Skip to main content

Live application settings with pluggable backends, including Redis and MongoDB.

Project description

Store “live” application settings in a choice of key/value data stores.

This was originally a fork of django-constance, but is now independent of Django and is essentially the key/value abstraction part of the original library.

Backends currently supported: Redis and MongoDB.

Tested with Python 2.7 and Python 3.4.

The source is on github.

Installation

$ pip install waterboy

Usage

In your application, define the settings that you want to be editable:

CONFIG = {
    '<KEY>': <DEFAULT>,
    ...
}

For example:

CONFIG = {
    'INT_VALUE': 1,
    'LONG_VALUE': 100000000,
    'BOOL_VALUE': True,
    'STRING_VALUE': 'Hello world',
    'UNICODE_VALUE': six.u('Rivière-Bonjour'),
    'DECIMAL_VALUE': Decimal('0.1'),
    'DATETIME_VALUE': datetime(2010, 8, 23, 11, 29, 24),
    'FLOAT_VALUE': 3.1415926536,
    'DATE_VALUE': date(2010, 12, 24),
    'TIME_VALUE': time(23, 59, 59),
}

Then create a Config object based on these initial settings. For example, using Redis:

>>> from waterboy import RedisConfig
>>> cfg = RedisConfig(initial=CONFIG)

You then retrieve settings from the backend via attribute-style access:

>>> cfg.INT_VALUE
1

If the backend returns None then the default value is returned.

Similarly, setting an attribute on the Config object will transparently “upsert” (update or insert) that value in the backend.

Attempts to get or set values on the Config object will fail with an AttributeError if the key does not exist in the initial defaults dictionary:

>>> cfg.ABCD = 'abcd'
Traceback (most recent call last):
  ...
AttributeError: 'RedisConfig' object has no attribute 'ABCD'

But this behaviour may be modified by passing strict=False to the Config constructor:

>>> cfg = RedisConfig(initial=CONFIG, strict=False)

which will cause the existence check to be bypassed:

>>> cfg.ABCD = 'abcd'

Development

Clone and run tests:

$ git clone git@github.com:gmflanagan/waterboy.git
$ cd waterboy
$ make test

Tests are run via tox and pytest.

If redis and mongo are not running on the declared ports then the tests associated with those backends will be skipped. See the makefile for the default ports.

To install redis and mongo locally, run buildout:

$ make buildout

Then run redis in the foreground with:

$ make redis

and mongodb with:

$ make mongod

Now run all tests:

$ make test

Project details


Download files

Download the file for your platform. If you're not sure which to choose, learn more about installing packages.

Source Distribution

waterboy-0.1.0.tar.gz (15.4 kB view hashes)

Uploaded Source

Supported by

AWS AWS Cloud computing and Security Sponsor Datadog Datadog Monitoring Fastly Fastly CDN Google Google Download Analytics Microsoft Microsoft PSF Sponsor Pingdom Pingdom Monitoring Sentry Sentry Error logging StatusPage StatusPage Status page