Package conf provides support for using environmental variables and command line arguments for configuration.
It is compatible with the GNU extensions to the POSIX recommendations for command-line options. See http://www.gnu.org/software/libc/manual/html_node/Argument-Syntax.html
There are no hard bindings for this package. This package takes a struct value and parses it for both the environment and flags. It supports several tags to customize the flag options.
default - Provides the default value for the help
env - Allows to set a value using env variable name.
flag - Allows for overriding the default flag name.
short - Denotes a shorthand option for the flag.
noprint - Denotes to not include the field in any display string.
required - Denotes a value must be provided.
help - Provides a description for the help.
The field name and any parent struct name will be used for the long form of the command name unless the name is overridden.
As an example, this config struct:
type ip struct {
Name string `conf:"default:localhost,env:IP_NAME"`
IP string `conf:"default:127.0.0.0,IP_IP"`
Endpoints []string `conf:"default:127.0.0.1:200;127.0.0.1:829"`
}
type Embed struct {
Name string `conf:"default:bill"`
Duration time.Duration `conf:"default:1s,flag:e-dur,short:d"`
}
type config struct {
AnInt int `conf:"default:9"`
AString string `conf:"default:B,short:s"`
Bool bool
Skip string `conf:"-"`
IP ip
Embed
}
Would produce the following usage output:
Usage: conf.test [options] [arguments]
OPTIONS
--an-int <int> (default: 9)
--a-string/-s <string> (default: B)
--bool <bool>
--ip-name/$TEST_IP_NAME <string> (default: localhost)
--ip-ip/$TEST_IP_IP <string> (default: 127.0.0.0)
--ip-endpoints <string>,[string...] (default: 127.0.0.1:200;127.0.0.1:829)
--name <string> (default: bill)
--e-dur/-d <duration> (default: 1s)
--help/-h
display this help message
The API is a single call to Parse
// Parse(args []string, namespace string, cfgStruct interface{}, sources ...Sourcer) error
if err := conf.Parse(os.Args, "TEST", &cfg); err != nil {
log.Fatalf("main : Parsing Config : %v", err)
}
Additionally, if the config struct has a field of the slice type conf.Args
then it will be populated with any remaining arguments from the command line
after flags have been processed.
For example a program with a config struct like this:
var cfg struct {
Port int
Args conf.Args
}
If that program is executed from the command line like this:
$ my-program --port=9000 serve http
Then the cfg.Args
field will contain the string values ["serve", "http"]
.
The Args
type has a method Num
for convenient access to these arguments
such as this:
arg0 := cfg.Args.Num(0) // "serve"
arg1 := cfg.Args.Num(1) // "http"
arg2 := cfg.Args.Num(2) // "" empty string: not enough arguments