Provided by: libpoet-perl_0.16-3_all bug

NAME

       Poet::Conf -- Poet configuration

SYNOPSIS

           # In a script...
           use Poet::Script qw($conf);

           # In a module...
           use Poet qw($conf);

           # $conf is automatically available in Mason components

           # then...
           my $value = $conf->get('key', 'default');
           my $value = $conf->get_or_die('key');

           my $listref = $conf->get_list('key', ['default']);
           my $hashref = $conf->get_hash('key', {'default' => 5});
           my $bool = $conf->get_boolean('key');

           my @keys = grep { /^foo\./ } $conf->get_keys;

           my $hash = $conf->as_hash;
           print $conf->as_string;

           {
              my $lex = $conf->set_local({'key' => 'new_value'});
              # key has new_value inside this scope only
           }

DESCRIPTION

       The Poet::Conf object gives access to the current environment's configuration, read from configuration
       files in the conf/ subdirectory.

CONFIGURATION FILES

       Poet configuration files are found in the conf/ subdirectory of the environment root:

         conf/
           global.cfg
           global/
             something.cfg
             something_else.cfg
             ...
           layer/
             development.cfg
             production.cfg
             ...
           local.cfg
         $ENV{POET_EXTRA_CONF_FILE}

       The files are read and merged in the following order, with later files taking precedence over earlier
       files. None of the files have to exist except "local.cfg".

       •   "global.cfg" contains various settings for the environment, typically checked into version control.
           Having a single file is fine for a simple site and a single developer, but if this gets too unwieldy,
           see global/ below.

       •   The "global/" directory contains multiple .cfg files, all of which are read in alphabetical order.
           This is an alternative to "global.cfg" when the latter gets too crowded and you have multiple
           developers making simultaneous changes.  It is an error for two global files to set the same key.

       •   The "layer/" directory contains version-controlled files specific to layers, e.g. "development.cfg"
           and "production.cfg".  Only one of these files will be active at a time, depending on the current
           layer (as set in "local.cfg").

       •   "local.cfg" contains settings for this particular instance of the environment.  It is not checked
           into version control. local.cfg must exist and must contain at least the layer, e.g.

               layer: development

       •   If $ENV{POET_EXTRA_CONF_FILE} is defined when configuration initializes, it is read as an extra conf
           file whose values override all others.

CONFIGURATION FORMAT

       Basic conf file format is YAML <http://www.yaml.org/>, e.g.

          cache:
            defaults:
              driver: Memcached
              servers: ["10.0.0.15:11211", "10.0.0.15:11212"]

          log:
            defaults:
              level: info
              output: poet.log
              layout: "%d{dd/MMM/yyyy:HH:mm:ss.SS} [%p] %c - %m - %F:%L - %P%n"

   Interpolation - referring to other entries
       Conf entries can refer to other entries via the syntax "${key}". For example:

          # conf file

          foo: 5
          bar: "The number ${foo}"
          baz: ${bar}00

          # then

          $conf->get('foo')
             => 5
          $conf->get('bar')
             => "The number 5"
          $conf->get('baz')
             => "The number 500"

       The key must exist or a fatal error will occur.

       There is a single built-in entry, "root_dir", containing the root directory of the environment that you
       can use in other entries, e.g.

          cache:
             defaults:
                driver: File
                root_dir: ${root_dir}/data/cache

   Dot notation for hash access
       Conf entries can use dot (".") notation to refer to hash entries. e.g. this

          foo.bar.baz: 5

       is the same as

          foo:
             bar:
                baz: 5

       The dot notation is especially useful for overriding individual hash elements from higher precedence
       config files. For example, if in "global/cache.cfg" you have

          cache:
             defaults:
                driver: File
                root_dir: $root/data/cache
                depth: 3

       and in local.cfg you have

           cache.defaults.depth: 2

       then only "depth" will be overridden; the "driver" and "root_dir" will remain as they were set in
       "global/cache.cfg". If instead local.cfg had

          cache:
             defaults:
                depth: 3

       then this would completely replace the entire hash under "cache".

OBTAINING $conf SINGLETON

       In a script:

           use Poet::Script qw($conf);

       In a module:

           use Poet qw($conf);

       $conf is automatically available in components.

       You can also get it via

           my $conf = Poet::Environment->current_env->conf;

METHODS

   Methods for getting conf values
       get (key[, default])
               my $value = $conf->get('key' => 'default');

           Get key from configuration. If key is unavailable, return the default, or undef if no default is
           given.

           The return value may be a scalar, list reference, or hash reference, though we recommend using
           "get_list" and "get_hash" if you expect a list or hash.

           key can contain dot notation to refer to hash entries. e.g. these are equivalent:

               $conf->get('foo.bar.baz');

               $conf->get_hash('foo')->{bar}->{baz};

       get_or_die (key)
               my $value = $conf->get_or_die('key');

           Get key from configuration. If key is unavailable, throw a fatal error.

       get_list (key[, default])
               my $listref = $conf->get_list('key', ['default']);

           Get key from configuration. If the value is not a list reference, throw an error.

           If key is unavailable, return the default, or an empty list reference if no default is given.

       get_hash (key[, default])
               my $hashref = $conf->get_hash('key', {'default' => 5});

           Get key from configuration. If the value is not a hash reference, throw an error.

           If key is unavailable, return the default, or an empty hash reference if no default is given.

       get_boolean (key)
               my $bool = $conf->get_boolean('key');

           Get key from configuration. Return 1 if the value represents true ("1", "t", "true", "y", "yes") and
           0 if the value represents false ("0", "f", "false", "n", "no") or is not present in configuration.
           These are case insensitive matches. Throws an error if there is a value that is a reference or does
           not match one of the valid options.

       get_secure (key)
               my $password = $conf->get_secure('secret_password');

           Get key from a separate, non-version-controlled, secure config file; if it cannot be found, then
           fallback to normal config. Useful for passwords, encryption keys, etc. that might be ok in normal
           config on development, but ought to be secure on production.

           The location of the secure config file is determined by config entry conf.secure_conf_file; it
           defaults to "conf/secure.cfg". The file is in plain YAML format, with no interpolation or dot
           notation.

   Other methods
       layer
           Returns the current layer, as determined from "local.cfg".

       is_development
           Boolean; returns true iff the current layer is 'development'.

       is_live
           Boolean; the opposte of "is_development".

       get_keys
               my @keys = sort $conf->get_keys;

           Return a list of all keys in configuration.

       as_hash
               my $hash = $conf->as_hash;

           Return a hash reference mapping keys to their value as returned by "$conf->get".

       as_string
               print $conf->as_string;

           Return a printable representation of the keys and values.

       set_local
               my $lex = $conf->set_local({key => 'value', ...});

           Temporarily set each key to value. The original value will be restored when $lex goes out of scope.

           This is intended for specialized use in unit tests and development tools, NOT for production code.
           Setting and resetting of configuration values will make it much more difficult to read and debug
           code!

       generate_dynamic_config
               $conf->generate_dynamic_config();

           This method can be used to dynamically generate configuration files for external software (e.g.
           Apache, nginx, logrotate). It uses MasonX::ProcessDir to process Mason templates in "conf/dynamic"
           and generate destination files in "data/conf/dynamic".

           For example, if "conf/dynamic/httpd.conf.mc" contains an Apache configuration file with Mason dynamic
           elements, this method will generate a static configuration file in "data/conf/dynamic/httpd.conf.mc",
           which you can then feed directly into Apache.

MODIFIABLE METHODS

       These methods are not intended to be called externally, but may be useful to override or modify with
       method modifiers in subclasses. Their APIs will be kept as stable as possible.

       read_conf_data
           This is the main method that finds and parses conf files and returns a hash of conf keys to values.
           You can modify this to dynamically compute certain conf keys:

               override 'read_conf_data' => sub {
                   my $hash = super();
                   $hash->{complex_key} = ...;
                   return $hash;
               };

           or to completely override how Poet gets its configuration:

               override 'read_conf_data' => sub {
                   return {
                      some_conf_key => 'some conf value',
                      ...
                   };
               };

       initial_conf_data
           Returns a hash with initial configuration data before any conf files have been merged in. By default,
           just contains

               ( root => '/path/to/root' )

       _build_layer
           Determines the current layer before "read_conf" is called. By default, looks for a "layer" key in
           "local.cfg".

       _build_is_development
           Determines the value of "is_development", and subsequently its opposite "is_live". By default, true
           iff layer == 'development'.

       ordered_conf_files
           Returns a list of conf files to read in order from lowest to highest precedence. You can modify this
           to insert an additional file, e.g.

               override 'ordered_conf_files' => sub {
                   my @list = super();
                   return (@list, '/path/to/important.cfg');
               };

       read_conf_file ($file)
           Read a single conf $file and return its hash representation. You can modify this to use a conf format
           other than YAML, e.g.

               use Config::INI;

               override 'read_conf_file' => sub {
                   my ($self, $file) = @_;
                   return Config::INI::Reader->read_file($file);
               };

       merge_conf_data ($current_data, $new_data, $file)
           Merge $new_data from $file into $current_data. $new_data and $current_data are both hashrefs, and
           $current_data will be the empty hash for the first file. By default, this just uses Perl's built-in
           hash merging with values from $new_data taking precedence.

CREDITS

       The ideas of merging multiple conf files and variable interpolation came from YAML::AppConfig.

SEE ALSO

       Poet

AUTHOR

       Jonathan Swartz <swartz@pobox.com>

COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE

       This software is copyright (c) 2012 by Jonathan Swartz.

       This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as the Perl 5
       programming language system itself.