Merge pull request #199 from Tim-Erwin/improved_config

added methods to load config from a file
This commit is contained in:
Eli Uriegas 2017-01-29 15:27:34 -06:00 committed by GitHub
commit f56c5e3a45
5 changed files with 228 additions and 7 deletions

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docs/config.md Normal file
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# Configuration
Any reasonably complex application will need configuration that is not baked into the acutal code. Settings might be different for different environments or installations.
## Basics
Sanic holds the configuration in the `config` attribute of the application object. The configuration object is merely an object that can be modified either using dot-notation or like a dictionary:
```
app = Sanic('myapp')
app.config.DB_NAME = 'appdb'
app.config.DB_USER = 'appuser'
```
Since the config object actually is a dictionary, you can use its `update` method in order to set several values at once:
```
db_settings = {
'DB_HOST': 'localhost',
'DB_NAME': 'appdb',
'DB_USER': 'appuser'
}
app.config.update(db_settings)
```
In general the convention is to only have UPPERCASE configuration parameters. The methods described below for loading configuration only look for such uppercase parameters.
## Loading Configuration
There are several ways how to load configuration.
### From an Object
If there are a lot of configuration values and they have sensible defaults it might be helpful to put them into a module:
```
import myapp.default_settings
app = Sanic('myapp')
app.config.from_object(myapp.default_settings)
```
You could use a class or any other object as well.
### From a File
Usually you will want to load configuration from a file that is not part of the distributed application. You can load configuration from a file using `from_file(/path/to/config_file)`. However, that requires the program to know the path to the config file. So instead you can specify the location of the config file in an environment variable and tell Sanic to use that to find the config file:
```
app = Sanic('myapp')
app.config.from_envvar('MYAPP_SETTINGS')
```
Then you can run your application with the `MYAPP_SETTINGS` environment variable set:
```
$ MYAPP_SETTINGS=/path/to/config_file; python3 myapp.py
INFO: Goin' Fast @ http://0.0.0.0:8000
```
The config files are regular Python files which are executed in order to load them. This allows you to use arbitrary logic for constructing the right configuration. Only uppercase varibales are added to the configuration. Most commonly the configuration consists of simple key value pairs:
```
# config_file
DB_HOST = 'localhost'
DB_NAME = 'appdb'
DB_USER = 'appuser'
```
## Builtin Configuration Values
Out of the box there are just a few predefined values which can be overwritten when creating the application.
| Variable | Default | Description |
| ----------------- | --------- | --------------------------------- |
| REQUEST_MAX_SIZE | 100000000 | How big a request may be (bytes) |
| REQUEST_TIMEOUT | 60 | How long a request can take (sec) |

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@ -15,6 +15,7 @@ Guides
exceptions
blueprints
class_based_views
config
cookies
custom_protocol
testing

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class Config:
LOGO = """
import os
import types
class Config(dict):
def __init__(self, defaults=None):
super().__init__(defaults or {})
self.LOGO = """
_______________
/ \\
@ -20,6 +26,65 @@ class Config:
"""
REQUEST_MAX_SIZE = 100000000 # 100 megababies
REQUEST_TIMEOUT = 60 # 60 seconds
ROUTER_CACHE_SIZE = 1024
self.REQUEST_MAX_SIZE = 100000000 # 100 megababies
self.REQUEST_TIMEOUT = 60 # 60 seconds
def __getattr__(self, attr):
try:
return self[attr]
except KeyError as ke:
raise AttributeError("Config has no '{}'".format(ke.args[0]))
def __setattr__(self, attr, value):
self[attr] = value
def from_envvar(self, variable_name):
"""Loads a configuration from an environment variable pointing to
a configuration file.
:param variable_name: name of the environment variable
:return: bool. ``True`` if able to load config, ``False`` otherwise.
"""
config_file = os.environ.get(variable_name)
if not config_file:
raise RuntimeError('The environment variable %r is not set and '
'thus configuration could not be loaded.' %
variable_name)
return self.from_pyfile(config_file)
def from_pyfile(self, filename):
"""Updates the values in the config from a Python file. Only the uppercase
variables in that module are stored in the config.
:param filename: an absolute path to the config file
"""
module = types.ModuleType('config')
module.__file__ = filename
try:
with open(filename) as config_file:
exec(compile(config_file.read(), filename, 'exec'),
module.__dict__)
except IOError as e:
e.strerror = 'Unable to load configuration file (%s)' % e.strerror
raise
self.from_object(module)
return True
def from_object(self, obj):
"""Updates the values from the given object.
Objects are usually either modules or classes.
Just the uppercase variables in that object are stored in the config.
Example usage::
from yourapplication import default_config
app.config.from_object(default_config)
You should not use this function to load the actual configuration but
rather configuration defaults. The actual config should be loaded
with :meth:`from_pyfile` and ideally from a location not within the
package because the package might be installed system wide.
:param obj: an object holding the configuration
"""
for key in dir(obj):
if key.isupper():
self[key] = getattr(obj, key)

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import re
from collections import defaultdict, namedtuple
from functools import lru_cache
from .config import Config
from .exceptions import NotFound, InvalidUsage
from .views import CompositionView
@ -15,6 +14,8 @@ REGEX_TYPES = {
'alpha': (str, r'[A-Za-z]+'),
}
ROUTER_CACHE_SIZE = 1024
def url_hash(url):
return url.count('/')
@ -198,7 +199,7 @@ class Router:
return self._get(request.url, request.method,
request.headers.get("Host", ''))
@lru_cache(maxsize=Config.ROUTER_CACHE_SIZE)
@lru_cache(maxsize=ROUTER_CACHE_SIZE)
def _get(self, url, method, host):
"""
Gets a request handler based on the URL of the request, or raises an

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from os import environ
import pytest
from tempfile import NamedTemporaryFile
from sanic import Sanic
def test_load_from_object():
app = Sanic('test_load_from_object')
class Config:
not_for_config = 'should not be used'
CONFIG_VALUE = 'should be used'
app.config.from_object(Config)
assert 'CONFIG_VALUE' in app.config
assert app.config.CONFIG_VALUE == 'should be used'
assert 'not_for_config' not in app.config
def test_load_from_file():
app = Sanic('test_load_from_file')
config = b"""
VALUE = 'some value'
condition = 1 == 1
if condition:
CONDITIONAL = 'should be set'
"""
with NamedTemporaryFile() as config_file:
config_file.write(config)
config_file.seek(0)
app.config.from_pyfile(config_file.name)
assert 'VALUE' in app.config
assert app.config.VALUE == 'some value'
assert 'CONDITIONAL' in app.config
assert app.config.CONDITIONAL == 'should be set'
assert 'condition' not in app.config
def test_load_from_missing_file():
app = Sanic('test_load_from_missing_file')
with pytest.raises(IOError):
app.config.from_pyfile('non-existent file')
def test_load_from_envvar():
app = Sanic('test_load_from_envvar')
config = b"VALUE = 'some value'"
with NamedTemporaryFile() as config_file:
config_file.write(config)
config_file.seek(0)
environ['APP_CONFIG'] = config_file.name
app.config.from_envvar('APP_CONFIG')
assert 'VALUE' in app.config
assert app.config.VALUE == 'some value'
def test_load_from_missing_envvar():
app = Sanic('test_load_from_missing_envvar')
with pytest.raises(RuntimeError):
app.config.from_envvar('non-existent variable')
def test_overwrite_exisiting_config():
app = Sanic('test_overwrite_exisiting_config')
app.config.DEFAULT = 1
class Config:
DEFAULT = 2
app.config.from_object(Config)
assert app.config.DEFAULT == 2
def test_missing_config():
app = Sanic('test_missing_config')
with pytest.raises(AttributeError):
app.config.NON_EXISTENT