Expand description

Easier access to environment variables

biodome does two things:

  1. Automatically cast env vars to the “right” types.
  2. Automatically parse structured types from env vars.

This crate is a rust implementation of a similar library I made for Python several years ago. I used it mainly for microservices, which I am now starting to build in Rust also.

Demo

This reads an environment variable called TIMEOUT:

use biodome::biodome;

let TIMEOUT = biodome("TIMEOUT", 10);
let PORTS = biodome("PORTS", vec![8081, 8082, 8083]);

Consider the TIMEOUT identifier:

  • If the env var has not been set, the default value of 10 will be used, i.e., assigned to TIMEOUT.
  • If the env var has been set, it will automatically be converted to the correct type, and then assigned.
  • The type of the identifier TIMEOUT will always be the same as the type of the default value.

Consider the PORTS identifier:

  • The default value is a Vec<i32>: this means that the typePORTS will always be a Vec<i32>.
  • biodome will parse the env var, if set, to make that happen. An env var like this (bash) would work: export PORTS=[81, 82]

Simple Types

In the above example, the literal integer 10 is of type i32 by default. For most primitive types this can be controlled in an obvious way:

use biodome::biodome;

let TIMEOUT = biodome("TIMEOUT", 10u8);
let TIMEOUT = biodome("TIMEOUT", 10f64);

In the first line above example, TIMEOUT will be a u8, and any env var value will have to set appropriately or a runtime error will occur. Likewise, if the default is an f64, then TIMEOUT will be an f64.

Boolean values are handled a little differently than for parsing:

use biodome::biodome;

/// This line sets an environment variable, same as
/// if you have done `export DEBUG=yes` in Bash.
std::env::set_var("DEBUG", "yes");

/// This line reads the value of the env var in Rust.
/// Because the default value is a bool, it means that
/// biodome will attempt to convert the value of the
/// env var into a bool.
let DEBUG = biodome("DEBUG", false);

assert_eq!(DEBUG, true);

If the env var has been set to a wide range of “probably truthy” patterns, the result will be true; otherwise, false. Some of these values are (case-insensitively) true, t, yes, y, on, active, enabled, 1, ok and so on.

Structured Types

If all biodome did was cast primitive types, it would be mildly interesting. We also have support for more structured types. To support this, we’re parsing all structured types using a limited subset of the TOML markup format.

Imagine that the following 3 env vars are set:

export LOGLEVELS='{ root = "warn", http = "info" }'
export TIMEOUTS='{ connect = 5.0, request = 10.0 }'
export PROXIES='["a.proxy.com:8000", "b.proxy.com:8001"]'

In the above, LOGLEVELS and TIMEOUTS are formatted as TOML inline tables while PROXIES is formatted as a TOML array.

These can be accessed with biodome like this:

use biodome::biodome;
use std::collections::HashMap;
use std::iter::FromIterator;

/// Create the default values for the structured types
let default_loglevels = HashMap::from_iter(
    vec![(String::from("root"), String::from("info"))]
);

let default_timeouts = HashMap::from_iter(
    vec![
        (String::from("resolve"), 1.0),
        (String::from("connect"), 1.0),
        (String::from("request"), 1.0),
    ]
);

let default_proxies = vec![
    "dev.proxy.com:9009".to_string(),
];

/// Read the env vars
let LOGLEVELS = biodome("LOGLEVELS", default_loglevels);
let TIMEOUTS = biodome("TIMEOUTS", default_timeouts);
let PROXIES = biodome("TIMEOUTS", default_proxies);

In the above example, LOGLEVELS will be a HashMap<String, String>, TIMEOUTS will be a HashMap<String, f64>, and PROXIES will be a Vec<String>.

Alternative Projects

envy uses the power of Serde derive to work magic in populating a “settings” struct.

Developer Info

This README is generated with cargo-readme. Please follow its instructions on how to set it up. The README file can be regenerated with cargo readme > README.md.

Traits

Functions

Read the env var “key”, and convert to type T. If the env var has not been set, “default” will be used. If the env var (or the default value) fail to parse correctly to type T, panic.