1Config::ZOMG(3) User Contributed Perl Documentation Config::ZOMG(3)
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6 Config::ZOMG - Yet Another Catalyst::Plugin::ConfigLoader-style layer
7 over Config::Any
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10 version 1.000000
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13 "Config::ZOMG" is a fork of Config::JFDI. It removes a couple of
14 unusual features and passes the same tests three times faster than
15 Config::JFDI.
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17 "Config::ZOMG" is an implementation of Catalyst::Plugin::ConfigLoader
18 that exists outside of Catalyst.
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20 "Config::ZOMG" will scan a directory for files matching a certain name.
21 If such a file is found which also matches an extension that
22 Config::Any can read, then the configuration from that file will be
23 loaded.
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25 "Config::ZOMG" will also look for special files that end with a
26 "_local" suffix. Files with this special suffix will take precedence
27 over any other existing configuration file, if any. The precedence
28 takes place by merging the local configuration with the "standard"
29 configuration via Hash::Merge::Simple.
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31 Finally you can override/modify the path search from outside your
32 application, by setting the "${NAME}_CONFIG" variable outside your
33 application (where $NAME is the uppercase version of what you passed to
34 Config::ZOMG->new).
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37 use Config::ZOMG;
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39 my $config = Config::ZOMG->new(
40 name => 'my_application',
41 path => 'path/to/my/application',
42 );
43 my $config_hash = $config->load;
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45 This will look for something like (depending on what Config::Any will
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48 path/to/my/application/my_application_local.{yml,yaml,cnf,conf,jsn,json,...}
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50 and
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52 path/to/my/application/my_application.{yml,yaml,cnf,conf,jsn,json,...}
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54 ... and load the found configuration information appropiately, with
55 "_local" taking precedence.
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57 You can also specify a file directly:
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59 my $config = Config::ZOMG->new(file => '/path/to/my/application/my_application.cnf');
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61 To later reload your configuration:
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63 $config->reload;
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66 new
67 $config = Config::ZOMG->new(...)
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69 Returns a new "Config::ZOMG" object
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71 You can configure the $config object by passing the following to new:
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73 name
74 The name specifying the prefix of the configuration file to look for
75 and the ENV variable to read. This can be a package name. In any
76 case, :: will be substituted with _ in "name" and the result will be
77 lowercased. To prevent modification of "name", pass it in as a
78 scalar reference.
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80 "path"
81 The directory to search in
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83 "file"
84 Directly read the configuration from this file. "Config::Any" must
85 recognize the extension. Setting this will override "path"
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87 "no_local"
88 Disable lookup of a local configuration. The "local_suffix" option
89 will be ignored. Off by default
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91 "local_suffix"
92 The suffix to match when looking for a local configuration. "local"
93 by default
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95 "no_env"
96 Set this to ignore ENV. "env_lookup" will be ignored. Off by default
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98 "env_lookup"
99 Additional ENV to check if $ENV{<NAME>...} is not found
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101 "driver"
102 A hash consisting of "Config::" driver information. This is passed
103 directly through to "Config::Any"
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105 "default"
106 A hash filled with default keys/values
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108 open
109 $config_hash = Config::ZOMG->open( ... )
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111 As an alternative way to load a config "open" will pass given arguments
112 to "new" then attempt to do "load"
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114 Unlike "load" if no configuration files are found "open" will return
115 "undef" (or the empty list)
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117 This is so you can do something like:
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119 my $config_hash = Config::ZOMG->open( '/path/to/application.cnf' )
120 or die "Couldn't find config file!"
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122 In scalar context "open" will return the config hash, not the config
123 object. If you want the config object call "open" in list context:
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125 my ($config_hash, $config) = Config::ZOMG->open( ... )
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127 You can pass any arguments to "open" that you would to "new"
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129 load
130 $config->load
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132 Load a config as specified by "new" and "ENV" and return a hash
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134 This will only load the configuration once, so it's safe to call
135 multiple times without incurring any loading-time penalty
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137 found
138 $config->found
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140 Returns a list of files found
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142 If the list is empty then no files were loaded/read
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144 find
145 $config->find
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147 Returns a list of files that configuration will be loaded from. Use
148 this method to check whether configuration files have changed, without
149 actually reloading.
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151 clone
152 $config->clone
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154 Return a clone of the configuration hash using Clone
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156 This will load the configuration first, if it hasn't already
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158 reload
159 $config->reload
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161 Reload the configuration, examining ENV and scanning the path anew
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163 Returns a hash of the configuration
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166 Config::JFDI
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168 Catalyst::Plugin::ConfigLoader
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170 Config::Any
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172 Catalyst
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174 Config::Merge
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176 Config::General
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179 • Arthur Axel "fREW" Schmidt <frioux+cpan@gmail.com>
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181 • Robert Krimen <robertkrimen@gmail.com>
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184 This software is copyright (c) 2013 by Arthur Axel "fREW" Schmidt.
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186 This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under
187 the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.
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191perl v5.34.0 2022-01-21 Config::ZOMG(3)