Common config loading for Python and the command line
Project description
confight
One simple way of parsing configs
- Extensible "Unix-like"
conf.d
directory - Allow for multiple formats (toml, json, yaml, ini)
- Full unicode support
- User settings
~/.config
support - Nice out-of-the-box defaults
- See examples
confight focuses on making application configuration easy to load, change, extend, generate and audit. It does so by allowing to use separated files for different topics, simplifying changes and new additions, without messing with already existing defaults or deleting or moving protected files.
This is achieved by using at least one config file (/etc/app/config.toml
)
and an extra directory (/etc/app/conf.d
) for extra files.
Those extra files are called droplets which consist in is a small config
file that is "dropped" into a conf.d
directory where they will be parsed
and merged nicely into a single final configuration.
The idea is to "map reduce" configurations, by parsing all files in order, giving more relevance to the latest appearance and then merge them into a single config that holds all the data:
C₀ -- parse -----|
C₁ -- parse --|
C₂ -- parse --|-- merge --> C
⋮ |
Cₙ -- parse --|
The name of those files will determine the order in which they're parsed and the priority their values will have when merging. The last one wins.
This approach is very common in Unix and used in cron (/etc/cron.d
), bash
profiles (/etc/profile.d
), apt (/etc/apt/sources.list.d
), systemd and many
others. Is specially good for externally managed configs or debian-packaged
applications, avoiding clashes between installed files and generated configs,
avoiding changes that would stay forever unless manually merged (Yes, I've
said 💩MANUALLY💩💩Placing new files in conf.d
, application configuration
can change be extended and overriden without getting dirty.
Usage
>>> import confight
>>> confight.load_app('myapp')
{
"section": {
"key": "value"
}
}
The previous fragment got all the config files at /etc/myapp/config.toml
and
within the /etc/myapp/conf.d
directory and merged them into a single config.
# /etc/myapp/config.toml /etc/myapp/conf.d/00_first.json /etc/myapp/conf.d/99_second.ini
[section] { [section]
key = "base config" "section": { key = value
"key": "not this"
}
}
Default file locations for an application named myapp
would be at:
/etc/myapp/config.toml
/etc/myapp/conf.d/*
User custom configurations would be read (if any) from:
~/.config/myapp/config.toml
~/.config/myapp/conf.d/*
See the examples section for more information on how to use these functions.
Loading
The load
family of functions take a list of names, files or directories to
easily parse and merge a related set of configurations:
confight.load_app('myapp')
confight.load_user_app('myapp')
confight.load_paths(['/path/to/config', '/path/to/dir'])
confight.load(['/path/to/config.toml', '/path/to/dir/droplet.toml'])
Each function offers different parameters to improve the ease of use.
The extension of the configuration file can be given with the extension
parameter. For instance, load_app('myapp', extension='json')
would look for
the /etc/myapp/config.json
file.
All files in the conf.d
directory are read by default regardless the
extension. To enforce that only .extension
files are read, add the
force_extension
flag.
Parsing
Given a path to an existing configuration file, it will be loaded in memory
using basic types (string
, int
, float
, list
, dict
).
The given file can be in one of the allowed formats. For a complete list see
the confight.FORMATS
list.
confight.parse('/path/to/config', format='toml')
When no format is given, it tries to guess by looking at file extensions:
confight.parse('/path/to/config.json') # will gess json format
You can see the list of all available extensions at confight.FORMAT_EXTENSIONS
.
A custom parsing can be provided by passing a parser
function to the load
family of functions, matching the signature:
def parser(path, format=None)
The function takes a filesystem path
and a format
and the result should
be a single dictionary with all the loaded data. When format
is None the
parser is expected to guess it.
Merging
Given a list of parsed configs in order, merge them into a single one. For values that appears several times, the last one wins.
Sections and subsections are recursively merged, keeping all keys along the way and overriding the ones in more than one file with the latest appearance.
A custom merging can be provided by passing a merger
function to the load
family of functions, matching the signature:
def merger(configs)
The function takes a list of dictionaries containing the parsed configuration in ascending order of priority. It should return a single dictionary with all the configuration.
Finding configs
The default behaviour is that all files at the conf.d
directory will be
opened, in lexicographical order, and parsed.
A custom config locator can be provided by passing a finder
function to the
load
family of functions, matching the signature:
def finder(path)
The function takes a filesystem path (a conf.d
directory supposedly) and
returns a list of paths to config files in the desired order of parsing and
merging, this is from less to more priority for their values.
Examples
Load application config from the default locations by using the load_app
function which will look by default at the /etc/myapp/config.toml
and
configuration directory at /etc/myapp/conf.d
:
# /etc/myapp/config.toml # /etc/myapp/conf.d/production.toml
user = myapp password = aX80@klj
password = guest
>>> confight.load_app('myapp')
{
"user": "myapp",
"password": "aX80@klj"
}
Allow the user to override the default value when wanting to use a different configuration. When None is given, the default is used:
import argparse
import confight
parser = argparse.ArgumentParser()
parser.add_argument('--config', default=None)
parser.add_argument('--config-dir', default=None)
args = parser.parse_args()
config = confight.load_app('myapp',
file_path=args.config,
dir_path=args.config_dir)
If the application supports user configuration the function load_user_app
might come handy as it will first load the regular app config and then the one
defined in the user directory ~/.config/myapp/config.toml
and
~/.config/myapp/conf.d/*
:
# /etc/myapp/config.toml # ~/.config/myapp/conf.d/mysettings.toml
url = http://teg.avature.net password = Avature123!
>>> confight.load_user_app('myapp')
{
"url": "http://teg.avature.net",
"password": "Avature123!"
}
To ignore config file extensions, set a format and all files will be parsed using such:
# /etc/myapp/config.toml # /etc/myapp/config.d/extra
name = test name = erebus
>>> confight.load_app('myapp', format='toml')
{
"name": "erebus"
}
To load configs from a dev or debug location use the prefix
option.
This will change the base to calculate default paths.
# Loads from ./configs/config.toml and ./configs/config.d/*
>>> confight.load_app('myapp', prefix='./configs')
The user_prefix
option can be used altogether for user config files:
# Loads from regular places and ./user/config.toml and ./user/config.d/*
>>> confight.load_user_app('myapp', user_prefix='./user')
Added in version 1.0
Command line
confight allows to inspect configuration from the command line.
By using the confight command it would load the myapp configuration from it's default places and display the output in toml format:
confight show myapp
This allows to preview the resulting config for an application after all merges have been resolved. It can come handy when figuring out what the application has loaded or to debug complex config scenarios.
By passing the --verbose INFO
interesting data such as all visited files is
listed.
Added in version 0.3
Command line options
usage: confight [-h] [--version] [-v {DEBUG,INFO,WARNING,ERROR,CRITICAL}]
{show} ...
One simple way of parsing configs
positional arguments:
{show}
optional arguments:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
--version show program's version number and exit
-v {DEBUG,INFO,WARNING,ERROR,CRITICAL}, --verbose {DEBUG,INFO,WARNING,ERROR,CRITICAL}
Logging level default: ERROR ['DEBUG', 'INFO',
'WARNING', 'ERROR', 'CRITICAL']
Installation
Install it via pip using:
pip install confight
Also with yaml support:
pip install confight[yaml]
Development
Run application tests
tox
Install the application and run tests in development:
pip install -e .
python -m pytest
Changelog
-
1.2.2 (2019-02-19)
- [7344c929] Fixes man generation in debian rules
-
1.2.1 (2019-02-19)
- [491f8b05] Fixes find path expansion
-
1.2 (2019-02-14)
- [3c266c8d] Force all loaded files to have the same extension
-
1.1.1 (2019-01-31)
[ javier.lasheras ]
- [a1646871] OrderedDict for yaml too
-
1.1 (2019-01-29)
- [4a5920af] Adds pypi version badge to README
- [59c47a5e] Drops support for Python 3.3 and Python 3.4
- [dfa9c436] Adds support for Python 3.7
- [6979074d] Fix manpage generation
- [8f6b58f5] Create a parser with ExtendedInterpolation
- [7d74246d] Avoid DeprecationWarnings
- [633b1571] Ordered dicts everywhere
-
1.0 (2018-06-26)
- [736a6493] Adds prefix and user_prefix options
- [023158e5] Adds --prefix and --user-prefix cli options
- [f395fc44] Adapt tests to run in python 3.3 and 3.4
- [a144dab1] Update package metadata
-
0.3 (2018-06-14)
- [a7b46ef1] Adds travis config file
- [5f625da9] Add tox-travis integration
- [1b678173] Adds confight command line tool
- [691e042a] Adds cli unit tests
-
0.2.2 (2018-04-13)
- [3322a7a4] Allow custom file extensions when format is defined
-
0.2.1 (2018-04-09)
- [93cd8a1c] Update README
-
0.2 (2018-04-04)
- [63d55fa8] Add Yaml support
-
0.1.1 (2018-04-03)
- [80087037] Allows to pass extra paths in load functions
-
0.1.0 (2018-03-27)
- [23927421] Reorganize pretty functions and find behaviour
- [fade6dd0] Adds debian packaging
- [c818857a] Update README
-
0.0.1 (2018-03-27)
- Initial release.
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