Configuration
Configuration support
Install: @travetto/config
npm install @travetto/config
yarn add @travetto/config
The config module provides support for loading application config on startup. Configuration values support the common YAML constructs as defined in YAML. Additionally, the configuration is built upon the Schema module, to enforce type correctness, and allow for validation of configuration as an entrypoint into the application. Given that all @Config classes are @Schema-based classes, all the standard @Schema and @Field functionality applies.
Resolution
The configuration information is comprised of:
- configuration files - YAML, JSON, and basic properties file
- configuration classes
Config loading follows a defined resolution path, below is the order in increasing specificity (
ext
can be yaml
, yml
, json
, properties
):
resources/application.<ext>
- Load the default application.<ext>
if available.resources/*.<ext>
- Load profile specific configurations as defined by the values in process.env.TRV_PROFILES
resources/{env}.<ext>
- Load environment specific profile configurations as defined by the values of process.env.TRV_ENV
.
By default all configuration data is inert, and will only be applied when constructing an instance of a configuration class.
A Complete Example
A more complete example setup would look like:
Config: resources/application.yml
---
database:
host: localhost
creds:
user: test
password: test
Config: resources/prod.json
{
"database": {
"host": "prod-host-db",
"creds": {
"user": "admin-user"
}
}
}
with environment variables
Config: Environment variables
TRV_ENV = prod
TRV_PROFILES = prod
At runtime the resolved config would be:
Terminal: Runtime Resolution
$ trv main doc/resolve.ts
Config {
sources: [
'application.1 - file://./doc/resources/application.yml',
'prod.1 - file://./doc/resources/prod.json',
'override.3 - memory://override'
],
active: {
DBConfig: { host: 'prod-host-db', port: 2000, creds: { user: 'admin-user' } }
}
}
Standard Configuration Extension
The framework provides two simple base classes that assist with existing patterns of usage to make adding in new configuration sources as easy as possible. The goal here is for the developer to either instantiate or extend these classes and produce a configuration source unique to their needs:
Code: Memory Provider
import { ConfigData } from '../parser/types';
import { ConfigSource, ConfigValue } from './types';
export class MemoryConfigSource implements ConfigSource {
priority = 1;
data: Record<string, ConfigData>;
name = 'memory';
constructor(data: Record<string, ConfigData>, priority: number = 1) {
this.data = data;
this.priority = priority;
}
getValues(profiles: string[]): ConfigValue[] {
const out: ConfigValue[] = [];
for (const profile of profiles) {
if (this.data[profile]) {
out.push({ profile, config: this.data[profile], source: `${this.name}://${profile}`, priority: this.priority });
}
}
return out;
}
}
Code: Environment JSON Provider
import { Env, GlobalEnv } from '@travetto/base';
import { ConfigSource, ConfigValue } from './types';
export class EnvConfigSource implements ConfigSource {
priority: number;
name = 'env';
#envKey: string;
constructor(key: string, priority: number) {
this.#envKey = key;
this.priority = priority;
}
getValues(profiles: string[]): ConfigValue[] {
try {
const data = JSON.parse(Env.get(this.#envKey, '{}'));
return [{ profile: GlobalEnv.envName, config: data, source: `${this.name}://${this.#envKey}`, priority: this.priority }];
} catch (e) {
console.error(`env.${this.#envKey} is an invalid format`, { text: Env.get(this.#envKey) });
return [];
}
}
}
Custom Configuration Provider
In addition to files and environment variables, configuration sources can also be provided via the class itself. This is useful for reading remote configurations, or dealing with complex configuration normalization. The only caveat to this pattern, is that the these configuration sources cannot rely on the Configuration service for input. This means any needed configuration will need to be accessed via specific patterns.
Code: Custom Configuration Source
import { ConfigSource, ConfigValue } from '@travetto/config';
import { Injectable } from '@travetto/di';
@Injectable()
export class CustomConfigSource implements ConfigSource {
priority = 1000;
name = 'custom';
async getValues(): Promise<ConfigValue[]> {
return [
{
config: { user: { name: 'bob' } },
priority: this.priority,
profile: 'override',
source: `custom://${CustomConfigSource.name}`
}
];
}
}
Startup
At startup, the Configuration service will log out all the registered configuration objects. The configuration state output is useful to determine if everything is configured properly when diagnosing runtime errors. This service will find all configurations, and output a redacted version with all secrets removed. The default pattern for secrets is /password|private|secret/i
. More values can be added in your configuration under the path config.secrets
. These values can either be simple strings (for exact match), or /pattern/
to create a regular expression.
Consuming
The Configuration service provides injectable access to all of the loaded configuration. For simplicity, a decorator, @Config allows for classes to automatically be bound with config information on post construction via the Dependency Injection module. The decorator will install a postConstruct
method if not already defined, that performs the binding of configuration. This is due to the fact that we cannot rewrite the constructor, and order of operation matters.
Environment Variables
Additionally there are times in which you may want to also support configuration via environment variables. EnvVar supports override configuration values when environment variables are present.
The decorator takes in a namespace, of what part of the resolved configuration you want to bind to your class. Given the following class:
Code: Database config object
import { Config, EnvVar } from '@travetto/config';
@Config('database')
export class DBConfig {
host: string;
@EnvVar('DATABASE_PORT')
port: number;
creds: {
user: string;
password: string;
};
}
You can see that the DBConfig
allows for the port
to be overridden by the DATABASE_PORT
environment variable.
Terminal: Resolved database config
$ trv main doc/dbconfig-run.ts
{
message: 'Failed to construct @travetto/config:doc/dbconfig○DBConfig as validation errors have occurred',
category: 'data',
type: 'ValidationResultError',
at: 2029-03-14T04:00:00.618Z,
class: '@travetto/config:doc/dbconfig○DBConfig',
file: './doc/dbconfig.ts',
errors: [
{
kind: 'required',
active: true,
value: undefined,
message: 'port is required',
path: 'port',
type: undefined
}
]
}
What you see, is that the configuration structure must be honored and the application will fail to start if the constraints do not hold true. This helps to ensure that the configuration, as input to the system, is verified and correct.
By passing in the port via the environment variable, the config will construct properly, and the application will startup correctly:
Terminal: Resolved database config
$ DATABASE_PORT=200 trv main doc/dbconfig-run.ts
Config {
sources: [
'application.1 - file://./doc/resources/application.yml',
'prod.1 - file://./doc/resources/prod.json',
'override.3 - memory://override'
],
active: {
DBConfig: { host: 'prod-host-db', port: 200, creds: { user: 'admin-user' } }
}
}
Additionally you may notice that the password
field is missing, as it is redacted by default.