codyfyi / envkey-python

EnvKey's python library. Protect API keys and credentials. Keep configuration in sync.

Home Page:https://www.envkey.com

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envkey-python

Integrate EnvKey with your Python projects to keep API keys, credentials, and other configuration securely and automatically in sync for developers and servers.

Compatible with Python 2 and 3.

Installation

$ pip install envkey

Then at the entry point of your application:

import envkey

For Django, you should put the above in manage.py and wsgi.py.

Usage

Generate an ENVKEY in the EnvKey App. Then set ENVKEY=..., either in a gitignored .env file in the root of your project (in development) or in an environment variable (on servers).

Now all your EnvKey variables will be available in os.environ.

Errors

The package will throw an error if an ENVKEY is missing or invalid.

Example

Assume you have STRIPE_SECRET_KEY set for the development environment in the EnvKey App. You generate a local development ENVKEY.

In your project's gitignored .env file:

# .env
ENVKEY=GsL8zC74DWchdpvssa9z-nk7humd7hJmAqNoA

In app.py:

stripe.api_key = os.environ['STRIPE_SECRET_KEY']

Now STRIPE_SECRET_KEY will stay automatically in sync for all the developers on your team.

For a server, generate a server ENVKEY in the EnvKey App, then set the ENVKEY as an environment variable instead of putting it in a .env file.

Now your servers will stay in sync as well. If you need to rotate your STRIPE_SECRET_KEY you can do it in a few seconds in the EnvKey App, restart your servers, and you're good to go. All your team's developers and all your servers will have the new value.

Overriding Vars

This package will not overwrite existing environment variables or additional variables set in a .env file. This can be convenient for customizing environments that otherwise share the same configuration. You can also use sub-environments in the EnvKey App for this purpose.

Working Offline

This package caches your encrypted config in development so that you can still use it while offline. Your config will still be available (though possibly not up-to-date) the next time you lose your internet connection. If you do have a connection available, envkey will always load the latest config. Your cached encrypted config is stored in $HOME/.envkey/cache

For caching purposes, it's assumed you're in development mode when a .env file exists in the root of your project.

Disabling autoload

If you'd like to have more control over how your config is loaded, you can prevent the package from auto-loading on import by setting ENVKEY_DISABLE_AUTOLOAD=1 either in your .env file or as an environment variable.

You can then load your config explicitly like this:

import envkey

envkey.load(cache_enabled=True, dot_env_enabled=True, dot_env_path=".env")

For even more flexibility, you can just fetch your config as a dict (without setting it on os.environ) like this:

import envkey
import os

config = envkey.fetch_env(os.environ['ENVKEY'], cache_enabled=True)

envkey-fetch binaries

If you look in the ext directory of this package, you'll find a number of envkey-fetch binaries for various platforms and architectures. These are output by the envkey-fetch Go library. It contains EnvKey's core cross-platform fetching, decryption, verification, web of trust, redundancy, and caching logic. It is completely open source.

Further Reading

For more on EnvKey in general:

Read the docs.

Read the integration quickstart.

Read the security and cryptography overview.

Need help? Have questions, feedback, or ideas?

Post an issue or email us: support@envkey.com.

About

EnvKey's python library. Protect API keys and credentials. Keep configuration in sync.

https://www.envkey.com

License:MIT License


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