DotNetConfig.CommandLine

Extensions to System.CommandLine to automatically read default values from .netconfig files. Usage: var root = new RootCommand { // child commands, arguments, options }.WithConfigurableDefaults(); The following heuristics are applied when providing default values: * Only arguments/options without a default value are processed. * Section matches root command name, subsection (dot-separated) for each additional nested command level (i.e. `[mytool "mycommand.myverb"]`). * Compatible arguments/options (same name/type) can be placed in ancestor section/subsection to affect default value of entire subtree. * All the types supported by System.CommandLine for multiple artity arguments and options are automatically populated: arrays, `IEnumerable{T}`, `ICollection{T}`, `IList{T}` and `List{T}`: .netconfig can provide multi-valued variables for those. * Numbers can be either `int` or `long`. Built from https://github.com/dotnetconfig/dotnet-config/tree/d14cb664a


Keywords
dotnet, config, cli, tool, configuration
License
MIT
Install
Install-Package DotNetConfig.CommandLine -Version 1.0.6

Documentation

Icon dotnet-config

CLI NuGet API NuGet Downloads License Discord Chat GitHub

CI Version CI Status

Why | What | Who | How | Format | API | CLI

Why

dotnet-config (or .netconfig) provides a uniform mechanism for .NET Core tools to store and read configuration values in a predictable format which can be manipulated through a command line tool, an API and also manually in any text editor by the user.

Just like git config provides a uniform way of storing settings for all git commands, the goal of dotnet-config is to foster the same level of consistency across all .NET tools. The format is (mostly) compatible with it too and therefore leverages the learnings of the git community around configuration for arbitrary tools.

What

dotnet-config provides the following:

  • A well-documented file format than can be hand-edited in any text editor.
  • A dotnet global tool to manage the configuration files (much like git config).
  • An API for dotnet tool authors to read/write settings.

By default, configuration files are named .netconfig and support four storage levels:

The files are read in the order given above, with first value found taking precedence. When multiple values are read then all values of a key from all files will be returned.

.netconfig.user can be used to keep local-only settings separate from team-wide settings in source control, and it's already a commonly ignored extension in .gitignore.

Who

The following are some of the tools that leverage .netconfig to provide flexible configuration persistence options:

dotnet-eventgrid dotnet-file dotnet-serve dotnet-vs reportgenerator sleet

Learn more about how the various tools leverage .netconfig in the Who section of our docs site.

How

Format

Example file:

# .netconfig is awesome: https://dotnetconfig.org

[serve]
	port = 8080
	gzip                    #shorthand for gzip=true

[vs "alias"]
	comexp = run|community|exp
	preexp = run|preview|exp

[file]
	# example of multi-valued variables
	url = https://github.com/dotnet/runtime/tree/master/docs/design/features
	url = https://github.com/dotnet/aspnetcore/tree/master/docs

; subsections allow grouping variables
[file "docs/design/features/code-versioning.md"]
	url = https://github.com/dotnet/runtime/blob/master/docs/design/features/code-versioning.md
	etag = 7405567...

[file "docs/APIReviewProcess.md"]
	url = https://github.com/dotnet/aspnetcore/blob/master/docs/APIReviewProcess.md
	etag = 1e4acd7...

[mytool]
    description = "\t tab and \n newline escapes, plus \\ backslash are valid"
    title = My tool is great    # internal whitespace preserved without needing double quotes
    path = C:\\tool             # backslashes always escaped, inside or outside double quotes
    size = 500kb                # numbers can have a multiplier (case insensitive) suffix kb, mb, gb, tb 
    max-size = 1T               # the 'b' is optional.
    compress = true             # multiple variants for boolean: true|false|yes|no|on|off|1|0
    secure   = yes
    localized = off
    enabled  = 1    

The syntax follows closely the git-config syntax. The # and ; characters begin comments to the end of line, blank lines are ignored.

The file consists of sections and variables. A section begins with the name of the section in square brackets and continues until the next section begins. Section names are case-insensitive. Only alphanumeric characters and - are allowed in section names. Each variable must belong to some section, which means that there must be a section header before the first setting of a variable.

Sections can be further divided into subsections. To begin a subsection put its name in double quotes, separated by space from the section name, in the section header, like in the example below:

[section "subsection"]

Subsection names are case sensitive and can contain any characters except newline. Doublequote " and backslash \ can be included by escaping them as \" and \\, respectively.

Section headers cannot span multiple lines. Variables may belong directly to a section or to a given subsection. You can have [section] if you have [section "subsection"], but you don't need to.

All the other lines are recognized as setting variables, in the form name = value (or just name, which is a short-hand to say that the variable is the boolean true). Variable names are case-insensitive, allow only alphanumeric characters and -, and must start with an alphabetic character. Variables may appear multiple times; we say then that the variable is multivalued.

Leading whitespaces after name =, the remainder of the line after the first comment character # or ;, and trailing whitespaces of the line are discarded unless they are enclosed in double quotes. Internal whitespaces within the value are retained verbatim.

Backslash \ characters must always be escaped with \\. Double quotes must either be escaped with \" or be properly balanced, which causes the whitespace within to be preserved verbatim.

Beside \" and \\, only \n for newline character (NL) and \t for horizontal tabulation (HT, TAB) escape sequences are recognized.

NOTE: when using the CLI or API, these escaping rules are applied automatically

Values

Values of many variables are treated as a simple string, but there are variables that take values of specific types and there are rules as to how to spell them.

  • boolean

    When a variable is said to take a boolean value, many synonyms are accepted for true and false; these are all case-insensitive.

    • true: boolean true literals are yes, on, true, and 1. Also, a variable defined without =<value> is taken as true.

    • false: boolean false literals are no, off, false, 0 and the empty string.

  • datetime

    Variables of this type are always parsed/written using ISO 8601 (or round-trip) format.

  • number

    The value for many variables that specify various sizes can be suffixed with k, M, G or T to mean "scale the number by 1024", "by 1024x1024", "by 1024x1024x1024" or "by 1024x1024x1024x1024" respectively. The suffix is case insensitive, and can also include the b, as in kb or MB.

API

There are three main ways to access .netconfig values:

Native API

Version Downloads

PM> Install-Package DotNetConfig

The main usage for .NET tool authors consuming the DotNetConfig API is to first build a configuration from a specific path (will assume current directory if omitted):

var config = Config.Build();

The resulting configuration will contain the hierarchical variables set in the current directory (or the given path), all its ancestor directories, plus global and system locations.

When getting values, the supported primitives are exposed as first-class methods for Add, Get and Set, so you get quite a few usability overloads for each of Boolean, DateTime, Number and String, such as AddBoolean, GetDateTime, GetString or SetNumber:

// reads from:
// [mytool]
//   enabled = true

bool? enabled = config.GetBoolean("mytool", "enabled");

// reads from:
// [mytool.editor]
//   path = code.exe

string? path = config.GetString("mytool.editor", "path");


// reads from:
// [mytool "src/file.txt"]
//   createdOn = 2020-08-23T12:00:00Z

DateTime? created = config.GetDateTime("mytool", "src/file.txt", "createdOn");
// If value was not found, set it to the current datetime
if (created == null)
    // Would create the section if it did not previously exist, and add the variable
    config.SetDateTime("mytool", "src/file.txt", "createdOn", DateTime.Now);

Alternatively you can use the TryGetXXX methods instead, to avoid checking for null return values in cases where the variable (in the requested section and optional subsection) is not found:

if (!config.TryGetDateTime("mytool", "src/file.txt", "createdOn", out created))
    config.SetDateTime("mytool", "src/file.txt", "createdOn", DateTime.Now);

Since .netconfig supports multi-valued variables, you can retrieve all entries as ConfigEntry and inspect or manipulate them granularly:

foreach (ConfigEntry entry in config.GetAll("proxy", "url"))
{
    // entry.Level allows inspecting the location where the entry was read from
    if (entry.Level == ConfigLevel.System)
        // entry came from Environment.SpecialFolder.System
    else if (entry.Level == ConfigLevel.Global)
        // entry came from Environment.SpecialFolder.UserProfile
    else if (entry.Level == ConfigLevel.Local)
        // entry came from .netconfig.user file in the current dir or an ancestor directory
    else
        // local entry from current dir .netconfig or an ancestor directory

    Console.WriteLine(entry.GetString());
    // entry.GetBoolean(), entry.GetDateTime(), entry.GetNumber()
}

When writing values (via AddXXX or SetXXX) you can optionally specify the configuration level to use for persisting the value, by passing a ConfigLevel:

// writes on the global .netconfig in the user's profile
//[vs "alias"]
//	comexp = run|community|exp

config = config.AddString("vs", "alias", "comexp", "run|community|exp", ConfigLevel.Global);

IMPORTANT: the Config API is immutable, so if you make changes, you should update your reference to the newly updated Config, otherwise, subsequent changes would override prior ones.

You can explore the entire API in the docs site.

Microsoft.Extensions.Configuration

Version Downloads

PM> Install-Package DotNetConfig.Configuration

Usage (in this example, also chaining other providers):

var config = new ConfigurationBuilder()
    .AddJsonFile(...)
    .AddEnvironmentVariables()
    .AddIniFile(...)
    .AddDotNetConfig();

Given the following .netconfig:

[serve]
	port = 8080

[security "admin"]
    timeout = 60

You can read both values with:

string port = config["serve:port"];  // == "8080";
string timeout = config["security:admin:timeout"];  // == "60";

System.CommandLine

Version Downloads

Given the explicit goal of making .netconfig a first-class citizen among dotnet (global) tools, it offers excelent and seamless integration with System.CommandLine.

Let's asume you create a CLI app named package which manages your local cache of packages (i.e. NuGet). You might have a couple commands, like download and prune, like so:

var root = new RootCommand
{
  new Command("download")
  {
    new Argument<string>("id")
  },
  new Command("prune")
  {
    new Argument<string>("id"),
    new Option<int>("days")
  },
}.WithConfigurableDefaults("package");

The added WithConfigurableDefaults invocation means that now all arguments and options can have their default values specified in config, such as:

[package]
  id = DotNetConfig

[package "prune"]
  days = 30

Note how the id can be specified at the top level too. The integration will automatically promote configurable values to ancestor sections as long as they have compatible types (both id in download and prune commands are defined as string).

Running package -? from the command line will now pull the rendered default values from config, so you can see what will actually be used if the command is run with no values:

Usage:
  package [options] [command]

Options:
  --version       Show version information
  -?, -h, --help  Show help and usage information

Commands:
  download <id>  [default: DotNetConfig]
  prune <id>     [default: DotNetConfig]

And package prune -? would show:

Usage:
  package [options] prune [<id>]

Arguments:
  <id>  [default: DotNetConfig]

Options:
  --days <days>   [default: 30]
  -?, -h, --help  Show help and usage information

Since .netconfig supports multi-valued variables, it's great for populating default values for arguments or options that can be specified more than once. By making this simple change to the argument above:

    new Argument<string[]>("id")

We can now support a configuration like the following:

[package]
  id = DotNetConfig
  id = Moq
  id = ThisAssembly

And running the command with no id argument will now cause the handler to receive all three. You can also verify that this is the case via download -?, for example:

Usage:
  package [options] download [<id>...]

Arguments:
  <id>  [default: DotNetConfig|Moq|ThisAssembly]

Options:
  -?, -h, --help  Show help and usage information

All the types supported by System.CommandLine for multiple artity arguments and options are automatically populated: arrays, IEnumerable<T>, ICollection<T>, IList<T> and List<T>.

For numbers, the argument/option can be either long or int. Keep in mind that since numbers in .netconfig are always long, truncation may occur in the latter case.

CLI

Version Downloads

The command line tool allows you to inspect and modify configuration files used by your dotnet tools. Installation is the same as for any other dotnet tool:

> dotnet tool install -g dotnet-config

Reading and writing variables don't require any special options. The following lines first write a variable value and then retrieve its value:

> dotnet config mytool.myvariable myvalue
> dotnet config mytool.myvariable
myvalue

The value is returned verbatim via the standard output, so you can assign it directly to a variable, for example.

All current options from running dotnet config -? are:

Usage: dotnet config [options]

Location (uses all locations by default)
      --local                use .netconfig.user file
      --global               use global config file
      --system               use system config file
      --path[=VALUE]         use given config file or directory

Action
      --get                  get value: name [value-regex]
      --get-all              get all values: key [value-regex]
      --get-regexp           get values for regexp: name-regex [value-regex]
      --set                  set value: name value [value-regex]
      --set-all              set all matches: name value [value-regex]
      --add                  add a new variable: name value
      --unset                remove a variable: name [value-regex]
      --unset-all            remove all matches: name [value-regex]
      --remove-section       remove a section: name
      --rename-section       rename section: old-name new-name
  -l, --list                 list all
  -e, --edit                 edit the config file in an editor

Other
      --default[=VALUE]      with --get, use default value when missing entry
      --name-only            show variable names only
      --type[=VALUE]         value is given this type, can be 'boolean', 'datetime' or 'number'
  -?, -h, --help             Display this help

Command line parsing is done with Mono.Options so all the following variants for arguments are supported: -flag, --flag, /flag, -flag=value, --flag=value, /flag=value, -flag:value, --flag:value, /flag:value, -flag value, --flag value, /flag value.