Awesome
HOCON (Human-Optimized Config Object Notation)
C# implementation of Typesafe's HOCON (Human-Optimized Object Configuration Notation)
Installation
To install HOCON via NuGet:
PS> Install-Package Hocon.Configuration
Nightly Build Access
If you need access to nightly HOCON builds, you can get them via the Akka.NET nightly build NuGet feed.
Spec
This is an informal spec, but hopefully it's clear.
Goals / Background
The primary goal is: keep the semantics (tree structure; set of types; encoding/escaping) from JSON (JavaScript Object Notation), but make it more convenient as a human-editable config file format.
The following features are desirable, to support human usage:
- less noisy / less pedantic syntax
- ability to refer to another part of the configuration (set a value to another value)
- import/include another configuration file into the current file
- a mapping to a flat properties list such as Java's system properties
- ability to get values from environment variables
- ability to write comments
Implementation-wise, the format should have these properties:
- a JSON superset, that is, all valid JSON should be valid and should result in the same in-memory data that a JSON parser would have produced.
- be deterministic; the format is flexible, but it is not heuristic. It should be clear what's invalid and invalid files should generate errors.
- require minimal look-ahead; should be able to tokenize the file by looking at only the next three characters. (right now, the only reason to look at three is to find "//" comments; otherwise you can parse looking at two.)
HOCON is significantly harder to specify and to parse than JSON. Think of it as moving the work from the person maintaining the config file to the computer program.
Default HOCON Configuration Sources
By default the HOCON library will look for HOCON configurations in the following locations whenever you call the Hocon.Configuration.ConfigurationFactory.Default()
method:
- [.NET Core / .NET Framework] An "app.conf" or an "app.hocon" file in the current working directory of the executable when it loads;
- [.NET Framework] - the
<hocon>
ConfigurationSection
insideApp.config
orWeb.config
; or - [.NET Framework] - and a legacy option, to load the old
<akka>
HOCON section for backwards compatibility purposes with all users who have been using HOCON with Akka.NET.
Definitions
-
a key is a string JSON would have to the left of
:
and a value is anything JSON would have to the right of:
. i.e. the two halves of an object field. -
a value is any "value" as defined in the JSON spec, plus unquoted strings and substitutions as defined in this spec.
-
a simple value is any value excluding an object or array value.
-
a field is a key, any separator such as ':', and a value.
-
references to a file ("the file being parsed") can be understood to mean any byte stream being parsed, not just literal files in a filesystem.
Syntax
Much of this is defined with reference to JSON; you can find the JSON spec at http://json.org/ of course.
Unchanged from JSON
- files must be valid UTF-8
- quoted strings are in the same format as JSON strings
- values have possible types: string, number, object, array, boolean, null
- allowed number formats matches JSON; as in JSON, some possible
floating-point values are not represented, such as
NaN
Comments
Anything between //
or #
and the next newline is considered a comment
and ignored, unless the //
or #
is inside a quoted string.
Omit root braces
JSON documents must have an array or object at the root. Empty files are invalid documents, as are files containing only a non-array non-object value such as a string.
In HOCON, if the file does not begin with a square bracket or
curly brace, it is parsed as if it were enclosed with {}
curly
braces.
A HOCON file is invalid if it omits the opening {
but still has
a closing }
; the curly braces must be balanced.
Key-value separator
The =
character can be used anywhere JSON allows :
, i.e. to
separate keys from values.
If a key is followed by {
, the :
or =
may be omitted. So
"foo" {}
means "foo" : {}
Commas
Values in arrays, and fields in objects, need not have a comma
between them as long as they have at least one ASCII newline
(\n
, decimal value 10) between them.
The last element in an array or last field in an object may be followed by a single comma. This extra comma is ignored.
[1,2,3,]
and[1,2,3]
are the same array.[1\n2\n3]
and[1,2,3]
are the same array.[1,2,3,,]
is invalid because it has two trailing commas.[,1,2,3]
is invalid because it has an initial comma.[1,,2,3]
is invalid because it has two commas in a row.- these same comma rules apply to fields in objects.
Whitespace
The JSON spec simply says "whitespace"; in HOCON whitespace is defined as follows:
- any Unicode space separator (Zs category), line separator (Zl category), or paragraph separator (Zp category), including nonbreaking spaces (such as 0x00A0, 0x2007, and 0x202F). The BOM (0xFEFF) must also be treated as whitespace.
- tab (
\t
0x0009), newline ('\n' 0x000A), vertical tab ('\v' 0x000B), form feed (
\f' 0x000C), carriage return ('\r' 0x000D), file separator (0x001C), group separator (0x001D), record separator (0x001E), unit separator (0x001F).
In Java, the isWhitespace()
method covers these characters with
the exception of nonbreaking spaces and the BOM.
While all Unicode separators should be treated as whitespace, in this spec "newline" refers only and specifically to ASCII newline 0x000A.
Duplicate keys and object merging
The JSON spec does not clarify how duplicate keys in the same object should be handled. In HOCON, duplicate keys that appear later override those that appear earlier, unless both values are objects. If both values are objects, then the objects are merged.
Note: this would make HOCON a non-superset of JSON if you assume that JSON requires duplicate keys to have a behavior. The assumption here is that duplicate keys are invalid JSON.
To merge objects:
- add fields present in only one of the two objects to the merged object.
- for non-object-valued fields present in both objects, the field found in the second object must be used.
- for object-valued fields present in both objects, the object values should be recursively merged according to these same rules.
Object merge can be prevented by setting the key to another value first. This is because merging is always done two values at a time; if you set a key to an object, a non-object, then an object, first the non-object falls back to the object (non-object always wins), and then the object falls back to the non-object (no merging, object is the new value). So the two objects never see each other.
These two are equivalent:
{
"foo" : { "a" : 42 },
"foo" : { "b" : 43 }
}
{
"foo" : { "a" : 42, "b" : 43 }
}
And these two are equivalent:
{
"foo" : { "a" : 42 },
"foo" : null,
"foo" : { "b" : 43 }
}
{
"foo" : { "b" : 43 }
}
The intermediate setting of "foo"
to null
prevents the object merge.
Unquoted strings
A sequence of characters outside of a quoted string is a string value if:
- it does not contain "forbidden characters": "$", '"', '{', '}', '[', ']', ':', '=', ',', '+', '#', '`', '^', '?', '!', '@', '*', '&', '' (backslash), or whitespace.
- it does not contain the two-character string "//" (which starts a comment)
- its initial characters do not parse as
true
,false
,null
, or a number.
Unquoted strings are used literally, they do not support any kind of escaping. Quoted strings may always be used as an alternative when you need to write a character that is not permitted in an unquoted string.
truefoo
parses as the boolean token true
followed by the
unquoted string foo
. However, footrue
parses as the unquoted
string footrue
. Similarly, 10.0bar
is the number 10.0
then
the unquoted string bar
but bar10.0
is the unquoted string
bar10.0
. (In practice, this distinction doesn't matter much
because of value concatenation; see later section.)
In general, once an unquoted string begins, it continues until a forbidden character or the two-character string "//" is encountered. Embedded (non-initial) booleans, nulls, and numbers are not recognized as such, they are part of the string.
An unquoted string may not begin with the digits 0-9 or with a
hyphen (-
, 0x002D) because those are valid characters to begin a
JSON number. The initial number character, plus any valid-in-JSON
number characters that follow it, must be parsed as a number
value. Again, these characters are not special inside an
unquoted string; they only trigger number parsing if they appear
initially.
Note that quoted JSON strings may not contain control characters (control characters include some whitespace characters, such as newline). This rule is from the JSON spec. However, unquoted strings have no restriction on control characters, other than the ones listed as "forbidden characters" above.
Some of the "forbidden characters" are forbidden because they already have meaning in JSON or HOCON, others are essentially reserved keywords to allow future extensions to this spec.
Multi-line strings
Multi-line strings are similar to Python or Scala, using triple
quotes. If the three-character sequence """
appears, then all
Unicode characters until a closing """
sequence are used
unmodified to create a string value. Newlines and whitespace
receive no special treatment. Unlike Scala, and unlike JSON quoted
strings, Unicode escapes are not interpreted in triple-quoted
strings.
In Python, """foo""""
is a syntax error (a triple-quoted string
followed by a dangling unbalanced quote). In Scala, it is a
four-character string foo"
. HOCON works like Scala; any sequence
of at least three quotes ends the multi-line string, and any
"extra" quotes are part of the string.
Value concatenation
The value of an object field or array element may consist of multiple values which are combined. There are three kinds of value concatenation:
- if all the values are simple values (neither objects nor arrays), they are concatenated into a string.
- if all the values are arrays, they are concatenated into one array.
- if all the values are objects, they are merged (as with duplicate keys) into one object.
String value concatenation is allowed in field keys, in addition to field values and array elements. Objects and arrays do not make sense as field keys.
Note: Akka 2.0 (and thus Play 2.0) contains an embedded implementation of the config lib which does not support array and object value concatenation; it only supports string value concatenation.
String value concatenation
String value concatenation is the trick that makes unquoted
strings work; it also supports substitutions (${foo}
syntax) in
strings.
Only simple values participate in string value concatenation. Recall that a simple value is any value other than arrays and objects.
As long as simple values are separated only by non-newline whitespace, the whitespace between them is preserved and the values, along with the whitespace, are concatenated into a string.
String value concatenations never span a newline, or a character that is not part of a simple value.
A string value concatenation may appear in any place that a string may appear, including object keys, object values, and array elements.
Whenever a value would appear in JSON, a HOCON parser instead collects multiple values (including the whitespace between them) and concatenates those values into a string.
Whitespace before the first and after the last simple value must be discarded. Only whitespace between simple values must be preserved.
So for example foo bar baz
parses as three unquoted strings,
and the three are value-concatenated into one string. The inner
whitespace is kept and the leading and trailing whitespace is
trimmed. The equivalent string, written in quoted form, would be
"foo bar baz"
.
Value concatenating foo bar
(two unquoted strings with
whitespace) and quoted string "foo bar"
would result in the same
in-memory representation, seven characters.
For purposes of string value concatenation, non-string values are converted to strings as follows (strings shown as quoted strings):
true
andfalse
become the strings"true"
and"false"
.null
becomes the string"null"
.- quoted and unquoted strings are themselves.
- numbers should be kept as they were originally written in the
file. For example, if you parse
1e5
then you might render it alternatively as1E5
with capitalE
, or just100000
. For purposes of value concatenation, it should be rendered as it was written in the file. - a substitution is replaced with its value which is then converted to a string as above.
- it is invalid for arrays or objects to appear in a string value concatenation.
A single value is never converted to a string. That is, it would
be wrong to value concatenate true
by itself; that should be
parsed as a boolean-typed value. Only true foo
(true
with
another simple value on the same line) should be parsed as a value
concatenation and converted to a string.
Array and object concatenation
Arrays can be concatenated with arrays, and objects with objects, but it is an error if they are mixed.
For purposes of concatenation, "array" also means "substitution that resolves to an array" and "object" also means "substitution that resolves to an object."
Within an field value or array element, if only non-newline whitespace separates the end of a first array or object or substitution from the start of a second array or object or substitution, the two values are concatenated. Newlines may occur within the array or object, but not between them. Newlines between prevent concatenation.
For objects, "concatenation" means "merging", so the second object overrides the first.
Arrays and objects cannot be field keys, whether concatenation is involved or not.
Here are several ways to define a
to the same object value:
// one object
a : { b : 1, c : 2 }
// two objects that are merged via concatenation rules
a : { b : 1 } { c : 2 }
// two fields that are merged
a : { b : 1 }
a : { c : 2 }
Here are several ways to define a
to the same array value:
// one array
a : [ 1, 2, 3, 4 ]
// two arrays that are concatenated
a : [ 1, 2 ] [ 3, 4 ]
// a later definition referring to an earlier
// (see "self-referential substitutions" below)
a : [ 1, 2 ]
a : ${a} [ 3, 4 ]
A common use of object concatenation is "inheritance":
data-center-generic = { cluster-size = 6 }
data-center-east = ${data-center-generic} { name = "east" }
A common use of array concatenation is to add to paths:
path = [ /bin ]
path = ${path} [ /usr/bin ]
Note: Arrays without commas or newlines
Arrays allow you to use newlines instead of commas, but not whitespace instead of commas. Non-newline whitespace will produce concatenation rather than separate elements.
// this is an array with one element, the string "1 2 3 4"
[ 1 2 3 4 ]
// this is an array of four integers
[ 1
2
3
4 ]
// an array of one element, the array [ 1, 2, 3, 4 ]
[ [ 1, 2 ] [ 3, 4 ] ]
// an array of two arrays
[ [ 1, 2 ]
[ 3, 4 ] ]
If this gets confusing, just use commas. The concatenation behavior is useful rather than surprising in cases like:
[ This is an unquoted string my name is ${name}, Hello ${world} ]
[ ${a} ${b}, ${x} ${y} ]
Non-newline whitespace is never an element or field separator.
Path expressions
Path expressions are used to write out a path through the object
graph. They appear in two places; in substitutions, like
${foo.bar}
, and as the keys in objects like { foo.bar : 42 }
.
Path expressions are syntactically identical to a value concatenation, except that they may not contain substitutions. This means that you can't nest substitutions inside other substitutions, and you can't have substitutions in keys.
When concatenating the path expression, any .
characters outside
quoted strings are understood as path separators, while inside
quoted strings .
has no special meaning. So
foo.bar."hello.world"
would be a path with three elements,
looking up key foo
, key bar
, then key hello.world
.
The main tricky point is that .
characters in numbers do count
as a path separator. When dealing with a number as part of a path
expression, it's essential to retain the original string
representation of the number as it appeared in the file (rather
than converting it back to a string with a generic
number-to-string library function).
10.0foo
is a number then unquoted stringfoo
and should be the two-element path with10
and0foo
as the elements.foo10.0
is an unquoted string with a.
in it, so this would be a two-element path withfoo10
and0
as the elements.foo"10.0"
is an unquoted then a quoted string which are concatenated, so this is a single-element path.1.2.3
is the three-element path with1
,2
,3
Unlike value concatenations, path expressions are always converted to a string, even if they are just a single value.
If you have an array or element value consisting of the single
value true
, it's a value concatenation and retains its character
as a boolean value.
If you have a path expression (in a key or substitution) then it
must always be converted to a string, so true
becomes the string
that would be quoted as "true"
.
If a path element is an empty string, it must always be quoted.
That is, a."".b
is a valid path with three elements, and the
middle element is an empty string. But a..b
is invalid and
should generate an error. Following the same rule, a path that
starts or ends with a .
is invalid and should generate an error.
Paths as keys
If a key is a path expression with multiple elements, it is expanded to create an object for each path element other than the last. The last path element, combined with the value, becomes a field in the most-nested object.
In other words:
foo.bar : 42
is equivalent to:
foo { bar : 42 }
and:
foo.bar.baz : 42
is equivalent to:
foo { bar { baz : 42 } }
and so on. These values are merged in the usual way; which implies that:
a.x : 42, a.y : 43
is equivalent to:
a { x : 42, y : 43 }
Because path expressions work like value concatenations, you can have whitespace in keys:
a b c : 42
is equivalent to:
"a b c" : 42
Because path expressions are always converted to strings, even single values that would normally have another type become strings.
true : 42
is"true" : 42
3 : 42
is"3" : 42
3.14 : 42
is"3" : { "14" : 42 }
As a special rule, the unquoted string include
may not begin a
path expression in a key, because it has a special interpretation
(see below).
Substitutions
Substitutions are a way of referring to other parts of the configuration tree.
The syntax is ${pathexpression}
or ${?pathexpression}
where
the pathexpression
is a path expression as described above. This
path expression has the same syntax that you could use for an
object key.
The ?
in ${?pathexpression}
must not have whitespace before
it; the three characters ${?
must be exactly like that, grouped
together.
For substitutions which are not found in the configuration tree, implementations may try to resolve them by looking at system environment variables or other external sources of configuration. (More detail on environment variables in a later section.)
Substitutions are not parsed inside quoted strings. To get a string containing a substitution, you must use value concatenation with the substitution in the unquoted portion:
key : ${animal.favorite} is my favorite animal
Or you could quote the non-substitution portion:
key : ${animal.favorite}" is my favorite animal"
Substitutions are resolved by looking up the path in the configuration. The path begins with the root configuration object, i.e. it is "absolute" rather than "relative."
Substitution processing is performed as the last parsing step, so a substitution can look forward in the configuration. If a configuration consists of multiple files, it may even end up retrieving a value from another file.
If a key has been specified more than once, the substitution will always evaluate to its latest-assigned value (that is, it will evaluate to the merged object, or the last non-object value that was set, in the entire document being parsed including all included files).
If a configuration sets a value to null
then it should not be
looked up in the external source. Unfortunately there is no way to
"undo" this in a later configuration file; if you have { "HOME" : null }
in a root object, then ${HOME}
will never look at the
environment variable. There is no equivalent to JavaScript's
delete
operation in other words.
If a substitution does not match any value present in the
configuration and is not resolved by an external source, then it
is undefined. An undefined substitution with the ${foo}
syntax
is invalid and should generate an error.
If a substitution with the ${?foo}
syntax is undefined:
- if it is the value of an object field then the field should not be created. If the field would have overridden a previously-set value for the same field, then the previous value remains.
- if it is an array element then the element should not be added.
- if it is part of a value concatenation with another string then it should become an empty string; if part of a value concatenation with an object or array it should become an empty object or array.
foo : ${?bar}
would avoid creating fieldfoo
ifbar
is undefined.foo : ${?bar}${?baz}
would also avoid creating the field if bothbar
andbaz
are undefined.
Substitutions are only allowed in field values and array elements (value concatenations), they are not allowed in keys or nested inside other substitutions (path expressions).
A substitution is replaced with any value type (number, object, string, array, true, false, null). If the substitution is the only part of a value, then the type is preserved. Otherwise, it is value-concatenated to form a string.
Self-Referential Substitutions
The big picture:
- substitutions normally "look forward" and use the final value for their path expression
- when this would create a cycle, when possible the cycle must be broken by looking backward only (thus removing one of the substitutions that's a link in the cycle)
The idea is to allow a new value for a field to be based on the older value:
path : "a:b:c"
path : ${path}":d"
A self-referential field is one which:
- has a substitution, or value concatenation containing a substitution, as its value
- where this field value refers to the field being defined, either directly or by referring to one or more other substitutions which eventually point back to the field being defined
Examples of self-referential fields:
a : ${a}
a : ${a}bc
path : ${path} [ /usr/bin ]
Note that an object or array with a substitution inside it is not considered self-referential for this purpose. The self-referential rules do not apply to:
a : { b : ${a} }
a : [${a}]
These cases are unbreakable cycles that generate an error. (If
"looking backward" were allowed for these, something like
a={ x : 42, y : ${a.x} }
would look backward for a
nonexistent a
while resolving ${a.x}
.)
A possible implementation is:
- substitutions are resolved by looking up paths in a document. Cycles only arise when the lookup document is an ancestor node of the substitution node.
- while resolving a potentially self-referential field (any substitution or value concatenation that contains a substitution), remove that field and all fields which override it from the lookup document.
The simplest form of this implementation will report a circular
reference as missing; in a : ${a}
you would remove a : ${a}
while resolving ${a}
, leaving an empty document to look up
${a}
in. You can give a more helpful error message if, rather
than simply removing the field, you leave a marker value
describing the cycle. Then generate an error if you return to that
marker value during resolution.
Cycles should be treated the same as a missing value when
resolving an optional substitution (i.e. the ${?foo}
syntax).
If ${?foo}
refers to itself then it's as if it referred to a
nonexistent value.
The +=
field separator
Fields may have +=
as a separator rather than :
or =
. A
field with +=
transforms into a self-referential array
concatenation, like this:
a += b
becomes:
a = ${?a} [b]
+=
appends an element to a previous array. If the previous value
was not an array, an error will result just as it would in the
long form a = ${?a} [b]
. Note that the previous value is
optional (${?a}
not ${a}
), which allows a += b
to be the
first mention of a
in the file (it is not necessary to have a = []
first).
Note: Akka 2.0 (and thus Play 2.0) contains an embedded
implementation of the config lib which does not support +=
.
Examples of Self-Referential Substitutions
In isolation (with no merges involved), a self-referential field is an error because the substitution cannot be resolved:
foo : ${foo} // an error
When foo : ${foo}
is merged with an earlier value for foo
,
however, the substitution can be resolved to that earlier value.
When merging two objects, the self-reference in the overriding
field refers to the overridden field. Say you have:
foo : { a : 1 }
and then:
foo : ${foo}
Then ${foo}
resolves to { a : 1 }
, the value of the overridden
field.
It would be an error if these two fields were reversed, so first:
foo : ${foo}
and then second:
foo : { a : 1 }
Here the ${foo}
self-reference comes before foo
has a value,
so it is undefined, exactly as if the substitution referenced a
path not found in the document.
Because foo : ${foo}
conceptually looks to previous definitions
of foo
for a value, the error should be treated as "undefined"
rather than "intractable cycle"; as a result, the optional
substitution syntax ${?foo}
does not create a cycle:
foo : ${?foo} // this field just disappears silently
If a substitution is hidden by a value that could not be merged with it (by a non-object value) then it is never evaluated and no error will be reported. So for example:
foo : ${does-not-exist}
foo : 42
In this case, no matter what ${does-not-exist}
resolves to, we
know foo
is 42
, so ${does-not-exist}
is never evaluated and
there is no error. The same is true for cycles like foo : ${foo}, foo : 42
, where the initial self-reference must simply be ignored.
A self-reference resolves to the value "below" even if it's part of a path expression. So for example:
foo : { a : { c : 1 } }
foo : ${foo.a}
foo : { a : 2 }
Here, ${foo.a}
would refer to { c : 1 }
rather than 2
and so
the final merge would be { a : 2, c : 1 }
.
Recall that for a field to be self-referential, it must have a substitution or value concatenation as its value. If a field has an object or array value, for example, then it is not self-referential even if there is a reference to the field itself inside that object or array.
Implementations must be careful to allow objects to refer to paths within themselves, for example:
bar : { foo : 42,
baz : ${bar.foo}
}
Here, if an implementation resolved all substitutions in bar
as
part of resolving the substitution ${bar.foo}
, there would be a
cycle. The implementation must only resolve the foo
field in
bar
, rather than recursing the entire bar
object.
Because there is no inherent cycle here, the substitution must
"look forward" (including looking at the field currently being
defined). To make this clearer, bar.baz
would be 43
in:
bar : { foo : 42,
baz : ${bar.foo}
}
bar : { foo : 43 }
Mutually-referring objects should also work, and are not self-referential (so they look forward):
// bar.a should end up as 4
bar : { a : ${foo.d}, b : 1 }
bar.b = 3
// foo.c should end up as 3
foo : { c : ${bar.b}, d : 2 }
foo.d = 4
Another tricky case is an optional self-reference in a value
concatenation, in this example a
should be foo
not foofoo
because the self reference has to "look back" to an undefined a
:
a = ${?a}foo
In general, in resolving a substitution the implementation must:
- lazy-evaluate the substitution target so there's no "circularity by side effect"
- "look forward" and use the final value for the path specified in the substitution
- if a cycle results, the implementation must "look back" in the merge stack to try to resolve the cycle
- if neither lazy evaluation nor "looking only backward" resolves
a cycle, the substitution is missing which is an error unless
the
${?foo}
optional-substitution syntax was used.
For example, this is not possible to resolve:
bar : ${foo}
foo : ${bar}
A multi-step loop like this should also be detected as invalid:
a : ${b}
b : ${c}
c : ${a}
Some cases have undefined behavior because the behavior depends on the order in which two fields are resolved, and that order is not defined. For example:
a : 1
b : 2
a : ${b}
b : ${a}
Implementations are allowed to handle this by setting both a
and
b
to 1, setting both to 2
, or generating an error. Ideally
this situation would generate an error, but that may be difficult
to implement. Making the behavior defined would require always
working with ordered maps rather than unordered maps, which is too
constraining. Implementations only have to track order for
duplicate instances of the same field (i.e. merges).
MIME Type
Use "application/hocon" for Content-Type.
API Recommendations
Implementations of HOCON ideally follow certain conventions and work in a predictable way.
Automatic type conversions
If an application asks for a value with a particular type, the implementation should attempt to convert types as follows:
- number to string: convert the number into a string representation that would be a valid number in JSON.
- boolean to string: should become the string "true" or "false"
- string to number: parse the number with the JSON rules
- string to boolean: the strings "true", "yes", "on", "false", "no", "off" should be converted to boolean values. It's tempting to support a long list of other ways to write a boolean, but for interoperability and keeping it simple, it's recommended to stick to these six.
- string to null: the string
"null"
should be converted to a null value if the application specifically asks for a null value, though there's probably no reason an app would do this. - numerically-indexed object to array: see the section "Conversion of numerically-indexed objects to arrays" above
The following type conversions should NOT be performed:
- null to anything: If the application asks for a specific type and finds null instead, that should usually result in an error.
- object to anything
- array to anything
- anything to object
- anything to array, with the exception of numerically-indexed object to array
Converting objects and arrays to and from strings is tempting, but in practical situations raises thorny issues of quoting and double-escaping.
Units format
Implementations may wish to support interpreting a value with some
family of units, such as time units or memory size units: 10ms
or 512K
. HOCON does not have an extensible type system and there
is no way to add a "duration" type. However, for example, if an
application asks for milliseconds, the implementation can try to
interpret a value as a milliseconds value.
If an API supports this, for each family of units it should define a default unit in the family. For example, the family of duration units might default to milliseconds (see below for details on durations). The implementation should then interpret values as follows:
-
if the value is a number, it is taken to be a number in the default unit.
-
if the value is a string, it is taken to be this sequence:
- optional whitespace
- a number
- optional whitespace
- an optional unit name consisting only of letters (letters
are the Unicode
L*
categories, JavaisLetter()
) - optional whitespace
If a string value has no unit name, then it should be interpreted with the default unit, as if it were a number. If a string value has a unit name, that name of course specifies the value's interpretation.
Duration format
Implementations may wish to support a getMilliseconds()
(and
similar for other time units).
This can use the general "units format" described above; bare numbers are taken to be in milliseconds already, while strings are parsed as a number plus an optional unit string.
The supported unit strings for duration are case sensitive and must be lowercase. Exactly these strings are supported:
ns
,nanosecond
,nanoseconds
us
,microsecond
,microseconds
ms
,millisecond
,milliseconds
s
,second
,seconds
m
,minute
,minutes
h
,hour
,hours
d
,day
,days
Size in bytes format
Implementations may wish to support a getBytes()
returning a
size in bytes.
This can use the general "units format" described above; bare numbers are taken to be in bytes already, while strings are parsed as a number plus an optional unit string.
The one-letter unit strings may be uppercase (note: duration units are always lowercase, so this convention is specific to size units).
There is an unfortunate nightmare with size-in-bytes units, that they may be in powers or two or powers of ten. The approach defined by standards bodies appears to differ from common usage, such that following the standard leads to people being confused. Worse, common usage varies based on whether people are talking about RAM or disk sizes, and various existing operating systems and apps do all kinds of different things. See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Binary_prefix#Deviation_between_powers_of_1024_and_powers_of_1000 for examples. It appears impossible to sort this out without causing confusion for someone sometime.
For single bytes, exactly these strings are supported:
B
,b
,byte
,bytes
For powers of ten, exactly these strings are supported:
kB
,kilobyte
,kilobytes
MB
,megabyte
,megabytes
GB
,gigabyte
,gigabytes
TB
,terabyte
,terabytes
PB
,petabyte
,petabytes
EB
,exabyte
,exabytes
ZB
,zettabyte
,zettabytes
YB
,yottabyte
,yottabytes
For powers of two, exactly these strings are supported:
K
,k
,Ki
,KiB
,kibibyte
,kibibytes
M
,m
,Mi
,MiB
,mebibyte
,mebibytes
G
,g
,Gi
,GiB
,gibibyte
,gibibytes
T
,t
,Ti
,TiB
,tebibyte
,tebibytes
P
,p
,Pi
,PiB
,pebibyte
,pebibytes
E
,e
,Ei
,EiB
,exbibyte
,exbibytes
Z
,z
,Zi
,ZiB
,zebibyte
,zebibytes
Y
,y
,Yi
,YiB
,yobibyte
,yobibytes
It's very unclear which units the single-character abbreviations
("128K") should go with; some precedents such as java -Xmx 2G
and the GNU tools such as ls
map these to powers of two, so this
spec copies that. You can certainly find examples of mapping these
to powers of ten, though. If you don't like ambiguity, don't use
the single-letter abbreviations.
Config object merging and file merging
It may be useful to offer a method to merge two objects. If such a method is provided, it should work as if the two objects were duplicate values for the same key in the same file. (See the section earlier on duplicate key handling.)
As with duplicate keys, an intermediate non-object value "hides" earlier object values. So say you merge three objects in this order:
{ a : { x : 1 } }
(first priority){ a : 42 }
(fallback){ a : { y : 2 } }
(another fallback)
The result would be { a : { x : 1 } }
. The two objects are not
merged because they are not "adjacent"; the merging is done in
pairs, and when 42
is paired with { y : 2 }
, 42
simply wins
and loses all information about what it overrode.
But if you re-ordered like this:
{ a : { x : 1 } }
(first priority){ a : { y : 2 } }
(fallback){ a : 42 }
(another fallback)
Now the result would be { a : { x : 1, y : 2 } }
because the two
objects are adjacent.
This rule for merging objects loaded from different files is exactly the same behavior as for merging duplicate fields in the same file. All merging works the same way.
Needless to say, normally it's well-defined whether a config setting is supposed to be a number or an object. This kind of weird pathology where the two are mixed should not be happening.
The one place where it matters, though, is that it allows you to "clear" an object and start over by setting it to null and then setting it back to a new object. So this behavior gives people a way to get rid of default fallback values they don't want.
hyphen-separated vs. camelCase
Config keys are encouraged to be hyphen-separated
rather than
camelCase
.
Hocon.Extensions.Configuration
Hocon.Extensions.Configuration
is an extension of HOCON that
allows HOCON configuration files to be read and loaded into Microsoft.Extensions.Configuration
Installation
To install Microsoft.Extensions.Configuration
via NuGet:
PS> Install-Package Hocon.Extensions.Configuration
Examples
An example project on how to use Hocon.Extensions.Configuration
with ASP.NET Core
Web Application can be seen in the examples folder