Adding Custom Environment Variables - Phizzard/Reactbase-cms GitHub Wiki
Note: this feature is available with
[email protected]
and higher.
Your project can consume variables declared in your environment as if they were declared locally in your JS files. By
default you will have NODE_ENV
defined for you, and any other environment variables starting with
REACT_APP_
.
The environment variables are embedded during the build time. Since Create React App produces a static HTML/CSS/JS bundle, it can’t possibly read them at runtime. To read them at runtime, you would need to load HTML into memory on the server and replace placeholders in runtime, just like described here. Alternatively you can rebuild the app on the server anytime you change them.
Note: You must create custom environment variables beginning with
REACT_APP_
. Any other variables exceptNODE_ENV
will be ignored to avoid accidentally exposing a private key on the machine that could have the same name. Changing any environment variables will require you to restart the development server if it is running.
These environment variables will be defined for you on process.env
. For example, having an environment
variable named REACT_APP_SECRET_CODE
will be exposed in your JS as process.env.REACT_APP_SECRET_CODE
.
There is also a special built-in environment variable called NODE_ENV
. You can read it from process.env.NODE_ENV
. When you run npm start
, it is always equal to 'development'
, when you run npm test
it is always equal to 'test'
, and when you run npm run build
to make a production bundle, it is always equal to 'production'
. You cannot override NODE_ENV
manually. This prevents developers from accidentally deploying a slow development build to production.
These environment variables can be useful for displaying information conditionally based on where the project is deployed or consuming sensitive data that lives outside of version control.
First, you need to have environment variables defined. For example, let’s say you wanted to consume a secret defined
in the environment inside a <form>
:
render() {
return (
<div>
<small>You are running this application in <b>{process.env.NODE_ENV}</b> mode.</small>
<form>
<input type="hidden" defaultValue={process.env.REACT_APP_SECRET_CODE} />
</form>
</div>
);
}
During the build, process.env.REACT_APP_SECRET_CODE
will be replaced with the current value of the REACT_APP_SECRET_CODE
environment variable. Remember that the NODE_ENV
variable will be set for you automatically.
When you load the app in the browser and inspect the <input>
, you will see its value set to abcdef
, and the bold text will show the environment provided when using npm start
:
<div>
<small>You are running this application in <b>development</b> mode.</small>
<form>
<input type="hidden" value="abcdef" />
</form>
</div>
The above form is looking for a variable called REACT_APP_SECRET_CODE
from the environment. In order to consume this
value, we need to have it defined in the environment. This can be done using two ways: either in your shell or in
a .env
file. Both of these ways are described in the next few sections.
Having access to the NODE_ENV
is also useful for performing actions conditionally:
if (process.env.NODE_ENV !== 'production') {
analytics.disable();
}
When you compile the app with npm run build
, the minification step will strip out this condition, and the resulting bundle will be smaller.
Note: this feature is available with
[email protected]
and higher.
You can also access the environment variables starting with REACT_APP_
in the public/index.html
. For example:
<title>%REACT_APP_WEBSITE_NAME%</title>
Note that the caveats from the above section apply:
- Apart from a few built-in variables (
NODE_ENV
andPUBLIC_URL
), variable names must start withREACT_APP_
to work. - The environment variables are injected at build time. If you need to inject them at runtime, follow this approach instead.
Defining environment variables can vary between OSes. It’s also important to know that this manner is temporary for the life of the shell session.
set REACT_APP_SECRET_CODE=abcdef&&npm start
(Note: the lack of whitespace is intentional.)
REACT_APP_SECRET_CODE=abcdef npm start
Note: this feature is available with
[email protected]
and higher.
To define permanent environment variables, create a file called .env
in the root of your project:
REACT_APP_SECRET_CODE=abcdef
.env
files should be checked into source control (with the exclusion of .env*.local
).
Note: this feature is available with
[email protected]
and higher.
-
.env
: Default. -
.env.local
: Local overrides. This file is loaded for all environments except test. -
.env.development
,.env.test
,.env.production
: Environment-specific settings. -
.env.development.local
,.env.test.local
,.env.production.local
: Local overrides of environment-specific settings.
Files on the left have more priority than files on the right:
-
npm start
:.env.development.local
,.env.development
,.env.local
,.env
-
npm run build
:.env.production.local
,.env.production
,.env.local
,.env
-
npm test
:.env.test.local
,.env.test
,.env
(note.env.local
is missing)
These variables will act as the defaults if the machine does not explicitly set them.
Please refer to the dotenv documentation for more details.
Note: If you are defining environment variables for development, your CI and/or hosting platform will most likely need these defined as well. Consult their documentation how to do this. For example, see the documentation for Travis CI or Heroku.