A Clojure library for managing application configuration.
Add the following dependency to your project.clj
file:
[io.logicblocks/configurati "0.5.6"]
Configurati allows sets of configuration to be defined:
(require '[configurati.core :as conf])
(def database-configuration
(conf/define-configuration
(conf/with-source (conf/env-source :prefix :my-service))
(conf/with-parameter :database-host)
(conf/with-parameter :database-port :type :integer)
(conf/with-parameter :database-schema :default "default-schema")))
This defines a configuration that will look up parameter values from
environment variables, converting database-port
to an integer and leaving
all other parameters as strings, defaulting database-schema
to
"default-schema"
.
Assuming an environment of:
MY_SERVICE_DATABASE_HOST="db.example.com"
MY_SERVICE_DATABASE_PORT="5000"
this configuration resolves to a map as follows:
(conf/resolve database-configuration)
; =>
; {:database-host "db.example.com",
; :database-port 5000
; :database-schema "default-schema"}
Each parameter has a mandatory name, corresponding to the key used to look up that parameter in the provided configuration sources. Names are always keywords.
Parameters also have options:
:type
: specifies the type of the resulting value. Currently, only:any
,:string
and:integer
are supported although the conversions are extensible as detailed in the advanced usage section below. Defaults to:any
, performing no conversion of the looked up values.:nilable
: whether the parameter can benil
. Eithertrue
orfalse
. Defaults tofalse
.:validator
: specifies a validator function or keyword referencing a spec to validate the parameter against. Validation occurs post-conversion.:default
: the default value to use in the case that no configuration source contains this parameter. The default value is converted before being returned. Defaults tonil
.
The with-parameter
function accepts all of these options:
(def database-configuration
(conf/define-configuration
(conf/with-parameter :database-host)
(conf/with-parameter :database-port :type :integer)
(conf/with-parameter :database-scheme :default "default-schema")
(conf/with-parameter :database-timeout
:type :integer :nilable true :validator #(<= % 30000))
...))
Each parameter is looked up in a configuration source. A configuration source
is anything that implements clojure.lang.ILookup
.
There are a number of configuration sources included with Configurati as detailed in the subsequent sections.
map-source
uses an in memory map to look up parameter values:
(def database-configuration
(conf/define-configuration
(conf/with-source (conf/map-source
{:database-username "some-username"
:database-password "some-password"}))
...))
env-source
looks up parameter values from environment variables.
env-source
takes an optional prefix prepended to the parameter name before
look up.
(def database-configuration
(conf/define-configuration
(conf/with-source (conf/env-source :prefix :my-service))
...))
environ-source
uses environ to look
up
parameter values such that configuration can come from environment variables,
system properties or via the build system (lein or boot).
environ-source
takes an optional prefix prepended to the parameter name before
look up.
(def database-configuration
(conf/define-configuration
(conf/with-source (conf/env-source :prefix :my-service))
...))
yaml-file-source
loads configuration from a YAML file at the provided path.
Under the covers, yaml-file-source
uses slurp
so everything it supports,
e.g., URIs, are also supported.
yaml-file-source
takes an optional prefix prepended to the parameter name
before look up.
(def database-configuration
(conf/define-configuration
(conf/with-source (conf/yaml-file-source "path/to/config.yaml"
:prefix :my-service))
...))
The file at path/to/config.yaml
would look something like:
my_service_database_username: "some-username"
my_service_database_password: "some-password"
Sometimes it is useful to look up configuration from a number of different sources that form a configuration hierarchy.
multi-source
takes a number of sources and looks up parameter values in the
order the sources are specified at construction.
(def database-configuration
(conf/define-configuration
(conf/with-source
(conf/multi-source
(conf/env-source)
(conf/yaml-file-source "path/to/config.yaml")))
...))
Note, if multiple sources are provided to define-configuration
, a
multi-source
is automatically created in the background passing the sources
in the same order as they are provided.
Sources support middleware allowing parameter keys to be transformed before they are passed to the source and parameter values to be transformed before they are returned.
Since middleware apply to sources, they take effect before parameter value conversion takes place.
Configurati includes a number of parameter value transforming middlewares as detailed in the subsequent sections.
json-parsing-middleware
parses parameter values as JSON. It allows
configuration of:
- which parameters to target;
- how to perform the parsing.
By default, json-parsing-middleware
parses all parameter values retrieved
from the source, converting keys to keywords but not changing their casing:
(require '[configurati.middleware :as conf-mdlw])
(def issuer-configuration
(conf/define-configuration
(conf/with-source
(conf/map-source
{:issuer-1 "{\"url\": \"https://issuer-1.example.com\"}"
:issuer-2 "{\"url\": \"https://issuer-2.example.com\"}"})
(conf/with-middleware (conf-mdlw/json-parsing-middleware)))
(conf/with-parameter :issuer-1)
(conf/with-parameter :issuer-2)))
which resolves to:
(conf/resolve issuer-configuration)
; =>
; {:issuer-1 {:url "https://issuer-1.example.com"}
; :issuer-2 {:url "https://issuer-2.example.com"}}
To convert only certain parameters, pass their parameter keys in the :only
option:
(def issuer-configuration
(conf/define-configuration
(conf/with-source
(conf/map-source
{:issuer "{\"url\": \"https://issuer-1.example.com\"}"
:timeout 10000})
(conf/with-middleware
(conf-mdlw/json-parsing-middleware
:only [:issuer])))
(conf/with-parameter :issuer)
(conf/with-parameter :timeout)))
which resolves to:
(resolve issuer-configuration)
; =>
; {:issuer {:url "https://issuer-1.example.com"}
; :timeout 10000}
To configure parsing, there are two options available:
:key-fn
replaces the function used to convert keys in the resulting map;:parse-fn
replaces the entire JSON parsing function.
For example, to kebab case keys:
(require '[camel-snake-kebab.core :as csk])
(def issuer-configuration
(conf/define-configuration
(conf/with-source
(conf/map-source
{:authentication "{\"issuerUrl\": \"https://issuer-1.example.com\"}"})
(conf/with-middleware
(conf-mdlw/json-parsing-middleware
:key-fn csk/kebab-case-keyword)))
(conf/with-parameter :authentication)))
which resolves to:
(conf/resolve issuer-configuration)
; =>
; {:authentication {:issuer-url "https://issuer-1.example.com"}}
separator-parsing-middleware
splits parameter values on a separator. It allows
configuration of:
- which parameters to target;
- how to perform the parsing.
By default, separator-parsing-middleware
parses all parameter values retrieved
from the source, splitting on comma:
(def supplier-configuration
(conf/define-configuration
(conf/with-source
(conf/map-source
{:countries "USA,GBR,DEU"
:currencies "USD,GBP,EUR"})
(conf/with-middleware (conf-mdlw/separator-parsing-middleware)))
(conf/with-parameter :countries)
(conf/with-parameter :currencies)))
which resolves to:
(conf/resolve issuer-configuration)
; =>
; {:countries ["USA" "GBR" "DEU"]
; :currencies ["USD" "GBP" "EUR"]}
To convert only certain parameters, pass their parameter keys in the :only
option:
(def supplier-configuration
(conf/define-configuration
(conf/with-source
(conf/map-source
{:countries "USA,GBR,DEU"
:name "Supplier, Ltd."})
(conf/with-middleware (conf-mdlw/separator-parsing-middleware
:only [:countries])))
(conf/with-parameter :countries)
(conf/with-parameter :currencies)))
which resolves to:
(conf/resolve issuer-configuration)
; =>
; {:countries ["USA" "GBR" "DEU"]
; :name "Supplier, Ltd."}
To configure parsing, there are three options available:
:separator
defines the character on which to split, defaulting to","
;:trim
indicates whether to trim the split values, defaulting totrue
;:parse-fn
which replaces the entire parsing function, ignoring the above two options.
For example, to split on pipe characters:
(require '[camel-snake-kebab.core :as csk])
(def supplier-configuration
(conf/define-configuration
(conf/with-source
(conf/map-source
{:countries "USA|GBR|DEU"})
(conf/with-middleware
(conf-mdlw/separator-parsing-middleware
:separator "|")))
(conf/with-parameter :countries)))
which resolves to:
(conf/resolve supplier-configuration)
; =>
; {:countries ["USA" "GBR" "DEU"]}
You may wish to refer to configuration parameters differently in code compared to how they are specified in the configuration sources. Key functions enable this.
When a configuration is defined, one or more key functions can be provided
allowing keys to be transformed during configuration resolution. A key
function receives each key and returns its replacement. A number of key
functions are provided in configurati.key-fns
.
(require '[configurati.key-fns :as conf-kf])
(def api-configuration
(conf/define-configuration
(conf/with-source
(conf/map-source {:api-username "some-username"
:api-password "some-password"
:api-port "5000"}))
(conf/with-parameter :api-username)
(conf/with-parameter :api-password)
(conf/with-parameter :api-port :type :integer)
(conf/with-key-fn (conf-kf/remove-prefix :api))
(conf/with-key-fn (conf-kf/add-prefix :service))))
(conf/resolve api-configuration)
; =>
; {:service-username "some-username"
; :service-password "some-password"
; :service-port 5000}
In some cases, you may need to change the shape of a configuration map or add, modify or remove elements from it. Transformations enable this.
When a configuration is defined, one or more transformations can be provided allowing the configuration map to be transformed during configuration resolution. A transformation function receives the resolved configuration map and returns it after applying the transformation.
(def api-configuration
(conf/define-configuration
(conf/with-source
(conf/map-source {:username "some-username"
:password "some-password"
:port "5000"}))
(conf/with-parameter :username)
(conf/with-parameter :password)
(conf/with-parameter :port :type :integer)
(conf/with-transformation (fn [m] {:api m}))))
(conf/resolve api-configuration)
; =>
; {:api
; {:username "some-username"
; :password "some-password"
; :port 5000}}
A set of parameters makes up a configuration specification. Configuration specifications can be created separately from defining configuration:
(def database-configuration-specification
(conf/define-configuration-specification
(conf/with-parameter :database-host)
(conf/with-parameter :database-port :type :integer)
(conf/with-parameter :database-scheme :default "default-schema")))
...
(def database-configuration
(conf/define-configuration
(conf/with-specification
database-configuration-specification)
...))
This is useful if different configuration sources need to be used at different times for the same configuration specification.
define-configuration
supports multiple specifications whose parameters are
merged together to form one specification. Additional parameters can also be
specified:
(def database-configuration-specification
(conf/define-configuration-specification
(conf/with-parameter :database-host)
(conf/with-parameter :database-port :type :integer)
(conf/with-parameter :database-scheme :default "default-schema")))
(def service-configuration-specification
(conf/define-configuration-specification
(conf/with-parameter :service-host)
(conf/with-parameter :service-port :type :integer)
(conf/with-parameter :service-token)))
...
(def database-configuration
(conf/define-configuration
(conf/with-specification
database-configuration-specification)
(conf/with-specification
service-configuration-specification)
(conf/with-parameter :other-parameter)
...))
is the same as:
(def database-configuration
(conf/define-configuration
(conf/with-parameter :database-host)
(conf/with-parameter :database-port :type :integer)
(conf/with-parameter :database-scheme :default "default-schema")
(conf/with-parameter :service-host)
(conf/with-parameter :service-port :type :integer)
(conf/with-parameter :service-token)
(conf/with-parameter :other-parameter)
...))
A configuration specification optionally takes one or more key functions similar to those described above:
(require '[configurati.key-fns :as conf-kf])
(def database-configuration-specification
(conf/define-configuration-specification
(conf/with-key-fn (conf-kf/remove-prefix :api))
...))
When configuration specifications are merged as part of a definition, their key functions are composed together in the reverse order the specifications are provided with any key functions on the definition itself applying last:
(def specification-1
(conf/define-configuration-specification
(conf/with-key-fn (fn [key] (str "s1-" (name key))))))
(def specification-2
(conf/define-configuration-specification
(conf/with-key-fn (fn [key] (str "s2-" (name key))))))
(def configuration
(conf/define-configuration
(conf/with-specification specification-1)
(conf/with-specification specification-2)
(conf/with-parameter :param)
(conf/with-key-fn (fn [key] (str "def-" (name key))))
(conf/with-key-fn (fn [key] (keyword key)))
(conf/with-source (conf/map-source {:param "val"}))))
(conf/resolve configuration)
; =>
; {:def-s2-s1-param "val"}
To add a parameter type, implement the convert-to
multimethod in
configurati.conversions
:
(require '[configurati.conversions :as conf-conv])
(defmethod conf-conv/convert-to :boolean [_ value]
(if (#{"true" true} value) true false))
(def configuration
(conf/define-configuration
(conf/with-source (conf/map-source {:encrypted? "true"}))
(conf/with-parameter :encrypted? :type :boolean)))
(conf/resolve configuration)
; =>
; {:encrypted? true}
To create a custom middleware, create a function that returns a function as follows:
(defn custom-middleware []
(fn [source parameter-name]
...))
Within the body of the returned function, call source
with parameter-name
or a derivative, transform and return the response.
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