Everett is a Python configuration library for your app.
Goals of Everett:
- flexible configuration from multiple configured environments
- easy testing with configuration
- easy automated documentation of configuration for users
From that, Everett has the following features:
- is flexible for your configuration environment needs and supports process environment, env files, dicts, INI files, YAML files, and writing your own configuration environments
- facilitates helpful error messages for users trying to configure your software
- has a Sphinx extension for documenting configuration including
autocomponentconfig
andautomoduleconfig
directives for automatically generating configuration documentation - facilitates testing of configuration values
- supports parsing values of a variety of types like bool, int, lists of things, classes, and others and lets you write your own parsers
- supports key namespaces
- supports component architectures
- works with whatever you're writing--command line tools, web sites, system daemons, etc
Everett is inspired by python-decouple and configman.
Run:
$ pip install everett
Some configuration environments require additional dependencies:
# For INI support $ pip install 'everett[ini]' # for YAML support $ pip install 'everett[yaml]'
Example:
# myserver.py """ Minimal example showing how to use configuration for a web app. """ from everett.manager import ConfigManager config = ConfigManager.basic_config( doc="Check https://example.com/configuration for documentation." ) host = config("host", default="localhost") port = config("port", default="8000", parser=int) debug_mode = config( "debug", default="False", parser=bool, doc="Set to True for debugmode; False for regular mode", ) print(f"host: {host}") print(f"port: {port}") print(f"debug_mode: {debug_mode}")
Then you can run it:
$ python myserver.py host: localhost port: 8000 debug_mode: False
You can set environment variables to affect configuration:
$ PORT=7000 python myserver.py host: localhost port: 7000 debug_mode: False
It checks a .env
file in the current directory:
$ echo "HOST=127.0.0.1" > .env $ python myserver.py host: 127.0.0.1 port: 8000 debug_mode: False
It spits out useful error information if configuration is wrong:
$ DEBUG=foo python myserver.py <traceback> everett.InvalidValueError: ValueError: 'foo' is not a valid bool value DEBUG requires a value parseable by everett.manager.parse_bool DEBUG docs: Set to True for debugmode; False for regular mode Project docs: Check https://example.com/configuration for documentation.
You can test your code using config_override
in your tests to test various
configuration values:
# testdebug.py """ Minimal example showing how to override configuration values when testing. """ import unittest from everett.manager import ConfigManager, config_override class App: def __init__(self): config = ConfigManager.basic_config() self.debug = config("debug", default="False", parser=bool) class TestDebug(unittest.TestCase): def test_debug_on(self): with config_override(DEBUG="on"): app = App() self.assertTrue(app.debug) def test_debug_off(self): with config_override(DEBUG="off"): app = App() self.assertFalse(app.debug) if __name__ == "__main__": unittest.main()
Run that:
$ python testdebug.py .. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Ran 2 tests in 0.000s OK
That's perfectly fine for a 12-Factor app.
When you outgrow that or need different variations of it, you can switch to
creating a ConfigManager
instance that meets your needs.
Most other libraries I looked at had one or more of the following issues:
- were tied to a specific web app framework
- didn't allow you to specify configuration sources
- provided poor error messages when users configure things wrong
- had a global configuration object
- made it really hard to override specific configuration when writing tests
- had no facilities for autogenerating configuration documentation