Configuration management for node.js.
Example config:
// config.js
module.exports = {
db: {
password: 'abcde',
host: '127.0.0.1',
},
port: 3000,
hosts: ['127.0.0.1'],
logsDir: `${__dirname}/logs`,
$env_production: {
port: 80,
logsDir: '/home/app/logs',
},
$env_test: {
port: 5000,
},
$env_CI: {
db: {
// Docker image hostname
host: 'postgresql',
},
},
};
Usage:
const cfg = require('@smpx/cfg');
const dbConf = cfg('db'); // { password: 'abcde', host: '127.0.0.1' }
const dbPassword = cfg('db.password');
It reads values from config.js
file from project directory, but they can be overwritten with another config.js
in the private
folder in the project directory. Or through env vars in this format:
# Overwriting password (db.password):
CFG__DB__PASSWORD='password' yarn start
# Adding host to posiition 1 (hosts.1):
CFG__HOSTS__1='new-host.region.rds.amazonaws.com' yarn start
# Override all hosts
CFG__HOSTS='@JSON:["a.b", "c.d"]' yarn start
NOTE: ENV VARS override might only work with camelCase keys
It basically uses lodash.set internally. The path is generated by removing the CFG__
prefix and replacing __
with .
and converting each word in between to camelCase (also through lodash). If the value starts with @JSON:
, it will be parsed as JSON (after removing @JSON:
), so you can use it to set arrays, objects and numbers.
cfg also allows overriding config according to NODE_ENV or CI environment variables. For example if NODE_ENV="production", then if a $env_production
key exists it's value gets merged over existing conf (this happens before merging any private/config.js
file).
Similarly in CI environments, the value in $env_CI
is merged.
Please check out the typescript definition file: index.d.ts for an overview of all the functions provided.
For getting types of the output types, you can define a typedef in your config.js
file like:
//config.js
const config = {
db: {
password: 'abcde',
host: '127.0.0.1',
},
};
/** @typedef {typeof config} ConfigType */
module.exports = config;
And in a global typings file in your project, like global.d.ts
, import it and set this as the BaseConfig:
// global.d.ts
import { ConfigType } from './config';
declare global {
interface BaseConfig extends ConfigType {}
}
This will be automatically picked by cfg. You can also modify this type with some custom keys available only through env vars:
// global.d.ts
import { ConfigType } from './config';
declare global {
interface BaseConfig extends ConfigType {
envVarOnlyKey?: string;
}
}
Get a value from cfg.js
# Installed globally
cfg get redis.port
cfg get logsDir
# See how ENV_VAR will override config
CFG__DB__PASSWORD='password' cfg get "db.password"
# Through npx or yarn (when installed locally)
npx cfg get redis.port
yarn cfg get logsDir