/settingslogic

A simple and straightforward settings solution that uses an ERB enabled YAML file and a singleton design pattern.

Primary LanguageRubyMIT LicenseMIT

Settingslogic

Settingslogic is a simple configuration / settings solution that uses an ERB enabled YAML file. It has been great for our apps, maybe you will enjoy it too. Settingslogic works with Rails, Sinatra, or any Ruby project.

So here is my question to you.….is Settingslogic a great settings solution or the greatest?

* Documentation: rdoc.info/projects/binarylogic/settingslogic * Repository: github.com/binarylogic/settingslogic/tree/master

Installation

Install from rubyforge/gemcutter:

sudo gem install cubus-settingslogic

Settingslogic needs Hash#deep_merge which is provided by active_support. If you don’t use active_support you can provide your own implementation or use ruby facets (facets.rubyforge.org/apidoc/api/core/classes/Hash.html#M000216).

Usage

1. Define your class

Instead of defining a Settings constant for you, that task is left to you. Simply create a class in your application that looks like:

class Settings < Settingslogic
  source "#{Rails.root}/config/application.yml"
  namespace Rails.env
end

Name it Settings, name it Config, name it whatever you want. Add as many or as few as you like. A good place to put this file in a rails app is app/models/settings.rb. Declare your namespace to Rails.env if you use per-environment settings. These will be merged with the settings in the default namespace.

2. Create your settings

Notice above we specified an absolute path to our settings file called “application.yml”. This is just a typical YAML file. Also notice above that we specified a namespace for our environment. A namespace is just an optional string that corresponds to a key in the YAML file.

Using a namespace allows us to change our configuration depending on our environment:

# app/config/application.yml
defaults: &defaults
  cool:
    saweet: nested settings
  neat_setting: 24
  awesome_setting: <%= "Did you know 5 + 5 = #{5 + 5}?" %>

development:
  <<: *defaults
  neat_setting: 800

test:
  <<: *defaults

production:
  <<: *defaults

3. Access your settings

>> Rails.env
=> "development"

>> Settings.cool
=> "#<Settingslogic::Settings ... >"

>> Settings.cool.saweet
=> "nested settings"

>> Settings.neat_setting
=> 800

>> Settings.awesome_setting
=> "Did you know 5 + 5 = 10?"

>> Settings.key_by_path "cool.saweet"
=> "nested settings"

You can use these settings anywhere, for example in a model:

class Post < ActiveRecord::Base
  self.per_page = Settings.pagination.posts_per_page
end

4. Optional / dynamic settings

Often, you will want to handle defaults in your application logic itself, to reduce the number of settings you need to put in your YAML file. You can access an optional setting by using Hash notation:

>> Settings.messaging.queue_name
=> Exception: Missing setting 'queue_name' in 'message' section in 'application.yml'

>> Settings.messaging['queue_name']
=> nil

>> Settings.messaging['queue_name'] ||= 'user_mail'
=> "user_mail"

>> Settings.messaging.queue_name
=> "user_mail"

Modifying our model example:

class Post < ActiveRecord::Base
  self.per_page = Settings.posts['per_page'] || Settings.pagination.per_page
end

This would allow you to specify a custom value for per_page just for posts, or to fall back to your default value if not specified.

Author

Copyright © 2008-2010 Ben Johnson of Binary Logic, released under the MIT license. Support for optional settings and reloading by Nate Wiger.