documentit/node_modules/rc/README.md

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# rc
The non-configurable configuration loader for lazy people.
## Usage
The only option is to pass rc the name of your app, and your default configuration.
```javascript
var conf = require('rc')(appname, {
//defaults go here.
port: 2468,
//defaults which are objects will be merged, not replaced
views: {
engine: 'jade'
}
});
```
`rc` will return your configuration options merged with the defaults you specify.
If you pass in a predefined defaults object, it will be mutated:
```javascript
var conf = {};
require('rc')(appname, conf);
```
If `rc` finds any config files for your app, the returned config object will have
a `configs` array containing their paths:
```javascript
var appCfg = require('rc')(appname, conf);
appCfg.configs[0] // /etc/appnamerc
appCfg.configs[1] // /home/dominictarr/.config/appname
appCfg.config // same as appCfg.configs[appCfg.configs.length - 1]
```
## Standards
Given your application name (`appname`), rc will look in all the obvious places for configuration.
* command line arguments (parsed by minimist)
* environment variables prefixed with `${appname}_`
* or use "\_\_" to indicate nested properties <br/> _(e.g. `appname_foo__bar__baz` => `foo.bar.baz`)_
* if you passed an option `--config file` then from that file
* a local `.${appname}rc` or the first found looking in `./ ../ ../../ ../../../` etc.
* `$HOME/.${appname}rc`
* `$HOME/.${appname}/config`
* `$HOME/.config/${appname}`
* `$HOME/.config/${appname}/config`
* `/etc/${appname}rc`
* `/etc/${appname}/config`
* the defaults object you passed in.
All configuration sources that were found will be flattened into one object,
so that sources **earlier** in this list override later ones.
## Configuration File Formats
Configuration files (e.g. `.appnamerc`) may be in either [json](http://json.org/example) or [ini](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/INI_file) format. **No** file extension (`.json` or `.ini`) should be used. The example configurations below are equivalent:
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#### Formatted as `ini`
```
; You can include comments in `ini` format if you want.
dependsOn=0.10.0
; `rc` has built-in support for ini sections, see?
[commands]
www = ./commands/www
console = ./commands/repl
; You can even do nested sections
[generators.options]
engine = ejs
[generators.modules]
new = generate-new
engine = generate-backend
```
#### Formatted as `json`
```javascript
{
// You can even comment your JSON, if you want
"dependsOn": "0.10.0",
"commands": {
"www": "./commands/www",
"console": "./commands/repl"
},
"generators": {
"options": {
"engine": "ejs"
},
"modules": {
"new": "generate-new",
"backend": "generate-backend"
}
}
}
```
Comments are stripped from JSON config via [strip-json-comments](https://github.com/sindresorhus/strip-json-comments).
> Since ini, and env variables do not have a standard for types, your application needs be prepared for strings.
## Simple example demonstrating precedence
Assume you have an application like this (notice the hard-coded defaults passed to rc):
```
const conf = require('rc')('myapp', {
port: 12345,
mode: 'test'
});
console.log(JSON.stringify(conf, null, 2));
```
You also have a file `config.json`, with these contents:
```
{
"port": 9000,
"foo": "from config json",
"something": "else"
}
```
And a file `.myapprc` in the same folder, with these contents:
```
{
"port": "3001",
"foo": "bar"
}
```
Here is the expected output from various commands:
`node .`
```
{
"port": "3001",
"mode": "test",
"foo": "bar",
"_": [],
"configs": [
"/Users/stephen/repos/conftest/.myapprc"
],
"config": "/Users/stephen/repos/conftest/.myapprc"
}
```
*Default `mode` from hard-coded object is retained, but port is overridden by `.myapprc` file (automatically found based on appname match), and `foo` is added.*
`node . --foo baz`
```
{
"port": "3001",
"mode": "test",
"foo": "baz",
"_": [],
"configs": [
"/Users/stephen/repos/conftest/.myapprc"
],
"config": "/Users/stephen/repos/conftest/.myapprc"
}
```
*Same result as above but `foo` is overridden because command-line arguments take precedence over `.myapprc` file.*
`node . --foo barbar --config config.json`
```
{
"port": 9000,
"mode": "test",
"foo": "barbar",
"something": "else",
"_": [],
"config": "config.json",
"configs": [
"/Users/stephen/repos/conftest/.myapprc",
"config.json"
]
}
```
*Now the `port` comes from the `config.json` file specified (overriding the value from `.myapprc`), and `foo` value is overriden by command-line despite also being specified in the `config.json` file.*
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## Advanced Usage
#### Pass in your own `argv`
You may pass in your own `argv` as the third argument to `rc`. This is in case you want to [use your own command-line opts parser](https://github.com/dominictarr/rc/pull/12).
```javascript
require('rc')(appname, defaults, customArgvParser);
```
## Pass in your own parser
If you have a special need to use a non-standard parser,
you can do so by passing in the parser as the 4th argument.
(leave the 3rd as null to get the default args parser)
```javascript
require('rc')(appname, defaults, null, parser);
```
This may also be used to force a more strict format,
such as strict, valid JSON only.
## Note on Performance
`rc` is running `fs.statSync`-- so make sure you don't use it in a hot code path (e.g. a request handler)
## License
Multi-licensed under the two-clause BSD License, MIT License, or Apache License, version 2.0