Use special ninja powers to manage system configurations 🥷
Project description
Config Ninja 🥷
Similar to confd
, manage your system configuration files by populating Jinja2 templates with data from a remote provider.
Installation
config-ninja
is installed using the official installer or with pip
/ pipx
. After installation, you can enable config-ninja
as a systemd
service.
Official Installer
The recommended way to install config-ninja
is with the official installer:
curl -sSL https://config-ninja.github.io/config-ninja/install.py | python3 -
To view available installation options, run the installer with the --help
flag:
curl -sSL https://config-ninja.github.io/config-ninja/install.py | python3 - --help
usage: install [-h] [--version VERSION] [--pre] [--uninstall] [--force] [--path PATH] [--backends BACKENDS]
Installs the latest (or given) version of config-ninja
options:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
--version VERSION install named version
--pre allow pre-release versions to be installed
--uninstall uninstall config-ninja
--force respond 'yes' to confirmation prompts; overwrite existing installations
--path PATH install config-ninja to this directory
--backends BACKENDS comma-separated list of package extras to install, or 'none' to install no backends
With pip
/ pipx
Alternatively, use pip
/ pipx
to install all available backends (or choose a specific one):
pip install 'config-ninja[all]'
Enable the systemd
Service
After installing config-ninja
, enable it as a systemd
service for the current user:
# omit '--user' to install the agent at the system level
config-ninja self install --user
How It Works
To demonstrate how the mechanics work locally:
- create a settings file for
config-ninja
:cat <<EOF >config-ninja-settings.yaml CONFIG_NINJA_OBJECTS: example-0: dest: format: json path: ./.local/settings.json source: backend: local format: toml init: kwargs: path: ./.local/config.toml EOF
- start
config-ninja
inmonitor
mode:config-ninja monitor
- in a separate shell, create the
config.toml
:cat <<EOF >./.local/config.toml [example-0] a = "first value" b = "second value EOF
- Inspect the
settings.json
file created byconfig-ninja
:cat ./.local/settings.json
{ "example-0": { "a": "first value", "b": "second value" } }
- Make changes to the data in
config.toml
, andconfig-ninja
will updatesettings.json
accordingly:cat <<EOF >>./.local/config.toml [example-1] c = "third value" d = "fourth value EOF cat ./.local/settings.json
{ "example-0": { "a": "first value", "b": "second value" }, "example-1": { "c": "third value", "d": "fourth value" } }
Chances are, you'll want to update theconfig-ninja-settings.yaml
file to use a remote backend (instead oflocal
). See config_ninja.contrib for a list of supported config providers.
Configuration Architecture
The config-ninja
agent monitors the backend source for changes. When the source data is changed, the agent updates the local configuration file with the new data:
sequenceDiagram
loop polling
config-ninja->>backend: query for changes
end
backend->>+config-ninja: [backend changed] fetch config
config-ninja->>-filesystem: write updated configuration file
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