Metadata-Version: 1.1
Name: python-decouple
Version: 2.3
Summary: Strict separation of settings from code.
Home-page: http://github.com/henriquebastos/python-decouple/
Author: Henrique Bastos
Author-email: henrique@bastos.net
License: MIT
Description: Python Decouple: Strict separation of settings from code
        ========================================================
        
        *Decouple* helps you to organize your settings so that you can
        change parameters without having to redeploy your app.
        
        It also makes easy for you to:
        
        #. store parameters on *ini* or *.env* files;
        #. define comprehensive default values;
        #. properly convert values to the correct data type;
        #. have **only one** configuration module to rule all your instances.
        
        It was originally designed for Django, but became an independent generic tool
        for separating settings from code.
        
        .. image:: https://travis-ci.org/henriquebastos/python-decouple.png?branch=master
            :target: https://travis-ci.org/henriquebastos/python-decouple
            :alt: Test Status
        
        .. image:: https://landscape.io/github/henriquebastos/python-decouple/master/landscape.png
            :target: https://landscape.io/github/henriquebastos/python-decouple/master
            :alt: Code Helth
        
        .. image:: https://pypip.in/v/python-decouple/badge.png
            :target: https://crate.io/packages/python-decouple/
            :alt: Latest PyPI version
        
        .. image:: https://pypip.in/d/python-decouple/badge.png
            :target: https://crate.io/packages/python-decouple/
            :alt: Number of PyPI downloads
        
        Why?
        ----
        
        Web framework's settings stores many different kinds of parameters:
        
        * Locale and i18n;
        * Middlewares and Installed Apps;
        * Resource handles to the database, Memcached, and other backing services;
        * Credentials to external services such as Amazon S3 or Twitter;
        * Per-deploy values such as the canonical hostname for the instance.
        
        The first 2 are *project settings* the last 3 are *instance settings*.
        
        You should be able to change *instance settings* without redeploying your app.
        
        Why not just use environment variables?
        ---------------------------------------
        
        *Envvars* works, but since ``os.environ`` only returns strings, it's tricky.
        
        Let's say you have an *envvar* ``DEBUG=False``. If you run:
        
        .. code-block:: python
        
            if os.environ['DEBUG']:
                print True
            else:
                print False
        
        It will print **True**, because ``os.environ['DEBUG']`` returns the **string** ``"False"``.
        Since it's a non-empty string, it will be evaluated as True.
        
        *Decouple* provides a solution that doesn't look like a workaround: ``config('DEBUG', cast=bool)``.
        
        Install
        -------
        
        .. code-block:: console
        
            pip install python-decouple
        
        Usage
        -----
        
        On your ``settings.py``.
        
        #. Import the ``config`` object:
        
           .. code-block:: python
        
             from decouple import config
        
        #. Retrieve the configuration parameters:
        
           .. code-block:: python
        
             SECRET_KEY = config('SECRET_KEY')
             DEBUG = config('DEBUG', default=False, cast=bool)
             EMAIL_HOST = config('EMAIL_HOST', default='localhost')
             EMAIL_PORT = config('EMAIL_PORT', default=25, cast=int)
        
        Where the settings data are stored?
        -----------------------------------
        
        *Decouple* supports both *.ini* and *.env* files.
        
        Ini file
        ~~~~~~~~~
        
        Simply create a ``settings.ini`` next to your configuration module in the form:
        
        .. code-block:: ini
        
            [settings]
            DEBUG=True
            TEMPLATE_DEBUG=%(DEBUG)s
            SECRET_KEY=ARANDOMSECRETKEY
            DATABASE_URL=mysql://myuser:mypassword@myhost/mydatabase
            PERCENTILE=90%%
        
        *Note*: Since ``ConfigParser`` supports *string interpolation*, to represent the character ``%`` you need to escape it as ``%%``.
        
        Env file
        ~~~~~~~~~
        
        Simply create a ``.env`` text file on your repository's root directory in the form:
        
        .. code-block:: console
        
            DEBUG=True
            TEMPLATE_DEBUG=True
            SECRET_KEY=ARANDOMSECRETKEY
            DATABASE_URL=mysql://myuser:mypassword@myhost/mydatabase
            PERCENTILE=90%
        
        Example: How do I use it with Django?
        -------------------------------------
        
        Given that I have a ``.env`` file at my repository root directory, here is a snippet of my ``settings.py``.
        
        I also recommend using `unipath <https://pypi.python.org/pypi/Unipath>`_
        and `dj-datatabase-url <https://pypi.python.org/pypi/dj-database-url/>`_.
        
        .. code-block:: python
        
            # coding: utf-8
            from decouple import config
            from unipath import Path
            from dj_database_url import parse as db_url
        
        
            BASE_DIR = Path(__file__).parent
        
            DEBUG = config('DEBUG', default=False, cast=bool)
            TEMPLATE_DEBUG = DEBUG
        
            DATABASES = {
                'default': config(
                    'DATABASE_URL',
                    default='sqlite:///' + BASE_DIR.child('db.sqlite3'),
                    cast=db_url
                )
            }
        
            TIME_ZONE = 'America/Sao_Paulo'
            USE_L10N = True
            USE_TZ = True
        
            SECRET_KEY = config('SECRET_KEY')
        
            EMAIL_HOST = config('EMAIL_HOST', default='localhost')
            EMAIL_PORT = config('EMAIL_PORT', default=25, cast=int)
            EMAIL_HOST_PASSWORD = config('EMAIL_HOST_PASSWORD', default='')
            EMAIL_HOST_USER = config('EMAIL_HOST_USER', default='')
            EMAIL_USE_TLS = config('EMAIL_USE_TLS', default=False, cast=bool)
        
            # ...
        
        Atention with *undefined* parameters
        ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
        
        On the above example, all configuration parameters except ``SECRET_KEY = config('SECRET_KEY')``
        have a default value to fallback if it does not exist on the ``.env`` file.
        
        If ``SECRET_KEY`` is not present on the ``.env``, *decouple* will raise an ``UndefinedValueError``.
        
        This *fail fast* policy helps you avoid chasing misbehaviors when you eventually forget a parameter.
        
        How it works?
        =============
        
        *Decouple* is made of 5 classes:
        
        
        - ``Config``
        
            Coordinates all the configuration retrieval.
        
        - ``RepositoryIni``
        
            Can read values from ini files.
        
        - ``RepositoryEnv``
        
            Can read ``.env`` files and when a parameter does not exist there,
            it tries to find it on ``os.environ``.
        
            This process does **not** change nor add any environment variables.
        
        - ``RepositoryShell``
        
            Can only read values from ``os.environ``.
        
        - ``AutoConfig``
        
            Detects which configuration repository you're using.
        
            It recursively searches up your configuration module path looking for a
            ``settings.ini`` or a ``.env`` file.
        
        The **config** object is an instance of ``AutoConfig`` to improve
        *decouple*'s usage.
        
        Understanding the CAST argument
        -------------------------------
        
        By default, all values returned by `decouple` are `strings`.
        
        This happens because they are read from `text files` or the `envvars`.
        
        However, your Python code may expect some other value type, for example:
        
        * Django's DEBUG expects a boolean True or False.
        * Django's EMAIL_PORT expects an integer.
        * Django's ALLOWED_HOSTS expects a list of hostnames.
        
        To meet this need, the `config` function accepts a `cast` argument which
        receives any *callable*, that will be used to *transform* the string value
        into something else.
        
        Let's see some examples for the above mentioned cases:
        
        .. code-block:: pycon
        
            >>> os.environ['DEBUG'] = 'False'
            >>> config('DEBUG', cast=bool)
            False
        
            >>> os.environ['EMAIL_PORT'] = '42'
            >>> config('EMAIL_PORT', cast=int)
            42
        
            >>> os.environ['ALLOWED_HOSTS'] = '.localhost, .herokuapp.com'
            >>> config('ALLOWED_HOSTS', cast=lambda v: [s.strip() for s in v.split(',')])
            ['.localhost,', '.herokuapp.com']
        
        As you can see, `cast` is very flexible. But the last example got a bit complex.
        
        Built in Csv Helper
        -------------------
        
        To address the complexity of the last example, *Decouple* comes with an extensible *Csv helper*.
        
        Let's improve the last example:
        
        .. code-block:: pycon
        
            >>> os.environ['ALLOWED_HOSTS'] = '.localhost, .herokuapp.com'
            >>> config('ALLOWED_HOSTS', cast=Csv())
            ['.localhost,', '.herokuapp.com']
        
        You can also parametrize the *Csv Helper* to return other types of data.
        
        .. code-block:: pycon
        
            >>> os.environ['LIST_OF_INTEGERS'] = '1,2,3,4,5'
            >>> config('ALLOWED_HOSTS', cast=Csv(int))
            [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]
        
            >>> os.environ['COMPLEX_STRING'] = '%virtual_env%\t *important stuff*\t   trailing spaces   '
            >>> csv = Csv(cast=lambda s: s.upper(), delimiter='\t', strip=' %*')
            >>> csv('%virtual_env%\t *important stuff*\t   trailing spaces   ')
            ['VIRTUAL_ENV', 'IMPORTANT STUFF', 'TRAILING SPACES']
            """
        
        License
        =======
        
        The MIT License (MIT)
        
        Copyright (c) 2013 Henrique Bastos <henrique at bastos dot net>
        
        Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy
        of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal
        in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights
        to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell
        copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is
        furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
        
        The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in
        all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
        
        THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR
        IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY,
        FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE
        AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER
        LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM,
        OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN
        THE SOFTWARE.
        
Platform: any
Classifier: Development Status :: 5 - Production/Stable
Classifier: Framework :: Django
Classifier: Framework :: Flask
Classifier: Intended Audience :: Developers
Classifier: License :: OSI Approved :: MIT License
Classifier: Natural Language :: English
Classifier: Operating System :: OS Independent
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3
Classifier: Topic :: Software Development :: Libraries
