Cloud Foundry environment variables
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Environment variables are the means Cloud Foundry uses to communicate with a deployed app about its environment.
For information about setting your own app-specific environment variables, see the Environment variable in Deploying with app manifests.
Important Do not use user-provided environment variables for security-sensitive information such as credentials. They might unintentionally show up in cf CLI output and Cloud Controller logs. Use user-provided service instances instead. The system-provided environment variable VCAP_SERVICES is properly redacted for user roles such as Space Supporter and in Cloud Controller log files.
Important
The maximum size of an environment variable is 130 KB. This limit applies also to Cloud Foundry system environment variables such as VCAP_SERVICES
and VCAP_APPLICATION
.
View environment variables
Using the Cloud Foundry Command Line Interface (cf CLI), you can run the cf env
command to view the Cloud Foundry environment variables for your app. The cf env
command displays the following environment variables:
The
VCAP_APPLICATION
andVCAP_SERVICES
variables provided in the container environmentThe user-provided variables set using the
cf set-env
command
For more information about the cf env
command, see env in the cf CLI documentation. For more information about the cf set-env
command, see set-env in the cf CLI documentation.
The following example demonstrates the environment variables cf env
displays:
$ cf env my-app Getting env variables for app my-app in org my-org / space my-space as admin... OK System-Provided: { "VCAP_APPLICATION": { "application_id": "fa05c1a9-0fc1-4fbd-bae1-139850dec7a3", "application_name": "my-app", "application_uris": [ "my-app.example.com" ], "application_version": "fb8fbcc6-8d58-479e-bcc7-3b4ce5a7f0ca", "cf_api": "https://api.example.com", "limits": { "disk": 1024, "fds": 16384, "mem": 256 }, "name": "my-app", "organization_id": "c0134bad-97a9-468d-ab9d-e97547e3aed5", "organization_name": "my-org", "space_id": "06450c72-4669-4dc6-8096-45f9777db68a", "space_name": "my-space", "uris": [ "my-app.example.com" ], "users": null, "version": "fb8fbcc6-8d58-479e-bcc7-3b4ce5a7f0ca" } } User-Provided: MY_DRAIN: http://drain.example.com MY_ENV_VARIABLE: 100
App-specific system variables
This section describes the environment variables that Cloud Foundry makes available to your application container. Some of these variables are the same across instances of a single app, and some vary from instance to instance.
You can access environment variables programmatically, including variables defined by the buildpack. For more information, see the buildpack documentation for Java, Node.js, and Ruby.
The following table lists the system variables available to your application container.
Environment Variable | Running | Staging | Task |
---|---|---|---|
CF_INSTANCE_ADDR |
x | x | x |
CF_INSTANCE_GUID |
x | x | |
CF_INSTANCE_INDEX |
x | ||
CF_INSTANCE_INTERNAL_IP |
x | x | x |
CF_INSTANCE_IP |
x | x | x |
CF_INSTANCE_PORT |
x | x | x |
CF_INSTANCE_PORTS |
x | x | x |
CF_STACK |
x | ||
DATABASE_URL |
x | x | |
HOME |
x | x | x |
INSTANCE_GUID |
x | ||
INSTANCE_INDEX |
x | ||
LANG |
x | x | x |
MEMORY_LIMIT |
x | x | x |
PATH |
x | x | x |
PORT |
x | ||
PWD |
x | x | x |
TMPDIR |
x | x | |
USER |
x | x | x |
VCAP_APP_HOST |
x | ||
VCAP_APP_PORT |
x | ||
VCAP_APPLICATION |
x | x | x |
VCAP_SERVICES |
x | x | x |
CFINSTANCEADDR
The CF_INSTANCE_IP
and CF_INSTANCE_PORT
of the app instance, in the format IP:PORT
.
For example: CF_INSTANCE_ADDR=1.2.3.4:5678
For more information, see CFINSTANCEIP and CFINSTANCEPORT.
CFINSTANCEGUID
The UUID of the app instance.
For example: CF_INSTANCE_GUID=41653aa4-3a3a-486a-4431-ef258b39f042
CFINSTANCEINDEX
The index number of the app instance.
For example: CF_INSTANCE_INDEX=0
CFINSTANCEIP
The external IP address of the host running the app instance.
For example: CF_INSTANCE_IP=1.2.3.4
CFINSTANCEINTERNAL_IP
The internal IP address of the container running the app instance.
For example: CF_INSTANCE_INTERNAL_IP=5.6.7.8
CFINSTANCEPORT
The external (host-side) port corresponding to the internal (container-side) port with value PORT
. This value is usually different from the PORT
of the app instance.
For example: CF_INSTANCE_PORT=61045
For more information, see PORT.
CFINSTANCEPORTS
The list of mappings between internal (container-side) and external (host-side) ports allocated to the container running the app instance. Not all of the internal ports are necessarily available for the app to bind to, as some of them might be used by system-provided services that also run inside the container. These internal and external values might differ.
For example: CF_INSTANCE_PORTS=[{external:61045,internal:8080},{external:61046,internal:2222}]
DATABASE_URL
For apps bound to certain services that use a database, Cloud Foundry creates a DATABASE_URL
environment variable based on the VCAP_SERVICES
environment variable.
Cloud Foundry uses the structure of the VCAP_SERVICES
environment variable to populate the DATABASE_URL
environment variable. Cloud Foundry recognizes any service containing a JSON object like the following example as a candidate for the DATABASE_URL
environment variable and uses the first candidate it finds.
{
"some-service": [
{
"credentials": {
"uri": "SOME-DATABASE-URL"
}
}
]
}
For example, see the following VCAP_SERVICES
environment variable example:
VCAP_SERVICES =
{
"elephantsql": [
{
"name": "elephantsql-c6c60",
"label": "elephantsql",
"credentials": {
"uri": "postgres://exampleuser:examplepass@babar.elephantsql.com:5432/exampledb"
}
}
]
}
Based on this VCAP_SERVICES
environment variable, Cloud Foundry creates the following DATABASE_URL
environment variable:
DATABASE_URL = postgres://exampleuser:examplepass@babar.elephantsql.com:5432/exampledb
For more information, see VCAP_SERVICES.
HOME
The root directory for the deployed app.
For example: HOME=/home/vcap/app
LANG
Required by buildpacks to ensure consistent script load order.
For example: LANG=en_US.UTF-8
MEMORY_LIMIT
The maximum amount of memory that each instance of the app can consume. You specify this value in an app manifest or with the cf CLI when pushing an app. The value is limited by space and org quotas.
If an instance exceeds the maximum limit, it is restarted. If Cloud Foundry is asked to restart an instance too frequently, the instance is stopped.
For example: MEMORY_LIMIT=512M
PORT
The port on which the app listens for requests. Cloud Foundry allocates a port for each instance of the app, so code that obtains or uses the app port refers to it using the PORT
environment variable.
For example: PORT=8080
PWD
The present working directory where the buildpack that processed the app ran.
For example: PWD=/home/vcap/app
TMPDIR
The directory location where temporary and staging files are stored.
For example: TMPDIR=/home/vcap/tmp
USER
The user account under which the app runs.
For example: USER=vcap
VCAPAPPPORT
Deprecated name for the PORT
variable.
VCAP_APPLICATION
This environment variable contains the associated attributes for a deployed app. Results are returned in JSON format. The following table lists the attributes that are returned.
Attribute | Description |
---|---|
application_id |
The GUID identifying the app |
application_name |
The name assigned to the app when it was pushed |
application_uris |
The URIs assigned to the app |
application_version |
The GUID identifying a version of the app. Each time an app is pushed or restarted, this value is updated |
cf_api |
The location of the Cloud Controller API for the Cloud Foundry deployment where the app runs |
host |
Deprecated. The IP address of the app instance |
limits |
The limits to disk space, number of files, and memory permitted to the app. Memory and disk space limits are supplied when the app is deployed, either on the command line or in the app manifest. The number of files allowed is operator-defined |
name |
Identical to application_name |
organization_id |
The GUID identifying the org where the app is deployed |
organization_name |
The human-readable name of the org where the app is deployed |
process_id |
The UID identifying the process. Only present in running application containers |
process_type |
The type of process. Only present in running application containers |
space_id |
The GUID identifying the space where the app is deployed |
space_name |
The human-readable name of the space where the app is deployed |
start |
The human-readable timestamp for the time the instance was started. Not provided on Diego Cells |
started_at |
Identical to start . Not provided on Diego Cells |
started_at_timestamp |
The UNIX epoch timestamp for the time the instance was started. Not provided on Diego Cells |
state_timestamp |
Identical to started_at_timestamp . Not provided on Diego Cells |
uris |
Identical to application_uris . You must ensure that both application_uris and uris are set to the same value. |
users |
Deprecated. Not provided on Diego Cells |
version |
Identical to application_version |
VCAP_SERVICES
For bindable services, Cloud Foundry adds connection details to the VCAP_SERVICES
environment variable when you restart your app, after binding a service instance to your app. For more information about bindable services, see Services overview.
Cloud Foundry returns the results as a JSON document that contains an object for each service for which one or more instances are bound to the app. The service object contains a child object for each instance of the service that is bound to the app.
The following table defines the attributes that describe a bound service. The key for each service in the JSON document is the same as the value of the “label” attribute.
Attribute | Description |
---|---|
binding_guid |
The GUID of the service binding |
binding_name |
The name assigned to the service binding by the user |
instance_guid |
The GUID of the service instance |
instance_name |
The name assigned to the service instance by the user |
name |
The binding_name , if it exists. Otherwise, the instance_name |
label |
The name of the service offering |
tags |
An array of strings an app can use to identify a service instance |
plan |
The service plan selected when the service instance was created |
credentials |
A JSON object containing the service-specific credentials needed to access the service instance |
syslog_drain_url |
The service-specific syslog drain URL |
volume_mounts |
An array of service-specific volume mounts |
To see the value of the VCAP_SERVICES
environment variable for an app pushed to Cloud Foundry, see View environment variable values.
The following example shows the value of the VCAP_SERVICES
environment variable for bound instances of several services available in the Marketplace.
VCAP_SERVICES=
{
"elephantsql": [
{
"name": "elephantsql-binding-c6c60",
"binding_guid": "44ceb72f-100b-4f50-87a2-7809c8b42b8d",
"binding_name": "elephantsql-binding-c6c60",
"instance_guid": "391308e8-8586-4c42-b464-c7831aa2ad22",
"instance_name": "elephantsql-c6c60",
"label": "elephantsql",
"tags": [
"postgres",
"postgresql",
"relational"
],
"plan": "turtle",
"credentials": {
"uri": "postgres://exampleuser:examplepass@babar.elephantsql.com:5432/exampleuser"
},
"syslog_drain_url": null,
"volume_mounts": []
}
],
"sendgrid": [
{
"name": "mysendgrid",
"binding_guid": "6533b1b6-7916-488d-b286-ca33d3fa0081",
"binding_name": null,
"instance_guid": "8c907d0f-ec0f-44e4-87cf-e23c9ba3925d",
"instance_name": "mysendgrid",
"label": "sendgrid",
"tags": [
"smtp"
],
"plan": "free",
"credentials": {
"hostname": "smtp.sendgrid.net",
"username": "QvsXMbJ3rK",
"password": "HCHMOYluTv"
},
"syslog_drain_url": null,
"volume_mounts": []
}
]
}
Environment variable groups
Environment variable groups are system-wide variables that allow operators to apply a group of environment variables to all running apps and all staging apps separately.
An environment variable group consists of a single hash of name-value pairs that are later inserted into an application container at runtime or at staging. These values can contain information such as HTTP proxy information. The values for variables set in an environment variable group are case-sensitive.
When creating environment variable groups:
Only the Cloud Foundry operator can set the hash value for each group.
All authenticated users can get the environment variables assigned to their app.
All variable changes take effect after the operator restarts or restages the apps.
Any user-defined variable takes precedence over environment variables provided by these groups.
The following table lists the commands for environment variable groups.
CLI Command | Description |
---|---|
running-environment-variable-group or revg |
Retrieves the contents of the running environment variable group |
staging-environment-variable-group or sevg |
Retrieves the contents of the staging environment variable group |
set-staging-environment-variable-group or ssevg |
Passes parameters as JSON to create a staging environment variable group |
set-running-environment-variable-group or srevg |
Passes parameters as JSON to create a running environment variable group |
The following examples demonstrate how to retrieve the environment variables:
$ cf revg Retrieving the contents of the running environment variable group as sampledeveloper@example.com... OK Variable Name Assigned Value HTTP Proxy 198.51.100.130 $ cf sevg Retrieving the contents of the staging environment variable group as sampledeveloper@example.com... OK Variable Name Assigned Value HTTP Proxy 203.0.113.105 EXAMPLE-GROUP 2001 $ cf apps Getting apps in org SAMPLE-ORG-NAME / space dev as sampledeveloper@example.com... OK name requested state instances memory disk urls my-app started 1/1 256M 1G my-app.com $ cf env APP-NAME Getting env variables for app APP-NAME in org SAMPLE-ORG-NAME / space dev as sampledeveloper@example.com... OK System-Provided: { "VCAP_APPLICATION": { "application_name": "APP-NAME", "application_uris": [ "my-app.example.com" ], "application_version": "7d0d64be-7f6f-406a-9d21-504643147d63", "limits": { "disk": 1024, "fds": 16384, "mem": 256 }, "name": "APP-NAME", "organization_id": "c0134bad-97a9-468d-ab9d-e97547e3aed5", "organization_name": "my-org", "space_id": "37189599-2407-9946-865e-8ebd0e2df89a", "space_name": "dev", "uris": [ "my-app.example.com" ], "users": null, "version": "7d0d64be-7f6f-406a-9d21-504643147d63" } } Running Environment Variable Groups: HTTP Proxy: 198.51.100.130 Staging Environment Variable Groups: EXAMPLE-GROUP: 2001 HTTP Proxy: 203.0.113.105
The following examples demonstrate how to set environment variables:
$ cf ssevg '{"test":"198.51.100.130","test2":"203.0.113.105"}' Setting the contents of the staging environment variable group as admin... OK $ cf sevg Retrieving the contents of the staging environment variable group as admin... OK Variable Name Assigned Value test 198.51.100.130 test2 203.0.113.105 $ cf srevg '{"test3":"2001","test4":"2010"}' Setting the contents of the running environment variable group as admin... OK $ cf revg Retrieving the contents of the running environment variable group as admin... OK Variable Name Assigned Value test3 2001 test4 2010View the source for this page in GitHub