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Simple, dynamic, flexible, modular, extensible, templated, configuration library.

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dyflex-config

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Simple, dynamic, flexible, modular, extensible, templated, configuration library.

Why another configuration library?

Many backend projects need to read a configuration file.
Configuration from command line opts, from env, from json, from properties files, and on and on.
Some options vary from environment to environment and from developer to developer.
But importantly, some options just don't; They are only there to help future-proof your app.
Then if that's not complicated enough, sometimes you need to pull in pieces of config from different locations.
And of course, wouldn't functionality like Java's @AutoWire be nice?

Installation

You can get the latest release using npm:

$ npm install dyflex-config --save

Please note that this library supports a wide variety of runtimes and is distributed as both esm and cjs modules, side by side.

Concepts

I believe configuration needs to be:

  • reference-able (to eliminate duplication)
  • override-able (for different envs)
  • modular (for generation and maintainability)
  • compose-able (to reverse modularity 😃 and more easily support override-ability)

Show me some code

Some folks like the details (below), some folks want to see the code first...

As you read the code, keep in mind that for this example:

  • We are trying to show a myriad of features but still keep it simple.
  • There is a .env file in the cwd that contains host=mysql.prod.example.com
  • The app will be invoked with node example.js --defs mysql.user=james
  • And of course, you would naturally want to use async-injection (but you don't have to).
// Simple injectable database manager with injected settings.
@Injectable()
class MySqlDbMgr {
	constructor(@Inject(Symbol.for(my-sql-conf)) conf: MySqlConfiguration) {
		this.pool = mysql.createPool(conf);
	}
	// useful properties and methods.
}
const DbMgrToken = new InjectionToken<MySqlDbMgr>('DbMgr');

// Optionally define the global structure of your app configuration.
const DefaultAppConfig = {
	// @ts-ignore  (see pkgToConfig function for details)
	info: pkgToConfig(__dirname, __APP_NAME__, __APP_VERSION__, __APP_DESCRIPTION__),
	mysql: {
		// Flag this as the MySql configurtion object.
		__conf_register: 'my-sql-conf',
        // Define the type, but actuall value merged from .env
		host: undefined as unknown as string,
		port: 3306,
		user: undefined as unknown as string,
        // see evalConfig function to define your own custom interpolators
		password: '<%= fn.getSecret("my-app-passwd") %>',
		database: 'my-app-database',
        // auto-wire a database connection service via dependency injection.
        // makeConfig (below), creates a fully configured, injectable, database manager.
		__conf_init: {
			fn: (di: Container) => di.bindClass(DbMgrToken, MySqlDbMgr).asSingleton()
		}
	}
};

// ************ Main entry *****************
(async (args) => {
	const di = new Container();
	// Wire up the configuration for your application.
	const config = await makeConfig(DefaultAppConfig, 
                    {
                        // Helper to bind configuration information into dependency injeciton.
                        evalCb: (key: symbol, obj: object, path: string[]) => di.bindConstant(key, obj),
                        // Extensible configuration templating.
                        evalExt: {getSecret: (filePath) => fs.readFileSync(filePath, 'utf-8').trim()},
                        ctx: di
                    },
                    // merge the .env info into config.mysql
                    ['mysql', loadConfigFile('.env')],
                    // merge any command line arguments into the configuration.
                    keyValueToConfig(args.defs)
	);
	// Picked up from your package.json (see pkgToConfig).
	console.log(`Running ${config.info.name} v${config.info.version}`);
	// Thanks to async-injection, 'dbMgr' is fully typed as MySqlDbMgr.
	const dbMgr = di.get(DbMgrToken);   
})(minimist(process.argv.slice(2))).catch(e => console.error(e));

Details

Default Base Configuration (aka object literals).

Default Base Configurations are modular and composable const object literals, that contains default values (preferably for local development), which describes the structure (e.g. interface type) of the configuration for a given piece of your application.
This saves you from having to define a configuration interface, as it is derivable from the const declaration of the default base configuration
(e.g. type AppConfigType = typeof DefaultAppConfig;).

Your application can define its own (global) default base configuration, by simply merging together default base configurations from various modules within your application.

Loading

json5 is required to be present, and always supported. properties-reader, dotenv, yaml are supported if installed.

Merging

You supply the configuration merging process with an array of objects, and it recursively merges these into your global default base configuration.
You may also provide configuration fragments and merge them at defined sub-nodes. See mergeConfig, loadConfigFile, keyValueToConfig, and pkgToConfig for more info.

Templating (aka Interpolation)

Any object property value in the configuration hierarchy may be templated to reference other configuration properties.
const config = {release: '<%= config.name + "@" + config.version %>'};
This templating step is performed after all merging is completed, so the full config hierarchy is available to the template for interpolation.
Since templates are strings, the rendered (template output) type is normally string.
But templating provides a few helper functions:

  • fn.asNum Renders output type number (e.g. 12, '12', NaN, 'Infinity', etc.) instead of string.
  • fn.asBool Renders output type boolean (e.g. false, 'false', 0, etc) instead of string.
  • fn.asJs Ensures the config value is whatever was passed into the helper (e.g. object, number, string, etc.) instead of string.
  • fn.fromEnv Allows you to retrieve values from process.env.
  • fn.relTo Retrieve a property relative to the current object OR to a symbol. The input should be specified as a lodash property path. If the argument starts with a '.' it is interpreted as a relative path, otherwise it is interpreted as an absolute path starting at the given symbol (interpreted using Symbol.for).

Example:
const config = {port: '<%= fn.asNum("8888") %>'};
const config = {port: '<%= fn.asJs(8888) %>'}; See evalConfig for more info.

Initializers (aka auto-wiring)

The default base configuration (const) fragments, can contain initializers which are simply factory functions that automatically process configuration data to construct (and typically register) a service with the Dependency Injection Container.
This means that adding services to your application is usually as simple as defining a default base configuration.
You will likely need to provide configuration override data, such as username and/or password (.env, json, etc.), but that's it!
See discoverInitializers and invokeInitializers for more info.

Implementation Notes

lodash.merge is used for configuration merging (along with lodash.set if you are merging at a key prefixed merge point).
Understanding how lodash.merge actually works is important, so please read its documentation.
Once you understand it, you will see a problem that this library uses lodash.mergeWith to address...

  • How do I merge or union two arrays (instead of having the right array simply replace the left).
  • How do I replace an object (as opposed to merging it)?

By default, we use lodash.union to 'merge' arrays which is (IMO) the intuitive behavior. If you really did want to replace the left array with the right, you can us the 'not' feature described next.
To address the second, we implement a "not" ability (aka !, aka bang, aka replacement).
This feature allows you to overwrite a node in the hierarchy instead of merging. Finally, if you want the standard lodash merge behavior for arrays (instead of our default union behavior), you can prefix the key with %.

// Merging in this json5 override will "merge" the values into configuration,
// but completely replace anything at or below 'http.authn' (if it existed).
{
  "http": {
    "!authn": {
      "username": "foo",
      "password": "bar"
    },
    "some-key": "baz",
    "%some-array": ["one","two"]
  }
}