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

Overview

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.

Drone.io CI unit tests & auto PyPi push status: Build Status

Code coverage: codecov

Install

First install parse_it, for Python 3.6 & higher this is simply done using pip:

# Install from PyPi for Python version 3.6 & 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 but if you want you can also easily set it to look in all subfolders recursively:

# Load parse_it
from parse_it import ParseIt

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

# Create parse_it object that will look for the config files in the "/etc/my_config_folder" and all of it's subfolders
parser = ParseIt(config_location="/etc/my_config_folder", recurse=True)
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
  • env - .env formatted files, any file ending with a .env extension in the configuration folder is assumed to be this
  • 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

# This is just for the example
import os
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

# This is just for the example
import os
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

# This is just for the example
import os
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"]})

You might sometimes want to check that the enduser passed to your config a specific type of variable, parse_it allows you to easily check if a value belongs to a given list of types by setting allowed_types which will then raise a TypeError if the value type given is not in the list of allowed_types, by default this is set to None so no type ensuring takes place:

# Load parse_it
from parse_it import ParseIt

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

# 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()

# skips the type ensuring check as it's not set so all types are accepted
my_config_key = parser.read_configuration_variable("only_intgers_please")

# the type of the variable value is in the list of allowed_types so no errors\warning\etc will be raised
my_config_key = parser.read_configuration_variable("only_intgers_please", allowed_types=[int])

# will raise a TypeError
my_config_key = parser.read_configuration_variable("only_intgers_please", allowed_types=[str, dict, list, None])

Sometimes you'll need a lot of configuration keys to have the same parse_it configuration params, rather then looping over them yourself this can be achieved with the read_multiple_configuration_variables function that you will give it a list of the configuration keys you want & will apply the same configuration to all and return you a dict with the key/value of the configurations back.

# Load parse_it
from parse_it import ParseIt

# Create parse_it object.
parser = ParseIt()

# Read multiple config keys at once, will return {"my_first_config_key": "default_value", "my_second_config_key": "default_value"} in the example below
my_config_key = parser.read_multiple_configuration_variables(["my_first_config_key", "my_second_config_key"], default_value="default_value", required=False, allowed_types=[str, list, dict, int])

You can also read a single file rather then a config directory.

# 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 at a single config file, envvars & cli
parser = ParseIt(config_location="/etc/my_config_folder/my_config.json")
my_config_key = parser.read_configuration_variable("my_int")
# my_config_key will now be an int of 123

Another option is to read all configurations from all valid sources into a single dict that will include the combined results of all of them (by combined it means it will return only the highest priority of each found key & will combine different keys from different sources into a single dict), this provides less flexibility then reading the configuration variables one by one and is a tad (but just a tad) slower but for some use cases is simpler to use:

# Load parse_it
from parse_it import ParseIt

# Create parse_it object
parser = ParseIt()

my_config_dict = parser.read_all_configuration_variables()
# my_config_dict will now be a dict that includes the keys of all valid sources with the values of each being taken only from the highest priority source

# you can still define the "default_value", "required" & "allowed_types" when reading all configuration variables to a single dict
my_config_dict = parser.read_all_configuration_variables(default_value={"my_key": "my_default_value", "my_other_key": "my_default_value"}, required=["my_required_key","my_other_required_key"], allowed_types={"my_key": [str, list, dict, int], "my_other_key": [str, list, dict, int]})

It has also become a common practice to divide envvar keys by a divider character (usually _) and nest then as subdicts, this assists in declaring complex dictionaries subkeys with each of them being given it's own key, parse_it supports this option as well by setting the envvar_divider variable when declaring the parse_it object (disabled by default):

# Load parse_it
from parse_it import ParseIt

# This is just for the example
import os
os.environ["NEST1_NEST2_NEST3"] = "123"

# Create parse_it object with an envvar_divider
parser = ParseIt(envvar_divider="_")

my_config_dict = parser.read_all_configuration_variables()
# my_config_dict will now be a dict that includes the keys of all valid sources with the values of each being taken only from the highest priority source & the envars keys will be turned to nested subdicts.
# my_config_dict will have in it the following dict {"nest1": {"nest2":{"nest3": 123}}} 
Owner
Naor Livne
Naor Livne
A command line tool (and Python library) for archiving Twitter JSON

A command line tool (and Python library) for archiving Twitter JSON

Documenting the Now 1.3k Dec 28, 2022
AlienFX is a CLI and GUI utility to control the lighting effects of your Alienware computer.

AlienFX is a Linux utility to control the lighting effects of your Alienware computer. At present there is a CLI version (alienfx) and a gtk GUI versi

Stephen Harris 218 Dec 26, 2022
Python Library and CLI for exporting MySQL databases

expdb Python library and CLI for exporting MySQL databases Installation Pre-requisites MySQL server Python 3.9+ Using git Clone the repository to your

Devansh Singh 1 Nov 29, 2021
Wik is use to get information about anything on the shell using Wikipedia.

WIK wik is a tool to view wikipedia pages from your terminal. It also let you search for any wikipedia up to date article on one query from your termi

Yash Singh 340 Dec 18, 2022
tox-server is a command line tool which runs tox in a loop and calls it with commands from a remote CLI.

Tox Server tox-server is a command line tool which runs tox in a loop and calls it with commands from a remote CLI. It responds to commands via ZeroMQ

Alexander Rudy 3 Jan 10, 2022
A simple discord slash command handler for for discord.py.

A simple discord slash command handler for discord.py About ⦿ Installation ⦿ Disclaimer ⦿ Examples ⦿ Documentation ⦿ Discussions Note that master bran

641 Jan 03, 2023
Analyzing the most strategic words to guess on Wordle, based on letter frequency distributions

wordle-analysis Evaluating different heuristics to determine the most effective solving strategy and building an AI-powered assistant tool to help you

Sejal Dua 9 Feb 27, 2022
Baseline is a cross-platform library and command-line utility that creates file-oriented baselines of your systems.

Baselining, on steroids! Baseline is a cross-platform library and command-line utility that creates file-oriented baselines of your systems. The proje

Nelson 4 Dec 09, 2022
Chameleon is yet another PowerShell obfuscation tool designed to bypass AMSI and commercial antivirus solutions.

Chameleon is yet another PowerShell obfuscation tool designed to bypass AMSI and commercial antivirus solutions. The tool has been developed as a Python port of the Chimera project, by tokioneon_.

332 Dec 26, 2022
uploadgram uses your Telegram account to upload files up to 2GiB, from the Terminal.

uploadgram uploadgram uses your Telegram account to upload files up to 2GiB, from the Terminal. Heavily inspired by the telegram-upload Installing: pi

Shrimadhav U K 97 Jan 06, 2023
A dashboard for your Terminal written in the Python 3 language,

termDash is a handy little program, written in the Python 3 language, and is a small little dashboard for your terminal, designed to be a utility to help people, as well as helping new users get used

Rebecca White 2 Dec 03, 2021
A tool to automatically convert old string literal formatting to f-strings

flynt - string formatting converter flynt is a command line tool to automatically convert a project's Python code from old "%-formatted" and .format(.

Elijah K 551 Jan 06, 2023
Amazon Scraper: A command-line tool for scraping Amazon product data

Amazon Product Scraper: 2021 Description A command-line tool for scraping Amazon product data to CSV or JSON format(s). Requirements Python 3 pip3 Ins

49 Nov 15, 2021
A python command line tool to calculate options max pain for a given company symbol and options expiry date.

Options-Max-Pain-Calculator A python command line tool to calculate options max pain for a given company symbol and options expiry date. Overview - Ma

13 Dec 26, 2022
Python CLI vm manager for remote access of docker images via noVNC

vmman is a tool to quickly boot and view docker-based VMs running on a linux server through noVNC without ssh tunneling on another network.

UCSD Engineers for Exploration 1 Nov 29, 2021
A minimalist Vim plugin manager.

A minimalist Vim plugin manager. Pros. Easy to set up: Single file. No boilerplate code required. Easy to use: Concise, intuitive syntax Super-fast pa

Junegunn Choi 30.2k Jan 08, 2023
cli simple python script to interact with iphone afc api based on python library( tidevice )

afcclient cli simple python script to interact with iphone afc api based on python library( tidevice ) installation pip3 install -U tidevice cp afccli

fyst_14 2 Jul 15, 2022
Objexplore is an interactive Python object explorer for the terminal.

Objexplore is an interactive Python object explorer for the terminal. Use it while debugging, or exploring a new library, or whatever! 9D1FAC73-B2A5-4

kylepollina 249 Dec 23, 2022
A library for creating text-based graphs in the terminal

tplot is a Python package for creating text-based graphs. Useful for visualizing data to the terminal or log files.

Jeroen Delcour 164 Dec 14, 2022
Fylm is a wonderful automated command line app for organizing your film media.

Overview Fylm is a wonderful automated command line app for organizing your film media. You can pronounce it Film or File 'em, whichever you like! It

Brandon Shelley 30 Dec 05, 2022