1 stable release
1.0.0 | Nov 10, 2023 |
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#778 in Procedural macros
5KB
Envhead
Envhead is a crate that creates environment variable names using a static prefix.
Setup
First, you should define the prefix by setting the ENV_HEAD_PREFIX
environment variable to the desired value. When the ENV_HEAD_PREFIX
variable is not defined, ENV
is used as the default prefix. In the following examples, we will use MY_APP
as the prefix.
In case you are working with macOS or Linux, you might use Bash like this:
ENV_HEAD_PREFIX=MY_APP cargo build
Using an IDE from JetBrains like RustRover, you can set the environment variable in the run configuration and for your integrated terminal.
Do you use a CI/CD pipeline? You can set the environment variable in your pipeline configuration. Do you build your application in a Docker container? You can set the environment variable in your Dockerfile as well.
Please notice: This setup procedure is required just for the development environment. Your compiled program(s) will not depend on the ENV_HEAD_PREFIX
environment variable.
Usage
Now, in your code, you can use the envhead!
macro to create environment variable names.
use envhead::envhead;
fn main() {
let env_var = envhead!("server_port");
// Prints "MY_APP_SERVER_PORT":
println!("{}", env_var);
}
You might find it useful to use envhead
together with clap
to create environment variable names for your command line arguments:
use clap::Args;
use envhead::envhead;
#[derive(Debug, Args)]
pub struct ServerArgs {
#[arg(
short = 'p', long,
required = false,
value_name = "port",
value_hint = clap::ValueHint::Other,
help = "The server's port.",
default_value_t = 8000,
env = envhead!("server_port"),
)]
pub port: u16,
#[arg(
long,
required = true,
value_name = "SECRET_TOKEN",
value_hint = clap::ValueHint::Other,
help = "The secret token to authenticate the client.",
env = envhead!("server_secret_token"),
)]
pub secret_token: Option<String>,
}
Changelog
Version 1.0.0
- Initial release
Dependencies
~230–670KB
~16K SLoC