotenvx run -f .env.local -f .env --overload -- node index.js
[dotenvx@1.X.X] injecting env (1) from .env.local,.env
Hello World

Note that with --overload subsequent files DO override pre-existing variables defined in previous files.

`--verbose` flag
$ echo "HELLO=production" > .env.production

$ dotenvx run -f .env.production --verbose -- node index.js
[dotenvx][verbose] injecting env from /path/to/.env.production
[dotenvx][verbose] HELLO set
[dotenvx@1.X.X] injecting env (1) from .env.production
Hello production
`--debug` flag
$ echo "HELLO=production" > .env.production

$ dotenvx run -f .env.production --debug -- node index.js
[dotenvx][debug] configuring options
[dotenvx][debug] {"envFile":[".env.production"]}
[dotenvx][verbose] injecting env from /path/to/.env.production
[dotenvx][debug] reading env from /path/to/.env.production
[dotenvx][debug] parsing env from /path/to/.env.production
[dotenvx][debug] {"HELLO":"production"}
[dotenvx][debug] writing env from /path/to/.env.production
[dotenvx][verbose] HELLO set
[dotenvx][debug] HELLO set to production
[dotenvx@1.X.X] injecting env (1) from .env.production
Hello production
`--quiet` flag

Use --quiet to suppress all output (except errors).

$ echo "HELLO=production" > .env.production

$ dotenvx run -f .env.production --quiet -- node index.js
Hello production
`--log-level` flag

Set --log-level to whatever you wish. For example, to suppress warnings (risky), set log level to error:

$ echo "HELLO=production" > .env.production

$ dotenvx run -f .env.production --log-level=error -- node index.js
Hello production

Available log levels are error, warn, info, verbose, debug, silly

`--convention` flag

Load envs using Next.js' convention or dotenv-flow convention. Set --convention to nextjs or flow:

$ echo "HELLO=development local" > .env.development.local
$ echo "HELLO=local" > .env.local
$ echo "HELLO=development" > .env.development
$ echo "HELLO=env" > .env

$ dotenvx run --convention=nextjs -- node index.js
Hello development local

$ dotenvx run --convention=flow -- node index.js
Hello development local

(more conventions available upon request)

Add encryption to your .env files with a single command. Use dotenvx encrypt.

$ dotenvx encrypt
โœ” encrypted (.env)

A DOTENV_PUBLIC_KEY (encryption key) and a DOTENV_PRIVATE_KEY (decryption key) are generated using the same public-key cryptography as Bitcoin.

More examples

`.env`
$ echo "HELLO=World" > .env
$ dotenvx encrypt
$ echo "console.log('Hello ' + process.env.HELLO)" > index.js

$ dotenvx run -- node index.js
[dotenvx@1.X.X] injecting env (2) from .env
Hello World
`.env.production`
$ echo "HELLO=Production" > .env.production
$ dotenvx encrypt -f .env.production
$ echo "console.log('Hello ' + process.env.HELLO)" > index.js

$ DOTENV_PRIVATE_KEY_PRODUCTION="<.env.production private key>" dotenvx run -- node index.js
[dotenvx@1.X.X] injecting env (2) from .env.production
Hello Production

Note the DOTENV_PRIVATE_KEY_PRODUCTION ends with _PRODUCTION. This instructs dotenvx run to load the .env.production file.

`.env.ci`
$ echo "HELLO=Ci" > .env.ci
$ dotenvx encrypt -f .env.ci
$ echo "console.log('Hello ' + process.env.HELLO)" > index.js

$ DOTENV_PRIVATE_KEY_CI="<.env.ci private key>" dotenvx run -- node index.js
[dotenvx@1.X.X] injecting env (2) from .env.ci
Hello Ci

Note the DOTENV_PRIVATE_KEY_CI ends with _CI. This instructs dotenvx run to load the .env.ci file. See the pattern?

combine multiple encrypted .env files
$ dotenvx set HELLO World -f .env
$ dotenvx set HELLO Production -f .env.production
$ echo "console.log('Hello ' + process.env.HELLO)" > index.js

$ DOTENV_PRIVATE_KEY="<.env private key>" DOTENV_PRIVATE_KEY_PRODUCTION="<.env.production private key>" dotenvx run -- node index.js
[dotenvx@1.X.X] injecting env (3) from .env, .env.production
Hello World

Note the DOTENV_PRIVATE_KEY instructs dotenvx run to load the .env file and the DOTENV_PRIVATE_KEY_PRODUCTION instructs it to load the .env.production file. See the pattern?

combine multiple encrypted .env files for monorepo
$ mkdir app1
$ mkdir app2
$ dotenvx set HELLO app1 -f app1/.env.ci
$ dotenvx set HELLO app2 -f app2/.env.ci
$ echo "console.log('Hello ' + process.env.HELLO)" > index.js

$ DOTENV_PRIVATE_KEY_CI="<app1/privat ci key>,<app2/private ci key>" dotenvx run -f app1/.env.ci -f app2/.env.ci -- node index.js
[dotenvx@1.X.X] injecting env (2) from app1/.env.ci,app2/.env.ci
Hello app1

$ DOTENV_PRIVATE_KEY_CI="<app1/privat ci key>,<app2/private ci key>" dotenvx run -f app1/.env.ci -f app2/.env.ci --overload -- node index.js
[dotenvx@1.X.X] injecting env (2) from app1/.env.ci,app2/.env.ci
Hello app2

Note the DOTENV_PRIVATE_KEY_CI (and any DOTENV_PRIVATE_KEY*) can take multiple private keys by simply comma separating them.

`--stdout`
$ echo "HELLO=World" > .env
$ dotenvx encrypt --stdout
$ dotenvx encrypt --stdout > .env.encrypted
other curves

secp256k1 is a well-known and battle tested curve, in use with Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies, but we are open to adding support for more curves.

If your organization's compliance department requires NIST approved curves or other curves like curve25519, please reach out at security@dotenvx.com.

Become a dotenvx power user.

Advanced CLI commands.

`run` - Variable Expansion

Reference and expand variables already on your machine for use in your .env file.

# .env
USERNAME="username"
DATABASE_URL="postgres://${USERNAME}@localhost/my_database"
// index.js
console.log('DATABASE_URL', process.env.DATABASE_URL)
$ dotenvx run --debug -- node index.js
[dotenvx@1.X.X] injecting env (2) from .env
DATABASE_URL postgres://username@localhost/my_database
`run` - Default Values

Use default values when environment variables are unset or empty.

# .env
# Default value syntax: use value if set, otherwise use default
DATABASE_HOST=${DB_HOST:-localhost}
DATABASE_PORT=${DB_PORT:-5432}

# Alternative syntax (no colon): use value if set, otherwise use default
API_URL=${API_BASE_URL-https://api.example.com}
// index.js
console.log('DATABASE_HOST', process.env.DATABASE_HOST)
console.log('DATABASE_PORT', process.env.DATABASE_PORT)
console.log('API_URL', process.env.API_URL)
$ dotenvx run --debug -- node index.js
[dotenvx@1.X.X] injecting env (3) from .env
DATABASE_HOST localhost
DATABASE_PORT 5432
API_URL https://api.example.com
`run` - Alternate Values

Use alternate values when environment variables are set and non-empty.

# .env
NODE_ENV=production

# Alternate value syntax: use alternate if set and non-empty, otherwise empty
DEBUG_MODE=${NODE_ENV:+false}
LOG_LEVEL=${NODE_ENV:+error}

# Alternative syntax (no colon): use alternate if set, otherwise empty  
CACHE_ENABLED=${NODE_ENV+true}
// index.js
console.log('NODE_ENV', process.env.NODE_ENV)
console.log('DEBUG_MODE', process.env.DEBUG_MODE)
console.log('LOG_LEVEL', process.env.LOG_LEVEL)
console.log('CACHE_ENABLED', process.env.CACHE_ENABLED)
$ dotenvx run --debug -- node index.js
[dotenvx@1.X.X] injecting env (4) from .env
NODE_ENV production
DEBUG_MODE false
LOG_LEVEL error
CACHE_ENABLED true
`run` - Interpolation Syntax Summary (Variable Expansion, Default/Alternate Values)

Complete reference for variable interpolation patterns supported by dotenvx:

# .env
DEFINED_VAR=hello
EMPTY_VAR=
# UNDEFINED_VAR is not set

# Default value syntax - use variable if set/non-empty, otherwise use default
TEST1=${DEFINED_VAR:-fallback}     # Result: "hello"
TEST2=${EMPTY_VAR:-fallback}       # Result: "fallback"  
TEST3=${UNDEFINED_VAR:-fallback}   # Result: "fallback"

# Default value syntax (no colon) - use variable if set, otherwise use default
TEST4=${DEFINED_VAR-fallback}      # Result: "hello"
TEST5=${EMPTY_VAR-fallback}        # Result: "" (empty, but set)
TEST6=${UNDEFINED_VAR-fallback}    # Result: "fallback"

# Alternate value syntax - use alternate if variable is set/non-empty, otherwise empty
TEST7=${DEFINED_VAR:+alternate}    # Result: "alternate"
TEST8=${EMPTY_VAR:+alternate}      # Result: "" (empty)
TEST9=${UNDEFINED_VAR:+alternate}  # Result: "" (empty)

# Alternate value syntax (no colon) - use alternate if variable is set, otherwise empty  
TEST10=${DEFINED_VAR+alternate}    # Result: "alternate"
TEST11=${EMPTY_VAR+alternate}      # Result: "alternate" (empty but set)
TEST12=${UNDEFINED_VAR+alternate}  # Result: "" (empty)

Key differences:

`run` - Command Substitution

Add the output of a command to one of your variables in your .env file.

# .env
DATABASE_URL="postgres://$(whoami)@localhost/my_database"
// index.js
console.log('DATABASE_URL', process.env.DATABASE_URL)
$ dotenvx run --debug -- node index.js
[dotenvx@1.X.X] injecting env (1) from .env
DATABASE_URL postgres://yourusername@localhost/my_database
`run` - Shell Expansion

Prevent your shell from expanding inline $VARIABLES before dotenvx has a chance to inject it. Use a subshell.

$ dotenvx run --env="HELLO=World" -- sh -c 'echo Hello $HELLO'
Hello World
`run` - Multiline

Dotenvx supports multiline values. This is particularly useful in conjunction with Docker - which does not support multiline values.

# .env
MULTILINE_PEM="-----BEGIN PUBLIC KEY-----
MIIBIjANBgkqhkiG9w0BAQEFAAOCAQ8AMIIBCgKCAQEAnNl1tL3QjKp3DZWM0T3u
LgGJQwu9WqyzHKZ6WIA5T+7zPjO1L8l3S8k8YzBrfH4mqWOD1GBI8Yjq2L1ac3Y/
bTdfHN8CmQr2iDJC0C6zY8YV93oZB3x0zC/LPbRYpF8f6OqX1lZj5vo2zJZy4fI/
kKcI5jHYc8VJq+KCuRZrvn+3V+KuL9tF9v8ZgjF2PZbU+LsCy5Yqg1M8f5Jp5f6V
u4QuUoobAgMBAAE=
-----END PUBLIC KEY-----"
// index.js
console.log('MULTILINE_PEM', process.env.MULTILINE_PEM)
$ dotenvx run -- node index.js
MULTILINE_PEM -----BEGIN PUBLIC KEY-----
MIIBIjANBgkqhkiG9w0BAQEFAAOCAQ8AMIIBCgKCAQEAnNl1tL3QjKp3DZWM0T3u
LgGJQwu9WqyzHKZ6WIA5T+7zPjO1L8l3S8k8YzBrfH4mqWOD1GBI8Yjq2L1ac3Y/
bTdfHN8CmQr2iDJC0C6zY8YV93oZB3x0zC/LPbRYpF8f6OqX1lZj5vo2zJZy4fI/
kKcI5jHYc8VJq+KCuRZrvn+3V+KuL9tF9v8ZgjF2PZbU+LsCy5Yqg1M8f5Jp5f6V
u4QuUoobAgMBAAE=
-----END PUBLIC KEY-----
`run` - Contextual Help

Unlike other dotenv libraries, dotenvx attempts to unblock you with contextual help.

For example, when missing a custom .env file:

$ dotenvx run -f .env.missing -- echo $HELLO
[MISSING_ENV_FILE] missing .env.missing file (/Users/scottmotte/Code/dotenvx/playground/apr-16/.env.missing)
[MISSING_ENV_FILE] https://github.com/dotenvx/dotenvx/issues/484 and re-run [dotenvx run -- echo]

or when missing a KEY:

$ echo "HELLO=World" > .env
$ dotenvx get GOODBYE
[MISSING_KEY] missing GOODBYE key
`run` - multiple `-f` flags

Compose multiple .env files for environment variables loading, as you need.

$ echo "HELLO=local" > .env.local
$ echo "HELLO=World" > .env
$ echo "console.log('Hello ' + process.env.HELLO)" > index.js

$ dotenvx run -f .env.local -f .env -- node index.js
[dotenvx@1.X.X] injecting env (1) from .env.local, .env
Hello local

Note subsequent files do NOT override pre-existing variables defined in previous files or env. This follows historic principle. For example, above local wins โ€“ from the first file.

`run --env HELLO=String`

Set environment variables as a simple KEY=value string pair.

$ echo "HELLO=World" > .env
$ echo "console.log('Hello ' + process.env.HELLO)" > index.js

$ dotenvx run --env HELLO=String -f .env -- node index.js
[dotenvx@1.X.X] injecting env (1) from .env, and --env flag
Hello String
`run --overload`

Override existing env variables. These can be variables already on your machine or variables loaded as files consecutively. The last variable seen will 'win'.

$ echo "HELLO=local" > .env.local
$ echo "HELLO=World" > .env
$ echo "console.log('Hello ' + process.env.HELLO)" > index.js

$ dotenvx run -f .env.local -f .env --overload -- node index.js
[dotenvx@1.X.X] injecting env (1) from .env.local, .env
Hello World

Note that with --overload subsequent files DO override pre-existing variables defined in previous files.

`run` - Environment Variable Precedence (Container/Cloud Deployments)

When deploying applications in containers or cloud environments, you often need to override specific environment variables at runtime without modifying committed .env files. By default, dotenvx follows the historic dotenv principle: environment variables already present take precedence over .env files.

# .env.prod contains: MODEL_REGISTRY=registry.company.com/models/v1
$ echo "MODEL_REGISTRY=registry.company.com/models/v1" > .env.prod
$ echo "console.log('MODEL_REGISTRY:', process.env.MODEL_REGISTRY)" > app.js

# Without environment variable set - uses .env.prod value
$ dotenvx run -f .env.prod -- node app.js
MODEL_REGISTRY: registry.company.com/models/v1

# With environment variable set (e.g., via Azure Container Service) - environment variable takes precedence
$ MODEL_REGISTRY=registry.azure.com/models/v2 dotenvx run -f .env.prod -- node app.js
MODEL_REGISTRY: registry.azure.com/models/v2

# To force .env.prod to override environment variables, use --overload
$ MODEL_REGISTRY=registry.azure.com/models/v2 dotenvx run -f .env.prod --overload -- node app.js
MODEL_REGISTRY: registry.company.com/models/v1

For container deployments: Set environment variables through your cloud provider's UI/configuration (Azure Container Service, AWS ECS, etc.) to override specific values from committed .env files without rebuilding your application.

`DOTENV_PRIVATE_KEY=key run`

Decrypt your encrypted .env by setting DOTENV_PRIVATE_KEY before dotenvx run.

$ touch .env
$ dotenvx set HELLO encrypted
$ echo "console.log('Hello ' + process.env.HELLO)" > index.js

# check your .env.keys files for your privateKey
$ DOTENV_PRIVATE_KEY="122...0b8" dotenvx run -- node index.js
[dotenvx@1.X.X] injecting env (2) from .env
Hello encrypted
`DOTENV_PRIVATE_KEY_PRODUCTION=key run`

Decrypt your encrypted .env.production by setting DOTENV_PRIVATE_KEY_PRODUCTION before dotenvx run. Alternatively, this can be already set on your server or cloud provider.

$ touch .env.production
$ dotenvx set HELLO "production encrypted" -f .env.production
$ echo "console.log('Hello ' + process.env.HELLO)" > index.js

# check .env.keys for your privateKey
$ DOTENV_PRIVATE_KEY_PRODUCTION="122...0b8" dotenvx run -- node index.js
[dotenvx@1.X.X] injecting env (2) from .env.production
Hello production encrypted

Note the DOTENV_PRIVATE_KEY_PRODUCTION ends with _PRODUCTION. This instructs dotenvx run to load the .env.production file.

`DOTENV_PRIVATE_KEY_CI=key dotenvx run`

Decrypt your encrypted .env.ci by setting DOTENV_PRIVATE_KEY_CI before dotenvx run. Alternatively, this can be already set on your server or cloud provider.

$ touch .env.ci
$ dotenvx set HELLO "ci encrypted" -f .env.ci
$ echo "console.log('Hello ' + process.env.HELLO)" > index.js

# check .env.keys for your privateKey
$ DOTENV_PRIVATE_KEY_CI="122...0b8" dotenvx run -- node index.js
[dotenvx@1.X.X] injecting env (2) from .env.ci
Hello ci encrypted

Note the DOTENV_PRIVATE_KEY_CI ends with _CI. This instructs dotenvx run to load the .env.ci file. See the pattern?

`DOTENV_PRIVATE_KEY=key DOTENV_PRIVATE_KEY_PRODUCTION=key run` - Combine Multiple

Decrypt your encrypted .env and .env.production files by setting DOTENV_PRIVATE_KEY and DOTENV_PRIVATE_KEY_PRODUCTION before dotenvx run.

$ touch .env
$ touch .env.production
$ dotenvx set HELLO encrypted
$ dotenvx set HELLO "production encrypted" -f .env.production
$ echo "console.log('Hello ' + process.env.HELLO)" > index.js

# check .env.keys for your privateKeys
$ DOTENV_PRIVATE_KEY="122...0b8" DOTENV_PRIVATE_KEY_PRODUCTION="122...0b8" dotenvx run -- node index.js
[dotenvx@1.X.X] injecting env (3) from .env, .env.production
Hello encrypted

$ DOTENV_PRIVATE_KEY_PRODUCTION="122...0b8" DOTENV_PRIVATE_KEY="122...0b8" dotenvx run -- node index.js
[dotenvx@1.X.X] injecting env (3) from .env.production, .env
Hello production encrypted

Compose any encrypted files you want this way. As long as a DOTENV_PRIVATE_KEY_${environment} is set, the values from .env.${environment} will be decrypted at runtime.

`run --verbose`

Set log level to verbose. (log levels)

$ echo "HELLO=production" > .env.production
$ echo "console.log('Hello ' + process.env.HELLO)" > index.js

$ dotenvx run -f .env.production --verbose -- node index.js
loading env from .env.production (/path/to/.env.production)
HELLO set
[dotenvx@1.X.X] injecting env (1) from .env.production
Hello production
`run --debug`

Set log level to debug. (log levels)

$ echo "HELLO=production" > .env.production
$ echo "console.log('Hello ' + process.env.HELLO)" > index.js

$ dotenvx run -f .env.production --debug -- node index.js
process command [node index.js]
options: {"env":[],"envFile":[".env.production"]}
loading env from .env.production (/path/to/.env.production)
{"HELLO":"production"}
HELLO set
HELLO set to production
[dotenvx@1.X.X] injecting env (1) from .env.production
executing process command [node index.js]
expanding process command to [/opt/homebrew/bin/node index.js]
Hello production
`run --quiet`

Use --quiet to suppress all output (except errors). (log levels)

$ echo "HELLO=production" > .env.production
$ echo "console.log('Hello ' + process.env.HELLO)" > index.js

$ dotenvx run -f .env.production --quiet -- node index.js
Hello production
`run --log-level`

Set --log-level to whatever you wish. For example, to suppress warnings (risky), set log level to error:

$ echo "HELLO=production" > .env.production
$ echo "console.log('Hello ' + process.env.HELLO)" > index.js

$ dotenvx run -f .env.production --log-level=error -- node index.js
Hello production

Available log levels are error, warn, info, verbose, debug, silly (source)

`run --strict`

Exit with code 1 if any errors are encountered - like a missing .env file or decryption failure.

$ echo "console.log('Hello ' + process.env.HELLO)" > index.js

$ dotenvx run -f .env.missing --strict -- node index.js
[MISSING_ENV_FILE] missing .env.missing file (/path/to/.env.missing)
[MISSING_ENV_FILE] ? add one with [echo "HELLO=World" > .env.missing]

This can be useful in ci scripts where you want to fail the ci if your .env file could not be decrypted at runtime.

`run --ignore`

Ignore errors like MISSING_ENV_FILE.

$ echo "console.log('Hello ' + process.env.HELLO)" > index.js

$ dotenvx run -f .env.missing --ignore=MISSING_ENV_FILE -- node index.js
...
`run --convention=nextjs`

Load envs using Next.js' convention. Set --convention to nextjs:

$ echo "HELLO=development local" > .env.development.local
$ echo "HELLO=local" > .env.local
$ echo "HELLO=development" > .env.development
$ echo "HELLO=env" > .env
$ echo "console.log('Hello ' + process.env.HELLO)" > index.js

$ dotenvx run --convention=nextjs -- node index.js
[dotenvx@1.X.X] injecting env (1) from .env.development.local, .env.local, .env.development, .env
Hello development local

(more conventions available upon request)

`run --convention=flow`

Load envs using dotenv-flow's convention. Set --convention to flow:

$ echo "HELLO=development local" > .env.development.local
$ echo "HELLO=development" > .env.development
$ echo "HELLO=local" > .env.local
$ echo "HELLO=env" > .env
$ echo "console.log('Hello ' + process.env.HELLO)" > index.js

$ NODE_ENV=development dotenvx run --convention=flow -- node index.js 
[dotenvx@1.X.X] injecting env (1) from .env.development.local, .env.development, .env.local, .env
Hello development local

Further, we recommend using DOTENV_ENV over NODE_ENVโ€“ as dotenvx works everywhere, not just node.

$ DOTENV_ENV=development dotenvx run --convention=flow -- node index.js 
[dotenvx@1.X.X] injecting env (1) from .env.development.local, .env.development, .env.local, .env
Hello development local
`run -fk`

Specify path to .env.keys. This is useful with monorepos.

$ mkdir -p apps/app1
$ touch apps/app1/.env
$ dotenvx set HELLO world -fk .env.keys -f apps/app1/.env

$ dotenvx run -fk .env.keys -f apps/app1/.env -- yourcommand
`get KEY`

Return a single environment variable's value.

$ echo "HELLO=World" > .env

$ dotenvx get HELLO
World
`get KEY -f`

Return a single environment variable's value from a specific .env file.

$ echo "HELLO=World" > .env
$ echo "HELLO=production" > .env.production

$ dotenvx get HELLO -f .env.production
production
`get KEY -fk`

Specify path to .env.keys. This is useful with monorepos.

$ mkdir -p apps/app1
$ touch apps/app1/.env
$ dotenvx set HELLO world -fk .env.keys -f apps/app1/.env

$ dotenvx get HELLO -fk .env.keys -f apps/app1/.env
world
`get KEY --env`

Return a single environment variable's value from a --env string.

$ dotenvx get HELLO --env HELLO=String -f .env.production
String
`get KEY --overload`

Return a single environment variable's value where each found value is overloaded.

$ echo "HELLO=World" > .env
$ echo "HELLO=production" > .env.production

$ dotenvx get HELLO -f .env.production --env HELLO=String -f .env --overload
World
`get KEY --strict`

Exit with code 1 if any errors are encountered - like a missing key, missing .env file, or decryption failure.

$ dotenvx get DOES_NOT_EXIST --strict
[MISSING_KEY] missing DOES_NOT_EXIST key
`get KEY --convention=nextjs`

Return a single environment variable's value using Next.js' convention. Set --convention to nextjs:

$ echo "HELLO=development local" > .env.development.local
$ echo "HELLO=local" > .env.local
$ echo "HELLO=development" > .env.development
$ echo "HELLO=env" > .env
$ echo "console.log('Hello ' + process.env.HELLO)" > index.js

$ dotenvx get HELLO --convention=nextjs
development local
`get KEY --convention=flow`

Return a single environment variable's value using dotenv-flow's convention. Set --convention to flow:

$ echo "HELLO=development local" > .env.development.local
$ echo "HELLO=development" > .env.development
$ echo "HELLO=local" > .env.local
$ echo "HELLO=env" > .env
$ echo "console.log('Hello ' + process.env.HELLO)" > index.js

$ NODE_ENV=development dotenvx get HELLO --convention=flow
development local

Further, we recommend using DOTENV_ENV over NODE_ENVโ€“ as dotenvx works everywhere, not just node.

$ DOTENV_ENV=development dotenvx get HELLO --convention=flow
development local
`get` (json)

Return a json response of all key/value pairs in a .env file.

$ echo "HELLO=World" > .env

$ dotenvx get
{"HELLO":"World"}
`get --format shell`

Return a shell formatted response of all key/value pairs in a .env file.

$ echo "HELLO=World" > .env
$ echo "KEY=value" >> .env

$ dotenvx get --format shell
HELLO=World KEY=value

This can be useful when combined with env on the command line.

$ echo "console.log('Hello ' + process.env.KEY + ' ' + process.env.HELLO)" > index.js
$ env $(dotenvx get --format=shell) node index.js
Hello value World

or with export.

$ echo "console.log('Hello ' + process.env.KEY + ' ' + process.env.HELLO)" > index.js
$ export $(dotenvx get --format=shell)
$ node index.js
Hello value World
`get --format eval`

Return an eval-ready shell formatted response of all key/value pairs in a .env file.

$ echo "HELLO=World" > .env
$ echo "KEY=value" >> .env

$ dotenvx get --format eval
HELLO="World"
KEY="value"

Note that this exports newlines and quoted strings.

This can be useful for more complex .env values (spaces, escaped characters, quotes, etc) combined with eval on the command line.

$ echo "console.log('Hello ' + process.env.KEY + ' ' + process.env.HELLO)" > index.js
$ eval $(dotenvx get --format=eval) node index.js
Hello value World

Be careful with eval as it allows for arbitrary execution of commands. Prefer dotenvx run -- but in some cases eval is a sharp knife that is useful to have.

`get --all`

Return preset machine envs as well.

$ echo "HELLO=World" > .env

$ dotenvx get --all
{"PWD":"/some/file/path","USER":"username","LIBRARY_PATH":"/usr/local/lib", ..., "HELLO":"World"}
`get --all --pretty-print`

Make the output more readable - pretty print it.

$ echo "HELLO=World" > .env

$ dotenvx get --all --pretty-print
{
  "PWD": "/some/filepath",
  "USER": "username",
  "LIBRARY_PATH": "/usr/local/lib",
  ...,
  "HELLO": "World"
}
`set KEY value`

Set an encrypted key/value (on by default).

$ touch .env

$ dotenvx set HELLO World
set HELLO with encryption (.env)
`set KEY value -f`

Set an (encrypted) key/value for another .env file.

$ touch .env.production

$ dotenvx set HELLO production -f .env.production
set HELLO with encryption (.env.production)
`set KEY value -fk`

Specify path to .env.keys. This is useful with monorepos.

$ mkdir -p apps/app1
$ touch apps/app1/.env

$ dotenvx set HELLO world -fk .env.keys -f apps/app1/.env
set HELLO with encryption (.env)

Put it to use.

$ dotenvx get -fk .env.keys -f apps/app1/.env

Use it with a relative path.

$ cd apps/app1
$ dotenvx get -fk ../../.env.keys -f .env
`set KEY "value with spaces"`

Set a value containing spaces.

$ touch .env.ci

$ dotenvx set HELLO "my ci" -f .env.ci
set HELLO with encryption (.env.ci)
`set KEY -- "- + * รท"`

If your value starts with a dash (-), then place two dashes instructing the cli that there are no more flag arguments.

$ touch .env.ci

$ dotenvx set HELLO -f .env.ci -- "- + * รท"
set HELLO with encryption (.env.ci)
`set KEY value --plain`

Set a plaintext key/value.

$ touch .env

$ dotenvx set HELLO World --plain
set HELLO (.env)
`encrypt`

Encrypt the contents of a .env file to an encrypted .env file.

$ echo "HELLO=World" > .env

$ dotenvx encrypt
โœ” encrypted (.env)
โœ” key added to .env.keys (DOTENV_PRIVATE_KEY)
โฎ•  next run [dotenvx ext gitignore --pattern .env.keys] to gitignore .env.keys
โฎ•  next run [DOTENV_PRIVATE_KEY='122...0b8' dotenvx run -- yourcommand] to test decryption locally
`encrypt -f`

Encrypt the contents of a specified .env file to an encrypted .env file.

$ echo "HELLO=World" > .env
$ echo "HELLO=Production" > .env.production

$ dotenvx encrypt -f .env.production
โœ” encrypted (.env.production)
โœ” key added to .env.keys (DOTENV_PRIVATE_KEY_PRODUCTION)
โฎ•  next run [dotenvx ext gitignore --pattern .env.keys] to gitignore .env.keys
โฎ•  next run [DOTENV_PRIVATE_KEY='bff...bc4' dotenvx run -- yourcommand] to test decryption locally
`encrypt -fk`

Specify path to .env.keys. This is useful with monorepos.

$ mkdir -p apps/app1
$ echo "HELLO=World" > apps/app1/.env

$ dotenvx encrypt -fk .env.keys -f apps/app1/.env
โœ” encrypted (apps/app1/.env)

Put it to use.

$ dotenvx run -fk .env.keys -f apps/app1/.env

Use with a relative path.

$ cd apps/app1
$ dotenvx run -fk ../../.env.keys -f .env
`encrypt -k`

Specify the key(s) to encrypt by passing --key.

$ echo "HELLO=World\nHELLO2=Universe" > .env

$ dotenvx encrypt -k HELLO2
โœ” encrypted (.env)

Even specify a glob pattern.

$ echo "HELLO=World\nHOLA=Mundo" > .env

$ dotenvx encrypt -k "HE*"
โœ” encrypted (.env)
`encrypt -ek`

Specify the key(s) to NOT encrypt by passing --exclude-key.

$ echo "HELLO=World\nHELLO2=Universe" > .env

$ dotenvx encrypt -ek HELLO
โœ” encrypted (.env)

Even specify a glob pattern.

$ echo "HELLO=World\nHOLA=Mundo" > .env

$ dotenvx encrypt -ek "HO*"
โœ” encrypted (.env)
`encrypt --stdout`

Encrypt the contents of a .env file and send to stdout.

$ echo "HELLO=World" > .env
$ dotenvx encrypt --stdout
#/-------------------[DOTENV_PUBLIC_KEY]--------------------/
#/            public-key encryption for .env files          /
#/       [how it works](https://dotenvx.com/encryption)     /
#/----------------------------------------------------------/
DOTENV_PUBLIC_KEY="034af93e93708b994c10f236c96ef88e47291066946cce2e8d98c9e02c741ced45"
# .env
HELLO="encrypted:BDqDBibm4wsYqMpCjTQ6BsDHmMadg9K3dAt+Z9HPMfLEIRVz50hmLXPXRuDBXaJi/LwWYEVUNiq0HISrslzQPaoyS8Lotg3gFWJTsNCdOWnqpjF2xNUX2RQiP05kAbEXM6MWVjDr"

or send to a file:

$ echo "HELLO=World" > .env
$ dotenvx encrypt --stdout > somefile.txt
`decrypt`

Decrypt the contents of an encrypted .env file to an unencrypted .env file.

$ echo "HELLO=World" > .env
$ dotenvx encrypt
โœ” encrypted (.env)
$ dotenvx decrypt
โœ” decrypted (.env)
`decrypt -f`

Decrypt the contents of a specified encrypted .env file to an unencrypted .env file.

$ echo "HELLO=World" > .env
$ echo "HELLO=Production" > .env.production

$ dotenvx encrypt -f .env.production
โœ” encrypted (.env.production)
$ dotenvx decrypt -f .env.production
โœ” decrypted (.env.production)
`decrypt -fk`

Specify path to .env.keys. This is useful with monorepos.

$ mkdir -p apps/app1
$ echo "HELLO=World" > apps/app1/.env

$ dotenvx encrypt -fk .env.keys -f apps/app1/.env
โœ” encrypted (apps/app1/.env)
$ dotenvx decrypt -fk .env.keys -f apps/app1/.env
โœ” decrypted (apps/app1/.env)
`decrypt -k`

Decrypt the contents of a specified key inside an encrypted .env file.

$ echo "HELLO=World\nHOLA=Mundo" > .env
$ dotenvx encrypt
โœ” encrypted (.env)
$ dotenvx decrypt -k HELLO
โœ” decrypted (.env)

Even specify a glob pattern.

$ echo "HELLO=World\nHOLA=Mundo" > .env
$ dotenvx encrypt
โœ” encrypted (.env)
$ dotenvx decrypt -k "HE*"
โœ” encrypted (.env)
`decrypt -ek`

Decrypt the contents inside an encrypted .env file except for an excluded key.

$ echo "HELLO=World\nHOLA=Mundo" > .env
$ dotenvx encrypt
โœ” encrypted (.env)
$ dotenvx decrypt -ek HOLA
โœ” decrypted (.env)

Even specify a glob pattern.

$ echo "HELLO=World\nHOLA=Mundo" > .env
$ dotenvx encrypt
โœ” encrypted (.env)
$ dotenvx decrypt -ek "HO*"
โœ” encrypted (.env)
`decrypt --stdout`

Decrypt the contents of an encrypted .env file and send to stdout.

$ dotenvx decrypt --stdout
#/-------------------[DOTENV_PUBLIC_KEY]--------------------/
#/            public-key encryption for .env files          /
#/       [how it works](https://dotenvx.com/encryption)     /
#/----------------------------------------------------------/
DOTENV_PUBLIC_KEY="034af93e93708b994c10f236c96ef88e47291066946cce2e8d98c9e02c741ced45"
# .env
HELLO="World"

or send to a file:

$ dotenvx decrypt --stdout > somefile.txt
`keypair`

Print public/private keys for .env file.

$ echo "HELLO=World" > .env
$ dotenvx encrypt

$ dotenvx keypair
{"DOTENV_PUBLIC_KEY":"<publicKey>","DOTENV_PRIVATE_KEY":"<privateKey>"}
`keypair -f`

Print public/private keys for .env.production file.

$ echo "HELLO=Production" > .env.production
$ dotenvx encrypt -f .env.production

$ dotenvx keypair -f .env.production
{"DOTENV_PUBLIC_KEY_PRODUCTION":"<publicKey>","DOTENV_PRIVATE_KEY_PRODUCTION":"<privateKey>"}
`keypair -fk`

Specify path to .env.keys. This is useful for printing public/private keys for monorepos.

$ mkdir -p apps/app1
$ echo "HELLO=World" > apps/app1/.env
$ dotenvx encrypt -fk .env.keys -f apps/app1/.env

$ dotenvx keypair -fk .env.keys -f apps/app1/.env
{"DOTENV_PUBLIC_KEY":"<publicKey>","DOTENV_PRIVATE_KEY":"<privateKey>"}
`keypair DOTENV_PRIVATE_KEY`

Print specific keypair for .env file.

$ echo "HELLO=World" > .env
$ dotenvx encrypt

$ dotenvx keypair DOTENV_PRIVATE_KEY
<privateKey>
`keypair --format shell`

Print a shell formatted response of public/private keys.

$ echo "HELLO=World" > .env
$ dotenx encrypt

$ dotenvx keypair --format shell
DOTENV_PUBLIC_KEY=<publicKey> DOTENV_PRIVATE_KEY=<privateKey>
`ls`

Print all .env files in a tree structure.

$ touch .env
$ touch .env.production
$ mkdir -p apps/backend
$ touch apps/backend/.env

$ dotenvx ls
โ”œโ”€ .env.production
โ”œโ”€ .env
โ””โ”€ apps
   โ””โ”€ backend
      โ””โ”€ .env
`ls directory`

Print all .env files inside a specified path to a directory.

$ touch .env
$ touch .env.production
$ mkdir -p apps/backend
$ touch apps/backend/.env

$ dotenvx ls apps/backend
โ””โ”€ .env
`ls -f`

Glob .env filenames matching a wildcard.

$ touch .env
$ touch .env.production
$ mkdir -p apps/backend
$ touch apps/backend/.env
$ touch apps/backend/.env.prod

$ dotenvx ls -f **/.env.prod*
โ”œโ”€ .env.production
โ””โ”€ apps
   โ””โ”€ backend
      โ””โ”€ .env.prod
`ls -ef`

Glob .env filenames excluding a wildcard.

$ touch .env
$ touch .env.production
$ mkdir -p apps/backend
$ touch apps/backend/.env
$ touch apps/backend/.env.prod

$ dotenvx ls -ef '**/.env.prod*'
โ”œโ”€ .env
โ””โ”€ apps
   โ””โ”€ backend
      โ””โ”€ .env
`rotate`

Rotate public/private keys for .env file and re-encrypt all encrypted values.

$ echo "HELLO=World" > .env
$ dotenvx encrypt
โœ” encrypted (.env)
$ dotenvx rotate
โœ” rotated (.env)
`rotate -f`

Rotate public/private keys for a specified encrypted .env file and re-encrypt all encrypted values.

$ echo "HELLO=World" > .env
$ echo "HELLO=Production" > .env.production

$ dotenvx encrypt -f .env.production
โœ” encrypted (.env.production)
$ dotenvx rotate -f .env.production
โœ” rotated (.env.production)
`rotate -fk`

Specify path to .env.keys. This is useful with monorepos.

$ mkdir -p apps/app1
$ echo "HELLO=World" > apps/app1/.env

$ dotenvx encrypt -fk .env.keys -f apps/app1/.env
โœ” encrypted (apps/app1/.env)
$ dotenvx rotate -fk .env.keys -f apps/app1/.env
โœ” rotated (apps/app1/.env)
`rotate -k`

Rotate the contents of a specified key inside an encrypted .env file.

$ echo "HELLO=World\nHOLA=Mundo" > .env
$ dotenvx encrypt
โœ” encrypted (.env)
$ dotenvx rotate -k HELLO
โœ” rotated (.env)

Even specify a glob pattern.

$ echo "HELLO=World\nHOLA=Mundo" > .env
$ dotenvx encrypt
โœ” encrypted (.env)
$ dotenvx rotate -k "HE*"
โœ” rotated (.env)
`rotate -ek`

Rotate the encrypted contents inside an encrypted .env file except for an excluded key.

$ echo "HELLO=World\nHOLA=Mundo" > .env
$ dotenvx encrypt
โœ” encrypted (.env)
$ dotenvx rotate -ek HOLA
โœ” rotated (.env)

Even specify a glob pattern.

$ echo "HELLO=World\nHOLA=Mundo" > .env
$ dotenvx encrypt
โœ” encrypted (.env)
$ dotenvx rotate -ek "HO*"
โœ” rotated (.env)
`rotate --stdout`

Rotate the contents of an encrypted .env file and send to stdout.

$ dotenvx rotate --stdout
#/-------------------[DOTENV_PUBLIC_KEY]--------------------/
#/            public-key encryption for .env files          /
#/       [how it works](https://dotenvx.com/encryption)     /
#/----------------------------------------------------------/
DOTENV_PUBLIC_KEY="034af93e93708b994c10f236c96ef88e47291066946cce2e8d98c9e02c741ced45"
# .env
HELLO="encrypted:12345"

or send to a file:

$ dotenvx rotate --stdout > somefile.txt
`help`

Output help for dotenvx.

$ dotenvx help
Usage: dotenvx run -- yourcommand

a secure dotenvโ€“from the creator of `dotenv`

Options:
  -l, --log-level <level>      set log level (default: "info")
  -q, --quiet                  sets log level to error
  -v, --verbose                sets log level to verbose
  -d, --debug                  sets log level to debug
  -V, --version                output the version number
  -h, --help                   display help for command

Commands:
  run                inject env at runtime [dotenvx run -- yourcommand]
  get [KEY]          return a single environment variable
  set <KEY> <value>  set a single environment variable
  encrypt            convert .env file(s) to encrypted .env file(s)
  decrypt            convert encrypted .env file(s) to plain .env file(s)
  keypair [KEY]      print public/private keys for .env file(s)
  ls [directory]     print all .env files in a tree structure
 
Advanced: 
  pro                          ๐Ÿ† pro
  ext                          ๐Ÿ”Œ extensions

You can get more detailed help per command with dotenvx help COMMAND.

$ dotenvx help run
Usage: @dotenvx/dotenvx run [options]

inject env at runtime [dotenvx run -- yourcommand]

Options:
  -e, --env <strings...>            environment variable(s) set as string (example: "HELLO=World") (default: [])
  -f, --env-file <paths...>         path(s) to your env file(s) (default: [])
  -fv, --env-vault-file <paths...>  path(s) to your .env.vault file(s) (default: [])
  -o, --overload                    override existing env variables
  --convention <name>               load a .env convention (available conventions: ['nextjs'])
  -h, --help                        display help for command

Examples:

  $ dotenvx run -- npm run dev
  $ dotenvx run -- flask --app index run
  $ dotenvx run -- php artisan serve
  $ dotenvx run -- bin/rails s

Try it:

  $ echo "HELLO=World" > .env
  $ echo "console.log('Hello ' + process.env.HELLO)" > index.js

  $ dotenvx run -- node index.js
  [dotenvx@1.X.X] injecting env (1) from .env
  Hello World
`--version`

Check current version of dotenvx.

$ dotenvx --version
X.X.X

CLI extensions.

`ext genexample`

In one command, generate a .env.example file from your current .env file contents.

$ echo "HELLO=World" > .env

$ dotenvx ext genexample
โœ” updated .env.example (1)
`ext genexample -f`

Pass multiple .env files to generate your .env.example file from the combination of their contents.

$ echo "HELLO=World" > .env
$ echo "DB_HOST=example.com" > .env.production

$ dotenvx ext genexample -f .env -f .env.production
โœ” updated .env.example (2)
# .env.example
HELLO=""
DB_HOST=""
`ext genexample directory`

Generate a .env.example file inside the specified directory. Useful for monorepos.

$ echo "HELLO=World" > .env
$ mkdir -p apps/backend
$ echo "HELLO=Backend" > apps/backend/.env

$ dotenvx ext genexample apps/backend
โœ” updated .env.example (1)
# apps/backend/.env.example
HELLO=""
`ext gitignore`

Gitignore your .env files.

$ dotenvx ext gitignore
โœ” ignored .env* (.gitignore)
`ext gitignore --pattern`

Gitignore specific pattern(s) of .env files.

$ dotenvx ext gitignore --pattern .env.keys
โœ” ignored .env.keys (.gitignore)
`ext precommit`

Prevent .env files from being committed to code.

$ dotenvx ext precommit
[dotenvx][precommit] .env files (1) protected (encrypted or gitignored)
`ext precommit --install`

Install a shell script to .git/hooks/pre-commit to prevent accidentally committing any .env files to source control.

$ dotenvx ext precommit --install
[dotenvx][precommit] dotenvx ext precommit installed [.git/hooks/pre-commit]
`ext precommit directory`

Prevent .env files from being committed to code inside a specified path to a directory.

$ echo "HELLO=World" > .env
$ mkdir -p apps/backend
$ echo "HELLO=Backend" > apps/backend/.env

$ dotenvx ext precommit apps/backend
[dotenvx][precommit] apps/backend/.env not protected (encrypted or gitignored)
`ext prebuild`

Prevent .env files from being built into your docker containers.

Add it to your Dockerfile.

# Dockerfile
RUN curl -fsS https://dotenvx.sh | sh

...

RUN dotenvx ext prebuild
CMD ["dotenvx", "run", "--", "node", "index.js"]
`ext prebuild directory`

Prevent .env files from being built into your docker containers inside a specified path to a directory.

Add it to your Dockerfile.

# Dockerfile
RUN curl -fsS https://dotenvx.sh | sh

...

RUN dotenvx ext prebuild apps/backend
CMD ["dotenvx", "run", "--", "node", "apps/backend/index.js"]
`ext scan`

Scan for leaked secrets.

$ dotenvx ext scan
100 commits scanned.
no leaks found

Uses gitleaks under the hood.

Use dotenvx directly in code.

`config()`

Use directly in node.js code.

// index.js
require('@dotenvx/dotenvx').config()

console.log(`Hello ${process.env.HELLO}`)
$ node index.js
[dotenvx@1.X.X] injecting env (1) from .env
Hello World

It defaults to looking for a .env file.

`config(path: ['.env.local', '.env'])` - multiple files

Specify path(s) to multiple .env files.

// index.js
require('@dotenvx/dotenvx').config({path: ['.env.local', '.env']})

// esm
// import dotenvx from "@dotenvx/dotenvx";
// dotenvx.config({path: ['.env.local', '.env']});

console.log(`Hello ${process.env.HELLO}`)
$ node index.js
[dotenvx@1.X.X] injecting env (1) from .env.local, .env
Hello Me
`config(overload: true)` - overload

Use overload to overwrite the prior set value.

// index.js
require('@dotenvx/dotenvx').config({path: ['.env.local', '.env'], overload: true})

// esm
// import dotenvx from "@dotenvx/dotenvx";
// dotenvx.config({path: ['.env.local', '.env'], overload: true});

console.log(`Hello ${process.env.HELLO}`)
$ node index.js
[dotenvx@1.X.X] injecting env (1) from .env.local, .env
Hello World
`config(quiet: true)` - quiet

Suppress all output (except errors).

// index.js
require('@dotenvx/dotenvx').config({path: ['.env.missing', '.env'], quiet: true})

// esm
// import dotenvx from "@dotenvx/dotenvx";
// dotenvx.config({path: ['.env.missing', '.env'], quiet: true});

console.log(`Hello ${process.env.HELLO}`)
$ node index.js
Error: [MISSING_ENV_FILE] missing .env.missing file (/path/to/.env.missing)
Hello World
`config(strict: true)` - strict

Exit with code 1 if any errors are encountered - like a missing .env file or decryption failure.

// index.js
require('@dotenvx/dotenvx').config({path: ['.env.missing', '.env'], strict: true})

// esm
// import dotenvx from "@dotenvx/dotenvx";
// dotenvx.config({path: ['.env.missing', '.env'], strict: true});

console.log(`Hello ${process.env.HELLO}`)
$ node index.js
Error: [MISSING_ENV_FILE] missing .env.missing file (/path/to/.env.missing)
`config(ignore:)` - ignore

Use ignore to suppress specific errors like MISSING_ENV_FILE.

// index.js
require('@dotenvx/dotenvx').config({path: ['.env.missing', '.env'], ignore: ['MISSING_ENV_FILE']})

// esm
// import dotenvx from "@dotenvx/dotenvx";
// dotenvx.config({path: ['.env.missing', '.env'], ignore: ['MISSING_ENV_FILE']});

console.log(`Hello ${process.env.HELLO}`)
$ node index.js
[dotenvx@1.X.X] injecting env (1) from .env
Hello World
`config(envKeysFile:)` - envKeysFile

Use envKeysFile to customize the path to your .env.keys file. This is useful with monorepos.

// index.js
require('@dotenvx/dotenvx').config({path: ['.env'], envKeysFile: '../../.env.keys'})
`parse(src)`

Parse a .env string directly in node.js code.

// index.js
const dotenvx = require('@dotenvx/dotenvx')
const src = 'HELLO=World'
const parsed = dotenvx.parse(src)
console.log(`Hello ${parsed.HELLO}`)
$ node index.js
Hello World
`parse(src, {processEnv:})`

Sometimes, you want to run parse without it accessing process.env. (You can pass a fake processEnv this way as well - sometimes useful.)

// index.js
const dotenvx = require('@dotenvx/dotenvx')
const src = 'USER=Me'
const parsed = dotenvx.parse(src, { processEnv: {} })
console.log(`Hello ${parsed.USER}`)
`parse(src, {privateKey:})`

Decrypt an encrypted .env string with privateKey.

// index.js
const dotenvx = require('@dotenvx/dotenvx')
const src = 'HELLO="encrypted:BE9Y7LKANx77X1pv1HnEoil93fPa5c9rpL/1ps48uaRT9zM8VR6mHx9yM+HktKdsPGIZELuZ7rr2mn1gScsmWitppAgE/1lVprNYBCqiYeaTcKXjDUXU5LfsEsflnAsDhT/kWG1l"'
const parsed = dotenvx.parse(src, { privateKey: 'a4547dcd9d3429615a3649bb79e87edb62ee6a74b007075e9141ae44f5fb412c' })
console.log(`Hello ${parsed.HELLO}`)
$ node index.js
Hello World
`set(KEY, value)`

Programmatically set an environment variable.

// index.js
const dotenvx = require('@dotenvx/dotenvx')
dotenvx.set('HELLO', 'World', { path: '.env' })
`get(KEY)` - Decryption at Access

Programmatically get an environment variable at access/runtime.

// index.js
const dotenvx = require('@dotenvx/dotenvx')
const decryptedValue = dotenvx.get('HELLO')
console.log(decryptedValue)

This is known as Decryption at Access and is written about in the whitepaper.

Dotenvx Radar is a commercial extension for dotenvx.

Observe, version, and back up your environment variables at runtime.

  1. Install Radar
$ curl -sfS https://dotenvx.sh/radar | sh
  1. Log in
$ dotenvx-radar login
โœ” logged in [username]
  1. Run dotenvx
$ dotenvx run -- yourcommand
[dotenvx@1.0.0] ๐Ÿ“ก radar active
[dotenvx@1.0.0] injecting env (1) from .env

That's it! Your environment variables are auto-observed and backed up by Radar.

`login`

Log in to radar.

$ dotenvx-radar login
press Enter to open [https://radar.dotenvx.com/login/device] and enter code [D9C1-03BC]... (Y/n)
โ น waiting on browser authorization
โœ” logged in [username] to this device and activated token [dxo_6kjPifIโ€ฆ]
`logout`

Log out of radar.

$ dotenvx-radar logout
โœ” logged out [username] from this device and revoked token [dxo_5ZrwRXVโ€ฆ]
`status`

Check current status of radar - on or off (logged in or out).

$ dotenvx-radar status
on
`settings`

Check and configure various settings for radar - username, token, and more.

$ dotenvx-radar settings
Usage: dotenvx-radar settings [options] [command]

โš™๏ธ  settings

Options:
  -h, --help       display help for command

Commands:
  username         print your username
  token [options]  print your access token (--unmask)
  hostname         print hostname
  help [command]   display help for command

Dotenvx: Reducing Secrets Risk with Cryptographic Separation

Abstract. An ideal secrets solution would not only centralize secrets but also contain the fallout of a breach. While secrets managers offer centralized storage and distribution, their design creates a large blast radius, risking exposure of thousands or even millions of secrets. We propose a solution that reduces the blast radius by splitting secrets management into two distinct components: an encrypted secrets file and a separate decryption key.

...

Read the whitepaper

Go deeper with dotenvx โ€“ detailed framework and platform guides.

How does encryption work?

Dotenvx uses Elliptic Curve Integrated Encryption Scheme (ECIES) to encrypt each secret with a unique ephemeral key, while ensuring it can be decrypted using a long-term private key.

When you initialize encryption, a DOTENV_PUBLIC_KEY (encryption key) and DOTENV_PRIVATE_KEY (decryption key) are generated. The DOTENV_PUBLIC_KEY is used to encrypt secrets, and the DOTENV_PRIVATE_KEY is securely stored in your cloud secrets manager or .env.keys file.

Your encrypted .env file is then safely committed to code. Even if the file is exposed, secrets remain protected since decryption requires the separate DOTENV_PRIVATE_KEY, which is never stored alongside it. Read the whitepaper for more details.

Is it safe to commit an encrypted .env file to code?

Yes. Dotenvx encrypts secrets using AES-256 with ephemeral keys, ensuring that even if the encrypted .env file is exposed, its contents remain secure. The encryption keys themselves are protected using Secp256k1 elliptic curve cryptography, which is widely used for secure key exchange in technologies like Bitcoin.

This means that every secret in the .env file is encrypted with a unique AES-256 key, and that key is further encrypted using a public key (Secp256k1). Even if an attacker obtains the encrypted .env file, they would still need the corresponding private keyโ€”stored separately in a secrets managerโ€”to decrypt anything.

Breaking this encryption would require brute-forcing both AES-256 and elliptic curve cryptography, which is computationally infeasible with current technology. Read the whitepaper for more details.

Why am I getting the error node: .env: not found?

You are using Node 20 or greater and it adds a differing implementation of --env-file flag support. Rather than warn on a missing .env file (like dotenv has historically done), it raises an error: node: .env: not found.

This fix is easy. Replace --env-file with -f.

# from this:
./node_modules/.bin/dotenvx run --env-file .env -- yourcommand
# to this:
./node_modules/.bin/dotenvx run -f .env -- yourcommand

more context

What happened to the .env.vault file?

I've decided we should sunset it as a technological solution to this.

The .env.vault file got us far, but it had limitations such as:

That said, the .env.vault tooling will still stick around for at least 1 year under dotenvx vault parent command. I'm still using it in projects as are many thousands of other people.

How do I migrate my .env.vault file(s) to encrypted .env files?

Run $ dotenvx ext vault migrate and follow the instructions.

You can fork this repo and create pull requests or if you have questions or feedback:


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