Does anybody know how I can grab an environment variable in Swift?
6 Answers
Swift 3 and up:
import Foundation
if let value = ProcessInfo.processInfo.environment["KEY"] {
...
}
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5Careful. These env vars won't show up when you archive or launch the app away from Xcode. Commented Oct 28, 2022 at 22:34
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1@joshuakcockrell I learned it the hard way. Your comment saved me from another sleepless night. Thank you.– ASCIImoCommented Nov 29, 2023 at 13:05
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Use this if you want your env vars to persist even after archiving/shipping to TestFlight and/or App Store: stackoverflow.com/a/74254208/4975772 Commented Nov 29, 2023 at 19:55
Along with the NSProcessInfo
-based method mentioned by Oleg, you can access environment variables using the the standard C getenv
function, like so:
Swift 2.x:
func getEnvironmentVar(name: String) -> String? {
let rawValue = getenv(name)
guard rawValue != nil else { return nil }
return String(UTF8String: rawValue)
}
Swift 3.0:
func getEnvironmentVar(_ name: String) -> String? {
guard let rawValue = getenv(name) else { return nil }
return String(utf8String: rawValue)
}
It's also possible to set environment variables using the setenv
function:
func setEnvironmentVar(name: String, value: String, overwrite: Bool) {
setenv(name, value, overwrite ? 1 : 0)
}
The reason I mention the ability to set variables is because it's the only way I know of to set variables when working in an Xcode Playground.
I recently wanted to see a backtrace for a strange CGContext
error I was getting when working with a "live" view in a playground. By default, the backtrace isn't shown in the console, so I had to set the CG_CONTEXT_SHOW_BACKTRACE
environment variable to see what was up:
setenv("CG_CONTEXT_SHOW_BACKTRACE", "1", 1)
After that, it was smooth sailing. Well, other than the CGContext
error I was getting, but that's a topic for another day.
Hope this helps!
P.S. The above functions require the Darwin
module to be imported. Foundation
automatically imports Darwin
, but I thought I should mention it nonetheless.
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If you want to set environment variables for an Xcode project you can edit scheme > run > arguments section where you can add environment variables Commented Apr 4, 2019 at 3:38
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thank you for the
setenv
tip. tried to make it work before withProcess()
andProcessInfo.processInfo
but couldn't never make the env stick.setenv
fixes the issue for me.– godboutCommented Mar 16, 2021 at 17:43 -
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Yes it is possible. Use ProcessInfo
for that.
Simple example :
let dic = ProcessInfo.processInfo.environment
if dic["VAR"] != nil {
}
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2Ok, that work on running application, what do you do with the UI Tests?– MaetschlCommented Apr 8, 2017 at 13:21
Since Swift 3 NSProcessInfo
has been renamed to ProcessInfo
.
And method processInfo()
has been replaced with property processInfo
.
import Foundation
for (key, value) in ProcessInfo.processInfo.environment {
print("\(key): \(value)")
}
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Here is Apple's official API doc for it: developer.apple.com/documentation/foundation/processinfo/… Commented Jul 27, 2020 at 4:15
Alternatively you can use Info.plist file to store build-time env variables that your app needs at runtime, as described on apple developers forum:
For example if you have a MyConfig.xcconfig file like this:
MY_SECRET_API_KEY = mysupersecretapikeyvaluehere
In your Info.plist you should add an entry like this:
<key>MySecretApiKey</key> <string>$(MY_SECRET_API_KEY)</string>
Finally in your code read the value of your variable like this:
guard let infoDictionary: [String: Any] = Bundle.main.infoDictionary else { return } guard let mySecretApiKey: String = infoDictionary["MySecretApiKey"] as? String else { return } print("Here's your api key value -> \(mySecretApiKey)")
A Vapor specific solution:
From the code which Vapor automatically generates as a project template:
let variable = Environment.get("VARIABLE") ?? "or-the-default"