https://github.com/idlesign/envbox
Detect environment type and work within.
- Environment type detection (extendable system);
- Support for
.env
files; - Convenient
os.environ
proxying (with optional values casting into Python natives); - Automatic submodule-for-environment import tool;
- Cosy per-thread settings container with environment var support;
- CLI for environment probing.
from envbox import get_environment
# Detect current environment type
# and get its object.
#
# Default detection sources:
# 1. ``PYTHON_ENV`` env variable
# 2. ``environment`` file contents
#
# By default this function will also try to read env variables from .env files.
env = get_environment()
env.name
# >> development
env.is_production
# >> False
env.get('HOME')
# The same as env['HOME'] and env.HOME
# >> /home/idle/
env.getmany('PYTHON')
# {'UNBUFFERED': '1', 'IOENCODING': 'UTF-8', 'PATH': ...}
Now you may want to put your environment vars into .env
files
(e.g.: .env
, .env.development
.env.production
)
to be read by envbox
:
MY_VAR_1 = value1 HOME = /home/other/ # comments are ignored, just as lines without definitions # mathing quotes (" and ') are stripped MY_QUOTED = "some quoted " # ${VARNAME} will be replaced by value from env (if available) MY_VAR_2 = ${MY_QUOTED} # multiline with dangling quotes MULTI_1 = " line1 line2 " # multiline classic MULTI_2 = "line1 line2 line3" # multiline as one line MULTI_3 = "one\ntwo"
Read the docs for more examples.
$ envbox probe
# >> Detected environment type: development (Development)
$ envbox show
# >> [...]
# >> SHELL = /bin/bash
# >> [...]
Note: envbox
CLI requires click
package available.