A command line tool for generating Markdown documentation and .env files from pydantic.BaseSettings.
The same way you are able to generate OpenAPI documentation from pydantic.BaseModel
, settings-doc
allows you to generate documentation from pydantic.BaseSettings
.
It is powered by the Jinja2 templating engine and Typer framework. If you don't like the built-in templates, you can easily modify them or write completely custom ones. All attributes of the BaseSettings
models are exposed to the templates.
pip install settings-doc
See settings-doc --help
for all options.
Let's assume the following BaseSettings
in src/settings.py
of a project:
from pydantic import BaseSettings
class AppSettings(BaseSettings):
logging_level: str
You can generate a Markdown documentation into stdout with:
settings-doc generate --class src.settings.AppSettings --output-format markdown
Which will output:
# `LOGGING_LEVEL`
**Required**
Similarly, you can generate a .env
file for local development with:
settings-doc generate --class src.settings.AppSettings --output-format dotenv
Which will output:
LOGGING_LEVEL=
If you have a module with a single settings class or want to load multiple classes at once as a source, you can also use the --module
option. The following example works exactly like the one above and will use the AppSettings
class automatically.
settings-doc generate --module src.settings --output-format dotenv
If multiple classes contain a field with the same name, all instances will appear in the output.
You can add any extra field parameters to the settings. By default, settings-doc
will utilise the default value, whether the parameter is required or optional, description, example value, and list of possible values:
from pydantic import BaseSettings, Field
class AppSettings(BaseSettings):
logging_level: str = Field(
"WARNING",
description="Log level.",
example="`WARNING`",
possible_values=["DEBUG", "INFO", "WARNING", "ERROR", "CRITICAL"],
)
Which will generate the following markdown:
# `LOGGING_LEVEL`
*Optional*, default value: `WARNING`
Log level.
## Examples
`WARNING`
## Possible values
`DEBUG`, `INFO`, `WARNING`, `ERROR`, `CRITICAL`
or .env
file:
# Log level.
# Possible values:
# `DEBUG`, `INFO`, `WARNING`, `ERROR`, `CRITICAL`
# LOGGING_LEVEL=WARNING
You can find even more complex usage of settings-doc
in one of my other projects.
It is possible to generate documentation into an existing document. To fit with the heading structure, you can adjust the heading levels with --heading-offset
. Additionally, you can specify the location where to generate the documentation with two marks set by --between <START MARK> <END MARK>
.
Let's assume your README.md
looks like this:
# My app
This app is distributes as a docker image and configurable via environment variables. See the list below.
# Environment variables
<!-- generated env. vars. start -->
<!-- generated env. vars. end -->
When you run:
settings-doc generate \
--class src.settings.AppSettings \
--output-format markdown \
--update README.md \
--between "<!-- generated env. vars. start -->" "<!-- generated env. vars. end -->" \
--heading-offset 1
the updated README.md
will get only the specified location overwritten:
# My app
This app is distributes as a docker image and configurable via environment variables. See the list below.
# Environment variables
<!-- generated env. vars. start -->
## `LOGGING_LEVEL`
*Optional*, default value: `WARNING`
Log level.
### Examples
`WARNING`
### Possible values
`DEBUG`, `INFO`, `WARNING`, `ERROR`, `CRITICAL`
<!-- generated env. vars. end -->
settings-doc
comes with a few built-in templates. You can override them or write completely new ones.
To just modify the existing ones:
- Copy the built-in templates into a new directory:
mkdir custom_templates settings-doc templates --copy-to custom_templates
- Modify the template copies in
custom_templates
to suit your needs. You can keep only the modified ones assettings-doc
always falls back to the built-in ones. - Use them when generating the documentation:
settings-doc generate \ --class src.settings.AppSettings \ --output-format dotenv \ --templates custom_templates
To create new ones, create a folder and then a Jinja2 template with a file names <OUTPUT_FORMAT>.jinja
. Then simply reference both in the command line options:
mkdir custom_templates
echo "{{ field.title }}" > custom_templates/only_titles.jinja
settings-doc generate \
--class src.settings.AppSettings \
--output-format only_titles \
--templates custom_templates
By default, there are several variables available in all templates:
heading_offset
- the value of the--heading-offset
option. Defaults to0
.fields
the value ofBaseSettings.__fields__.values()
. In other words, a list of individual settings fields. Each field is then an instance ofModelField
. If multiple classes are used to generate the documentation,ModelField
s from all classes are collected intofields
. The information about original classes is not retained.classes
- a dictionary, where keys are theBaseSettings
sub-classes and values are lists of extractedModelField
s of that class. This can be used for example to split individual classes into sections.
Extra parameters unknown to pydantic are stored in field.field_info.extra
. Examples of such parameters are example
and possible_values
.
Even the bare ModelField
without any extra parameters has a large number of attributes. To see them all, run this settings-doc
with --format debug
.
To access information from the BaseSettings
classes, use the classes
variable in the templates:
{% for cls, fields in classes.items() %}
# {{ cls.__name__ }}
{% endfor %}
- Output into several formats with
--output-format
: markdown, dotenv - Writes into stdout by default, which allows piping to other tools for further processing.
- Able to update specified file with
--update
, optionally between two given string marks with--between
. Useful for keeping documentation up to date. - Additional templates and default template overrides via
--templates
.
- Allows setting a
--heading-offset
to fit into existing documentation. - Intelligently formats example values as:
- Single line if all values fit within 75 characters.
- List of values if all values won't fit on a single line.
- List of
<VALUE>: <DESCRIPTION>
if example values are tuples of 1-2 items.
- Leaves environment variables commented if they have a default value as the app doesn't require them.