Skip to main content

A python library for parsing multiple types of config files, envvars and command line arguments which takes the headache out of setting app configurations.

Project description

parse_it

A python library for parsing multiple types of config files, envvars and command line arguments that takes the headache out of setting app configurations.

Travis CI unit tests & auto PyPi push status: Build Status

Code coverage: codecov

Install

First install parse_it, for Python 3.5 & higher this is simply done using pip:

# Install from PyPi for Python version 3.5 & higher
pip install parse_it

If your using a Python 3.4 or older you will require the typing backported package as well, this is done with the following optional install:

# Install from PyPi for Python version 3.4 & lower
pip install parse_it[typing]

How to use

# Load parse_it
from parse_it import ParseIt

# Create parse_it object.
parser = ParseIt()

# Now you can read your configuration values no matter how they are configured (cli args, envvars, json/yaml/etc files)
my_config_key = parser.read_configuration_variable("my_config_key")

By default all configuration files will be assumed to be in the workdir or any (recursive) subfolder but that too can be easily changed:

# Load parse_it
from parse_it import ParseIt

# cat /etc/my_config_folder/my_config.json >>>
#
# {
#   "my_int": 123
# }
# 

# Create parse_it object that will look for the config files in the "/etc/my_config_folder" without looking in any subfolder
parser = ParseIt(config_folder_location="/etc/my_config_folder", recurse=False)
my_config_key = parser.read_configuration_variable("my_int")
# my_config_key will now be an int of 123

By default parse_it will look for the configuration options in the following order & will return the first one found:

  • cli_args - command line arguments that are passed in the following format --key value
  • env_vars - environment variables, you can also use envvars as an alias for it
  • json - JSON formatted files, any file ending with a .json extension in the configuration folder is assumed to be this
  • yaml - YAML formatted files, any file ending with a .yaml extension in the configuration folder is assumed to be this
  • yml - YAML formatted files, any file ending with a .yml extension in the configuration folder is assumed to be this
  • toml - TOML formatted files, any file ending with a .toml extension in the configuration folder is assumed to be this
  • tml - TOML formatted files, any file ending with a .tml extension in the configuration folder is assumed to be this
  • hcl - HCL formatted files, any file ending with a .hcl extension in the configuration folder is assumed to be this
  • tf - HCL formatted files, any file ending with a .tf extension in the configuration folder is assumed to be this
  • conf - INI formatted files, any file ending with a .conf extension in the configuration folder is assumed to be this
  • cfg - INI formatted files, any file ending with a .cfg extension in the configuration folder is assumed to be this
  • ini - INI formatted files, any file ending with a .ini extension in the configuration folder is assumed to be this
  • xml - XML formatted files, any file ending with a .xml extension in the configuration folder is assumed to be this
  • configuration default value - every configuration value can also optionally be set with a default value
  • global default value - the parser object also has a global default value which can be set

if multiple files of the same type exists in the same folder parse_it will look in all of them in alphabetical order before going to the next type,

You can decide on using your own custom order of any subset of the above options (default values excluded, they will always be last):

# Load parse_it
from parse_it import ParseIt

# Create parse_it object which will only look for envvars then yaml & yml files then json files
parser = ParseIt(config_type_priority=["env_vars", "yaml", "yml", "json"])

The global default value by default is None but if needed it's simple to set it:

# Load parse_it
from parse_it import ParseIt

# Create parse_it object with a custom default value
parser = ParseIt()
my_config_key = parser.read_configuration_variable("my_undeclared_key")
# my_config_key will now be a None

# Create parse_it object with a custom default value
parser = ParseIt(global_default_value="my_default_value")
my_config_key = parser.read_configuration_variable("my_undeclared_key")
# my_config_key will now be an string of "my_default_value"

parse_it will by default attempt to figure out the type of value returned so even in the case of envvars, cli args & INI files you will get strings/dicts/etc:

# Load parse_it
from parse_it import ParseIt
import os

# This is just for the example
os.environ["MY_INT"] = "123"
os.environ["MY_LIST"] = "['first_item', 'second_item', 'third_item']"
os.environ["MY_DICT"] = "{'key': 'value'}"

# Create parse_it object
parser = ParseIt()
my_config_key = parser.read_configuration_variable("MY_INT")
# my_config_key will now be an string of "123"
my_config_key = parser.read_configuration_variable("MY_LIST")
# my_config_key will now be an list of ['first_item', 'second_item', 'third_item']
my_config_key = parser.read_configuration_variable("MY_DICT")
# my_config_key will now be an dict of {'key': 'value'}

# you can easily disable the type estimation
parser = ParseIt(type_estimate=False)
my_config_key = parser.read_configuration_variable("MY_INT")
# my_config_key will now be an string of "123"
my_config_key = parser.read_configuration_variable("MY_LIST")
# my_config_key will now be an string of "['first_item', 'second_item', 'third_item']"
my_config_key = parser.read_configuration_variable("MY_DICT")
# my_config_key will now be an string of "{'key': 'value'}"

As envvars recommended syntax is to have all keys be UPPERCASE which is diffrent then all the rest of the configuration files parse_it will automatically change any needed config value to be in ALL CAPS when looking at envvars for the matching value but if needed you can of course disable that feature:

# Load parse_it
from parse_it import ParseIt
import os

# This is just for the example
os.environ["MY_STRING"] = "UPPER"
os.environ["my_string"] = "lower"

# Create parse_it object
parser = ParseIt()
my_config_key = parser.read_configuration_variable("my_string")
# my_config_key will now be an string of "UPPER"

# disabling force envvar uppercase
parser = ParseIt(force_envvars_uppercase=False)
my_config_key = parser.read_configuration_variable("my_string")
# my_config_key will now be an string of "lower"

You can also easily add a prefix to all envvars (note that force_envvars_uppercase will also affect the given prefix):

# Load parse_it
from parse_it import ParseIt
import os

# This is just for the example
os.environ["PREFIX_MY_INT"] = "123"

# add a prefix to all envvars used
parser = ParseIt(envvar_prefix="prefix_")
my_config_key = parser.read_configuration_variable("my_int")
# my_config_key will now be a int of 123

You can also set a default value on a per configuration key basis:

# Load parse_it
from parse_it import ParseIt

# get a default value of the key
parser = ParseIt()
my_config_key = parser.read_configuration_variable("my_undeclared_key", default_value="my_value")
# my_config_key will now be a string of "my_value"

You can also declare a key to be required (disabled by default) so it will raise a ValueError if not declared by the user anywhere:

# Load parse_it
from parse_it import ParseIt

# will raise an error as the key is not declared anywhere and required is set to True
parser = ParseIt()
my_config_key = parser.read_configuration_variable("my_undeclared_key", required=True)
# Will raise ValueError

While generally not a good idea sometimes you can't avoid it and will need to use a custom non standard file suffix, you can add a custom mapping of suffixes to any of the supported file formats as follows (note that config_type_priority should also be set to configure the priority of said custom suffix):

# Load parse_it
from parse_it import ParseIt

# Create parse_it object which will only look for envvars then the custom_yaml_suffix then standard yaml & yml files then json files
parser = ParseIt(config_type_priority=["env_vars", "custom_yaml_suffix", "yaml", "yml", "json"], custom_suffix_mapping={"yaml": ["custom_yaml_suffix"]})

Project details


Release history Release notifications | RSS feed

This version

0.9.0

Download files

Download the file for your platform. If you're not sure which to choose, learn more about installing packages.

Source Distribution

parse_it-0.9.0.tar.gz (15.6 kB view details)

Uploaded Source

Built Distribution

If you're not sure about the file name format, learn more about wheel file names.

parse_it-0.9.0-py3-none-any.whl (20.9 kB view details)

Uploaded Python 3

File details

Details for the file parse_it-0.9.0.tar.gz.

File metadata

  • Download URL: parse_it-0.9.0.tar.gz
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 15.6 kB
  • Tags: Source
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
  • Uploaded via: twine/1.13.0 pkginfo/1.5.0.1 requests/2.22.0 setuptools/41.0.1 requests-toolbelt/0.9.1 tqdm/4.32.2 CPython/3.7.1

File hashes

Hashes for parse_it-0.9.0.tar.gz
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 2476eff87e6f27e75db1bc98a97d3aebcb05260f5d265a1012a7afff67fff8a6
MD5 f9041e969e37a80d38cd9e4e58a24972
BLAKE2b-256 77c2a69815e0e3116e48d70401a23c6fc8bc8b31fd366c2b679ab0b631142b57

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file parse_it-0.9.0-py3-none-any.whl.

File metadata

  • Download URL: parse_it-0.9.0-py3-none-any.whl
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 20.9 kB
  • Tags: Python 3
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
  • Uploaded via: twine/1.13.0 pkginfo/1.5.0.1 requests/2.22.0 setuptools/41.0.1 requests-toolbelt/0.9.1 tqdm/4.32.2 CPython/3.7.1

File hashes

Hashes for parse_it-0.9.0-py3-none-any.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 917173b6ec70daefed8a72d3397e45ce5fb771a48230ac30d5297ed032e0c88a
MD5 290306b7e7b3651be81edfb1d138b236
BLAKE2b-256 a94b7a2057f505f0c0476b00b2a582f7cd96a9db35a69d250f046bc785baf366

See more details on using hashes here.

Supported by

AWS Cloud computing and Security Sponsor Datadog Monitoring Depot Continuous Integration Fastly CDN Google Download Analytics Pingdom Monitoring Sentry Error logging StatusPage Status page