#!/usr/bin/env python3
-"""Global configuration driven by commandline arguments (even across
-different modules). Usage:
+"""Global configuration driven by commandline arguments, environment variables
+and saved configuration files. This works across several modules.
+
+Usage:
module.py:
----------
config.parse() # Very important, this must be invoked!
If you set this up and remember to invoke config.parse(), all commandline
- arguments will play nicely together:
+ arguments will play nicely together. This is done automatically for you
+ if you're using the bootstrap module's initialize wrapper.
% main.py -h
usage: main.py [-h]
# This module is commonly used by others in here and should avoid
# taking any unnecessary dependencies back on them.
-# Note: at this point in time, logging hasn't been configured and
-# anything we log will come out the root logger.
-logger = logging.getLogger(__name__)
-
# Defer logging messages until later when logging has been initialized.
saved_messages: List[str] = []
# Make a copy of the original program arguments.
-program_name = os.path.basename(sys.argv[0])
-original_argv = [arg for arg in sys.argv]
+program_name: str = os.path.basename(sys.argv[0])
+original_argv: List[str] = [arg for arg in sys.argv]
+
+
+class OptionalRawFormatter(argparse.HelpFormatter):
+ """This formatter has the same bahavior as the normal argparse text
+ formatter except when the help text of an argument begins with
+ "RAW|". In that case, the line breaks are preserved and the text
+ is not wrapped.
+
+ """
+
+ def _split_lines(self, text, width):
+ if text.startswith('RAW|'):
+ return text[4:].splitlines()
+ return argparse.HelpFormatter._split_lines(self, text, width)
+
# A global parser that we will collect arguments into.
args = argparse.ArgumentParser(
description=None,
- formatter_class=argparse.ArgumentDefaultsHelpFormatter,
+ formatter_class=OptionalRawFormatter,
fromfile_prefix_chars="@",
- epilog=f'-----------------------------------------------------------------------------\n{program_name} uses config.py ({__file__}) for global, cross-module configuration setup and parsing.\n-----------------------------------------------------------------------------'
+ epilog=f'{program_name} uses config.py ({__file__}) for global, cross-module configuration setup and parsing.',
)
# Keep track of if we've been called and prevent being called more
# than once.
config_parse_called = False
+
# A global configuration dictionary that will contain parsed arguments.
# It is also this variable that modules use to access parsed arguments.
# This is the data that is most interesting to our callers; it will hold
# the configuration result.
config: Dict[str, Any] = {}
+# It would be really nice if this shit worked from interactive python
def add_commandline_args(title: str, description: str = ""):
'--config_loadfile',
metavar='FILENAME',
default=None,
- help='Config file from which to read args in lieu or in addition to commandline.',
+ help='Config file (populated via --config_savefile) from which to read args in lieu or in addition to commandline.',
)
group.add_argument(
'--config_dump',
default=False,
action='store_true',
- help='Display the global configuration on STDERR at program startup.',
+ help='Display the global configuration (possibly derived from multiple sources) on STDERR at program startup.',
)
group.add_argument(
'--config_savefile',
type=str,
metavar='FILENAME',
default=None,
- help='Populate config file compatible --config_loadfile to save config for later use.',
+ help='Populate config file compatible with --config_loadfile to save global config for later use.',
+)
+group.add_argument(
+ '--config_rejects_unrecognized_arguments',
+ default=False,
+ action='store_true',
+ help=(
+ 'If present, config will raise an exception if it doesn\'t recognize an argument. The '
+ + 'default behavior is to ignore this so as to allow interoperability with programs that '
+ + 'want to use their own argparse calls to parse their own, separate commandline args.'
+ ),
)
+def overwrite_argparse_epilog(msg: str) -> None:
+ args.epilog = msg
+
+
def is_flag_already_in_argv(var: str):
"""Is a particular flag passed on the commandline?"""
for _ in sys.argv:
return False
-def parse(entry_module: Optional[str]) -> Dict[str, Any]:
- """Main program should call this early in main()"""
- global config_parse_called
- if config_parse_called:
- logger.warning('config.parse has already been called; ignoring spurious invocation')
- return config
+def reorder_arg_action_groups(entry_module: Optional[str]):
+ global program_name, args
+ reordered_action_groups = []
+ for group in args._action_groups:
+ if entry_module is not None and entry_module in group.title: # type: ignore
+ reordered_action_groups.append(group)
+ elif program_name in group.title: # type: ignore
+ reordered_action_groups.append(group)
+ else:
+ reordered_action_groups.insert(0, group)
+ return reordered_action_groups
- global saved_messages
- # If we're about to do the usage message dump, put the main module's
- # argument group last in the list (if possible) so that when the user
- # passes -h or --help, it will be visible on the screen w/o scrolling.
- reordered_action_groups = []
- global prog
- for arg in sys.argv:
- if arg == '--help' or arg == '-h':
- for group in args._action_groups:
- if entry_module is not None and entry_module in group.title:
- reordered_action_groups.append(group)
- elif program_name in group.title:
- reordered_action_groups.append(group)
- else:
- reordered_action_groups.insert(0, group)
- args._action_groups = reordered_action_groups
-
- # Examine the environment variables that match known flags. For a
- # flag called --example_flag the corresponding environment
- # variable would be called EXAMPLE_FLAG.
+def augment_sys_argv_from_environment_variables():
+ global saved_messages
usage_message = args.format_usage()
optional = False
var = ''
if env in os.environ:
if not is_flag_already_in_argv(var):
value = os.environ[env]
- saved_messages.append(
- f'Initialized from environment: {var} = {value}'
- )
+ saved_messages.append(f'Initialized from environment: {var} = {value}')
from string_utils import to_bool
+
if len(chunks) == 1 and to_bool(value):
sys.argv.append(var)
elif len(chunks) > 1:
sys.argv.append(value)
var = ''
env = ''
- else:
- next
- # Look for loadfile and read/parse it if present.
+
+def augment_sys_argv_from_loadfile():
+ global saved_messages
loadfile = None
saw_other_args = False
grab_next_arg = False
saw_other_args = True
if loadfile is not None:
- if saw_other_args:
- msg = f'WARNING: Augmenting commandline arguments with those from {loadfile}.'
- print(msg, file=sys.stderr)
- saved_messages.append(msg)
if not os.path.exists(loadfile):
- print(f'--config_loadfile argument must be a file, {loadfile} not found.',
- file=sys.stderr)
- sys.exit(-1)
+ raise Exception(
+ f'ERROR: --config_loadfile argument must be a file, {loadfile} not found.'
+ )
+ if saw_other_args:
+ msg = f'Augmenting commandline arguments with those from {loadfile}.'
+ else:
+ msg = f'Reading commandline arguments from {loadfile}.'
+ print(msg, file=sys.stderr)
+ saved_messages.append(msg)
+
with open(loadfile, 'r') as rf:
newargs = rf.readlines()
newargs = [arg.strip('\n') for arg in newargs if 'config_savefile' not in arg]
sys.argv += newargs
+
+def parse(entry_module: Optional[str]) -> Dict[str, Any]:
+ """Main program should call this early in main(). Note that the
+ bootstrap.initialize wrapper takes care of this automatically.
+
+ """
+ global config_parse_called
+ if config_parse_called:
+ return config
+ global saved_messages
+
+ # If we're about to do the usage message dump, put the main
+ # module's argument group last in the list (if possible) so that
+ # when the user passes -h or --help, it will be visible on the
+ # screen w/o scrolling.
+ for arg in sys.argv:
+ if arg == '--help' or arg == '-h':
+ args._action_groups = reorder_arg_action_groups(entry_module)
+
+ # Examine the environment for variables that match known flags.
+ # For a flag called --example_flag the corresponding environment
+ # variable would be called EXAMPLE_FLAG. If found, hackily add
+ # these into sys.argv to be parsed.
+ augment_sys_argv_from_environment_variables()
+
+ # Look for loadfile and read/parse it if present. This also
+ # works by jamming these values onto sys.argv.
+ augment_sys_argv_from_loadfile()
+
# Parse (possibly augmented, possibly completely overwritten)
# commandline args with argparse normally and populate config.
known, unknown = args.parse_known_args()
# future argument parsers. For example, unittest_main in python
# has some of its own flags. If we didn't recognize it, maybe
# someone else will.
+ if len(unknown) > 0:
+ if config['config_rejects_unrecognized_arguments']:
+ raise Exception(
+ f'Encountered unrecognized config argument(s) {unknown} with --config_rejects_unrecognized_arguments enabled; halting.'
+ )
+ saved_messages.append(f'Config encountered unrecognized commandline arguments: {unknown}')
sys.argv = sys.argv[:1] + unknown
# Check for savefile and populate it if requested.
savefile = config['config_savefile']
if savefile and len(savefile) > 0:
with open(savefile, 'w') as wf:
- wf.write(
- "\n".join(original_argv[1:])
- )
+ wf.write("\n".join(original_argv[1:]))
# Also dump the config on stderr if requested.
if config['config_dump']:
"""Print the current config to stdout."""
print("Global Configuration:", file=sys.stderr)
pprint.pprint(config, stream=sys.stderr)
+ print()
def late_logging():