Nuxt/docs/content/1.docs/2.guide/3.going-further/10.runtime-config.md

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---
title: "Runtime Config"
description: "Nuxt provides a runtime config API to expose configuration within your application."
---
# Runtime Config
Nuxt provides a runtime config API to expose configuration within your application and server routes, with the ability to update it at runtime by setting environment variables.
## Exposing Runtime Config
To expose config and environment variables to the rest of your app, you will need to define runtime configuration in your `nuxt.config` file, using the [`runtimeConfig` option](/docs/guide/directory-structure/nuxt.config#runtimeconfig).
**Example:**
```ts [nuxt.config.ts]
export default defineNuxtConfig({
runtimeConfig: {
// The private keys which are only available within server-side
apiSecret: '123',
// Keys within public, will be also exposed to the client-side
public: {
apiBase: '/api'
}
}
})
```
When adding `apiBase` to the `runtimeConfig.public`, Nuxt adds it to each page payload. We can universally access `apiBase` in both server and browser.
```js
const runtimeConfig = useRuntimeConfig()
console.log(runtimeConfig.apiSecret)
console.log(runtimeConfig.public.apiBase)
```
::alert{type=info}
When using Options API the public runtime config is available via `this.$config.public`.
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::
### Serialization
Your runtime config will be serialized before being passed to Nitro. This means that anything that cannot be serialized and then deserialized (such as functions, Sets, Maps, and so on), should not be set in your `nuxt.config`.
Instead of passing non-serializable objects or functions into your application from your `nuxt.config`, you can place this code in a Nuxt or Nitro plugin or middleware.
### Environment Variables
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The most common way to provide configuration is by using [Environment Variables](https://medium.com/chingu/an-introduction-to-environment-variables-and-how-to-use-them-f602f66d15fa).
::alert{type=info}
Nuxt CLI has built-in [dotenv](https://github.com/motdotla/dotenv) support in development mode and when running `nuxi build` and `nuxi generate`.
In addition to any process environment variables, if you have a `.env` file in your project root directory, it will be automatically loaded **at build, dev, and generate time**, and any environment variables set there will be accessible within your `nuxt.config` file and modules.
When updating `.env` in development mode, the Nuxt instance is automatically restarted to apply new values to the `process.env`.
However, **after your server is built**, you are responsible for setting environment variables when you run the server. Your `.env` file will not be read at this point. How you do this is different for every environment. On a Linux server, you could pass the environment variables as arguments using the terminal `DATABASE_HOST=mydatabaseconnectionstring node .output/server/index.mjs`. Or you could source your env file using `source .env && node .output/server/index.mjs`.
Note that for a purely static site, it is not possible to set runtime configuration config after your project is prerendered.
::
Runtime config values are automatically replaced by matching environment variables at runtime. For this to work, you _must_ have a fallback value (which can just be an empty string) defined in your `nuxt.config`.
**Example:**
```sh [.env]
NUXT_API_SECRET=api_secret_token
NUXT_PUBLIC_API_BASE=https://nuxtjs.org
```
```ts [nuxt.config.ts]
export default defineNuxtConfig({
runtimeConfig: {
apiSecret: '', // can be overridden by NUXT_API_SECRET environment variable
public: {
apiBase: '', // can be overridden by NUXT_PUBLIC_API_BASE environment variable
}
},
})
```
## Accessing Runtime Config
### Vue App
Within the Vue part of your Nuxt app, you will need to call `useRuntimeConfig()` to access the runtime config.
**Note:** Behavior is different between the client-side and server-side:
- On the client-side, only keys in `public` are available, and the object is both writable and reactive.
The entire runtime config is available on the server-side, but it is read-only to avoid context sharing.
```vue
<template>
<div>
<div>Check developer console!</div>
</div>
</template>
<script setup>
const config = useRuntimeConfig()
console.log('Runtime config:', config)
if (process.server) {
console.log('API secret:', config.apiSecret)
}
</script>
```
**🛑 Security note:** Be careful not to expose runtime config keys to the client-side by either rendering them or passing them to `useState`.
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::alert{icon=👉}
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**`useRuntimeConfig` only works during `setup` or `Lifecycle Hooks`**.
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::
### Plugins
If you want to use the runtime config within any (custom) plugin, you can use `useRuntimeConfig()` inside of your `defineNuxtPlugin` function.
For Example:
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```ts
export default defineNuxtPlugin((nuxtApp) => {
const config = useRuntimeConfig()
console.log('API base URL:', config.public.apiBase)
});
```
### Server Routes
You can access runtime config within the server routes as well using `useRuntimeConfig`.
```ts
export default async () => {
const result = await $fetch('https://my.api.com/test', {
headers: {
Authorization: `Bearer ${useRuntimeConfig().apiSecret}`
}
})
return result
}
```
### Manually Typing Runtime Config
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Nuxt tries to automatically generate a typescript interface from provided runtime config using [unjs/untyped](https://github.com/unjs/untyped).
It is also possible to type your runtime config manually:
```ts [index.d.ts]
declare module '@nuxt/schema' {
interface RuntimeConfig {
apiSecret: string
public: {
apiBase: string
}
}
}
// It is always important to ensure you import/export something when augmenting a type
export {}
```