import "github.com/kelseyhightower/envconfig"See godoc
Set some environment variables:
export MYAPP_DEBUG=false
export MYAPP_PORT=8080
export MYAPP_USER=Kelsey
export MYAPP_RATE="0.5"
export MYAPP_TIMEOUT="3m"
export MYAPP_USERS="rob,ken,robert"Write some code:
package main
import (
    "fmt"
    "log"
    "time"
    "github.com/kelseyhightower/envconfig"
)
type Specification struct {
    Debug   bool
    Port    int
    User    string
    Users   []string
    Rate    float32
    Timeout time.Duration
}
func main() {
    var s Specification
    err := envconfig.Process("myapp", &s)
    if err != nil {
        log.Fatal(err.Error())
    }
    format := "Debug: %v\nPort: %d\nUser: %s\nRate: %f\nTimeout: %s\n"
    _, err = fmt.Printf(format, s.Debug, s.Port, s.User, s.Rate)
    if err != nil {
        log.Fatal(err.Error())
    }
    fmt.Println("Users:")
    for _, u := range s.Users {
        fmt.Printf("  %s\n", u)
    }
}Results:
Debug: false
Port: 8080
User: Kelsey
Rate: 0.500000
Timeout: 3m0s
Users:
  rob
  ken
  robertEnvconfig supports the use of struct tags to specify alternate, default, and required environment variables.
For example, consider the following struct:
type Specification struct {
    MultiWordVar string `envconfig:"multi_word_var"`
    DefaultVar   string `default:"foobar"`
    RequiredVar  string `required:"true"`
    IgnoredVar   string `ignored:"true"`
}Envconfig will process value for MultiWordVar by populating it with the
value for MYAPP_MULTI_WORD_VAR.
export MYAPP_MULTI_WORD_VAR="this will be the value"
# export MYAPP_MULTIWORDVAR="and this will not"If envconfig can't find an environment variable value for MYAPP_DEFAULTVAR,
it will populate it with "foobar" as a default value.
If envconfig can't find an environment variable value for MYAPP_REQUIREDVAR,
it will return an error when asked to process the struct.
If envconfig can't find an environment variable in the form PREFIX_MYVAR, and there
is a struct tag defined, it will try to populate your variable with an environment
variable that directly matches the envconfig tag in your struct definition:
export SERVICE_HOST=127.0.0.1
export MYAPP_DEBUG=truetype Specification struct {
    ServiceHost string `envconfig:"SERVICE_HOST"`
    Debug       bool
}Envconfig won't process a field with the "ignored" tag set to "true", even if a corresponding environment variable is set.
envconfig supports supports these struct field types:
- string
 - int8, int16, int32, int64
 - bool
 - float32, float64
 
Embedded structs using these fields are also supported.
Any field whose type (or pointer-to-type) implements envconfig.Decoder can
control its own deserialization:
export DNS_SERVER=8.8.8.8type IPDecoder net.IP
func (ipd *IPDecoder) Decode(value string) error {
    *ipd = IPDecoder(net.ParseIP(value))
    return nil
}
type DNSConfig struct {
    Address IPDecoder `envconfig:"DNS_SERVER"`
}