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Configuration loader for node.js applications.
Your application probably needs to load configuration from multiple sources and make them available as one object. Etc is here to help!
Etc provides a fairly complete API for loading configuration from a
variety of sources, however, its been engineered to easily load config from
(in order of precedence): argv, environment, files in ./etc
, package.json, and
defaults. Etc. also supports a simple plugin system so new file parsers or other
sources of configuration can be handled.
Attention Etc 0.1.x Users - Etc 0.1.x used proto-list-deep
as its primary
internal configuration store. This was probably fast for writes, but as it
turns out the deep-merging going on in proto-list-deep
(for conf.get()
) is
pretty slow. I hit a personal use-case where I need reasonably fast conf.get()
calls. I tried a few different iterations and came up with 0.2.x, which uses
an object literal to store the conf and uses a combination of clone
and
tea-merge
to handle sets and gets.
The API has not changed, however, depending on your specific configuration
the values of your conf may have changed. tea-merge
is much more
intelligent about merging than proto-list-deep
was, specifically when
dealing with arrays. If you upgrade, please check that your conf is
still merging how you think it should. Thanks!
Here is an idea of the speed-up from 0.1.x:
$ node bench/bench.js
benchmarking /Users/cpsubrian/projects/node/brian/etc/bench/bench.js
Please be patient.
{ http_parser: '1.0',
node: '0.8.19',
v8: '3.11.10.25',
ares: '1.7.5-DEV',
uv: '0.8',
zlib: '1.2.3',
openssl: '1.0.0f' }
Scores: (bigger is better)
merge
Raw:
> 2187.812187812188
> 2200.7992007992007
> 2195.804195804196
> 2194.805194805195
Average (mean) 2194.805194805195
proto
Raw:
> 14.381591562799617
> 14.619883040935672
> 14.45086705202312
> 14.409221902017292
Average (mean) 14.465390889443926
Winner: merge
Compared with next highest (proto), it's:
99.34% faster
151.73 times as fast
2.18 order(s) of magnitude faster
A LOT FASTER
var conf = require('etc')().all().toJSON();
var etc = require('etc')();
etc
.argv()
.env()
.etc()
.pkg();
var conf = etc.toJSON();
var etc = require('etc')();
etc.argv();
etc.env();
etc.file('/path/to/you/file/config.json');
etc.add({
my: 'defaults'
});
var conf = etc.toJSON();
/etc/myapp/*
var etc = require('etc')();
etc.folder('/etc/myapp');
var conf = etc.toJSON();
var etc = require('etc')();
etc.add({
host: 'localhost',
port: 3000,
meta: {
title: 'Cool title'
}
});
console.log(etc.get('meta:title'));
// Cool title
etc.set('meta:description', 'This is a really cool app');
console.log(etc.get('meta'));
// { title: 'Cool title',
// description: 'This is a really cool app' }
Etc exports a factory function the creates instances of Etc
objects. You can
optionally specify the key delimiter to use (defaults to :
)
Fetch a value from the configuration stack. Keys can be simple strings or
deliminated strings such as db:host
, which will dive into the configuration
to grab a nested value.
Set a new configuration value. Primitives will override exsting values whereas Objects and Arrays will merge. The key can be a simple string or a deliminated string. (Chainable)
Set a configuration value, overriding whatever was there. The key can be a simple string or a deliminated string. (Chainable)
Clear the configuration stored under a given key. The key can be a simple string or a deliminated string. (Chainable)
Returns all of the configuration, deep-merged into a single object.
Attach an etc plugin. See more below. (Chainable)
Alias for etc.argv().env().etc().pkg()
(Chainable)
Parses argv using optimist and adds it to the configuration. (Chainable)
Adds any environment variables that start with the prefix (defaults to 'app_') to the configuration. The prefix is stripped from the key. (Chainable)
Add configuration from an object literal. (Chainable)
Add configuration from a file. A suitable parser must be registered
in etc.parsers ('.json' and '.js' supported by default). If named
is true
then the extension will be stripped from the filename and the contents will
be added nested under that name.
For example, if your filename is /path/to/conf/db.json
, then the configuration
will be added like:
{
"db": { [contents of db.json ] }
}
(Chainable)
Loops through the files in dir
and adds them to the configuration.
All files will be added with named=true
(see etc.file()), except for one
special case when the filename is config.*
. (Chainable)
Try to find the local package.json
for the consumer of etc and
look for an etc
key in it. If it exists then add the contents to the
configuration.
Example:
{
"name": "etc-example",
"description": "Etc example",
"main": "example.js",
"dependencies": {
"etc": "*"
},
"etc": {
"db": {
"host": "localhost",
"port": 3000
}
}
}
(Chainable)
Look for [app root]/etc
(based on location of package.json) and
load it using etc.folder()
. (Chainable)
By default, each call to etc that adds more configuration pushes it on the
bottom of the stack. If you wish to unshift conf onto the top of the stack
instead you can call etc.reverse()
followed by any other etc commands.
Until you call etc.reverse()
again all subsequent etc methods will continue
to unshift.
Etc supports a simple plugin system, primarily useful for adding new file
parsers. Plugins should implement an attach
method like so:
exports.attach = function(options) {
options = options || {};
// Plugin will be attached with the scope set to an etc instance.
var etc = this;
etc.parsers['xml'] = xmlparser;
}
function xmlparser(filePath) {
// Parse the file and return an object literal.
}
Support for YAML configuration files can be added via etc-yaml.
var etc = require('etc'),
path = require('path'),
conf = etc();
conf.use(require('etc-yaml'));
// Load a yaml file.
conf.file(path.join(__dirname, 'config.yaml'));
// Print the config.
console.log(conf.toJSON());
Coming soon
Inspired by dominictarr/rc and dominictarr/config-chain, but with deep-merging and less trolling in the README :)
Terra Eclipse, Inc. is a nationally recognized political technology and strategy firm located in Aptos, CA and Washington, D.C.
Copyright (C) 2012 Terra Eclipse, Inc.
Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.
FAQs
Configuration loader for node.js applications
We found that etc demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 4 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
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