import { createEnv } from "@t3-oss/env-nextjs"; import { z } from "zod"; export const env = createEnv({ /** * Specify your server-side environment variables schema here. This way you can ensure the app * isn't built with invalid env vars. */ server: { NODE_ENV: z .enum(["development", "test", "production"]) .default("development"), NEXTAUTH_SECRET: process.env.NODE_ENV === "production" ? z.string() : z.string(), NEXTAUTH_URL: z.preprocess( // This makes Vercel deployments not fail if you don't set NEXTAUTH_URL // Since NextAuth.js automatically uses the VERCEL_URL if present. (str) => process.env.VERCEL_URL ?? str, // VERCEL_URL doesn't include `https` so it cant be validated as a URL process.env.VERCEL ? z.string() : z.string().url(), ), GOOGLE_CLIENT_ID: z.string(), GOOGLE_CLIENT_SECRET: z.string(), BACKEND_SECURITY_KEY: z.string(), }, /** * Specify your client-side environment variables schema here. This way you can ensure the app * isn't built with invalid env vars. To expose them to the client, prefix them with * `NEXT_PUBLIC_`. */ client: { // NEXT_PUBLIC_CLIENTVAR: z.string(), }, /** * You can't destruct `process.env` as a regular object in the Next.js edge runtimes (e.g. * middlewares) or client-side so we need to destruct manually. */ runtimeEnv: { DATABASE_URL: process.env.DATABASE_URL, NODE_ENV: process.env.NODE_ENV, NEXTAUTH_SECRET: process.env.NEXTAUTH_SECRET, NEXTAUTH_URL: process.env.NEXTAUTH_URL, GOOGLE_CLIENT_ID: process.env.GOOGLE_CLIENT_ID, GOOGLE_CLIENT_SECRET: process.env.GOOGLE_CLIENT_SECRET, BACKEND_SECURITY_KEY: process.env.BACKEND_SECURITY_KEY, }, /** * Run `build` or `dev` with `SKIP_ENV_VALIDATION` to skip env validation. This is especially * useful for Docker builds. */ skipValidation: !!process.env.SKIP_ENV_VALIDATION, /** * Makes it so that empty strings are treated as undefined. `SOME_VAR: z.string()` and * `SOME_VAR=''` will throw an error. */ emptyStringAsUndefined: true, });