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ConfigReader::Simple(3) |
User Contributed Perl Documentation |
ConfigReader::Simple(3) |
ConfigReader::Simple - A simple line-oriented configuration file parser
use ConfigReader::Simple;
# parse one file
$config = ConfigReader::Simple->new("configrc", [qw(Foo Bar Baz Quux)]);
# parse multiple files, in order
$config = ConfigReader::Simple->new_multiple(
Files => [ "global", "configrc" ],
Keys => [qw(Foo Bar Baz Quux)]
);
my @directives = $config->directives;
$config->get( "Foo" );
if( $config->exists( "Bar" ) ) {
print "Bar was in the config file\n";
}
# copy an object to play with it separately
my $clone = $config->clone;
# only affects clone
$clone->set( "Foo", "Buster" );
# save the config to a single file
$clone->save( "configrc" )
# save the config to a single file, but only with
# certain directives
$clone->save( "configrc" => [qw(Foo Bar)] )
# save to multiple configuration files
$clone->save(
"configrc" => [qw(Foo Bar)],
"global" => [qw(Baz Quux)],
);
"ConfigReader::Simple" reads and parses simple
configuration files. It is designed to be smaller and simpler than the
"ConfigReader" module and is more suited to
simple configuration files.
The configuration file uses a line-oriented format, meaning that the directives
do not have containers. The values can be split across lines with a
continuation character, but for the most part everything ends up on the same
line.
The first group of non-whitespace characters is the
"directive", or the name of the configuration item. The linear
whitespace after that separates the directive from the "value",
which is the rest of the line, including any other whitespace.
In this example, the directive is "Camel" and the value
is "Dromedary".
Camel Dromedary
Optionally, you can use a equal sign to separate the directive
from the value.
Camel=Dromedary
The equal sign can also have whitespace on either or both
sides.
Camel = Dromedary
Camel= Dromedary
In the next example, the directive is "Llama" and the
value is "Live from Peru"
Llama Live from Peru
This is the same, to
"ConfigReader::Simple", as the following
which has more whitespace between the directive and the value.
Llama Live from Peru
You can also enclose the value in single or double quotes.
Llama "Live from Peru"
Llama 'Live from Peru'
Llama='Live from Peru'
In some cases you may want to split the logical line across two
lines, perhaps to see it better in a terminal window. For that, use a \
followed only by whitespace. To split the last entry across two lines, we
use the \ at the end of the line. These three entries are the same:
Llama Live from Peru
Llama Live from \
Peru
Llama Live \
from \
Peru
If a line is only whitespace, or the first non-whitespace
character is a #, the Perl comment character,
"ConfigReader::Simple" ignores the line
unless it is the continuation of the previous line.
- new ( FILENAME, DIRECTIVES )
- Creates a "ConfigReader::Simple" object.
"FILENAME" tells the
instance where to look for the configuration file. If FILENAME cannot be
found, an error message for the file is added to the
%ERROR hash with the FILENAME as a key, and a
combined error message appears in $ERROR.
"DIRECTIVES" is an optional
argument and is a reference to an array. Each member of the array should
contain one valid directive. A directive is the name of a key that must
occur in the configuration file. If it is not found, the method croaks.
The directive list may contain all the keys in the configuration file, a
sub set of keys or no keys at all.
The "new" method is really a
wrapper around "new_multiple".
- new_multiple( Files => ARRAY_REF, Keys => ARRAY_REF )
- Create a configuration object from several files listed in the anonymous
array value for the "Files" key. The
module reads the files in the same order that they appear in the array.
Later values override earlier ones. This allows you to specify global
configurations which you may override with more specific ones:
ConfigReader::Simple->new_multiple(
Files => [ qw( /etc/config /usr/local/etc/config /home/usr/config ) ],
);
This function croaks if the values are not array
references.
If this method cannot read a file, an error message for that
file is added to the %ERROR hash with the
filename as a key, and a combined error message appears in
$ERROR. Processing the list of filenames
continues if a file cannot be found, which may produced undesired
results. You can disable this feature by setting the
$ConfigReader::Simple::Die variable to a true
value.
- new_string( Strings => ARRAY_REF, Keys => ARRAY_REF )
- Create a configuration object from several strings listed in the anonymous
array value for the "Strings" key. The
module reads the strings in the same order that they appear in the array.
Later values override earlier ones. This allows you to specify global
configurations which you may override with more specific ones:
ConfigReader::Simple->new_strings(
Strings => [ \$global, \$local ],
);
This function croaks if the values are not array
references.
- add_config_file( FILENAME )
- Parse another configuration file and add its directives to the current
configuration object. Any directives already defined will be replaced with
the new values found in FILENAME.
- files
- Return the list of configuration files associated with this object. The
order of the return values is the order of parsing, so the first value is
the first file parsed (and subsequent files may mask it).
- new_from_prototype(
- Create a clone object. This is the same thing as calling
clone().
- parse( FILENAME )
- This does the actual work.
This is automatically called from
"new()", although you can reparse the
configuration file by calling
"parse()" again.
- parse_string( SCALAR_REF )
- Parses the string inside the reference SCALAR_REF just as if it found it
in a file.
- get( DIRECTIVE )
- Returns the parsed value for that directive. For directives which did not
have a value in the configuration file,
"get" returns the empty string.
- set( DIRECTIVE, VALUE )
- Sets the value for DIRECTIVE to VALUE. The DIRECTIVE need not already
exist. This overwrites previous values.
The VALUE must be a simple scalar. It cannot be a reference.
If the VALUE is a reference, the function prints a warning and returns
false.
- unset( DIRECTIVE )
- Remove the value from DIRECTIVE, which will still exist. It's value is
undef. If the DIRECTIVE does not exist, it will not be created. Returns
FALSE if the DIRECTIVE does not already exist, and TRUE otherwise.
- remove( DIRECTIVE )
- Remove the DIRECTIVE. Returns TRUE is DIRECTIVE existed and FALSE
otherwise.
- directives()
- Returns a list of all of the directive names found in the configuration
file. The keys are sorted ASCII-betically.
- exists( DIRECTIVE )
- Return TRUE if the specified directive exists, and FALSE otherwise.
- clone
- Return a copy of the object. The new object is distinct from the original
so you can make changes to the new object without affecting the old
one.
- save( FILENAME [ => ARRAY_REF [, FILENAME => ARRAY_REF ] ] );
- The save method works in three ways, depending on the argument list.
With a single argument, the save function attempts to save all
of the field-value pairs of the object to the file named by the
argument.
$clone->save( "configrc" );
With two arguments, the method expects the second argument to
be an array reference which lists the directives to save in the
file.
$clone->save( "configrc" => [qw(Foo Bar)] );
With more than two arguments, the method expects filename-list
pairs. The method will save in each file the values in their respective
array references.
$clone->save(
"configrc" => [qw(Foo Bar)],
"global" => [qw(Baz Quux)],
);
In the last two cases, the method checks that the value for
each pair is an array reference before it affects any files. It croaks
if any value is not an array reference.
Once the method starts writing files, it tries to write all of
the specified files. Even if it has a problem with one of them, it
continues onto the next one. The method does not necessarily write the
files in the order they appear in the argument list, and it does not
check if you specified the same file twice.
- $Die - DEPRECATED
- If set to a true value, all errors are fatal.
- $ERROR
- The last error message.
- %ERROR
- The error messages from unreadable files. The key is the filename and the
value is the error message.
- $Warn - DEPRECATED
- If set to a true value, methods may output warnings.
Directives are case-sensitive.
If a directive is repeated, the first instance will silently be
ignored.
Bek Oberin "<gossamer@tertius.net.au>"
wote the original module
Kim Ryan
"<kimaryan@ozemail.com.au>" adapted
the module to make declaring keys optional. Thanks Kim.
Alan W. Jurgensen
"<jurgensen@berbee.com>" added a
change to allow the NAME=VALUE format in the configuration file.
Andy Lester,
"<petdance@cpan.org>", for
maintaining the module while brian was on active duty.
Adam Trickett,
"<atrickett@cpan.org>", added
multi-line support. You might want to see his
"Config::Trivial" module.
Greg White has been a very patient user and tester.
The source is in Github:
http://github.com/briandfoy/ConfigReader-Simple/
brian d foy, "<bdfoy@cpan.org>"
Copyright © 2002-2022, brian d foy <bdfoy@cpan.org>. All rights
reserved.
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
modify it under the Artistic License 2.0.
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