Stacked environment variable management system.
Project description
envstack
Stacked environment variable management system. The lightweight, easy to use "rez" alternative for production pipelines.
Environment variables are declared in namespaced .env files using yaml syntax.
The default stack is stack
and variables are declared in stack.env
files. You can create any new stack by creating new .env
files, e.g. creating
a new test
stack just create test.env
files.
Envstack works best combined with siteconf.
Installation
The easiest way to install:
$ pip install envstack
Quickstart
Copy the default stack file
stack.env
to your current working directory, or the root of your project. This is the default
environment stack. Running the envstack
command should show you the resolved
environment for your platform:
$ envstack
ENV 'prod'
HELLO 'world'
FOO 'bar'
PYVERSION 3.11
LIB 'lib/python3.11'
LOG_LEVEL 20
ROOT '/mnt/tools/lib/python3.11'
Modify the environment stack by updating stack.env
or by creating new contextual
stack.env
files up and down the project hierarchy.
You can execute any command inside the default stacked environment like this:
$ enstack -- <command>
For example:
$ envstack -- python -c "import os; print(os.environ['HELLO'])"
world
To create a new environment stack, create a new namespaced .env file.
For example thing.env
(the stack namespace is "thing"):
all: &default
FOO: bar
To see the resolved environment for the thing
environment stack, run:
$ envstack thing
FOO 'bar'
Environment stacks are hierarchical, so values for $FOO
defined in .env files lower
in the filesystem (lower in scope) override those defined higher up (higher in scope):
/show/thing.env
/show/seq/thing.env
/show/seq/shot/thing.env
/show/seq/shot/task/thing.env
Variables can reference other variables defined elsewhere (but cannot be circular):
all: &default
BAR: $FOO
Variables can be platform specific (and inherit the defaults):
linux:
<<: *default
HELLO: world
Environment files can include other namespaced environments:
include: ['other']
Usage
To see the default resolved environment for any given scope (directory):
$ envstack
To see the resolved environment for a given namespace.
$ envstack <stack> [OPTIONS]
To resolve a $VAR
declaration for a given environment stack:
$ envstack <stack> -r <VAR>
To trace where a $VAR
declaration is being set:
$ envstack <stack> -t <VAR>
To see an environment stack on another platform:
$ envstack <stack> -p <platform>
Running Commands
To run any command line executable inside of an environment stack, where <command>
is the command to run:
$ enstack <stack> -- <command>
For example, running python in the default stack (reading from the default stack.env
file):
$ envstack -- python -c "import os; print(os.environ['HELLO'])"
world
Same command but using the "thing" stack"
$ envstack thing -- python -c "import os; print(os.environ['FOO'])"
bar
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