RailsConfig I18N
Summary
RailsConfig I18N helps you manage environment and locale specific Rails settings in an easy and usable manner
Features
- simple YAML config files
- Support locales with i18n
- config files support ERB
- config files support inheritance
- access config information via convenient object member notation
Compatibility
- Rails 3.x
- Padrino
- Sinatra
For older versions of Rails and other Ruby apps, use AppConfig.
Installing on Rails 3
Add this to your Gemfile
:
gem "rails_config_i18n"
Installing on Padrino
Add this to your Gemfile
:
gem "rails_config_i18n"
in your app.rb, you'll also need to register RailsConfig
register RailsConfig
Installing on Sinatra
Add this to your Gemfile
:
gem "rails_config_i18n"
in your app, you'll need to register RailsConfig. You'll also need to give it a root so it can find the config files.
set :root, File.dirname(__FILE__)
register RailsConfig
It's also possible to initialize it manually within your configure block if you want to just give it some yml paths to load from.
RailsConfig.load_and_set_settings("/path/to/yaml1", "/path/to/yaml2", ...)
Customizing RailsConfig
You may customize the behavior of RailsConfig by generating an initializer file:
rails g rails_config:install
This will generate config/initializers/rails_config.rb
with a set of default settings as well as to generate a set of default settings files:
config/settings.yml
config/settings/development.yml
config/settings/production.yml
config/settings/test.yml
Accessing the Settings object
After installing this plugin, the Settings
object will be available globally. Entries are accessed via object member notation:
Settings.my_config_entry
Nested entries are supported:
Settings.my_section.some_entry
Alternatively, you can also use the []
operator if you don't know which exact setting you need to access ahead of time.
# All the following are equivalent to Settings.my_section.some_entry
Settings.my_section[:some_entry]
Settings.my_section['some_entry]
Settings[:my_section][:some_entry]
If you have set a different constant name for the object in the initializer file, use that instead.
Common config file
Config entries are compiled from:
config/settings.yml
config/settings/#{environment}.yml
config/settings/#{locale}.yml
config/environments/#{environment}.yml
config/settings.local.yml
config/settings/#{environment}.local.yml
config/environments/#{environment}.local.yml
Settings defined in files that are lower in the list override settings higher.
Reloading settings
You can reload the Settings object at any time by running Settings.reload!
.
Reloading settings and config files
You can also reload the Settings
object from different config files at runtime.
For example, in your tests if you want to test the production settings, you can:
Rails.env = "production"
Settings.reload_from_files(
Rails.root.join("config", "settings.yml").to_s,
Rails.root.join("config", "settings", "#{Rails.env}.yml").to_s,
Rails.root.join("config", "environments", "#{Rails.env}.yml").to_s
)
Environment specific config files
You can have environment specific config files. Environment specific config entries take precedence over common config entries.
Example development environment config file:
#{Rails.root}/config/environments/development.yml
Example production environment config file:
#{Rails.root}/config/environments/production.yml
Developer specific config files
If you want to have local settings, specific to your machine or development environment,
you can use the following files, which are automatically .gitignored
:
Rails.root.join("config", "settings.local.yml").to_s,
Rails.root.join("config", "settings", "#{Rails.env}.local.yml").to_s,
Rails.root.join("config", "environments", "#{Rails.env}.local.yml").to_s
Adding sources at Runtime
You can add new YAML config files at runtime. Just use:
Settings.add_source!("/path/to/source.yml")
Settings.reload!
This will use the given source.yml file and use its settings to overwrite any previous ones.
One thing I like to do for my Rails projects is provide a local.yml config file that is .gitignored (so its independent per developer). Then I create a new initializer in config/initializers/add_local_config.rb
with the contents
Settings.add_source!("#{Rails.root}/config/settings/local.yml")
Settings.reload!
Note: this is an example usage, it is easier to just use the default local files
settings.local.yml, settings/#{Rails.env}.local.yml and environments/#{Rails.env}.local.yml
for your developer specific settings.
Embedded Ruby (ERB)
Embedded Ruby is allowed in the configuration files. See examples below.
Accessing Configuration Settings
Consider the two following config files.
#Rails.root/config/settings.yml:
en:
size: 1
server: google.com
zh-CN:
size: '一'
server: '谷歌'
#Rails.root/config/environments/development.yml:
en:
size: 2
computed: <%= 1 + 2 + 3 %>
section:
size: 3
servers: [ {name: yahoo.com}, {name: amazon.com} ]
Notice that the environment specific config entries overwrite the common entries.
Settings.size # => 2
Settings.server # => google.com
I18n.locale = 'zh-CN'
Settings.size # => '一'
Settings.server # => '谷歌'
Notice the embedded Ruby.
Settings.computed # => 6
Notice that object member notation is maintained even in nested entries.
Settings.section.size # => 3
Notice array notation and object member notation is maintained.
Settings.section.servers[0].name # => yahoo.com
Settings.section.servers[1].name # => amazon.com
Authors
- Jacques Crocker
- Fred Wu
- Cedric Fung
- Inherited from AppConfig by Christopher J. Bottaro