- infos = Information about the kconfig plugin is in keys below
- infos/author = Dardan Haxhimustafa mail@dardan.im
- infos/licence = BSD
- infos/needs =
- infos/provides = storage/kconfig
- infos/recommends =
- infos/placements = getstorage setstorage
- infos/status = recommended maintained compatible specific experimental unfinished nodoc concept
- infos/metadata =
- infos/description = Reads and writes the KConfig INI format
This plugin can be used to parse and serialize a KConfig INI file.
Information about the syntax:
- Files are expected to be encoded in
UTF-8
. - Empty lines are ignored.
- Lines that start with a
#
character are considered comments. Comments are ignored too. - Configurations consist of groups and keys. Only keys can have values.
- Key names can't start with a
[
character - Keys can contain spaces and any special characters except
=
. - If a key has a value, then it will be followed with an
=
symbol and then the value will be read until the end of the line. The white space characters around the=
symbol are ignored. - In values, the following escape sequences can be used:
\n
and\r
are mapped to newline\t
is mapped to tab\\
is mapped to\
- Values can contain any character from the
UTF-8
set except for newline and\
followed by an invalid escape sequence. - Keys can be localized. The locale is surrounded with
[
and]
and cannot start with$
. - Same key names can be used multiple times if it has different locales. The following example is valid:
greeting[en] = Hello greeting[de] = Hallo
- Keys can have metadata. Those are one byte long, start with
$
and are surrounded with[
and]
. - The same key name can't be used multiple times with different metadata (different to locales). The following example is invalid:
key.name[$a] = Something key.name[$i] = Something else
- Group names begin have a
[
symbol at the beginning of a line and every key that follows them is part of this group (until the next group is declared)
An example of how a valid config file might look like:
[group][subgroup]
key.name[en][$i][$e]=Key Value
key.name[de]=Key Wert
And how it will be represented in kdb:
keyNew (PREFIX "group/subgroup/key.name[en]", KEY_VALUE, "Key Value", KEY_META, "kconfig", "ie", KEY_END)
keyNew (PREFIX "group/subgroup/key.name[de]", KEY_VALUE, "Key Wert", KEY_END)
The following example shows you how you can read data using this plugin.
# Mount the plugin to the cascading namespace `/tests/kconfig`
sudo kdb mount configrc /tests/kconfig kconfig
# Manually add a key-value pair to the database
mkdir -p "$(dirname "$(kdb file /tests/kconfig)")"
echo 'key=Value' > "$(kdb file /tests/kconfig)"
# Retrieve the new value
kdb get /tests/kconfig/key
#> Value
# Set the value to Example
kdb set /tests/kconfig/key Example
# Verify that the value has changed in the file too
cat `kdb file /tests/kconfig`
#> key=Example
# Manually add a gorup to the database
echo '[group][subgroup]' >> "$(kdb file /tests/kconfig)"
# Manually add a key that contains metas to that group
echo 'key.name[$a][$i]=New Value' >> "$(kdb file /tests/kconfig)"
# Retrieve the new value
kdb get /tests/kconfig/group/subgroup/key.name
#> New Value
# Retrieve the meta values
kdb meta-get /tests/kconfig/group/subgroup/key.name kconfig
#> ai
# Manually add a group and a localized key
echo '[localized keys]' >> `kdb file /tests/kconfig`
echo 'greeting[en]=Hello' >> `kdb file /tests/kconfig`
echo 'greeting[de]=Hallo' >> `kdb file /tests/kconfig`
# Retrieve the english greeting
kdb get '/tests/kconfig/localized keys/greeting[en]'
#> Hello
# Retrieve the german greeting
kdb get '/tests/kconfig/localized keys/greeting[de]'
#> Hallo
# Undo modifications to the database
sudo kdb umount /tests/kconfig
- Comments from the file are discarded on save (same as the default KConfig functionality)
- No validation for meta values or locale codes