Effortlessly persist/retrieve flags of your Golang programs. If you need global configuration instead of requiring user always to set command line flags, you are looking at the right package. globalconf
allows your users to not only provide flags, but config files and environment variables as well.
import "github.com/rakyll/globalconf"
By default, globalconf provides you a config file under ~/.config/<yourappname>/config.ini
.
globalconf.New("appname") // loads from ~/.config/<appname>/config.ini
If you don't prefer the default location you can load from a specified path as well.
globalconf.NewWithOptions(&globalconf.Options{
Filename: "/path/to/config/file",
})
You may like to override configuration with env variables. See "Environment variables" header to see how to it works.
globalconf.NewWithOptions(&globalconf.Options{
Filename: "/path/to/config/file",
EnvPrefix: "APPCONF_",
})
globalconf
populates flags with data in the config file if they are not already set.
var (
flagName = flag.String("name", "", "Name of the person.")
flagAddress = flag.String("addr", "", "Address of the person.")
)
Assume the configuration file to be loaded contains the following lines.
name = Burcu
addr = Brandschenkestrasse 110, 8002
And your program is being started, $ myapp -name=Jane
conf, err := globalconf.New("myapp")
conf.ParseAll()
*flagName
is going to be equal to Jane
, whereas *flagAddress
is Brandschenkestrasse 110, 8002
, what is provided in the configuration file.
Custom flagsets are supported, but required registration before parse is done. The default flagset flag.CommandLine
is automatically registered.
globalconf.Register("termopts", termOptsFlagSet)
conf.ParseAll() // parses command line and all registered flag sets
Custom flagset values should be provided in their own segment. Getting back to the sample ini config file, termopts values will have their own segment.
name = Burcu
addr = Brandschenkestrasse 110, 8002
[termopts]
color = true
background = ff0000
If an EnvPrefix is provided, environment variables will take precedence over values in the configuration file.
Set the EnvPrefix
option when calling globalconf.NewWithOptions
.
An EnvPrefix
will only be used if it is a non-empty string.
Command line flags will override the environment variables.
opts := globalconf.Options{
EnvPrefix: "APPCONF_",
Filename: "/path/to/config",
}
conf, err := globalconf.NewWithOptions(&opts)
conf.ParseAll()
With environment variables:
APPCONF_NAME = Burcu
and configuration:
name = Jane
addr = Brandschenkestrasse 110, 8002
name
will be set to "burcu" and addr
will be set to "Brandschenkestrasse 110, 8002".
Modifications are persisted as long as you set a new flag and your GlobalConf object was configured with a filename.
f := &flag.Flag{Name: "name", Value: val}
conf.Set("", f) // if you are modifying a command line flag
f := &flag.Flag{Name: "color", Value: val}
conf.Set("termopts", color) // if you are modifying a custom flag set flag
Like Set, Deletions are persisted as long as you delete a flag's value and your GlobalConf object was configured with a filename.
conf.Delete("", "name") // removes command line flag "name"s value from config
conf.Delete("termopts", "color") // removes "color"s value from the custom flag set
Copyright 2014 Google Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at
http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations under the License.