Claude-skill-registry env-to-fnox

This skill should be used when users want to migrate from .env files to fnox with 1Password (or another secret provider). It covers installing fnox, creating 1Password items, configuring fnox.toml, and integrating with mise. Use when users mention ".env migration", "fnox setup", "1password secrets", or want to improve their secret management workflow.

install
source · Clone the upstream repo
git clone https://github.com/majiayu000/claude-skill-registry
Claude Code · Install into ~/.claude/skills/
T=$(mktemp -d) && git clone --depth=1 https://github.com/majiayu000/claude-skill-registry "$T" && mkdir -p ~/.claude/skills && cp -r "$T/skills/data/env-to-fnox" ~/.claude/skills/majiayu000-claude-skill-registry-env-to-fnox && rm -rf "$T"
manifest: skills/data/env-to-fnox/SKILL.md
source content

Migrate from .env to fnox + 1Password

This skill guides the migration from plaintext

.env
files to fnox with 1Password as the secret provider. fnox is provider-agnostic and supports multiple backends (1Password, AWS Secrets Manager, Azure Key Vault, HashiCorp Vault, age encryption, etc.).

Prerequisites

Before starting, verify:

  1. 1Password CLI is installed:
    op --version
  2. User is authenticated to 1Password:
    op vault list
  3. mise is installed (optional but recommended):
    mise --version

Migration Workflow

Step 1: Analyze Existing .env

Read the existing

.env
file to understand what secrets need migration:

cat .env

Categorize the secrets:

  • Cloud provider credentials (AWS_, ARM_, GOOGLE_*)
  • API tokens (CLOUDFLARE_, GITHUB_, etc.)
  • Application secrets (DATABASE_URL, API_KEY, etc.)
  • Configuration values (non-secret defaults like regions)

Step 2: Install fnox

Install fnox via mise (recommended):

mise use fnox

Or add to

mise.toml
:

[tools]
fnox = "latest"

Initialize fnox configuration:

mise exec -- fnox init
mise exec -- fnox provider add op 1password

Step 3: Create 1Password Item

Create a single 1Password item containing all secrets. Use the API Credential category for organization:

op item create \
  --category="API Credential" \
  --title="project-name" \
  --vault="Private" \
  'Field Name[text]=value' \
  'Secret Field[password]=secret-value'

Field naming conventions:

  • Use descriptive names: "AWS Access Key ID" not "aws_key"
  • Use
    [text]
    for non-sensitive values (IDs, regions, emails)
  • Use
    [password]
    for sensitive values (secrets, tokens, keys)

Example for a typical project:

op item create \
  --category="API Credential" \
  --title="myproject" \
  --vault="Private" \
  'AWS Access Key ID[text]=AKIA...' \
  'AWS Secret Access Key[password]=...' \
  'Database URL[password]=postgres://...' \
  'API Token[password]=...'

Step 4: Configure fnox.toml

Update

fnox.toml
to reference the 1Password item:

[providers.op]
type = "1password"
vault = "Private"

[secrets]
# Format: ENV_VAR = { provider = "op", value = "item-title/Field Name" }
AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID = { provider = "op", value = "myproject/AWS Access Key ID" }
AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY = { provider = "op", value = "myproject/AWS Secret Access Key" }
DATABASE_URL = { provider = "op", value = "myproject/Database URL" }

# Non-secret defaults don't need 1Password
AWS_DEFAULT_REGION = { default = "us-east-1" }

Step 5: Integrate with mise

Update

mise.toml
to use fnox instead of
.env
:

[tools]
fnox = "latest"
# ... other tools

[env]
_.source = "fnox export"

Remove the old

.env
reference:

- _.file = ".env"
+ _.source = "fnox export"

Step 6: Verify and Clean Up

Test the configuration:

# List configured secrets
mise exec -- fnox list

# Verify a secret can be retrieved
mise exec -- fnox get AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID

# Test full environment
mise exec -- printenv | grep AWS_

Once verified, delete the old

.env
file:

rm .env

Commit

fnox.toml
(it contains no secrets, only references):

git add fnox.toml mise.toml
git commit -m "Migrate secrets from .env to fnox + 1Password"

fnox.toml Reference

Provider Configuration

# 1Password
[providers.op]
type = "1password"
vault = "Private"
# account = "my.1password.com"  # Optional: specify account

# Age encryption (for git-stored encrypted secrets)
[providers.age]
type = "age"
recipients = ["age1..."]

# AWS Secrets Manager
[providers.aws]
type = "aws-sm"
region = "us-east-1"
prefix = "myapp/"

Secret Reference Formats

[secrets]
# 1Password: item-title/field-name
SECRET = { provider = "op", value = "myproject/Secret Field" }

# 1Password: full op:// URI
SECRET = { provider = "op", value = "op://Vault/Item/Field" }

# Default value (no provider needed)
REGION = { default = "us-east-1" }

# Age-encrypted value
SECRET = { provider = "age", value = "YWdlLWVu..." }

Profiles for Multiple Environments

[providers.op]
type = "1password"
vault = "Development"

[secrets]
DATABASE_URL = { provider = "op", value = "dev-db/url" }

[profiles.production.providers.op]
vault = "Production"

[profiles.production.secrets]
DATABASE_URL = { provider = "op", value = "prod-db/url" }

Use profiles with:

FNOX_PROFILE=production fnox export

Troubleshooting

"No configuration file found"

Run

fnox init
to create
fnox.toml
, or check that you're in the correct directory.

1Password authentication errors

Ensure you're signed in:

op signin
or check that "Integrate with other apps" is enabled in 1Password Settings > Developer.

Secrets not loading in shell

If using mise, ensure

mise trust
has been run for the project directory.

fnox command not found after mise install

Use

mise exec -- fnox
or restart your shell to pick up the new PATH.