require "yaml" require "erb" # A simple settings solution using a YAML file. See README for more information. class Settingslogic < Hash class MissingSetting < StandardError; end class << self def name # :nodoc: instance.key?("name") ? instance.name : super end # Enables Settings.get('nested.key.name') for dynamic access def get(key) parts = key.split('.') curs = self while p = parts.shift curs = curs.send(p) end curs end def source(value = nil) if value.nil? @source else @source = value end end def namespace(value = nil) if value.nil? @namespace else @namespace = value end end def [](key) instance.fetch(key.to_s, nil) end def []=(key, val) # Setting[:key][:key2] = 'value' for dynamic settings val = new(val, source) if val.is_a? Hash instance.store(key.to_s, val) instance.create_accessor_for(key, val) end def load! instance true end def reload! @instance = nil load! end private def instance return @instance if @instance @instance = new create_accessors! @instance end def method_missing(name, *args, &block) instance.send(name, *args, &block) end # It would be great to DRY this up somehow, someday, but it's difficult because # of the singleton pattern. Basically this proxies Setting.foo to Setting.instance.foo def create_accessors! instance.each do |key,val| create_accessor_for(key) end end def create_accessor_for(key) return unless key.to_s =~ /^\w+$/ # could have "some-setting:" which blows up eval instance_eval "def #{key}; instance.send(:#{key}); end" end end # Initializes a new settings object. You can initialize an object in any of the following ways: # # Settings.new(:application) # will look for config/application.yml # Settings.new("application.yaml") # will look for application.yaml # Settings.new("/var/configs/application.yml") # will look for /var/configs/application.yml # Settings.new(:config1 => 1, :config2 => 2) # # Basically if you pass a symbol it will look for that file in the configs directory of your rails app, # if you are using this in rails. If you pass a string it should be an absolute path to your settings file. # Then you can pass a hash, and it just allows you to access the hash via methods. def initialize(hash_or_file = self.class.source, section = nil) #puts "new! #{hash_or_file}" case hash_or_file when nil raise Errno::ENOENT, "No file specified as Settingslogic source" when Hash self.replace hash_or_file else hash = YAML.load(ERB.new(File.read(hash_or_file)).result).to_hash hash = hash[self.class.namespace] if self.class.namespace self.replace hash end @section = section || self.class.source # so end of error says "in application.yml" create_accessors! end # Called for dynamically-defined keys, and also the first key deferenced at the top-level, if load! is not used. # Otherwise, create_accessors! (called by new) will have created actual methods for each key. def method_missing(name, *args, &block) key = name.to_s raise MissingSetting, "Missing setting '#{key}' in #{@section}" unless has_key? key value = fetch(key) create_accessor_for(key) value.is_a?(Hash) ? self.class.new(value, "'#{key}' section in #{@section}") : value end def [](key) fetch(key.to_s, nil) end def []=(key,val) # Setting[:key][:key2] = 'value' for dynamic settings val = self.class.new(val, @section) if val.is_a? Hash store(key.to_s, val) create_accessor_for(key, val) end # This handles naming collisions with Sinatra/Vlad/Capistrano. Since these use a set() # helper that defines methods in Object, ANY method_missing ANYWHERE picks up the Vlad/Sinatra # settings! So settings.deploy_to title actually calls Object.deploy_to (from set :deploy_to, "host"), # rather than the app_yml['deploy_to'] hash. Jeezus. def create_accessors! self.each do |key,val| create_accessor_for(key) end end # Use instance_eval/class_eval because they're actually more efficient than define_method{} # http://stackoverflow.com/questions/185947/ruby-definemethod-vs-def # http://bmorearty.wordpress.com/2009/01/09/fun-with-rubys-instance_eval-and-class_eval/ def create_accessor_for(key, val=nil) return unless key.to_s =~ /^\w+$/ # could have "some-setting:" which blows up eval instance_variable_set("@#{key}", val) if val self.class.class_eval <<-EndEval def #{key} return @#{key} if @#{key} raise MissingSetting, "Missing setting '#{key}' in #{@section}" unless has_key? '#{key}' value = fetch('#{key}') @#{key} = value.is_a?(Hash) ? self.class.new(value, "'#{key}' section in #{@section}") : value end EndEval end end