In Ubuntu it's quite simple; I can run the application using:
$ NODE_ENV=production node myapp/app.js
However, this doesn't work on Windows. Is there a configuration file where I can set the attribute?
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In Ubuntu it's quite simple; I can run the application using:
$ NODE_ENV=production node myapp/app.js
However, this doesn't work on Windows. Is there a configuration file where I can set the attribute?
Current versions of Windows use Powershell as the default shell, so use:
$env:NODE_ENV="production"
Per @jsalonen's answer below. If you're in CMD (which is no longer maintained), use
set NODE_ENV=production
This should be executed in the command prompt where you intend to run your Node.js application.
The above line would set the environment variable NODE_ENV for the command prompt where you execute the command.
To set environment variables globally so they persist beyond just the single command prompt, you can find the tool from System in Control Panel (or by typing 'environment' into the search box in the start menu).
set NODE_ENV=production && node app
. More conveniently configure your package.json
accordingly: "scripts": { "start": "set NODE_ENV=production && node app" }
.
– Amberlamps
Oct 20 '14 at 13:03
echo %NODE_ENV%
to check its current value.
– Jani Hartikainen
Apr 26 '15 at 5:31
cross-env
is the better solution to this problem if your team works on mixed operating systems. Answer from @MoOx would be my pick as an answer to this question.
– philk
Mar 9 '16 at 9:52
I just found a nice Node.js package that can help a lot to define environment variables using a unique syntax, cross platform.
https://www.npmjs.com/package/cross-env
It allow you to write something like this:
cross-env NODE_ENV=production my-command
Which is pretty convenient! No Windows or Unix specific commands any more!
In PowerShell:
$env:NODE_ENV="production"
set NODE_ENV=production
did not work for me in powershell but this did. Thanks!
– rage
Apr 11 '17 at 2:56
$env:NODE_ENV="development"; gulp runMytask
. Note the semi-colon in there. The gulp file can use conditional logic on process.env.NODE_ENV. Unless you set it, it will be undefined.
– dvsoukup
Sep 28 '17 at 15:20
cross-env NODE_ENV=production
option is really a better solution if running npm commands from package.json that require the env to be set. It's too easy to leave the env set on dev/prod after using the $env:NODE_ENV option
– Drenai
Dec 26 '17 at 17:35
It would be ideal if you could set parameters on the same line as your call to start Node.js on Windows. Look at the following carefully, and run it exactly as stated:
You have these two options:
At the command line:
set NODE_ENV=production&&npm start
or
set NODE_ENV=production&&node index.js
The trick for it to work on Windows is you need to remove the whitespace before and after the "&&". Configured your package.json file with start_windows (see below) below. Then Run "npm run start_windows" at the command line.
//package.json
"scripts": {
"start": "node index.js"
"start_windows": "set NODE_ENV=production&&node index.js"
}
You can use
npm run env NODE_ENV=production
It is probably the best way to do it, because it's compatible on both Windows and Unix.
From the npm run-script documentation:
The env script is a special built-in command that can be used to list environment variables that will be available to the script at runtime. If an "env" command is defined in your package it will take precedence over the built-in.
npm run env NODE_ENV=production -- node -e 'console.log(process.env.NODE_ENV)'
The --
is mandatory. Replace node -e 'console.log(process.env.NODE_ENV)'
with whatever command you want.
– Pauan
Oct 20 '16 at 13:54
npm run env NODE_TLS_REJECT_UNAUTHORIZED=0 -- node --inspect ./etc/http-req-standalone.js
and ... nothing happened. I'm not sure this method works on windows.
– jcollum
Jul 19 '17 at 17:53
I wrote a module win-node-env with which you can run your command just like you would in *nix.
NODE_ENV=production node myapp/app.js
It works by creating a NODE_ENV.cmd
that sets the NODE_ENV
environment variable and spawns a child process with the rest of the command and its args.
Just install it (globally), and run your npm script commands, it should automatically make them work.
npm install -g win-node-env
If you are using Visual Studio with NTVS, you can set the environment variables on the project properties page:
As you can see, the Configuration and Platform dropdowns are disabled (I haven't looked too far into why this is), but if you edit your .njsproj
file as follows:
<PropertyGroup Condition=" '$(Configuration)' == 'Debug' ">
<DebugSymbols>true</DebugSymbols>
<Environment>NODE_ENV=development</Environment>
</PropertyGroup>
<PropertyGroup Condition=" '$(Configuration)' == 'Release' ">
<DebugSymbols>true</DebugSymbols>
<Environment>NODE_ENV=production</Environment>
</PropertyGroup>
The 'Debug / Release' dropdown will then control how the variable is set before starting Node.js.
My experience using Node.js on Windows 7 64-bit in Visual Studio 2013 is that you need to use
setx NODE_ENV development
from a cmd window. AND you have to restart Visual Studio in order for the new value to be recognized.
The set syntax only lasts for the duration of the cmd window in which it is set.
Simple test in Node.js:
console.log('process.env.NODE_ENV = ' + process.env.NODE_ENV);
It returns 'undefined' when using set, and it will return 'development' if using setx and restarting Visual Studio.
To run your application in PowerShell (since &&
is disallowed):
($env:NODE_ENV="production") -and (node myapp/app.js)
Note that the text output of what the server's doing is suppressed, and I am not sure if that's fixable. (Expanding on @jsalonen's answer.)
"debug-windows": "($env:NODE_ENV=\"dev\") -and (node src/dequeue.js)"
– Evandro Pomatti
Apr 27 '20 at 16:18
Here is the non-command line method:
In Windows 7 or 10, type environment into the start menu search box, and select Edit the system environment variables.
Alternatively, navigate to Control Panel\System and Security\System, and click Advanced system settings
This should open up the System properties dialog box with the Advanced tab selected. At the bottom, you will see an Environment Variables... button. Click this.
The Environment Variables Dialog Box will open.
At the bottom, under System variables, select New...This will open the New System Variable dialog box.
Enter the variable name and value, and click OK.
You will need to close all cmd prompts and restart your server for the new variable to be available to process.env. If it still doesn't show up, restart your machine.
Just to clarify, and for anyone else that may be pulling their hair out...
If you are using git bash on Windows, set node_env=production&& node whatever.js
does not seem to work. Instead, use the native cmd. Then, using set node_env=production&& node whatever.js
works as expected.
My use case:
I develop on Windows because my workflow is a lot faster, but I needed to make sure that my application's development-specific middleware were not firing in the production environment.
first in powershell type
$env:NODE_ENV="production"
then type
node fileName.js
It will work perfectly displaying all the outputs.
For multiple environment variables, an .env
file is more convenient:
# .env.example, committed to repo
DB_HOST=localhost
DB_USER=root
DB_PASS=s1mpl3
# .env, private, .gitignore it
DB_HOST=real-hostname.example.com
DB_USER=real-user-name
DB_PASS=REAL_PASSWORD
It's easy to use with dotenv-safe
:
npm install --save dotenv-safe
.index.js
) and directly use it with the process.env
command:require('dotenv').load()
console.log(process.env.DB_HOST)
Don't forget to ignore the .env
file in your VCS.
Your program then fails fast if a variable "defined" in .env.example
is unset either as an environment variable or in .env
.
In case you are using GITBASH terminal
"set NODE_ENV=production"
will not work, what can you do is type
"export NODE_ENV=production"
if you are using vs code terminal you have to use this command
$env:NODE_ENV="production"
this will not set a variable but it's usefull in many cases. I will not recommend using this for production, but it should be okay if you're playing around with npm.
npm install --production
I used npm script for running a gulp task without "&&"
NODE_ENV=testcases npm run seed-db
Restart VS code if the NODE_ENV or any other environment variable is not providing correct value. This should work after restart.
It seems that
{
"start_windows": "set NODE_ENV=test"
}
is not working for me. I'm currently trying this on my Windows machine. When I hit:
npm run start_windows
it would execute on the console without errors but when I try to echo
echo %NODE_ENV%
nothing comes out of it, meaning it does not exist and it wasn't set at all...
ps aux | grep NODE_ENV
But, you're also not running with the "start_windows" script. Other answers point out that you'd need to do something like: "set NODE_ENV=test&& node ./index.js"
. Finally, you're setting the envar for that particular session, on that terminal. So, really, your echo or more proper "ps aux" op is invalid. You'd just log-out the setting in your "index.js" or "app.js", whatever your entry is: console.log(process.env.NODE_ENV);
. Anyway, I hope that helps more than a downvote.
– Neil Guy Lindberg
Nov 17 '20 at 21:06