a Python configuration library loads Python configuration files


Keywords
setting, configuration, config, configuration-management, python, python3
License
Apache-2.0
Install
pip install confect==0.1.5

Documentation

Confect - a Python configuration library loads Python configuration files

Introduction

Why you need a configuration library?

  • For storing secrets

    You have a project that needs to access database or other services with password or some secret keys. Storing secrets and passwords in your code is not smart. You need a configuration file and a library for loading and using it in the runtime.

  • For different runtime environments

    For example, database IP addresses and passwords in development environment normally differs from production environment. You need multiple configuration files for storing those information for different environment, and load one of them in the run time.

  • For better parameter management

    You're running some experiments, e.g. working on Machine Learning projects. There're a bunch of parameters needs to be changed in the run time. And you want to manage them in a smarter and more elegant way.

How confect differs from others?

  • Python configuration files

    This makes it possible to

    • have complex type objects as configuration values, like Decimal, timedelta or any class instance
    • dynamically handle complicated logic, you can use conditional statements like if in it.
    • read other TOML/YMAL/JSON/ini files or even environment variables in the configuration file.
  • Loads configuration file through module importing

    Confect loads configuration file through a given file path, or through module importing. It's easy to control the source of configuration file through PYTHONPATH.

  • Loads configuration file multiple times

    Sometimes we need multiple configuration files — one for project, one for team and one for personal use. And we want that the personal configuration file has the highest priority. If there's a configuration setting existing in that file, it would override values from other files.

  • Loads configuration properties from environment variable

    This feature is convenient if you want to change a single or some properties values, and don't want to modify the configuration file.

  • Attachs command line options to some click_ command

    You can change any configuration value through command line options, if your command is created by click.

  • Better maintainability

    Confect forces users to define configuration properties and set a default value before using them. And the conf object is immutable for reducing the possibility of making errors.

Install

confect is a Python package hosted on PyPI and works only with Python 3.6 up.

Just like other Python packages, install it by pip into a virtualenv , or use poetry to manage project dependencies and virtualenv.

$ pip install confect

Basics

Conf Object

Calling conf = confect.Conf() creates a new configuration manager object.

Suppose projx is your top-level package name. Put the following lines into projx/core.py or projx/confspec.py

import confect
conf = confect.Conf()

It is possible to create multiple Conf objects, but normally it's not what you want. In most cases, initialize and manage only one Conf object in your application, then import and use it anywhere.

Configuration Properties Declaration

Configuration properties should be declared before using it. This feature makes your code more readable and maintainable.

Two ways to declare properties.

  1. context manager:

    with conf.declare_group(group_name) as group_name:
        group_name.prop1 = 'default value'
        group_name.prop2 = 42
  2. function call

    conf.declare_group(group_name, prop1='default value', prop2=42)

Group names and property names should be valid Python variable names, which consist of letters (A-Z, a-z), digits (0-9), and the underscore character (_). Normally, the group name is your class name, module name or subpackage name.

Default Value and Parser

Default values of all properties should be defined along with the declaration. Use confect.prop(default, desc=None, prop_type=None) to specify details other than the default value. desc is for commentary and the help message in CLI option. Argument of prop_type is an instance of confect.PropertyType which is responsable for CLI argument and environment variable parsing. prop_type of popular Python types would be infered from default value automatically.

Default values don't have to be a workable value (e.g. fake secret keys or passwords). The true workable value can be defined in the configuration file. However, even if it's not a workable value, the mock default values still make the declaration and the code more readable and maintainable. For instance:

with conf.declare_group('aws') as aws:
    aws.access_key_id = 'true-access-key'
    aws.secret_access_key = 'fake-key-plz-set-it-in-local_conf.py'

Declaration Example

import confect
conf = confect.Conf()

# declare properties with context manager
with conf.declare_group('api') as api:
    # default value only. confect would infer property type automatically
    api.cache_prefix = 'projx_cache'
    api.cache_expire = confect.prop(
        default=60 * 60 * 24,
        desc="expire time in seconds")

    # add description for CLI help message and commentary
    api.url_base_path = confect.prop(
        default='api/v2/',
        desc='URL base path of API')


with conf.declare_group('db') as db:
    db.host = '127.0.0.1'
    db.db_name = 'projx'
    db.username = 'projx_admin'

    # if default value has to be None, it'd be better to assign property
    # type manually for parsing
    db.password = confect.prop(
       default=None,
       prop_type=confect.prop_type.String(),
       desc='`None` for no password')

    db.port = confect.prop(
        default=None,
        prop_type=confect.prop_type.Integer(),
        desc='`None` for db engine default port')

# declare properties with function call
conf.declare_group(
    'ctr_predict_model',
    model_pickle_s3folder='s3://some-bucket/path/to/folder',
    model_version=confect.prop(default='v3')
)

Declaration Location

Property declarations can be put into the module where the conf object is located. Or, you can put them into those modules where you need these configurations, like projx/db.py or projx/api.py. Just make sure your application import all these modules eagerly, not lazily.

Configuration Access

After the group and properties are declared, they are accessable through the conf object directly, like conf.group_name.prop_name.

projx/api.py

from projx.core import conf

@routes(conf.api.url_base_path + 'add')
@redis_cache(key=conf.api.cache_prefix, expire=conf.api.cache_expire)
def add(a, b)
    return a + b

projx/db.py

from projx.core import conf

engine = create_engine(
     f'mysql://{conf.db.username}:{conf.db.password}'
     f'@{conf.db.host}/{conf.db.db_name}')

Access Errors

Make sure that the configuration properties are declared before access. If not, exceptions would be raised.

>>> conf.unknown_group.unknown_prop
Traceback (most recent call last):
  ...
UnknownConfError: "Unknown configuration group 'unknown_group'"
>>> conf.api.unknown_prop
Traceback (most recent call last):
  ...
UnknownConfError: "Unknown 'unknown_prop' property in configuration group 'api'"

Configuration properties and groups are immutable. They are meant to be altered globally by loading configuration files, environment variables or CLI argument.

>>> conf.api.cache_expire = 60 * 60 * 3
Traceback (most recent call last):
  ...
confect.error.FrozenConfPropError: Configuration properties are frozen.

Setting Configuration Properties

Configuration properties are immutable in the application runtime. This feature make sure
the runtime environment is stable without unexpected behavior.

The standard ways to change the configuration properties are:

  1. Load from Python file conf.load_module(module_name) and conf.load_file(file_path). (Check Loading Configuration File)
  2. Load from environment variable conf.load_envvar(prefix). (Check Loading Environment Variables)
  3. Override by CLI options conf.click_options(click_command). (Check Command Line Options)

Confect still provide a hacky way to change them in the runtime, but use them wisely.

  1. Alter configuration in the runtime(Check Runtime Configuration Altering)

Loading Configuration File

Confect loads Python configuration files. That makes your configuration file programmable and unrestricted as we described in the section How confect differs from others?.

Two ways to load configuration file.

  1. Through Python module importing: conf.load_module(module_name)
  2. Through Python file reading: conf.load_file(file_path)

No matter the loading statement is located before or after properties declaration, property values in configuration file always override default values in the declarations. It's possible to load configuration file multiple times, the latter one would replace values from former loading.

Be aware, you should access your configuration properties after load configuration files. If not, you might get wrong/default value. Therefore, we usually load configuration file right after the statement of creating the Conf object.

import confect
conf = confect.Conf()

# load configuration files through importing
try:
    conf.load_module('local_conf')
except ImportError:
    pass

SYSTEM_CONF_PATH = Path('path/to/system_conf.py')
if SYSTEM_CONF_PATH.exists():
    conf.load_file(SYSTEM_CONF_PATH)

Use PYTHONPATH environment varibale to control the source of configuration file.

$ vi local_conf.py
$ export PYTHONPATH=.
$ python your_application.py

Write Configuration File

Configuration files are written in Python, but they are isolated from your application. The configuration declaration(check Configuration Properties Declaration) use the conf object directly, and declare properties with default value with conf.declar_group(...). While configuration files use confect.c to override declared properties. Configuration files shouldn't be import directly, they can only be loaded with conf.load_module(module_name)) or conf.load_file(file_path).

In configuration file, import confect.c object and set all properties on it as if c is the conf object. Here's an example of configuration file.

local_conf.py

from confect import c

import os

DEBUG = True

if DEBUG:
    c.cache.expire = 1

c.cache.key = os.environ['CACHE_KEY']

# loading some secret file and set configuration
import json
with open('db_secret.json') as f:
    db_secret = json.load(f)

c.db.username = db_secret['username']
c.db.password = db_secret['password']

It's not necessary and is unusual to have all configuration properties be defined in the configuration file. Put only those configuration properties that you want to override to the configuration file.

You can set any property in any configuration group onto the c object. However, they are only accessable if you declared it in the source code with Conf.declare_group(group_name). See Configuration Properties Declaration for details.

The c object only exits when loading a python configuration file, it's not possible to import it in your source code.

Advanced Usage

Loading Environment Variables

# overrides configuration with environment variables with the prefix projx conf.load_envvars('projx')

Conf.load_envvars(prefix: str) automatically searches environment variables in <prefix>__<group>__<prop> format. All of these three identifier are case sensitive. If you have a configuration property conf.cache.expire_time and you call Conf.load_envvars('projx'). It will set that expire_time property to the parsed value from projx__cache__expire_time environment variable.

>>> import os
>>> os.environ['projx__cache__expire'] = '3600'
>>> conf = confect.Conf()
>>> conf.load_envvars('projx')  # doctest: +SKIP

If cache.expire has been declared, then

>>> conf.cache.expire
3600

Command Line Options

conf.click_options decorator attachs all declared configuration to a click command.

projx/__main__.py

import click
from projx.core import conf

@click.command()
@conf.click_options
def cli():
    click.echo(f'cache_expire: {conf.api.cache_expire}')

if __name__ == '__main__':
    cli()

It automatically creates a comprehensive help message with all properties and default values.

$ python -m projx.cli --help
Usage: cli.py [OPTIONS]

Options:
  --api-cache_expire INTEGER  [default: 86400]
  --api-cache_prefix TEXT     [default: projx_cache]
  --api-url_base_path TEXT    [default: api/v2/]
  --db-db_name TEXT           [default: proj_x]
  --db-username TEXT          [default: proj_x_admin]
  --db-password TEXT          [default: your_password]
  --db-host TEXT              [default: 127.0.0.1]
  --help                      Show this message and exit.

The option do change the value of configuration property.

$ python -m projx.cli
cache_expire: 86400
$ python -m projx.cli --api-cache_expire 33
cache_expire: 33

Parser

Confect includes predefined parsers of these primitive types.

  • str: s
  • int: ast.literal_eval(s)
  • float: ast.literal_eval(s)
  • bytes: s.encode(encoding)
  • datetime.datetime : dt.datetime.strptime(s, fmt)
  • datetime.date : dt.datetime.strptime(s, fmt).date()
  • tuple : json.loads(s)
  • dict: json.loads(s)
  • list: json.loads(s)

Complex Configuration Loading

The code in the section Conf Object is a simple example that loads only through module importing. Here's an much more complex example that demostrates how to dynamically select and load configurations.

import sys
import confect

conf = confect.Conf()

# load configuration file
if len(sys.argv) == 2:
    conf.load_file(sys.argv[1])
else:
    try:
       conf.load_file('path/to/team_conf.py')
    FileNotFoundError:
       logger.warning('Unable to find team configuration file')

    try:
       conf.load_file('path/to/personal_conf.py')
    FileNotFoundError:
       logger.info('Unable to find personal configuration file')

# load configuration file through importing
try:
    conf.load_module('projx_conf')
except ImportError:
    logger.warning('Unable to load find configuration module %r',
                   'proj_x_conf')

# overrides configuration with environment variables
conf.load_envvars('projx')

Runtime Configuration Altering

Conf.mutate_locally() context manager creates an environment that makes Conf object temporarily mutable. All changes would be restored when it leaves the block. It is usaful on writing test case or testing configuration properties in Python REPL.

>>> conf = Conf()
>>> conf.declare_group(  # declare group through keyword arguments
...      'dummy',
...      prop1=3,
...      prop2='some string')
...
>>> with conf.mutate_locally():
...      conf.dummy.prop1 = 5
...      print(conf.dummy.prop1)
5
...     call_some_function_use_this_property()
>>> print(conf.dummy.prop1)  # all configuration restored
3

To-Dos

  • A public interface for exporting a conf group into a dictionary
  • A plugin for argparse that adds command line options for altering configuration properties.
  • Copy-on-write mechenism in conf.mutate_locally() for better performance and memory usage.
  • API reference page