Awesome
uConfig
Lightweight, zero-dependency, and extendable configuration management.
uConfig is extremely light and extendable configuration management library with zero dependencies. Every aspect of configuration is provided through a plugin, which means you can have any combination of flags, environment variables, defaults, secret providers, Kubernetes Downward API, and what you want, and only what you want, through plugins.
uConfig takes the config schema as a struct decorated with tags, nesting is supported.
Supports all basic types, time.Duration, and any other type through encoding.TextUnmarshaler
interface.
See the flat view package for details.
Example Configuration:
package database
// Config holds the database configurations.
type Config struct {
Address string `default:"localhost"`
Port string `default:"28015"`
Database string `default:"my-project"`
}
package redis
// Config describes the requirement for redis client.
type Config struct {
Address string `default:"redis-master"`
Port string `default:"6379"`
Password string `secret:""`
DB int `default:"0"`
Expire time.Duration `default:"5s"`
}
package main
import (
"encoding/json"
"github.com/omeid/uconfig"
"$PROJECT/redis"
"$PROJECT/database"
)
// Config is our application config.
type Config struct {
// yes you can have slices.
Hosts []string `default:"localhost,localhost.local" usage:"the ip or domains to bind to"`
Redis redis.Config
Database database.Config
}
func main() {
conf := &Config{}
files := uconfig.Files{
{"config.json", json.Unmarshal, true},
// you can of course add as many files
// as you want, and they will be applied
// in the given order.
}
_, err := uconfig.Classic(&conf, files)
if err != nil {
fmt.Println(err)
os.Exit(1)
}
// use conf as you please.
// let's pretty print it as JSON for example:
configAsJson, err := json.MarshalIndent(conf, "", " ")
if err != nil {
fmt.Println(err)
os.Exit(1)
}
fmt.Print(string(configAsJson))
}
Now lets run our program:
$ go run main.go -h
Supported Fields:
FIELD FLAG ENV DEFAULT USAGE
----- ----- ----- ------- -----
Hosts -hosts HOSTS localhost,localhost.local the ip or domains to bind to
Redis.Address -redis-address REDIS_ADDRESS redis-master
Redis.Port -redis-port REDIS_PORT 6379
Redis.Password -redis-password REDIS_PASSWORD
Redis.DB -redis-db REDIS_DB 0
Redis.Expire -redis-expire REDIS_EXPIRE 5s
Database.Address -database-address DATABASE_ADDRESS localhost
Database.Port -database-port DATABASE_PORT 28015
Database.Database -database-database DATABASE_DATABASE my-project
$ go run main.go
{
"Hosts": [
"localhost",
"localhost.local"
],
"Redis": {
"Address": "redis-master",
"Port": "6379",
"Password": "",
"DB": 0,
"Expire": 5000000000
},
"Database": {
"Address": "localhost",
"Port": "28015",
"Database": "my-project"
}
}
Custom names:
Sometimes you might want to use a different env var, or flag name for backwards compatibility or other reasons, you have two options.
- uconfig tag
You can change the name of a field as seen by unconfig. This option supports the usual nesting prefixing. See the port example below.
- Plugin specific tags
Most plugins support controlling the field name as seen by that specific plugin.
This option does not support nesting prefixes. See the Database field in the example below.
package database
// Config holds the database configurations.
type Database struct {
Address string `default:"localhost"`
Port string `default:"28015" uconfig:"Service.Port"`
Database string `default:"my-project" env:"DB_NAME" flag:"main-db-name"`
}
package main
// Config is our application config.
type Config struct {
// yes you can have slices.
Hosts []string `default:"localhost,localhost.local"`
Redis redis.Config
Database database.Config
}
Which should give you the following settings:
Supported Fields:
FIELD FLAG ENV DEFAULT USAGE
----- ----- ----- ------- -----
Hosts -hosts HOSTS localhost,localhost.local the ip or domains to bind to
Redis.Port -redis-port REDIS_PORT 6379
Redis.Password -redis-password REDIS_PASSWORD
Redis.DB -redis-db REDIS_DB 0
Redis.Expire -redis-expire REDIS_EXPIRE 5s
Database.Address -database-address DATABASE_ADDRESS localhost
Database.Service.Port -database-service-port DATABASE_SERVICE_PORT 28015
Database.Database -main-db-db DB_NAME my-project
exit status 1
For file based plugins, you will need to use the appropriate tags as used by your encoder of choice. For example:
package users
// Config holds the database configurations.
type Config struct {
Host string `json:"bind_addr"`
}
Secrets Plugin
The secret provider allows you to grab the value of a config from anywhere you want. You simply need to implement the func(name string) (value string)
function and pass it to the secrets plugin.
Unlike most other plugins, secret requires explicit secret:""
tag, this is because only specific config values like passwords and api keys come from a secret provider, compared to the rest of the config which can be set in various ways.
import (
"github.com/omeid/uconfig"
"github.com/omeid/uconfig/plugins/secret"
)
// Creds is an example of a config struct that uses secret values.
type Creds struct {
// by default, secret plugin will generate a name that is identical
// to env plugin, SCREAM_SNAKE_CASE, so in this case it will be
// APIKEY however, following the standard uConfig nesting rules
// in Config struct below, it becomes CREDS_APIKEY.
APIKey string `secret:""`
// or you can provide your own name, which will not be impacted
// by nesting or the field name.
APIToken string `secret:"API_TOKEN"`
}
type Config struct {
Redis Redis
Creds Creds
}
func main() {
conf := &Config{}
files := uconfig.Files{
{"config.json", json.Unmarshal, false}
}
// secret.New accepts a function that maps a secret name to it's value.
secretPlugin := secret.New(func(name string) (string, error) {
// you're free to grab the secret based on the name from wherever
// you please, aws secrets-manager, hashicorp vault, or wherever.
value, ok := secretSource.Get(name)
if !ok {
return "", ErrSecretNotFound
}
return value, nil
})
// then you can use the secretPlugin with uConfig like any other plugin.
// Lucky, uconfig.Classic allows passing more plugins, which means
// you can simply do the following for flags, envs, files, and secrets!
_, err := uconfig.Classic(&conf, files, secretPlugin)
if err != nil {
t.Fatal(err)
}
}
Tests
For tests, you may consider the Must
function to set the defaults, like so
package something
import (
"testing"
"github.com/omeid/uconfig"
"github.com/omeid/uconfig/defaults"
)
func TestSomething(t *testing.T) error {
conf := &YourConfigStruct{}
// It will panic on error
uconfig.Must(conf, defaults.New())
// Use your conf as you please.
}
See the Classic source for how to compose plugins. For more details, see the godoc.
Extending uConfig:
uConfig provides a plugin mechanism for adding new sources of configuration. There are two kind of plugins, Walkers and Visitors.
To implement your own, see the examples.
Visitors
Visitors get a flat view of the configuration struct, which is a flat view of the structs regardless of nesting level, for more details see the flat package documentation.
Plugins that load the configurations from flat structures (e.g flags, environment variables, default tags) are good candidates for this type of plugin. See env plugin for an example.
Walkers
Walkers are used for configuration plugins that take the whole config struct and unmarshal the underlying content into the config struct. Plugins that load the configuration from files are good candidates for this.
See file plugin for an example.