vercel env
The vercel env command is used to manage Environment Variables of a Project, providing functionality to list, add, remove, and export.
To leverage environment variables in local tools (like next dev or gatsby dev) that want them in a file (like .env), run vercel env pull <file>. This will export your Project's environment variables to that file. After updating environment variables on Vercel (through the dashboard, vercel env add, or vercel env rm), you will have to run vercel env pull <file> again to get the updated values.
Some frameworks make use of environment variables during local development through CLI commands like next dev or gatsby dev. The vercel env pull sub-command will export development environment variables to a local .env file or a different file of your choice.
vercel env pull [file]To override environment variable values temporarily, use:
MY_ENV_VAR="temporary value" next devIf you are using vercel build or
vercel dev, you should use
vercel pull instead. Those commands
operate on a local copy of environment variables and Project settings that are
saved under .vercel/, which
vercel pull provides.
vercel env lsUsing the vercel env command to list all Environment
Variables in a Vercel Project.
vercel env addUsing the vercel env command to add an Environment
Variable to a Vercel Project.
vercel env rmUsing the vercel env command to remove an Environment
Variable from a Vercel Project.
vercel env ls [environment]Using the vercel env command to list Environment
Variables for a specific Environment in a Vercel Project.
vercel env ls [environment] [gitbranch]Using the vercel env command to list Environment
Variables for a specific Environment and Git branch.
vercel env add [name]Using the vercel env command to add an Environment
Variable to all Environments to a Vercel Project.
vercel env add [name] [environment]Using the vercel env command to add an Environment
Variable for a specific Environment to a Vercel Project.
vercel env add [name] [environment] [gitbranch]Using the vercel env command to add an Environment
Variable to a specific Git branch.
vercel env add [name] [environment] < [file]Using the vercel env command to add an Environment
Variable to a Vercel Project using a local file's content as the value.
echo [value] | vercel env add [name] [environment]Using the echo command to generate the value of the
Environment Variable and piping that value into the
vercel dev command. Warning: this will save the value
in bash history, so this is not recommend for secrets.
vercel env add [name] [environment] [gitbranch] < [file]Using the vercel env command to add an Environment
Variable with Git branch to a Vercel Project using a local file's content as
the value.
vercel env rm [name] [environment]Using the vercel env command to remove an Environment
Variable from a Vercel Project.
vercel env pull [file]Using the vercel env command to download Development
Environment Variables from the cloud and write to a specific file.
vercel env pull --environment=previewUsing the vercel env command to download Preview
Environment Variables from the cloud and write to the
.env.local file.
vercel env pull --environment=preview --git-branch=feature-branchUsing the vercel env command to download
"feature-branch" Environment Variables from the cloud and write to the
.env.local file.
These are options that only apply to the vercel env command.
The --yes option can be used to bypass the confirmation prompt when overwriting an environment file or removing an environment variable.
vercel env pull --yesUsing the vercel env pull command with the
--yes option to overwrite an existing environment
file.
vercel env rm [name] --yesUsing the vercel env rm command with the
--yes option to skip the remove confirmation.
The following global options can be passed when using the vercel env command:
For more information on global options and their usage, refer to the options section.
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