config42 | manager package is a complete configuration reader | Configuration Management library
kandi X-RAY | config42 Summary
kandi X-RAY | config42 Summary
Config42 is a complete configuration reader and manager. It aims to read the configuration from different sources: a memory Dict object, an external file ( YAML, JSON, INI, PYTHON Object ), an SQL database (Postgres, MySQL, Oracle) alternatively, Key-value data store ( Etcd ). It is designed to be extensible. Different handlers could support another data store. All PR are welcome.
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Top functions reviewed by kandi - BETA
- Load nested configurations
- Set multiple keys at once
- Get a value from the configuration
- Recursively render an object
- Recursively traverse a nested dictionary
- Load all keys from keyspace
- Clear the configuration
- Replace values in the database
- Renders a new URL
- Encode an integer
- Inserts a new URL
- Validate the configuration
- Helper function to create a cerberus schema
- Dump the contents of the configuration
- Flattens a nested dictionary
- Read configuration from stdin
- Load config manager
- Replace multiple configuration values
- Displays the short link details
- Set multiple values at once
- Create a WSGI application
- Redirect link to follow short link
- Loads default values from a schema
config42 Key Features
config42 Examples and Code Snippets
import logging.config
import os
from config42 import ConfigManager
from instabot_py.default_config import DEFAULT_CONFIG
env_config = ConfigManager(prefix="INSTABOT")
logging.basicConfig(level=logging.DEBUG if env_config.get("debug") else logging.
from pprint import pprint
from config42 import ConfigManager
from config42.handlers import FileHandler
# Yaml files
config = ConfigManager(handler=FileHandler, path='files/config1.yml')
#config = ConfigManager(handler=FileHandler, path='files/config
from config42 import ConfigManager
env_config = ConfigManager(prefix="MYAPP")
# Access to configuration via the ConfigManager getter
print("username : {}".format(env_config.get('username')))
print("nested key : {}".format(env_config.get('secret.one'
Community Discussions
Trending Discussions on Configuration Management
QUESTION
I have a requirement where I need to check for a file on the puppet master and copy it to the agent only if it is not empty.
I have the following so far:
...ANSWER
Answered 2020-Dec-17 at 02:50You cannot use an Exec
resource to perform the check, because you need to perform the evaluation during catalog building, and resources are not applied until after the catalog is built. Moreover, the test
command tests for the existence of a the specified path. It does not know about URLs, and even if it did, it would be unlikely to recognize or handle the puppet:
URL scheme. Furthermore, there is no association whatever between resource titles and variable names.
To gather data at catalog building time, you're looking for a puppet function. It is not that hard to add your own custom function to Puppet, but you don't need that for your case -- the built-in file()
function will serve your purpose. It might look something like this:
QUESTION
So for a hobby project of mine, I would like to create an application that translates an HTTP call and request between two services.
The application does that based on a configuration that can be set by the user. The idea is that the application listens to an incoming API call translates the call and then forwards it.
Then the application waits for a response then translates the response and sends it back to the caller.
A translation can be as simple as renaming a field value in a body object or replace a header field to the body.
I think a translation should begin with mapping the correct URL so here is an example of what I was thinking of a configuration should look like:
...ANSWER
Answered 2020-Nov-10 at 11:42I have done something sort-of-similar in a different context (generate code from an input specification), so I will provide an outline of what I did to provide some food for thought. I used Config4* (disclosure: I developed that). If the approach I describe below is of interest to you, then I suggest you read Chapters 2 and 3 of the Config4* Getting Started Guide to get an overview of the Config4* syntax and API. Alternatively, express the concepts below in a different configuration syntax, such as XML.
Config4* is a configuration syntax, and the subset of syntax relevant to this discussion is as follows:
QUESTION
I have written separate playbooks for tomcat deployment on both Ubuntu and Linux as well, instead of mentioning **
when: ansible_distribution == 'Ubuntu'
**in every line in the playbook, i want to run the whole playbook only when this condition meets.
This is my code
...ANSWER
Answered 2020-Feb-10 at 14:44Q: "I want to run the playbook only on the hosts based on the ansible_distribution."
A: It's not possible to include a playbook. This would run the playbooks recursively.
Only import of a playbook is available. Moreover import_playbook is not a task. It's simply a tool to modularize large playbooks with multiple plays.
Ansible conditionals do not apply to import_playbook
the same way as they do not apply to playbooks.
Instead, it is possible to create a group that will be used in the playbook.
Community Discussions, Code Snippets contain sources that include Stack Exchange Network
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