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Environment Variables

Create-T3-App uses Zod for validating your environment variables at runtime and buildtime by providing some additional files in the env-directory:

📁 src/env

┣ 📄 client.mjs

┣ 📄 schema.mjs

┣ 📄 server.mjs

The content of these files may seem scary at first glance, but don’t worry, it’s not as complicated as it looks. Let’s take a look at them one by one, and walk through the process of adding additional environment variables.

TLDR; If you want to add a new environment variable, you must add it to both your .env as well as define the validator in env/schema.mjs.

schema.mjs

This is the file you will actually touch. It contains two schemas, one for server-side environment variables and one for client-side as well as a clientEnv object.

env/schema.mjs
export const serverSchema = z.object({
  // DATABASE_URL: z.string().url(),
});

export const clientSchema = z.object({
  // NEXT_PUBLIC_WS_KEY: z.string(),
});

export const clientEnv = {
  // NEXT_PUBLIC_WS_KEY: process.env.NEXT_PUBLIC_WS_KEY,
};

Server Schema

Define your server-side environment variables schema here.

Make sure you do not prefix keys here with NEXT_PUBLIC. Validation will fail if you do to help you detect invalid configuration.

Client Schema

Define your client-side environment variables schema here.

To expose them to the client you need to prefix them with NEXT_PUBLIC. Validation will fail if you don’t to help you detect invalid configuration.

clientEnv Object

Destruct the process.env here.

We need a JavaScript object that we can parse our Zod-schemas with and due to the way Next.js handles environment variables, you can’t destruct process.env like a regular object, so we need to do it manually.

TypeScript will help you make sure that you have entered the keys in both clientEnv as well as clientSchema.

// ❌ This doesn't work, we need to destruct it manually
const schema = z.object({
  NEXT_PUBLIC_WS_KEY: z.string(),
});

const validated = schema.parse(process.env);

server.mjs & client.mjs

This is where the validation happens and exports the validated objects. You shouldn’t need to modify these files.

Using Environment Variables

When you want to use your environment variables, you can import them from env/client.mjs or env/server.mjs depending on where you want to use them:

pages/api/hello.ts
import { env } from "../../env/server.mjs";

// `env` is fully typesafe and provides autocompletion
const dbUrl = env.DATABASE_URL;

.env.example

Since the default .env file is not committed to version control, we have also included a .env.example file, in which you can optionally keep a copy of your .env file with any secrets removed. This is not required, but we recommend keeping the example up to date to make it as easy as possible for contributors to get started with their environment.

Adding Environment Variables

To ensure your build never completes without the environment variables the project needs, you will need to add new environment variables in two locations:

📄 .env: Enter your environment variable like you would normally do in a .env file, i.e. KEY=VALUE

📄 schema.mjs: Add the appropriate validation logic for the environment variable by defining a Zod schema, e.g. KEY: z.string()

Optionally, you can also keep .env.example updated:

📄 .env.example: Enter your environment variable, but be sure to not include the value if it is secret, i.e. KEY=VALUE or KEY=

Example

I want to add my Twitter API Token as a server-side environment variable

  1. Add the environment variable to .env:
TWITTER_API_TOKEN=1234567890
  1. Add the environment variable to schema.mjs:
export const serverSchema = z.object({
  // ...
  TWITTER_API_TOKEN: z.string(),
});

NOTE: An empty string is still a string, so z.string() will accept an empty string as a valid value. If you want to make sure that the environment variable is not empty, you can use z.string().min(1).

  1. optional: Add the environment variable to .env.example, but don’t include the token
TWITTER_API_TOKEN=

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