table of contents Table of contents

Using environment variables

There are two types of environment variables (env vars) in the Checkly CLI context.

  • Local environment variables.
  • Remote environment variables.

To get a quick overview of when to use which, checkout this video 👇

Local Environment Variables

Local environment variables exist on your local machine, your CI environment, or anywhere you run the Checkly CLI. They normally are part of your shell session or stored in a .env file in your app’s Git repo. Here is what you need to remember:

  1. Use local environment variables to replace values in your constructs before test and deploy invocations.
  2. Local environment variables are not interpreted in code dependencies like .spec.ts files or setup and teardown scripts.

Use local environment variables to inject or replace values in your Check, AlertChannel or other constructs at build time when the CLI compiles your constructs for testing and deploying.

Here is an example of setting up an SmsAlertChannel where we pass in the actual phone number from a local environment variable. Note the exclamation mark ! at the end. This is to tell the Typescript compiler the value will be set. Alternatively you can use a string template.

import { SmsAlertChannel } from 'checkly/constructs'

export const smsChannel = new SmsAlertChannel('sms-channel-1', {
  phoneNumber: process.env.PHONE_NUMBER!
  // phoneNumber: `${process.env.PHONE_NUMBER}` this also works
})

Now, when you execute test or deploy the variable needs to part of the parent process env object. This is typically done by just prepending the variable to the command.

PHONE_NUMBER=0987654321 npx checkly deploy

The above command will replace process.env.PHONE_NUMBER with the actual PHONE_NUMBER you prepended and then create that SMS channel in your Checkly account.

Remote Environment Variables

Checkly also stores environment variables in your Checkly account. These can exist at the Global, Group or Check level. Here is what you need to remember:

  1. Use remote environment variables to dynamically inject or replace values during runtime of a check.
  2. Remote variables can be set and overridden when invoking the test command.

You will typically use remote environment variables inside the code dependencies you write, e.g. Playwright tests, setup and teardown scripts. The point is that the process.env.SOME_VARIABLE stays in your code and are only interpreted when a check executes on the Checkly cloud.

Using the -e flag

Here is an example of a Playwright script using an ENVIRONMENT_URL variable to define the page to visit. We also added a fallback value in case that variable is not defined for some reason.

import { test } from '@playwright/test'

test('Check Home Page', async ({ page }) => {
  const response = await page.goto(process.env.ENVIRONMENT_URL! || 'https://wwww.checklyhq.com')
  await page.screenshot({ path: 'home.jpg' })
})

Here is an example of a Checkly ApiCheck construct using an ENVIRONMENT_URL variable to define the page to visit. Notice the {{ENVIRONMENT_URL}} is wrapped in double handlebars and must be written this way for a remote environment variable to be parsed within an ApiCheck construct.

import * as path from 'path'
import { ApiCheck, AssertionBuilder } from 'checkly/constructs'
import { websiteGroup } from './website-group.check'

new ApiCheck('books-api-check-1', {
  name: 'Books API',
  group: websiteGroup,
  degradedResponseTime: 10000,
  maxResponseTime: 20000,
  setupScript: {
    entrypoint: path.join(__dirname, './utils/setup.ts'),
  },
  request: {
    url: '{{ENVIRONMENT_URL}}' || 'https://danube-web.shop/api/books',
    method: 'GET',
    followRedirects: true,
    skipSSL: false,
    assertions: [AssertionBuilder.statusCode().equals(200)],
  },
  runParallel: true,
})

You can now test this check and temporarily set the environment variable as follows.

npx checkly test -e ENVIRONMENT_URL="https://staging.checklyhq.com"
  • Notice that we pass in the variable using the -e flag. This means it will be passed to the cloud environment and made available during runtime.
  • After deploying this check, the ENVIRONMENT_URL needs to be set at the Account, Group or Check level. If not set, the Check will use the fallback URL.
  • Prepending the variable like ENVIRONMENT_URL="https://staging.checklyhq.com" npx checkly test has no effect as local environment variables are not replaced in code dependencies.

Using the --env-file flag

If you have a lot of variables, it makes sense to store them in a .env file. Make sure to add that to your .gitignore file!

ENVIRONMENT_URL=https://checklyhq.com
USER_NAME=admin
PASSWORD=admin

You can reference that file in the test as follows:

npx checkly test --env-file="./.env"

You can also pull in the variables from your account and store them in a file using the npx checkly env pull command. See the examples below.

Managing Remote Environment Variables using the CLI

Manage your remote environment variables with the CLI using the checkly env command. You can list, add, update, remove and export your global variables. Here are some examples:

List all your stored variables and lock it.

npx checkly env ls

Create a new variable.

npx checkly env add  MY_PASSWORD 123test --locked

Pull in the variables from your account and store them in a file.

npx checkly env pull .env.prod

Reference that file in your test command.

npx checkly test --env-file="./.env.prod"

See the reference documentation for the checkly env command

Securing Environment Variables

For storing and securing environment variables, we advise the following:

  1. Store local environment variables in your shell or in .env files that are not committed to your git repo. Add those files to your .gitignore file.
  2. In a CI context, e.g. GitHub Actions, store sensitive variables as secrets. Almost all CI providers have such a feature.
  3. For remote variables, store sensitive secrets at the Account level and click the lock icon so Read Only users cannot view them. All variables are stored encrypted at rest and in transfer.

Last updated on July 29, 2024. You can contribute to this documentation by editing this page on Github