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Custom settings management for Django

Project description

Django Convigvars

Configure your Django project in easy and readable way.

Description

Configvars gives possibility to configure Django-based project with local file and environment variables (i.e. for Docker containers).

Environmental variables are the most important. If not set, the variables from the local module will be used, or if these are not present either - the default values will be used:

ENV > LOCAL > DEFAULT

Installation

pip install git+https://gitlab.com/marcinjn/django-configvars.git

Basic configuration

Add configvars to your settings.INSTALLED_APPS:

INSTALLED_APPS = [
    # ...
    "configvars",
    # ...
]

Quickstart

In your settings.py add these lines at the top of the file:

from convigvars import config, secret

SOME_API_KEY = config("SOME_API_KEY", "default_api_key")
SOME_API_SECRET = secret("SOME_API_SECRET", "")

Then use local settings to set these values or pass them by environment variables. To use local file, add these settings to local.py file in the same folder where settings.py file is located, and fill it with:

SOME_API_KEY = "NEW_API_KEY"
SOME_API_SECRET = "NEW_API_SECRET"

To check if they are apllied propely run manage.py configvars.

You can override these settings by using environment vars (i.e. for deployment in containers). To do so just declare an environment variable as usual:

SOME_API_KEY="ENV_API_KEY" manage.py configvars

In case of secrets, you should provide a path to the secret file containing a value:

SOME_API_SECRET="/run/secrets/SOME_API_SECRET" manage.py configvars

If file does not exist, the path will be interpreted as typical string value.

Usage

Config vars declaration

In your settings.py file declare configurable variables by using config or secret functions. The first one is used for regular variables, the second one - for secure variables (like passwords, secrets, etc).

DATABASES = {
    "default": {
        "NAME": config("DB_NAME", "example"),   # `example` as default database name
        "USER": config("DB_USER", "postgres"),  # `postgres` as default username
        "PASSWORD": secret("DB_PASSWORD"),
        "HOST": config("DB_HOST", "localhost"), # `localhost` as default host
        "PORT": config("DB_PORT", 5432),        # `5432` as default port
    }
}

Show configurable variables for your project

python manage.py configvars

Should result in something like that:

DB_NAME = 'example'
DB_USER = 'postgres'
DB_PASSWORD = None
DB_HOST = 'localhost'
DB_PORT = 5432

Show only changed config variables

To show changed config variables by local.py or environment variables use:

python manage.py configvars --changed

Adding short description to your config variables

In your settings.py declare config or secret with additional desc argument:

MY_CUSTOM_VARIABLE = config("MY_CUSTOM_VARIABLE", "default_value", desc="Set's custom variable")

Then you can dump your config variables with descriptions:

$ python manage.py configvars --comment

MY_CUSTOM_VARIABLE = 'default_value'  # Set's custom variable

Local settings

Django Configvars will try to import <projectname>.local module by default. By using this file you can customize your config variables - they will be used as current values.

To do so, create empty local.py in directory where your settings.py file is located, then assign values to your variables.

As local config variables are specific to a local machine, consider adding local.py to .gitignore.

Note that:

  • Local settings can be overriden by environment variables
  • Local settings can be skipped for your project

To change location or name of your local settings file, you must initialize Django Configvars explicitely in settings.py module:

from configvars import initialize

initialize("other.location.of.settings_local")

Environment variables

Django Config vars will check at the first whether environment name of the variable is defined. It is important for deployments in containers, where configuration variables are passed mostly by environment variables.

If environment variable does not exist, a local variable will be used. If local value is not defined, a default value will be used.

Environment variables can be prefixed to solve issues with eventual name conflicts. To do so you must initialize Django Configvars explicitely in settings.py file:

from configvars import initialize

initialize(env_prefix="MYPREFIX_")

Support

To ask question please create an issue.

To do

  • better support for type casts
  • config vars view for Django Admin

Contributing

You can contribute by creating issues, feature requests or merge requests.

Authors and acknowledgment

  • Marcin Nowak

License

ISC License

Copyright (c) 2023 Marcin Nowak

Permission to use, copy, modify, and/or distribute this software for any purpose with or without fee is hereby granted, provided that the above copyright notice and this permission notice appear in all copies.

THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS" AND THE AUTHOR DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES WITH REGARD TO THIS SOFTWARE INCLUDING ALL IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR BE LIABLE FOR ANY SPECIAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES OR ANY DAMAGES WHATSOEVER RESULTING FROM LOSS OF USE, DATA OR PROFITS, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, NEGLIGENCE OR OTHER TORTIOUS ACTION, ARISING OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE USE OR PERFORMANCE OF THIS SOFTWARE.

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