Runtime agnostic JS utils
# Using npm
npm i std-env
# Using pnpm
pnpm i std-env
# Using yarn
yarn add std-env// ESM
import { env, isDevelopment, isProduction } from "std-env";
// CommonJS
const { env, isDevelopment, isProduction } = require("std-env");hasTTYhasWindowisDebugisDevelopmentisLinuxisMacOSisMinimalisProductionisTestisWindowsplatformisColorSupportednodeVersionnodeMajorVersion
You can read more about how each flag works from ./src/flags.ts.
std-env can automatically detect the current runtime provider based on environment variables.
You can use isCI and platform exports to detect it:
import { isCI, provider, providerInfo } from "std-env";
console.log({
isCI, // true
provider, // "github_actions"
providerInfo, // { name: "github_actions", isCI: true }
});List of well known providers can be found from ./src/providers.ts.
std-env can automatically detect the current JavaScript runtime based on global variables, following the WinterCG Runtime Keys proposal:
import { runtime, runtimeInfo } from "std-env";
// "" | "node" | "deno" | "bun" | "workerd" ...
console.log(runtime);
// { name: "node" }
console.log(runtimeInfo);You can also use individual named exports for each runtime detection:
Note
When running code in Bun and Deno with Node.js compatibility mode, isNode flag will be also true, indicating running in a Node.js compatible runtime.
Use runtime === "node" if you need strict check for Node.js runtime.
isNodeisBunisDenoisNetlifyisEdgeLightisWorkerdisFastly
List of well known providers can be found from ./src/runtimes.ts.
std-env provides a lightweight proxy to access environment variables in a platform agnostic way.
import { env } from "std-env";std-env provides a lightweight proxy to access process object in a platform agnostic way.
import { process } from "std-env";MIT