I've deployed too many times Laravel projects up to Cloud Run successfully, but right now
It looks like Cloud Run is unable to read Enviroment Variables (which i've specified already in the Variables&Secrets section within Cloud Run instance).
I'm using Laravel 8. For testing purposes (and make sure Cloud Run it's reading env variables), i've added a simple route in the api.php section like belows:
Route::get('/test-env', function () {
echo 'debuggeando<br>';
dd(config('variables.test_env'));
});
Into my config/variables.php i've the follows:
<?php
return [
'test_env' => env('TEST_ENV', 'no se encontro la variable')
];
And this is my final result:
What do am I doing wrong? Why Cloud Run is unable to read the enviroment variables from Laravel?
You can only make Laravel pick up envirnmental variables, but not the other way around.
config(['test_env' => getenv('TEST_ENV')]);
Running php artisan config:clear & php artisan config:cache might be required. Another option might be to generate a fresh .env file during the deployment, which merely translates to: already defining the value, before it can be cached.
H Guys,
I have custom folder in App folder call libraries in laravel 5.2 version.In that libraries folder have a error.php file. I need load my custom config file to the error.php. I have try Config::get('errorreporter.active') & config('errorreporter.active') But these to not work. any one can help me please for resolve this issue
Move the file to the config folder and use the correct naming:
Config::get('[filename].[array_key]');
So if config/error.php has the following content:
<?php
return [
'active' => true
];
then the correct way of calling that value would be
Config::get('error.active')
or
config('error.active')
I’m creating a deployment configuration for Laravel project.
On my hosting public/ folder must be moved to another place.
Obviously, since that, I need to change path to the autoload.php and app.php in index.php.
However, I’d like to add and use a parameter which would tell where these files reside. Something like this:
require __DIR__ . '/../' . env('DEP_EXT_FOLDER') . 'vendor/autoload.php';
I think, the most proper place for such a parameter is .env file.
However, I’ve got an error:
Call to undefined function env()
You can't use the env() function before loading the autoloader.
if you absolutely want to use your .env file, you will have to use native php preg_match() for finding your key and using the value after that :)
What is difference between use env('APP_ENV'), config('app.env') or App::environment() to get app environment?
I know that the env('APP_ENV') will to $_ENV, config('app.env') reads the configuration and App::environment() is an abstraction of all. And in my opinion the advantage is even this. Abstraction.
I do not know if there are other differences, such as the level of performance or security
In Short & up-to-date 2022:
use env() only in config files
use App::environment() for checking the environment (APP_ENV in .env).
use config('app.var') for all other env variables, ex: config('app.debug')
create own config files for your own ENV variables. Example:
In your .env:
MY_VALUE=foo
example config/myconfig.php
return [
'myvalue' => env('MY_VALUE', 'bar'), // 'bar' is default if MY_VALUE is missing in .env
];
Access in your code:
config('myconfig.myvalue') // will result in 'foo'
Explanation & History:
I just felt over it. When you cache your config file, env() will (sometimes?) not work right. So what I found out:
Laravel recommends only to use env() within the config files. Use the config() helper in your code instead of env(). For example you can call config('app.env') in your code.
When you use php artisan config:cache all the configuration strings are cached by the framework and any changes you make to your .env file will not be active until you run the php artisan config:cache command again.
From this article on Laracast:
UPDATE:
env() calls work as long as you don't use php artisan config:cache. So it's very dangerous because it will often work while development but will fail on production. See upgrade guide
Caching And Env
If you are using the config:cache command during deployment, you must
make sure that you are only calling the env function from within your
configuration files, and not from anywhere else in your application.
If you are calling env from within your application, it is strongly
recommended you add proper configuration values to your configuration
files and call env from that location instead, allowing you to convert
your env calls to config calls.
UPDATE Laravel 5.6:
Laravel now recommends in its documentation to use
$environment = App::environment();
// or check on an array of environments:
if (App::environment(['local', 'staging'])) {
// The environment is either local OR staging...
}
and describes that env() is just to retrieve values from .env in config files, like config('app.env') or config('app.debug').
You have two equally good options
if (\App::environment('production')) {...}
or
if (app()->environment('production')) {...}
app()->environment() is actually used by Bugsnag, look in documentation here it says
By default, we’ll automatically detect the app environment by calling the environment() function on Laravel’s application instance.
Now, differences:
1) env(...) function returns null after caching config. It happens on production a lot.
2) you can change config parameters inside unit tests, it gives you flexibility while testing.
One thing to consider is perhaps the convenience factor of passing string to app()->environment() in order validate your current environment.
// or App:: whichever you prefer.
if (app()->environment('local', 'staging')) {
logger("We are not live yet!");
Seeder::seedThemAll();
} else {
logger("We are LIVE!");
}
2023 Updated Answer
env() helper works when there is no config.php inside bootstrap/cache directory
config() helper works both in case if the file config.php is present or not. If the file is not present then if will parse the variables at runtime, but if it does find one; it uses the cached version instead.
In production environment the artisan commands we run to add/remove the config file.php becomes of paramount importance in context of how env() and config() behave.
Consider the following example to understand the concept:
Route::get('/', function () {
// to experiment: set APP_ENV=production in your .env file
echo 'Via env(): ' . env('APP_ENV') . '<br/>'; // production
echo 'Via config(): ' . config('app.env'); // production
/*
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
| run: php artisan config:cache
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
| The config:cache command will generate a configuration cache file (config.php) in the bootstrap/cache directory.
| At this point, the env() helper will no longer work as all ENV variables will be flushed in favor of the cached config.php file.
|
*/
echo '<hr/>';
echo 'Via env(): ' . env('APP_ENV') . '<br/>'; // null
echo 'Via config(): ' . config('app.env'); // production
/*
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
| run: php artisan config:clear
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
| The config:clear command will remove (config.php) configuration cache file from the bootstrap/cache directory.
| At this point, the env() helper will work again as framework doesn't find a cached configuration file.
|
*/
echo '<hr/>';
echo 'Via env(): ' . env('APP_ENV') . '<br/>'; // production
echo 'Via config(): ' . config('app.env'); // production
});
So general rule of thumb is to always use config() helper inside your code files; in this way your code does not explode if cached configuration file is available or not.
Now getting the environment is so important and common; Laravel gives us a handful ways we can accomplish the same:
// APP_ENV=production inside .env file
App::environment(); // production
app()->environment(); // production
App::environment('production'); // returns boolean: true
app()->environment('production'); // return boolean: true
Keep in mind you are using App facade or app() helper they all will be using config helper under the hood.
If you are using the config:cache command during deployment, you must make sure that you are only calling the env function from within your configuration files, and not from anywhere else in your application.
If you are calling env from within your application, it is strongly recommended you add proper configuration values to your configuration files and call env from that location instead, allowing you to convert your env calls to config calls.
Add an env configuration option to your app.php configuration file that looks like the following:
'env' => env('APP_ENV', 'production'),
More: https://laravel.com/docs/5.2/upgrade#upgrade-5.2.0
In 12factor methodology application contains two types of configuration values:
internal which not vary between deploys and are stored in laravel ./config/ folder. In this type we usually store some technical optimal/good values used in application which should not be changed by users over time e.g. optimal image compression level, connection timeout, session expiration time etc.
external which vary between deploys and are stored in .env file (but should not be stored in git repo, however .env.example with example values with detail info can be stored in repo). In this type we store usually some important/protected values which depends on local environment e.g. passwords, debug mode, db address etc.
Laravel proposes handy approach for this
in regular code we use only config(...) helper (so on this level programmer do not need to know which configuration value is internal and which is external)
in configuration code external config values should be set using env(...) helper e.g. in config/app.php 'debug' => env('APP_DEBUG', false)
What is the best solution if I want to rename my laravel 5.1 project, I just tried to rename one but it did not work properly got some errors.
Are there some kind of steps one has to do to rename a laravel project?
You should use php artisan app:name command to rename your app. It will change namespace in all project files for you. This is the only right way to rename your app.
https://laravel.com/docs/5.0/configuration#after-installation
From laravel version 5.3^ there is a function to call the app name
config('app.name');
You can change the default name 'Laravel' inside this file
config/app.php
'name' => 'Laravel',
And also inside .env file
APP_NAME=Laravel
I just recommend to:
go to .env file at APP-NAME =
put your desired name in "" (double quotes)
restart your server
And you're done.
You can change your project name using the following command:
php artisan app:name your_git_name\your_app_name