Configatron
Configatron makes configuring your applications and scripts incredibly easy. No longer is a there a need to use constants or global variables. Now you can use a simple and painless system to configure your life. And, because it’s all Ruby, you can do any crazy thing you would like to!
One of the more important changes to V3 is that it now resembles more a Hash
style interface. You can use []
, fetch
, each
, etc…
Installation
Add this line to your application’s Gemfile:
ruby
gem 'configatron'
And then execute:
bash
$ bundle
Or install it yourself as:
bash
$ gem install configatron --pre
Usage
Once installed you just need to require it:
ruby
require 'configatron'
Simple
ruby
configatron.email = '[email protected]'
configatron.database.url = "postgres://localhost/foo"
Now, anywhere in your code you can do the following:
ruby
configatron.email # => "[email protected]"
configatron.database.url # => "postgres://localhost/foo"
Voila! Simple as can be.
Now you’re saying, what if I want to have a ‘default’ set of options, but then override them later, based on other information? Simple again. Let’s use our above example. We’ve configured our database.url
option to be postgres://localhost/foo
. The problem with that is that is our production database url, not our development url. Fair enough, all you have to do is redeclare it:
ruby
configatron.database.url = "postgres://localhost/foo_development"
becomes:
ruby
configatron.email # => "[email protected]"
configatron.database.url # => "postgres://localhost/foo_development"
Notice how our other configuration parameters haven’t changed? Cool, eh?
Hash/YAML
You can configure Configatron from a hash as well (this is really only useful in testing or for data driven configuration, it’s not recommended for actual configuration):
```ruby configatron.configure_from_hash(email: {address: ‘pop.example.com’, port: 110}, smtp: ‘smtp.example.com’)
configatron.email.pop.address # => ‘pop.example.com’ configatron.email.pop.port # => 110 # and so on… ```
YAML
YAML is terrible and should be driven from the face of the Earth. Because of this Configatron V3 does not support it. Sorry.
Namespaces
The question that should be on your lips is what I need to have namespaced configuration parameters. It’s easy! Configatron allows you to create namespaces.
```ruby configatron.website_url = “http://www.example.com” configatron.email.pop.address = “pop.example.com” configatron.email.pop.port = 110 configatron.email.smtp.address = “smtp.example.com” configatron.email.smtp.port = 25
configatron.to_h # => :email=>{:pop=>{:address=>”pop.example.com”, :port=>110, :smtp=>:port=>25}} ```
Configatron allows you to nest namespaces to your hearts content! Just keep going, it’s that easy.
Of course you can update a single parameter n levels deep as well:
```ruby configatron.email.pop.address = “pop2.example.com”
configatron.email.pop.address # => “pop2.example.com” configatron.email.smtp.address # => “smtp.example.com” ```
Configatron will also let you use a block to clean up your configuration. For example the following two ways of setting values are equivalent:
```ruby configatron.email.pop.address = “pop.example.com” configatron.email.pop.port = 110
configatron.email.pop do |pop| pop.address = “pop.example.com” pop.port = 110 end ```
Temp Configurations
Sometimes in testing, or other situations, you want to temporarily change some settings. You can do this with the temp
method:
ruby
configatron.one = 1
configatron.letters.a = 'A'
configatron.letters.b = 'B'
configatron.temp do
configatron.letters.b = 'bb'
configatron.letters.c = 'c'
configatron.one # => 1
configatron.letters.a # => 'A'
configatron.letters.b # => 'bb'
configatron.letters.c # => 'c'
end
configatron.one # => 1
configatron.letters.a # => 'A'
configatron.letters.b # => 'B'
configatron.letters.c # => {}
Delayed and Dynamic Configurations
There are times when you want to refer to one configuration setting in another configuration setting. Let’s look at a fairly contrived example:
```ruby configatron.memcached.servers = [‘127.0.0.1:11211’] configatron.page_caching.servers = configatron.memcached.servers configatron.object_caching.servers = configatron.memcached.servers
if Rails.env == ‘production’ configatron.memcached.servers = [‘192.168.0.1:11211’] configatron.page_caching.servers = configatron.memcached.servers configatron.object_caching.servers = configatron.memcached.servers elsif Rails.env == ‘staging’ configatron.memcached.servers = [‘192.168.0.2:11211’] configatron.page_caching.servers = configatron.memcached.servers configatron.object_caching.servers = configatron.memcached.servers end ```
Now, we could’ve written that slightly differently, but it helps to illustrate the point. With Configatron you can create Delayed
and Dynamic
settings.
Delayed
With Delayed
settings execution of the setting doesn’t happen until the first time it is executed.
```ruby configatron.memcached.servers = [‘127.0.0.1:11211’] configatron.page_caching.servers = Configatron::Delayed.new configatronconfigatron.memcachedconfigatron.memcached.servers configatron.object_caching.servers = Configatron::Delayed.new configatronconfigatron.memcachedconfigatron.memcached.servers
if Rails.env == ‘production’ configatron.memcached.servers = [‘192.168.0.1:11211’] elsif Rails.env == ‘staging’ configatron.memcached.servers = [‘192.168.0.2:11211’] end ```
Execution occurs once and after that the result of that execution is returned. So in our case the first time someone calls the setting configatron.page_caching.servers
it will find the configatron.memcached.servers
setting and return that. After that point if the configatron.memcached.servers
setting is changed, the original settings are returned by configatron.page_caching.servers
.
Dynamic
Dynamic
settings are very similar to Delayed
settings, but with one big difference. Every time you call a Dynamic
setting is executed. Take this example:
ruby
configatron.current.time = Configatron::Dynamic.new {Time.now}
Each time you call configatron.current.time
it will return a new value to you. While this seems a bit useless, it is pretty useful if you have ever changing configurations.
nil
Even if parameters haven’t been set, you can still call them, but you’ll get a Configatron::Store
object back. The Configatron::Store
class, however, will respond true to .nil?
or .blank?
if there are no parameters configured on it.
ruby
configatron.i.dont.exist.nil? # => true
configatron.i.dont.exist.blank? # => true
configatron.i.dont.exist # => Configatron::Store
You can use .has_key?
to determine if a key already exists.
ruby
configatron.i.dont.has_key?(:exist) # => false
(key)!
You can also append a !
to the end of any key. If the key exists it will return it, otherwise it will raise a Configatron::UndefinedKeyError
.
ruby
configatron.a.b = 'B'
configatron.a.b # => 'B'
configatron.a.b! # => 'B'
configatron.a.b.c! # => raise Configratron::UndefinedKeyError
Kernel
The configatron
“helper” method is store in the Kernel
module. Some people didn’t like that in the V2 of Configatron, so in V3, while that hasn’t changed, you don’t have to use it.
Instead of requiring configatron
simply require configatron/core
, but then you’ll have to set up your own Configatron::Store
object.
Example:
```ruby require ‘configatron/core’
store = Configatron::Store.new store.foo = ‘FOO’
store.to_h #= ‘FOO’ ```
Locking
Once you have setup all of your configurations you can call the lock!
method to lock your settings and raise an error should anyone try to change settings or access an unset setting later.
Example:
```ruby configatron.foo = ‘FOO’ configatron.lock!
configatron.foo # => ‘FOO’
configatron.bar # => raises Configatron::UndefinedKeyError configatron.bar = ‘BAR’ # => raises Configatron::LockedError ```
Rails
Configatron works great with Rails. Use the built-in generate to generate an initializer file and a series of environment files for you to use to configure your applications.
bash
$ rails generate configatron:install
Configatron will read in the config/configatron/defaults.rb
file first and then the environment specific file, such as config/configatron/development.rb
. Settings in the environment file will merge into and replace the settings in the defaults.rb
file.
Example
ruby
# config/configatron/defaults.rb
configatron.letters.a = 'A'
configatron.letters.b = 'B'
ruby
# config/configatron/development.rb
configatron.letters.b = 'BB'
configatron.letters.c = 'C'
ruby
configatron.to_h # => {:letters=>{:a=>"A", :b=>"BB", :c=>"C"}}
Contributing
- Fork it
- Create your feature branch (
git checkout -b my-new-feature
) - Write Tests!
- Commit your changes (
git commit -am 'Add some feature'
) - Push to the branch (
git push origin my-new-feature
) - Create new Pull Request
Contributors
- Mark Bates
- Kurtis Rainbolt-Greene
- Rob Sanheim
- Greg Brockman
- Jérémy Lecour
- Cody Maggard
- Jean-Denis Vauguet
- Torsten Schönebaum
- Simon Menke
- Gleb Pomykalov
- chatgris
- Mat Brown
- Casper Gripenberg
- Dan Pickett
- Artiom Diomin
- Tim Riley
- mattelacchiato
- joe miller
- Brandon Dimcheff
- Rick Fletcher
- Josh Nichols