6

I can't access env variables in the Rails console, while in the application they work.

In .powenv I have export SENDGRID_PASSWORD="123"

In config/initializers/mail.rb there is:

ActionMailer::Base.smtp_settings = {
  :password => ENV['SENDGRID_PASSWORD']
}

So in the console when I type UserMailer.welcome_mail.deliver there is an error 'ArgumentError: SMTP-AUTH requested but missing secret phrase'. However from the application it sends the mail successfully.

How can I make the env variables available in the console?

3
  • Have you tried explicitly setting it in the console? SENDGRID_PASSWORD=123 && UserMailer.welcome_mail.deliver
    – Mark Sands
    May 10, 2012 at 6:21
  • No, it doesn't work this way too. May 10, 2012 at 16:38
  • 1
    err I meant: SENDGRID_PASSWORD=123 rails console
    – Mark Sands
    May 10, 2012 at 16:50

3 Answers 3

11

try

. .powenv

then

rails c

(dot is a command to run script on current environment)

4

Your Rails console isn't able to access the environment variable because Pow passes information from the .powenv or .powrc file into Rails ... Rails doesn't read those files on its own.

In other words, you're setting the ENV['SENDGRID_PASSWORD'] variable in the .powenv file, but that file is not being touched when you start the Rails console.

You'll need to set up a before_filter in your Application Controller that sets the ENV['SENDGRID_PASSWORD'] (or come up with another, similar, way of reading in the .powenv file from within that before_filter in your Rails app).

4
  • "(or come up with another, similar, way of reading in the .powenv file from within that before_filter in your Rails app)" Yep, that would be fabulous... :) Any ideas? Jun 26, 2012 at 19:34
  • I don't know if you'd want to actually read the .powenv file from your Rails app, since there could be other stuff in there that you don't want/need to reload each time. Jun 26, 2012 at 20:01
  • If your .powenv file is super clean & each line is just setting environmental variables, then you might be able to read it in line by line within the before_filter. The before_filter could execute each line it reads out of the file. ... I'm pretty sure there are all sorts of wrong things going on with this idea, though ... Jun 26, 2012 at 20:02
  • Yes, it's easy to read in .powenv line by line and only execute those lines which set env vars. Unfortunately those will not be available in the console (or in Rake) that way... Jun 27, 2012 at 0:16
2

For posterity, you can add something like this to either your environment.rb, development.rb, or an initializer (config/initializers/pow.rb) depending on what load order you want:

# Load pow environment variables into development and test environments
if File.exist?(".powenv")
  IO.foreach('.powenv') do |line|
    next if !line.include?('export') || line.blank?
    key, value = line.gsub('export','').split('=',2)
    ENV[key.strip] = value.delete('"\'').strip
  end
end

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