Skip to main content

Use your local environment variables in Plover

Project description

Plover Local Env Var

Build Status linting: pylint

This Plover extension plugin contains a meta that can read in and output values stored in local environment variables on your computer.

Use Case

Ever have information that is not quite secret enough to warrant putting in a password manager, but not public enough that you want to have steno dictionary outlines containing it available to the public? Information like your phone number, home address, and date of birth is very handy to have in outline values when filling in online forms etc, but I wouldn't want to share that info in my steno dictionaries.

So, in order to be able to share the outlines I use, but not the values contained in them, I put that kind of semi-secret information in environment variables, manage them with direnv, and use this plugin to access them in order to write them out.

[!NOTE] If you prefer to manually write out all your semi-secret information and/or you do not share your steno dictionaries publicly, you may not need to use this plugin at all.

[!WARNING] Please do not put secret information like passwords in your steno dictionary outlines! Plover stands between when you write your keystrokes and when they output on screen, fitting the very definition of a "man-in-the-middle" (see your strokes.log file for what Plover records by default). Use a password manager.

Install

  1. In the Plover application, open the Plugins Manager (either click the Plugins Manager icon, or from the Tools menu, select Plugins Manager).
  2. From the list of plugins, find plover-local-env-var
  3. Click "Install/Update"
  4. When it finishes installing, restart Plover
  5. After re-opening Plover, open the Configuration screen (either click the Configuration icon, or from the main Plover application menu, select Preferences...)
  6. Open the Plugins tab
  7. Check the box next to plover_local_env_var to activate the plugin

How To Use

After defining and exporting environment variables in your shell configuration file, you can use them in your outlines with the ENV_VAR meta. For an environment variable named $PHONE_NUMBER, the outline would look like:

"{:ENV_VAR:$PHONE_NUMBER}"

Pressing the "Disconnect and reconnect the machine" button on the Plover UI resets the environment variable cache. If you make any changes to the values contained in your environment variables, make sure to press it so they get re-read in again.

Why a Plugin?

I used to access environment variables from a steno outline like in this example:

"PHAEUL/PHAEUL": "{:COMMAND:SHELL:bash -ci 'osascript $STENO_DICTIONARIES/src/command/actions/output-env-var.scpt EMAIL'}"

This solution does the following:

  • uses the Plover Run Shell plugin to run a shell command from Python
  • calls bash in interactive mode (-i) so that the command can see environment variables ($STENO_DICTIONARIES in this case) defined outside of the Plover environment
  • gets bash to use the osascript command-line tool to load in and run the target compiled AppleScript (.scpt) file
  • The AppleScript in question would then call out to the shell to fetch the $EMAIL env var, and keystroke it out to the screen

This stack of Python->Shell->AppleScript->Shell is convoluted and just not the right tool for the job at hand. Plover Local Env Var just uses Python and Shell, and reduces the outline above to be just:

"PHAEUL/PHAEUL": "{:ENV_VAR:$EMAIL}"

All the fetched values also get cached, so subsequent calls to the same env var get returned quicker.

Development

Clone from GitHub with git:

git clone git@github.com:paulfioravanti/plover-local-env-var.git
cd plover-local-env-var

Python Version

Plover's Python environment currently uses version 3.9 (see Plover's workflow_context.yml to confirm the current version).

So, in order to avoid unexpected issues, use your runtime version manager to make sure your local development environment also uses Python 3.9.x.

Testing

  • Pytest is used for testing in this plugin.
  • Coverage.py and pytest-cov are used for test coverage, and to run coverage within Pytest
  • Pylint is used for code quality
  • Mypy is used for static type checking

Currently, the only parts able to be tested are ones that do not rely directly on Plover.

Run tests, coverage, and linting with the following commands:

pytest --cov --cov-report=term-missing
pylint plover_local_env_var
mypy plover_local_env_var

To get a HTML test coverage report:

coverage run --module pytest
coverage html
open htmlcov/index.html

Deploying Changes

After making any code changes, deploy the plugin into Plover with the following command:

plover -s plover_plugins install .

Where plover in the command is a reference to your locally installed version of Plover. See the Invoke Plover from the command line page for details on how to create that reference.

Project details


Download files

Download the file for your platform. If you're not sure which to choose, learn more about installing packages.

Source Distribution

plover_local_env_var-0.2.11.tar.gz (49.0 kB view details)

Uploaded Source

Built Distribution

plover_local_env_var-0.2.11-py3-none-any.whl (33.6 kB view details)

Uploaded Python 3

File details

Details for the file plover_local_env_var-0.2.11.tar.gz.

File metadata

  • Download URL: plover_local_env_var-0.2.11.tar.gz
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 49.0 kB
  • Tags: Source
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? Yes
  • Uploaded via: twine/4.0.2 CPython/3.11.7

File hashes

Hashes for plover_local_env_var-0.2.11.tar.gz
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 3c0495cb02d0888d079dc1208d60b566b36309b53816054d44a17e1b8e9d971d
MD5 c7ca6d2f3d34cab71ecb0a4ed5837dfc
BLAKE2b-256 0830874e3c9b9fdf693e08058eb67034bc5336cdc98022eff354ccdb7894dba4

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file plover_local_env_var-0.2.11-py3-none-any.whl.

File metadata

File hashes

Hashes for plover_local_env_var-0.2.11-py3-none-any.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 667cffb68bede6386279c1e33556969d2e5472acf971608f48a799ee6bc8b624
MD5 2647d9e4339cc92e0d514c86ae70c788
BLAKE2b-256 a8a39a8f2b5d80c04a932abb4f13d91e74a9cb2a5fd7cf3c2e783a83d102161f

See more details on using hashes here.

Supported by

AWS AWS Cloud computing and Security Sponsor Datadog Datadog Monitoring Fastly Fastly CDN Google Google Download Analytics Microsoft Microsoft PSF Sponsor Pingdom Pingdom Monitoring Sentry Sentry Error logging StatusPage StatusPage Status page