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Helper utility to inject environment variables stored in a file into processes
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Knut Ahlers 00e8fde1ee
Allow reading passphrase from file
Signed-off-by: Knut Ahlers <knut@ahlers.me>
2018-06-01 17:37:47 +02:00
vendor Update vendors 2018-06-01 17:34:46 +02:00
.gobuilder.yml Initial version 2016-02-06 16:23:11 +01:00
.repo-runner.yaml Add Gtihub publishing 2017-03-21 14:56:38 +01:00
Gopkg.lock Update vendors 2018-06-01 17:34:46 +02:00
Gopkg.toml Migrate to dep for vendoring 2018-06-01 17:26:23 +02:00
History.md prepare release v0.3.1 2017-03-21 14:59:00 +01:00
main.go Allow reading passphrase from file 2018-06-01 17:37:47 +02:00
Makefile Add Gtihub publishing 2017-03-21 14:56:38 +01:00
README.md Document encrypted .env file 2017-03-21 16:35:53 +01:00

Luzifer / envrun

envrun is a small helper utility I wrote for myself to debug programs and scripts during their development expecting environment variables to be set to special values. Sure there is gin for go webservers doing the same but I wanted something also for commandline utilities.

It reads a .env file (configurable) from the current directory and then either takes its own environment variables or a clean set and adds the env variables found in .env to it. The resulting set is passed to the command you put as arguments to envrun.

Examples

To visualize the effect of the utility the test command is python test.py with this simple python script:

import os

for k in os.environ.keys():
  print "{} = {}".format(k, os.environ[k])

It just prints the current environment to STDOUT and exits.

# cat .env
MY_TEST_VAR=hello world
ANOTHER_VAR=foo

# python test.py | grep MY_TEST_VAR
## No output on this command

# envrun --help
Usage of envrun:
      --clean[=false]: Do not pass current environment to child process
      --env-file=".env": Location of the environment file
      --q[=false]: Suppress informational messages from envrun

# envrun python test.py | grep MY_TEST_VAR
MY_TEST_VAR = hello world

# envrun python test.py | wc -l
      45

# envrun --clean python test.py | wc -l
       3

# envrun --clean python test.py
__CF_USER_TEXT_ENCODING = 0x1F5:0x0:0x0
ANOTHER_VAR = foo
MY_TEST_VAR = hello world

Encrypted .env-file

In case you don't want to put the environment variables into a plain text file onto your disk you can use an AES256 encrypted file and provide a password to envrun:

# echo 'MYVAR=myvalue' | openssl enc -e -aes-256-cbc -pass pass:justatest -base64 -out .env

# cat .env
U2FsdGVkX18xcVIMejjwWzh1DppzptJCHhORH/JDj10=

# envrun -p justatest --clean -- env
MYVAR=myvalue
2017/03/21 16:34:57 Process exitted with code 0