This library allows to load json configs and access the values like members (i.e., config.server.port
instead of config['server']['port']
), validate the data types of fields and transform the values of fields.
pip install python-json-config
from python_json_config import ConfigBuilder
# create config parser
builder = ConfigBuilder()
# parse config
config = builder.parse_config('path/to/config.json')
# access elements
host = config.server.host
port = config.server.port
myfield = config.myfield
builder.validate_field_type('server.ip', str)
builder.validate_field_type('server.port', int)
builder.validate_field_type('jwt.access_token_expires', str)
from python_json_config.validators import is_unreserved_port, is_ipv4_address, is_timedelta
# use provided methods
builder.validate_field_value('server.ip', is_ipv4_address)
builder.validate_field_value('server.port', is_unreserved_port)
builder.validate_field_value('jwt.access_token_expires', is_timedelta)
# use custom validation function
builder.validate_field_value('server.ip', lambda ip: ip != '0.0.0.0')
# return custom error messages in your lambda
builder.validate_field_value('server.ip', lambda ip: (ip != '0.0.0.0', 'IP is unroutable.'))
# chain validation functions
builder.validate_field_value('server.ip', [lambda ip: ip != 'localhost', lambda ip: ip != '127.0.0.1'])
from python_json_config.transformers import to_timedelta
# use provided methods
builder.transform_field_value('jwt.access_token_expires', to_timedelta)
from datetime import datetime
# parse a timedelta (e.g., Jun 1 2005) into a datetime object
builder.transform_field_value('important_date', lambda date: datetime.strptime(date, '%b %d %Y'))
# required means an error is thrown if a non-existing field is accessed
builder.set_field_access_required()
# return None for the following fields instead of throwing an error
builder.add_optional_field('server.host')
builder.add_optional_fields(['cache.ttl', 'server.path'])
# optional means None is returned if a non-existing field is accessed
builder.set_field_access_optional()
# throw an error for the following fields instead of returning None
builder.add_required_field('server.user')
builder.add_required_fields(['cache.backend', 'server.password'])
port = config.server.port
assert port > 1023
ip = config.server.ip
assert ip not in ['0.0.0.0', 'localhost', '127.0.0.1']
important_date = config.important_date
assert isinstance(important_date, datetime)
jwt_access_token_expires = config.jwt.access_token_expires
assert isinstance(jwt_access_token_expires, timedelta)
config = ConfigBuilder().parse_config({"server.port": 1024})
config.add("server.host", "localhost")
assert config.server.host == "localhost"
config.add("cache", "redis")
assert config.cache == "redis"
config.update("server.port", 1025)
assert config.server.port == 1025
config.update("server.user", "user", upsert=True)
assert config.server.user == "user"
First, set environment variables (e.g., via bash):
$ MYPROJECT_SERVER_HOST="localhost"
$ MYPROJECT_CACHE="redis"
$ MYPYTHONPROJECTS_USER="user"
Escape underscores in names of variables with another underscore:
$ MYPYTHONPROJECTS_LOG__FILE="project.log"
Then just tell the builder, which prefixes should be merged:
builder = ConfigBuilder()
# you can also just pass a single prefix (builder.merge_with_env_variables("MYPROJECT")
builder.merge_with_env_variables(["MYPROJECT", "MYPYTHONPROJECTS"])
config = builder.parse_config({"server.host": "0.0.0.0"})
assert config.server.host == "localhost"
assert config.cache == "redis"
assert config.user == "user"
assert config.log_file == "project.log"
Alternatively you can also do the merging after creating the config object:
builder = ConfigBuilder()
config = builder.parse_config({"server.host": "0.0.0.0"})
config.merge_with_env_variables(["MYPROJECT", "MYPYTHONPROJECTS"])
assert config.server.host == "localhost"
assert config.cache == "redis"
assert config.user == "user"
The config can be serialized to a dictionary, json or binary (via pickle or msgpack).
builder = ConfigBuilder()
config = builder.parse_config({"server.host": "0.0.0.0"})
import pickle
pickle_config = pickle.loads(pickle.dumps(config))
dict_config = builder.parse_config(config.to_dict())
import json
json_config = builder.parse_config(config.to_json())
import msgpack
msgpack_config = Config.from_msgpack(config.to_msgpack())
Important note: serializing via json or msgpack will stringify any non-serializable value (e.g., datetime objects).