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Setting environment variable in react-native?

I am using react-native to build a cross-platform app, but I do not know how to set the environment variable so that I can have different constants for different environments.

Example:

development: 
  BASE_URL: '',
  API_KEY: '',
staging: 
  BASE_URL: '',
  API_KEY: '',
production:
  BASE_URL: '',
  API_KEY: '',
you can try this import {Platform} from 'react-native'; console.log(Platform);

N
Nimantha

Instead of hard-coding your app constants and doing a switch on the environment (I'll explain how to do that in a moment), I suggest using the twelve factor suggestion of having your build process define your BASE_URL and your API_KEY.

To answer how to expose your environment to react-native, I suggest using Babel's babel-plugin-transform-inline-environment-variables.

To get this working you need to download the plugin and then you will need to setup a .babelrc and it should look something like this:

{
  "presets": ["react-native"],
  "plugins": [
    "transform-inline-environment-variables"
  ]
}

And so if you transpile your react-native code by running API_KEY=my-app-id react-native bundle (or start, run-ios, or run-android) then all you have to do is have your code look like this:

const apiKey = process.env['API_KEY'];

And then Babel will replace that with:

const apiKey = 'my-app-id';

Sounds like great solution, but not works for me at RN@0.37.0. The only property on process.env is NODE_ENV.
See the answer below by Jack Zheng... you cannot access the variable via process.env.API_KEY... use process.env['API_KEY'] instead
I am getting the process.env['API_KEY'] as undefined. Can anyone help me set this up
I had the same problem: undefined
Works for me in v0.56. You have to clear bundler's cache by running react-native start --reset-cache every time you change the environment variables.
P
Patrik Prevuznak

In my opinion the best option is to use react-native-config. It supports 12 factor.

I found this package extremely useful. You can set multiple environments, e.g. development, staging, production.

In case of Android, variables are available also in Java classes, gradle, AndroidManifest.xml etc. In case of iOS, variables are available also in Obj-C classes, Info.plist.

You just create files like

.env.development

.env.staging

.env.production

You fill these files with key, values like

API_URL=https://myapi.com
GOOGLE_MAPS_API_KEY=abcdefgh

and then just use it:

import Config from 'react-native-config'

Config.API_URL  // 'https://myapi.com'
Config.GOOGLE_MAPS_API_KEY  // 'abcdefgh'

If you want to use different environments, you basically set ENVFILE variable like this:

ENVFILE=.env.staging react-native run-android

or for assembling app for production (android in my case):

cd android && ENVFILE=.env.production ./gradlew assembleRelease

It may be worth noting that in the README it states Keep in mind this module doesn't obfuscate or encrypt secrets for packaging, so do not store sensitive keys in .env. It's basically impossible to prevent users from reverse engineering mobile app secrets, so design your app (and APIs) with that in mind
Thing is it will not work with some frameworks like twitter which requires to have they key set as com.twitter.sdk.android.CONSUMER_KEY in your .env
If you mean putting the key inside the Manifest, the extension supports it. It is just not described in this answer. You can use the variables in XML, Java and JS files.
react-native-config does not work with RN 0.56, it has unresolved issues and it is unmaintained for over 6 months. The issue witch kills its usage in RN is github.com/luggit/react-native-config/issues/267, here is some hacking to make it work github.com/luggit/react-native-config/issues/285
How does the xcode knows when you want to rollout a stage / prod version?
s
swrobel

The simplest (not the best or ideal) solution I found was to use react-native-dotenv. You simply add the "react-native-dotenv" preset to your .babelrc file at the project root like so:

{
  "presets": ["react-native", "react-native-dotenv"]
}

Create a .env file and add properties:

echo "SOMETHING=anything" > .env

Then in your project (JS):

import { SOMETHING } from 'react-native-dotenv'
console.log(SOMETHING) // "anything"

@Slavo Vojacek How do I use this to configure for example one base_url for both staging and production?
@CompaqLE2202x I am not quite sure I understand? Are you asking about using different .env files (per environment), or about reusing some of your values in different .env files, so you don't duplicate them across, say, Staging and Production?
@SlavoVojacek I'm asking about different .env files per environment let's say staging and production.
@SlavoVojacek couldn't you overwrite values in a CI stage or at deployment?
Please update ypur answer due to the latest changes in the package: "Rename the import from 'react-native-dotenv' to '@env'." Otherwise, it will raise an error "module fs is not found". See this issue and the migration guide.
t
tohster

React native does not have the concept of global variables. It enforces modular scope strictly, in order to promote component modularity and reusability.

Sometimes, though, you need components to be aware of their environment. In this case it's very simple to define an Environment module which components can then call to get environment variables, for example:

environment.js

var _Environments = {
    production:  {BASE_URL: '', API_KEY: ''},
    staging:     {BASE_URL: '', API_KEY: ''},
    development: {BASE_URL: '', API_KEY: ''},
}

function getEnvironment() {
    // Insert logic here to get the current platform (e.g. staging, production, etc)
    var platform = getPlatform()

    // ...now return the correct environment
    return _Environments[platform]
}

var Environment = getEnvironment()
module.exports = Environment

my-component.js

var Environment = require('./environment.js')

...somewhere in your code...
var url = Environment.BASE_URL

This creates a singleton environment which can be accessed from anywhere inside the scope of your app. You have to explicitly require(...) the module from any components that use Environment variables, but that is a good thing.


my problem is how to getPlatform(). I have make a file like this but cannot finish the logic here in React Native
@DamonYuan that depends entirely on how you're setting up your packages. I have no idea what staging or production even mean, because it's dependent on your environment. For example, if you want different flavors for IOS vs Android then you can initialize Environment by importing it your index.ios.js and index.android.js files and setting the platform there, e.g. Environment.initialize('android').
@DamonYuan does what I put help at all, or do you need some more clarification?
This is very nice when you have control over the code. I'm running a third part module which relies on process.env, so...
If you create an env.js file be sure to ignore it from check-ins to the repository and copy the keys used, with empty string values, into another env.js.example file you do check-in so others can build your app more easily. If you accidentally check in project secrets consider rewriting history to remove them not just from the source but the history thereof.
L
Logister

I used the __DEV__ polyfill that is built into react-native in order to solve this problem. It is automatically set to true so long as you are not building react native for production.

E.g.:

//vars.js

let url, publicKey;
if (__DEV__) {
  url = ...
  publicKey = ...
} else {
  url = ...
  publicKey = ...
}

export {url, publicKey}

Then just import {url} from '../vars'and you'll always get the correct one. Unfortunately, this wont work if you want more than two environments, but its easy and doesn't involve adding more dependencies to your project.


do you know a way to 'foce' DEV to TRUE even when creating a release build in xcode?
Nope. I just comment out the prod vars and then copy paste the dev vars into the prod section when I want to do a release build with dev variables.
I found this the most elegant solution
Not a terrible solution, but it isn't great because it only handles boolean behavior. That is, either dev or not. How would I handle more than 2 environments? You may as well use process.env.NODE_ENV as it provides either development or production. Most people need to lift the app using dev, qa, staging, prod, etc.
T
Toni Chaz

i have created a pre build script for the same problem because i need some differents api endpoints for the differents environments

const fs = require('fs')

let endPoint

if (process.env.MY_ENV === 'dev') {
  endPoint = 'http://my-api-dev/api/v1'
} else if (process.env.MY_ENV === 'test') {
  endPoint = 'http://127.0.0.1:7001'
} else {
  endPoint = 'http://my-api-pro/api/v1'
}

let template = `
export default {
  API_URL: '${endPoint}',
  DEVICE_FINGERPRINT: Math.random().toString(36).slice(2)
}
`

fs.writeFile('./src/constants/config.js', template, function (err) {
  if (err) {
    return console.log(err)
  }

  console.log('Configuration file has generated')
})

And i have created a custom npm run scripts to execute react-native run..

My package-json

"scripts": {
    "start-ios": "node config-generator.js && react-native run-ios",
    "build-ios": "node config-generator.js && react-native run-ios --configuration Release",
    "start-android": "node config-generator.js && react-native run-android",
    "build-android": "node config-generator.js && cd android/ && ./gradlew assembleRelease",
    ...
}

Then in my services components simply import the auto generated file:

import config from '../constants/config'

fetch(`${config.API_URL}/login`, params)

v
vhs

The specific method used to set environment variables will vary by CI service, build approach, platform and tools you're using.

If you're using Buddybuild for CI to build an app and manage environment variables, and you need access to config from JS, create a env.js.example with keys (with empty string values) for check-in to source control, and use Buddybuild to produce an env.js file at build time in the post-clone step, hiding the file contents from the build logs, like so:

#!/usr/bin/env bash

ENVJS_FILE="$BUDDYBUILD_WORKSPACE/env.js"

# Echo what's happening to the build logs
echo Creating environment config file

# Create `env.js` file in project root
touch $ENVJS_FILE

# Write environment config to file, hiding from build logs
tee $ENVJS_FILE > /dev/null <<EOF
module.exports = {
  AUTH0_CLIENT_ID: '$AUTH0_CLIENT_ID',
  AUTH0_DOMAIN: '$AUTH0_DOMAIN'
}
EOF

Tip: Don't forget to add env.js to .gitignore so config and secrets aren't checked into source control accidentally during development.

You can then manage how the file gets written using the Buddybuild variables like BUDDYBUILD_VARIANTS, for instance, to gain greater control over how your config is produced at build time.


overall i like the idea, but how does the env.js.example part work? let's say i want to launch the app in my local environment. if my env.js file is in gitignore and env.js.example is used as an outline, the env.js.example isn't a legitimate JS extension, so i'm just a little confused on what you meant by this part
@volk The env.js.example file sits in the codebase as a reference document, a canonical source of truth as to what config keys the app wants to consume. It both describes the keys required to run the app, as well as the filename expected once copied and renamed. The pattern is common in Ruby apps using the dotenv gem, which is where I lifted the pattern from.
J
Jitendra Suthar

Step 1: Create separate component like this Component name : pagebase.js Step 2: Inside this use code this

    export const BASE_URL = "http://192.168.10.10:4848/";
    export const API_KEY = 'key_token';

Step 3: Use it in any component, for using it first import this component then use it. Import it and use it:

        import * as base from "./pagebase";

        base.BASE_URL
        base.API_KEY

O
Olcay Ertaş

I use babel-plugin-transform-inline-environment-variables.

What I did was put a configuration files within S3 with my different environments.

s3://example-bucket/dev-env.sh
s3://example-bucket/prod-env.sh
s3://example-bucket/stage-env.sh

EACH env file:

FIRSTENV=FIRSTVALUE
SECONDENV=SECONDVALUE

Afterwards, I added a new script in my package.json that runs a script for bundling

if [ "$ENV" == "production" ]
then
  eval $(aws s3 cp s3://example-bucket/prod-env.sh - | sed 's/^/export /')
elif [ "$ENV" == "staging" ]
then
  eval $(aws s3 cp s3://example-bucket/stage-env.sh - | sed 's/^/export /')
else
  eval $(aws s3 cp s3://example-bucket/development-env.sh - | sed 's/^/export /')
fi

react-native start

Within your app you will probably have a config file that has:

const FIRSTENV = process.env['FIRSTENV']
const SECONDENV = process.env['SECONDENV']

which will be replaced by babel to:

const FIRSTENV = 'FIRSTVALUE'
const SECONDENV = 'SECONDVALUE'

REMEMBER you have to use process.env['STRING'] NOT process.env.STRING or it won't convert properly.


REMEMBER you have to use process.env['STRING'] NOT process.env.STRING or it won't convert properly. Thanks! This is the one that trips me up!!!
l
leonfs

I think something like the following library could help you out to solve the missing bit of the puzzle, the getPlatform() function.

https://github.com/joeferraro/react-native-env

const EnvironmentManager = require('react-native-env');

// read an environment variable from React Native
EnvironmentManager.get('SOME_VARIABLE')
  .then(val => {
    console.log('value of SOME_VARIABLE is: ', val);

  })
  .catch(err => {
    console.error('womp womp: ', err.message);
  });

The only problem I see with this, that it's async code. There is a pull request to support getSync. Check it out too.

https://github.com/joeferraro/react-native-env/pull/9


Upvoted for providing an alternative approach not mentioned. No one size fits all.
The asynch pull req has been merged in
react-native-env doesn't appear to support Android. What's the point?
N
Nishant Kohli

I used react-native-config to set up multiple environments for my project. The README file very clearly explains how to configure the library in your project. Just make sure to implement the Extra step for Android section.

Also while setting up multiple environments make sure to specify the correct start commands in your package.json, based upon your system terminal. I developed the Android code in a windows laptop and iOS code in Macbook, so my respective start commands in package.json were -

"scripts": {
        "android:dev": "SET ENVFILE=.env.dev && react-native run-android",
        "android:prod": "SET ENVFILE=.env.prod && react-native run-android",
        "ios:dev": "ENVFILE=.env.dev react-native run-ios",
        "ios:prod": "ENVFILE=.env.prod react-native run-ios",
},

In case you just need to maintain a single .env file, consider using react-native-dotenv as a lighter alternative, although I did face some issues in setting up multiple .env files for this library.


How do you read actual build time variables into your project? i.e. I may have some variables which are fine to add to those files. But some secret keys should come from the build environment?
J
Jo E.

If you are using Expo there are 2 ways to do this according to the docs https://docs.expo.io/guides/environment-variables/

Method #1 - Using the .extra prop in the app manifest (app.json):

In your app.json file

{
  expo: {
    "slug": "my-app",
    "name": "My App",
    "version": "0.10.0",
    "extra": {
      "myVariable": "foo"
    }
  }
}

Then to access the data on your code (i.e. App.js) simply import expo-constants:

import Constants from 'expo-constants';

export const Sample = (props) => (
  <View>
    <Text>{Constants.manifest.extra.myVariable}</Text>
  </View>
);

This option is a good built-in option that doesn't require any other package to be installed.

Method #2 - Using Babel to "replace" variables. This is the method you would likely need especially if you are using a bare workflow. The other answers already mentioned how to implement this using babel-plugin-transform-inline-environment-variables, but I will leave a link here to the official docs to how to implement it: https://docs.expo.io/guides/environment-variables/#using-babel-to-replace-variables


S
Smakosh

For latest RN versions, you can use this native module: https://github.com/luggit/react-native-config


V
Vijay Joshua Nadar

If you are developing your app using expo(managed workflow), you will have to create a file called app.config.js inside the root directory of your project and add the following code to the file:

const myValue = "My App";

export default () => {
    if (process.env.MY_ENVIRONMENT === "development") {
        return {
            name: myValue,
            version: "1.0.0",
            // All values in extra will be passed to your app.
            extra: {
                fact: "dogs are cool"
            }
        };
    } else {
        return {
            name: myValue,
            version: "1.0.0",
            // All values in extra will be passed to your app.
            extra: {
                fact: "kittens are cool"
            }
        };
    }
};

Then you should start/publish your app using the command below (this will work in Windows. For other operating systems, read the article I have mentioned at the end).

npx cross-env MY_ENVIRONMENT=development expo start/publish

This will start or publish your application using the environment variable mentioned above (MY_ENVIRONMENT). The application will load the appropriate configuration based on the environment variable. Now you can access the variable extra ,from your configuration, by importing a module called expo-constants into your project file. For instance:

import Constants from "expo-constants";

export default function App() {
    console.log(Constants.manifest.extra.fact);
    return (
        <>
            <View>
                <Text>Dummy</Text>
            </View>
        </>
    );
}

Using Constants.manifest we can access the object inside extra. So if your environment variable was development, this code should console.log "dogs are cool". I hope this was useful. For more information, go through this article.


P
Pikachu-go

you can also have different env scripts: production.env.sh development.env.sh production.env.sh

And then source them in when starting to work [which is just tied to an alias] so all the sh file has is export for each env variable:

export SOME_VAR=1234
export SOME_OTHER=abc

And then adding babel-plugin-transform-inline-environment-variables will allow access them in the code:

export const SOME_VAR: ?string = process.env.SOME_VAR;
export const SOME_OTHER: ?string = process.env.SOME_OTHER;

Are you adding anything @chapinkapa hasn't said?
v
vonovak

@chapinkapa's answer is good. An approach that I have taken since Mobile Center does not support environment variables, is to expose build configuration through a native module:

On android:

   @Override
    public Map<String, Object> getConstants() {
        final Map<String, Object> constants = new HashMap<>();
        String buildConfig = BuildConfig.BUILD_TYPE.toLowerCase();
        constants.put("ENVIRONMENT", buildConfig);
        return constants;
    } 

or on ios:

  override func constantsToExport() -> [String: Any]! {
    // debug/ staging / release
    // on android, I can tell the build config used, but here I use bundle name
    let STAGING = "staging"
    let DEBUG = "debug"

    var environment = "release"
    if let bundleIdentifier: String = Bundle.main.bundleIdentifier {
      if (bundleIdentifier.lowercased().hasSuffix(STAGING)) {
        environment = STAGING
      } else if (bundleIdentifier.lowercased().hasSuffix(DEBUG)){
        environment = DEBUG
      }
    }

    return ["ENVIRONMENT": environment]
  }

You can read the build config synchronously and decide in Javascript how you're going to behave.


S
Srdjan Cosic

It is possible to access the variables with process.env.blabla instead of process.env['blabla']. I recently made it work and commented on how I did it on an issue on GitHub because I had some problems with cache based on the accepted answer. Here is the issue.


K
Kemal Ahmed

[Source] From what I've found, it looks like by default, it's only possible to do production and development configs (no staging or other environments) – is that right?

Right now, I've been using a environment.js file that can be used to detect expo release channels and change the variables returned based on that, but for building, I need to update the non- DEV variable returned to be either staging or prod:

import { Constants } from 'expo';
import { Platform } from 'react-native';
const localhost = Platform.OS === 'ios' ? 'http://localhost:4000/' : 'http://10.0.2.2:4000/';
const ENV = {
  dev: {
    apiUrl: localhost,
  },
  staging: {
    apiUrl: 'https://your-staging-api-url-here.com/'
  },
  prod: {
    apiUrl: 'https://your-prod-api-url-here.com/'
  },
}
const getEnvVars = (env = Constants.manifest.releaseChannel) => {
  // What is __DEV__ ?
  // This variable is set to true when react-native is running in Dev mode.
  // __DEV__ is true when run locally, but false when published.
  if (__DEV__) {
    return ENV.dev;
  } else {
    // When publishing to production, change this to `ENV.prod` before running an `expo build`
    return ENV.staging;
  }
}
export default getEnvVars;

Alternatives

does anyone have experience using react-native-dotenv for projects built with expo? I'd love to hear your thoughts

https://github.com/goatandsheep/react-native-dotenv


You could define as many release channel names as you want, and test the name in order to define your environment variable. Where I see the limitation is in the dev environment where releaseChannel is undefined. So maybe you could use babel-plugin-transform-inline-environment-variables - you could pass on environment variables in your scripts and reference process.env['VAR_NAME'] in your environment.js file if dev?
M
Muhammad Awais

hi there if you are facing this issue try this , this will work for me ,thanks me later

in bable.js

 plugins: [
      [
        "module:react-native-dotenv",
        {
          moduleName: "react-native-dotenv",
        },
      ],
    ],

use

import { YOURAPIKEY } from "react-native-dotenv";


inseted  of

import { YOURAPIKEY } from "@env";

As it’s currently written, your answer is unclear. Please edit to add additional details that will help others understand how this addresses the question asked. You can find more information on how to write good answers in the help center.
N
Nimantha

Do not pass these variables like VAR=value react-native run-android or VAR=value react-native run-ios . These variables are only accessible if we pass them in start command i.e VAR=value react-native start --reset-cache.

You can achieve this with 3 simple steps:-

Install babel-plugin-transform-inline-environment-variables by running npm i babel-plugin-transform-inline-environment-variables --save-dev. Add "plugins": [ "transform-inline-environment-variables" ] into your .bablerc or babel.config.js. Pass the variables while starting metro bundler i.e VAR=value reacti-native start --reset-cache, do not pass these variables in react-native run-android or react-native run-ios commands.

Please keep in mind that use of --reset-cache flag is required, otherwise changes in variables will not be applied.


L
LitileXueZha

After long efforts, I realized that react-native doesn't provide this feature officially. And this is in babel-ecosystem, so I should learn how to write a babel plugin...

/**
 * A simple replace text plugin in babel, such as `webpack.DefinePlugin`
 * 
 * Docs: https://github.com/jamiebuilds/babel-handbook
 */
function definePlugin({ types: t }) {
    const regExclude = /node_modules/;
    return {
        visitor: {
            Identifier(path, state) {
                const { node, parent, scope } = path;
                const { filename, opts } = state;
                const key = node.name;
                const value = opts[key];

                if (key === 'constructor' || value === undefined) { // don't replace
                    return;
                }
                if (t.isMemberExpression(parent)) { // not {"__DEV__":name}
                    return;
                }
                if (t.isObjectProperty(parent) && parent.value !== node) { // error
                    return;
                }
                if (scope.getBinding(key)) { // should in global
                    return;
                }
                if (regExclude.test(filename)) { // exclude node_modules
                    return;
                }
                switch (typeof value) {
                    case 'boolean':
                        path.replaceWith(t.booleanLiteral(value));
                        break;
                    case 'string':
                        path.replaceWith(t.stringLiteral(value));
                        break;
                    default:
                        console.warn('definePlugin only support string/boolean, so `%s` will not be replaced', key);
                        break;
                }
            },
        },
    };
}

module.exports = definePlugin;

That's all, then you can use like that:

module.exports = {
    presets: [],
    plugins: [
        [require('./definePlugin.js'), {
            // your environments...
            __DEV__: true,
            __URL__: 'https://example.org',
        }],
    ],
};

Packages that metioned by answerers are also great, and I also consult metro-transform-plugins/src/inline-plugin.js.