cocof

Consistent CLI config file modifier


Keywords
toml, yaml, json, terminal, cli, edit
License
EUPL-1.2
Install
pip install cocof==1.2.2

Documentation

Cocof

Build Status PyPI version

Cocof, short for consistent config file, is a python module that allows the modification of different key-value config files on the comand line.

Most importantly: For YAML and TOML it It will keep line breaks and comments the same. So the file will look more or less like the original (depending on the operations on it of course).

Currently supported formats are TOML, YAML, JSON and PLIST.

Install

$ pip install cocof

Usage

$ cocof --help
Usage: cocof [OPTIONS] FILEPATH JSONPATCH

  Cocof runs the provided 'jsonpatch' modifications on the configuration
  file given with the 'filepath' argument. Use the '--format' option to tell
  the file format. If not given cocof will try to guess the file format
  based on the file extension. Use '-' as filepath for stdin, in which case
  the output goes to stdout and you must provide the format of the data via
  the '--format' option.

Options:
  -f, --format [toml|yaml|json|plist]
                                  The format of the file. Obligatory if
                                  filepath is '-' (stdin).
  --help                          Show this message and exit.

Cocof takes a file path and a JSON patch string as arguments. It then modifies the datastructure given by the file's content accordingly and writies it back to the same file (in-place editing). You can also tell cocof to read from stdin, in which case it will output it's result to stdout. TOML, YAML and JSON expect their content to be utf-8 encoded. PLIST expects either an utf-8 encoded xml content or binary content.

Examples

# example.toml
title = "Example"

[owner]
name = "Tom Preston-Werner"
dob = 1979-05-27T07:32:00-08:00 # Inline comment

[database]
server = "192.168.1.1"
ports = [ 8001, 8001, 8002 ]

Using {"op": "add", "path": "/subtitle", "value": "Sub"} as modification yields:

$ cocof ./example.toml '[{"op": "add", "path": "/subtitle", "value": "Sub"}]'`
$ cat ./example.toml
# example.toml
title = "Example"
subtitle = "Sub"

[owner]
name = "Tom Preston-Werner"
dob = 1979-05-27T07:32:00-08:00 # Inline comment

[database]
server = "192.168.1.1"
ports = [ 8001, 8001, 8002 ]