[![Build Status](https://api.travis-ci.org/railsconfig/config.svg?branch=master)](http://travis-ci.org/railsconfig/config) [![Gem Version](https://badge.fury.io/rb/config.svg)](http://badge.fury.io/rb/config) [![Dependency Status](https://gemnasium.com/railsconfig/config.svg)](https://gemnasium.com/railsconfig/config) [![Code Climate](https://codeclimate.com/github/railsconfig/config/badges/gpa.svg)](https://codeclimate.com/github/railsconfig/config) [![Test Coverage](https://codeclimate.com/github/railsconfig/config/badges/coverage.svg)](https://codeclimate.com/github/railsconfig/config/coverage) # Config ## Summary Config helps you easily manage environment specific settings in an easy and usable manner. ## Features - simple YAML config files - config files support ERB - config files support inheritance - access config information via convenient object member notation ## Compatibility - Ruby 2.x - Rails 3.x and 4.x - Padrino - Sinatra For older versions of Rails and other Ruby apps, use [AppConfig](http://github.com/fredwu/app_config). ## Installing on Rails 3 or 4 Add this to your `Gemfile`: ```ruby gem "config" ``` If you want to use Settings before rails application initialization process you can load Config railtie manually: ```ruby module Appname class Application < Rails::Application Bundler.require(*Rails.groups) Config::Integration::Rails::Railtie.preload # ... config.time_zone = Settings.time_zone # ... end end ``` ## Installing on Padrino Add this to your `Gemfile`: ```ruby gem "config" ``` in your app.rb, you'll also need to register Config ```ruby register Config ``` ## Installing on Sinatra Add this to your `Gemfile`: ```ruby gem "config" ``` in your app, you'll need to register Config. You'll also need to give it a root so it can find the config files. ```ruby set :root, File.dirname(__FILE__) register Config ``` It's also possible to initialize it manually within your configure block if you want to just give it some yml paths to load from. ```ruby Config.load_and_set_settings("/path/to/yaml1", "/path/to/yaml2", ...) ``` ## Customizing Config You may customize the behavior of Config by generating an initializer file: rails g config:install This will generate `config/initializers/config.rb` with a set of default settings as well as to generate a set of default settings files: config/settings.yml config/settings/development.yml config/settings/production.yml config/settings/test.yml ## Accessing the Settings object After installing this plugin, the `Settings` object will be available globally. Entries are accessed via object member notation: ```ruby Settings.my_config_entry ``` Nested entries are supported: ```ruby Settings.my_section.some_entry ``` Alternatively, you can also use the `[]` operator if you don't know which exact setting you need to access ahead of time. ```ruby # All the following are equivalent to Settings.my_section.some_entry Settings.my_section[:some_entry] Settings.my_section['some_entry'] Settings[:my_section][:some_entry] ``` If you have set a different constant name for the object in the initializer file, use that instead. ## Common config file Config entries are compiled from: config/settings.yml config/settings/#{environment}.yml config/environments/#{environment}.yml config/settings.local.yml config/settings/#{environment}.local.yml config/environments/#{environment}.local.yml Settings defined in files that are lower in the list override settings higher. ### Reloading settings You can reload the Settings object at any time by running `Settings.reload!`. ### Reloading settings and config files You can also reload the `Settings` object from different config files at runtime. For example, in your tests if you want to test the production settings, you can: ```ruby Rails.env = "production" Settings.reload_from_files( Rails.root.join("config", "settings.yml").to_s, Rails.root.join("config", "settings", "#{Rails.env}.yml").to_s, Rails.root.join("config", "environments", "#{Rails.env}.yml").to_s ) ``` ### Environment specific config files You can have environment specific config files. Environment specific config entries take precedence over common config entries. Example development environment config file: ```ruby #{Rails.root}/config/environments/development.yml ``` Example production environment config file: ```ruby #{Rails.root}/config/environments/production.yml ``` ### Developer specific config files If you want to have local settings, specific to your machine or development environment, you can use the following files, which are automatically `.gitignored` : ```ruby Rails.root.join("config", "settings.local.yml").to_s, Rails.root.join("config", "settings", "#{Rails.env}.local.yml").to_s, Rails.root.join("config", "environments", "#{Rails.env}.local.yml").to_s ``` ### Adding sources at Runtime You can add new YAML config files at runtime. Just use: ```ruby Settings.add_source!("/path/to/source.yml") Settings.reload! ``` This will use the given source.yml file and use its settings to overwrite any previous ones. On the other hand, you can prepend a YML file to the list of configuration files: ```ruby Settings.prepend_source!("/path/to/source.yml") Settings.reload! ``` This will do the same as `add_source`, but the given YML file will be loaded first (instead of last) and its settings will be overwritten by any other configuration file. This is especially useful if you want to define defaults. One thing I like to do for my Rails projects is provide a local.yml config file that is .gitignored (so its independent per developer). Then I create a new initializer in `config/initializers/add_local_config.rb` with the contents ```ruby Settings.add_source!("#{Rails.root}/config/settings/local.yml") Settings.reload! ``` > Note: this is an example usage, it is easier to just use the default local files `settings.local.yml, settings/#{Rails.env}.local.yml and environments/#{Rails.env}.local.yml` for your developer specific settings. ## Embedded Ruby (ERB) Embedded Ruby is allowed in the configuration files. See examples below. ## Accessing Configuration Settings Consider the two following config files. * ```#{Rails.root}/config/settings.yml``` ```yaml size: 1 server: google.com ``` * ```#{Rails.root}/config/environments/development.yml``` ```yaml size: 2 computed: <%= 1 + 2 + 3 %> section: size: 3 servers: [ {name: yahoo.com}, {name: amazon.com} ] ``` Notice that the environment specific config entries overwrite the common entries. ```ruby Settings.size # => 2 Settings.server # => google.com ``` Notice the embedded Ruby. ```ruby Settings.computed # => 6 ``` Notice that object member notation is maintained even in nested entries. ```ruby Settings.section.size # => 3 ``` Notice array notation and object member notation is maintained. ```ruby Settings.section.servers[0].name # => yahoo.com Settings.section.servers[1].name # => amazon.com ``` ## Working with Heroku Heroku uses ENV object to store sensitive settings which are like the local files described above. You cannot upload such files to Heroku because it's ephemeral filesystem gets recreated from the git sources on each instance refresh. To use config with Heroku just set the `use_env` var to `true` in your `config/initializers/config.rb` file. Eg: ```ruby Config.setup do |config| config.const_name = 'AppSettings' config.use_env = true end ``` Now config would read values from the ENV object to the settings. For the example above it would look for keys starting with 'AppSettings'. Eg: ```ruby ENV['AppSettings.section.size'] = 1 ENV['AppSettings.section.server'] = 'google.com' ``` It won't work with arrays, though. To upload your local values to Heroku you could ran `bundle exec rake config:heroku`. ## Contributing Bootstrap ```bash $ appraisal install ``` Running the test suite ```bash $ appraisal rspec ``` ## Authors * [Jacques Crocker](http://github.com/railsjedi) - [Fred Wu](http://github.com/fredwu) * [Piotr Kuczynski](http://github.com/pkuczynski) - Inherited from [AppConfig](http://github.com/cjbottaro/app_config) by [Christopher J. Bottaro](http://github.com/cjbottaro) ## License Config is released under the [MIT License](http://www.opensource.org/licenses/MIT).