# Secret Variables > this feature is still considered experimental Drone allows you to store secret variables in an encrypted `.drone.sec` file in the root of your repository. This is useful when your build requires sensitive information that should not be stored in plaintext in your `.drone.yml` file. An example `.drone.sec` yaml file, prior to being encryped: ```yaml checksum: f63561783e550ccd21663d13eaf6a4d252d84147 environment: - HEROKU_TOKEN=pa$$word ``` To encrypt the above yaml file * navigate to your repository settings * click the section labeled secret variables * enter the plaintext yaml string in the textarea * click the encrypt button An encrypted string is returned to the browser. This string should be copied and pasted into a `.drone.sec` file in the root of your repository, alongside your `.drone.yml` file. ## Environment The `environment` section of the `.drone.sec` file is a list of secret variables that get injected into your `.drone.yml` file at runtime using the `$$` notation. Secret variables are not injected as environment variables. Instead, we use a simple find and replace algorithm. An example `.drone.yml` expecting the `HEROKU_TOKEN` private variable: ```yaml build: image: golang commands: - go get - go build - go test deploy: heroku: app: pied_piper token: $$HEROKU_TOKEN ``` ## Pull Requests Secret variables are **not** injected into to the build section of the `.drone.yml` if your repository is **public** and the build is a **pull request**. This is for security purposes to prevent a malicious pull request from leaking your secrets. Please note that you may still want secrets available to plugins when building a pull request. This is possible if you include a checksum of the `.drone.yml` file in your `.drone.sec` file. ## Checksum The `checksum` field in the `.drone.yml` is a sha of your `.drone.yml` file. It is optional, but highly recommended. The `checksum` is used to verify the integrity of your `.drone.yml` file. If the checksum does not match, secret variables are not injected into your Yaml. Generate a checksum on OSX or Linux: ``` $ shasum -a 256 .drone.yml f63561783e550ccd21663d13eaf6a4d252d84147 .drone.yml ``` Generate a checksum on Windows with powershell: ``` $ Get-FileHash .\.drone.yml -Algorithm SHA256 ```