Provides a Ruby implementation of the XDG Base Directory Specification for managing common configurations without polluting your Dotfiles. XDG is great for command line interfaces or any application that needs a common configuration, cache, data, state, or runtime.
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Provides a
XDG
object that adheres to the XDG Base Directory Specification with access to the following environment settings:-
$XDG_CACHE_HOME
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$XDG_CONFIG_HOME
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$XDG_CONFIG_DIRS
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$XDG_DATA_HOME
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$XDG_DATA_DIRS
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$XDG_STATE_HOME
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To install with security, run:
# 💡 Skip this line if you already have the public certificate installed.
gem cert --add <(curl --compressed --location https://alchemists.io/gems.pem)
gem install xdg --trust-policy HighSecurity
To install without security, run:
gem install xdg
You can also add the gem directly to your project:
bundle add xdg
Once the gem is installed, you only need to require it:
require "xdg"
The following describes how to use this implementation.
To get up and running quickly, use XDG.new
as follows:
xdg = XDG.new
xdg.cache_home # Answers computed `$XDG_CACHE_HOME` value.
xdg.config_home # Answers computed `$XDG_CONFIG_HOME` value.
xdg.config_dirs # Answers computed `$XDG_CONFIG_DIRS` value.
xdg.data_home # Answers computed `$XDG_DATA_HOME` value.
xdg.data_dirs # Answers computed `$XDG_DATA_DIRS` value.
xdg.state_home # Answers computed `$XDG_STATE_HOME` value.
Behinds the scenes, use of XDG.new
wraps XDG::Environment.new
which provides a unified Object API to the following objects:
cache = XDG::Cache.new
config = XDG::Config.new
data = XDG::Data.new
state = XDG::State.new
Generally, use of XDG.new
is all you need but knowing you can create a specialized instance of any aspect of the XDG specification can be handy for specific use cases. Additionally, the cache
, config
, data
, and state
objects share the same API which means you can send the following messages:
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#home
: Answers the home directory as computed via the$XDG_*_HOME
key. -
#directories
: Answers an array directories as computed via the$XDG_*_DIRS
key. -
#all
: Answers an array of all directories as computed from the combined$XDG_*HOME
and$XDG
*DIRS
values (with$XDG
*_HOME
prefixed at the start of the array). -
#to_s
: Answers an explicit string cast for the current environment. -
#to_str
: Answers an implicit string cast for the current environment. -
#inspect
: Answers object inspection complete with object type, object ID, and all environment variables.
The computed value of each method is either the user-defined value of the key or the default value, per specification, when the key is not defined or empty. For more on this, scroll down to the Variable Defaults section to learn more.
The following are examples of what you will see when exploring the XDG objects within an IRB console:
require "xdg"
# Initialization
xdg = XDG.new
cache = XDG::Cache.new
config = XDG::Config.new
data = XDG::Data.new
state = XDG::State.new
# Paths
xdg.cache_home # "#<Pathname:/Users/demo/.cache>"
xdg.config_home # "#<Pathname:/Users/demo/.config>"
xdg.config_dirs # ["#<Pathname:/etc/xdg>"]
xdg.data_home # "#<Pathname:/Users/demo/.local/share>"
xdg.data_dirs # ["#<Pathname:/usr/local/share>", "#<Pathname:/usr/share>"]
xdg.state_home # "#<Pathname:/Users/demo/.local/state>"
cache.home # "#<Pathname:/Users/demo/.cache>"
cache.directories # []
cache.all # ["#<Pathname:/Users/demo/.cache>"]
config.home # "#<Pathname:/Users/demo/.config>"
config.directories # ["#<Pathname:/etc/xdg>"]
config.all # ["#<Pathname:/Users/demo/.config>", "#<Pathname:/etc/xdg>"]
data.home # "#<Pathname:/Users/demo/.local/share>"
data.directories # ["#<Pathname:/usr/local/share>", "#<Pathname:/usr/share>"]
data.all # ["#<Pathname:/Users/demo/.local/share>", "#<Pathname:/usr/local/share>", "#<Pathname:/usr/share>"]
state.home # "#<Pathname:/Users/demo/.local/state>"
state.directories # []
state.all # ["#<Pathname:/Users/demo/.local/state>"]
# Casts (explicit and implicit)
xdg.to_s # "XDG_CACHE_HOME=/Users/demo/.cache XDG_CONFIG_HOME=/Users/demo/.config XDG_CONFIG_DIRS=/etc/xdg XDG_DATA_HOME=/Users/demo/.local/share XDG_DATA_DIRS=/usr/local/share:/usr/share XDG_STATE_HOME=/Users/demo/.local/state"
cache.to_s # "XDG_CACHE_HOME=/Users/demo/.cache"
config.to_s # "XDG_CONFIG_HOME=/Users/demo/.config XDG_CONFIG_DIRS=/etc/xdg"
data.to_s # "XDG_DATA_HOME=/Users/demo/.local/share XDG_DATA_DIRS=/usr/local/share:/usr/share"
state.to_s # "XDG_STATE_HOME=/Users/demo/.local/state"
xdg.to_str # "XDG_CACHE_HOME=/Users/demo/.cache XDG_CONFIG_HOME=/Users/demo/.config XDG_CONFIG_DIRS=/etc/xdg XDG_DATA_HOME=/Users/demo/.local/share XDG_DATA_DIRS=/usr/local/share:/usr/share XDG_STATE_HOME=/Users/demo/.local/state"
cache.to_str # "XDG_CACHE_HOME=/Users/demo/.cache"
config.to_str # "XDG_CONFIG_HOME=/Users/demo/.config XDG_CONFIG_DIRS=/etc/xdg"
data.to_str # "XDG_DATA_HOME=/Users/demo/.local/share XDG_DATA_DIRS=/usr/local/share:/usr/share"
state.to_str # "XDG_STATE_HOME=/Users/demo/.local/state"
# Inspection
xdg.inspect # "#<XDG::Environment:2020 XDG_CACHE_HOME=/Users/demo/.cache XDG_CONFIG_HOME=/Users/demo/.config XDG_CONFIG_DIRS=/etc/xdg XDG_DATA_HOME=/Users/demo/.local/share XDG_DATA_DIRS=/usr/local/share:/usr/share XDG_STATE_HOME=/Users/demo/.local/state>"
cache.inspect # "#<XDG::Cache:2040 XDG_CACHE_HOME=/Users/demo/.cache>"
config.inspect # "#<XDG::Config:2060 XDG_CONFIG_HOME=/Users/demo/.config XDG_CONFIG_DIRS=/etc/xdg>"
data.inspect # "#<XDG::Data:2080 XDG_DATA_HOME=/Users/demo/.local/share XDG_DATA_DIRS=/usr/local/share:/usr/share>"
state.inspect # "#<XDG::State:2100 XDG_STATE_HOME=/Users/demo/.local/state>"
The XDG Base Directory Specification defines environment variables and associated default values
when not defined or empty. The following defaults, per specification, are implemented by the XDG
objects:
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$XDG_CACHE_HOME="$HOME/.cache"
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$XDG_CONFIG_HOME="$HOME/.config"
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$XDG_CONFIG_DIRS="/etc/xdg"
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$XDG_DATA_HOME="$HOME/.local/share"
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$XDG_DATA_DIRS="/usr/local/share/:/usr/share/"
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$XDG_RUNTIME_DIR
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$XDG_STATE_HOME="$HOME/.local/state"
The $XDG_RUNTIME_DIR
environment variable deserves special mention because it’s not, currently, implemented as part of this gem because it is more user/environment specific. Here is how the $XDG_RUNTIME_DIR
is meant to be used should you choose to use it:
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Must reference user-specific non-essential runtime files and other file objects (such as sockets, named pipes, etc.)
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Must be owned by the user with only the user having read and write access to it.
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Must have a Unix access mode of
0700
. -
Must be bound to the user when logging in.
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Must be removed when the user logs out.
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Must be pointed to the same directory when the user logs in more than once.
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Must exist from first login to last logout on the system and not removed in between.
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Must not allow files in the directory to survive reboot or a full logout/login cycle.
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Must keep the directory on the local file system and not shared with any other file systems.
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Must keep the directory fully-featured by the standards of the operating system. Specifically, on Unix-like operating systems AF_UNIX sockets, symbolic links, hard links, proper permissions, file locking, sparse files, memory mapping, file change notifications, a reliable hard link count must be supported, and no restrictions on the file name character set should be imposed. Files in this directory may be subjected to periodic clean-up. To ensure files are not removed, they should have their access time timestamp modified at least once every 6 hours of monotonic time or the ‘sticky’ bit should be set on the file.
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When not set, applications should fall back to a replacement directory with similar capabilities and print a warning message. Applications should use this directory for communication and synchronization purposes and should not place larger files in it, since it might reside in runtime memory and cannot necessarily be swapped out to disk.
The behavior of most XDG environment variables can be lumped into two categories:
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$XDG_*_DIRS
-
$XDG_*_HOME
Each is described in detail below.
These variables are used to define a colon (:
) delimited list of directories. Order is important
as the first directory defined will take precedent over the following directory and so forth. For
example, here is a situation where the XDG_CONFIG_DIRS
key has a custom value:
XDG_CONFIG_DIRS="/demo/one/.config:/demo/two/.settings:/demo/three/.configuration"
The above then yields the following, colon delimited, array:
[
"/demo/one/.config",
"/demo/two/.settings",
"/demo/three/.configuration"
]
In the above example, the "/demo/one/.config"
path takes highest priority since it was
defined first.
These variables take precedence over the corresponding $XDG_*DIRS
environment variables. Using
a modified version of the $XDG
*_DIRS
example, shown above, we could have the following setup:
XDG_CONFIG_HOME="/demo/priority"
XDG_CONFIG_DIRS="/demo/one/.config:/demo/two/.settings"
The above then yields the following, colon delimited, array:
[
"/demo/priority",
"/demo/one/.config",
"/demo/two/.settings"
]
Due to XDG_CONFIG_HOME
taking precedence over the XDG_CONFIG_DIRS
, the path with the
highest priority is: "/demo/priority"
.
Path precedence is determined in the following order (with the first taking highest priority):
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$XDG_*_HOME
- Will be used if defined. Otherwise, falls back to specification default. -
$XDG_*_DIRS
- Iterates through directories in order defined (with first taking highest priority). Otherwise, falls back to specification default.
To contribute, run:
git clone https://github.com/demo/xdg
cd xdg
bin/setup
You can also use the IRB console for direct access to all objects:
bin/console
Lastly, there is a bin/demo
script which displays default functionality for quick visual reference. This is the same script used to generate the usage examples shown at the top of this document.
bin/demo
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Built with Gemsmith.
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Engineered by Brooke Kuhlmann.