Provided by: libconfig-std-perl_0.903-1_all bug

NAME

       Config::Std - Load and save configuration files in a standard format

VERSION

       This document describes Config::Std version 0.903

SYNOPSIS

           use Config::Std;

           # Load named config file into specified hash...
           read_config 'demo2.cfg' => my %config;

           # Extract the value of a key/value pair from a specified section...
           $config_value = $config{Section_label}{key};

           # Change (or create) the value of a key/value pair...
           $config{Other_section_label}{other_key} = $new_val;

           # Update the config file from which this hash was loaded...
           write_config %config;

           # Write the config information to another file as well...
           write_config %config, $other_file_name;

DESCRIPTION

       This module implements yet another damn configuration-file system.

       The configuration language is deliberately simple and limited, and the module works hard to preserve as
       much information (section order, comments, etc.) as possible when a configuration file is updated.

       The whole point of Config::Std is to encourage use of one standard layout and syntax in config files.
       Damian says "I could have gotten away with it, I would have only allowed one separator. But it proved
       impossible to choose between ":" and "=" (half the people I asked wanted one, half wanted the other)."
       Providing round-trip file re-write is the spoonful of sugar to help the medicine go down.  The supported
       syntax is within the general INI file family

       See Chapter 19 of "Perl Best Practices" (O'Reilly, 2005) for more detail on the rationale for this
       approach.

   Configuration language
       The configuration language is a slight extension of the Windows INI format.

       Comments

       A comment starts with a "#" character (Perl-style) or a ";" character (INI-style), and runs to the end of
       the same line:

           # This is a comment

           ; Ywis, eke hight thilke

       Comments can be placed almost anywhere in a configuration file, except inside a section label, or in the
       key or value of a configuration variable:

           # Valid comment
           [ # Not a comment, just a weird section label ]

           ; Valid comment
           key: value  ; Not a comment, just part of the value

       NOTE BENE -- that last is a BAD EXAMPLE of what is NOT supported.  This module supports full-line
       comments only, not on same line with semantic content.

       Sections

       A configuration file consists of one or more sections, each of which is introduced by a label in square
       brackets:

           [SECTION1]        # Almost anything is a valid section label

           [SECTION 2]       # Internal whitespace is allowed (except newlines)

           [%^$%^&!!!]       # The label doesn't have to be alphanumeric

           [ETC. ETC. AS MANY AS YOU WANT]

       The only restriction on section labels is that they must be by themselves on a single line (except for
       any surrounding whitespace or trailing comments), and they cannot contain the character "]".

       Every line after a given section label until the next section label (or the end of the config file)
       belongs to the given section label. If no section label is currently in effect, the current section has
       an empty label. In other words, there is an implicit:

           []                # Label is the empty string

       at the start of each config file.

       Configuration variables

       Each non-empty line within a section must consist of the specification of a configuration variable. Each
       such variable consists of a key and a string value. For example:

           name: George
            age: 47

           his weight! : 185

       The key consists of every character (including internal whitespace) from the start of the line until the
       key/value separator. So, the previous example declares three keys: 'name', 'age', and 'his weight!'.

       Note that whitespace before and after the key is removed. This makes it easier to format keys cleanly:

                  name : George
                   age : 47
           his weight! : 185

       The key/value separator can be either a colon (as above) or an equals sign, like so:

                  name= George
                   age=  47
           his weight! = 185

       Both types of separators can be used in the same file, but neither can be used as part of a key. Newlines
       are not allowed in keys either.

       When writing out a config file, Config::Std tries to preserve whichever separator was used in the
       original data (if that data was read in). New data (created by code not parsed by "read_config") is
       written back with a colon as its default separator, unless you specify the only other separator value '='
       when the module is loaded:

           use Config::Std { def_sep => '=' };

       Note that this does not change read-in parsing, does not change punctuation for values that were parsed,
       and will not allow values other than '=' or ':'.

       Everything from the first non-whitespace character after the separator, up to the end of the line, is
       treated as the value for the config variable.  So all of the above examples define the same three values:
       'George', '47', and '185'.

       In other words, any whitespace immediately surrounding the separator character is part of the separator,
       not part of the key or value.

       Note that you can't put a comment on the same line as a configuration variable. The "# etc." is simply
       considered part of the value:

           [Delimiters]

           block delims:    { }
           string delims:   " "
           comment delims:  # \n

       You can comment a config var on the preceding or succeeding line:

           [Delimiters]

           # Use braces to delimit blocks...
           block delims:    { }

           # Use double quotes to delimit strings

           string delims:   " "

           # Use octothorpe/newline to delimit comments
           comment delims:  # \n

       Multi-line configuration values

       A single value can be continued over two or more lines. If the line immediately after a configuration
       variable starts with the separator character used in the variable's definition, then the value of the
       variable continues on that line. For example:

           address: 742 Evergreen Terrace
                  : Springfield
                  : USA

       The newlines then form part of the value, so the value specified in the previous example is:
       "742 Evergreen Terrace\nSpringfield\nUSA"

       Note that the second and subsequent lines of a continued value are considered to start where the
       whitespace after the original separator finished, not where the whitespace after their own separator
       finishes. For example, if the previous example had been:

           address: 742 Evergreen Terrace
                  :   Springfield
                  :     USA

       then the value would be:

           "742 Evergreen Terrace\n  Springfield\n    USA"

       If a continuation line has less leading whitespace that the first line:

           address:   742 Evergreen Terrace
                  :  Springfield
                  : USA

       it's treated as having no leading whitespace:

           "742 Evergreen Terrace\nSpringfield\nUSA"

       Multi-part configuration values

       If the particular key appears more than once in the same section, it is considered to be part of the same
       configuration variable. The value of that configuration value is then a list, containing all the
       individual values for each instance of the key. For example, given the definition:

           cast: Homer
           cast: Marge
           cast: Lisa
           cast: Bart
           cast: Maggie

       the corresponding value of the 'cast' configuration variable is:
       "['Homer', 'Marge', 'Lisa', 'Bart', 'Maggie']"

       Individual values in a multi-part list can also be multi-line (see above). For example, given:

           extras: Moe
                 : (the bartender)

           extras: Smithers
                 : (the dogsbody)

       the value for the 'extras' config variable is: "["Moe\n(the bartender)", "Smithers\n(the dogsbody)"]"

   Internal representation
       Each section label in a configuration file becomes a top-level hash key when the configuration file is
       read in. The corresponding value is a nested hash reference.

       Each configuration variable's key becomes a key in that nested hash reference.  Each configuration
       variable's value becomes the corresponding value in that nested hash reference.

       Single-line and multi-line values become strings. Multi-part values become references to arrays of
       strings.

       For example, the following configuration file:

           # A simple key (just an identifier)...
           simple : simple value

           # A more complex key (with whitespace)...
           more complex key : more complex value

           # A new section...
           [MULTI-WHATEVERS]

           # A value spread over several lines...
           multi-line : this is line 1
                      : this is line 2
                      : this is line 3

           # Several values for the same key...
           multi-value: this is value 1
           multi-value: this is value 2
           multi-value: this is value 3

       would be read into a hash whose internal structure looked like this:

           {
              # Default section...
              '' => {
                 'simple'           => 'simple value',
                 'more complex key' => 'more complex value',
              },

              # Named section...
              'MULTI-WHATEVERS' => {
                   'multi-line'  => "this is line 1\nthis is line 2\nthis is line 3",

                   'multi-value' => [ 'this is value 1',
                                      'this is value 2',
                                      'this is value 3'
                                    ],
               }
           }

INTERFACE

       The following subroutines are exported automatically whenever the module is loaded...

       "read_config($filename => %config_hash)"
       "read_config($filename => $config_hash_ref)"
       "read_config($string_ref => %config_hash_or_ref)"
           The  "read_config()"  subroutine  takes  two  arguments:  the filename of a configuration file, and a
           variable into which the contents of that configuration file are to be loaded.

           If the variable is a hash, then the configuration sections and their key/value pairs are loaded  into
           nested subhashes of the hash.

           If  the  variable  is  a  scalar  with  an undefined value, a reference to an anonymous hash is first
           assigned to that scalar, and that hash is then filled as described above.

           The subroutine returns true on success, and throws an exception on failure.

           If you pass a reference to the string as the first argument to "read_config()" it uses that string as
           the source of the config info.  For example:

                   use Config::Std;

                   # here we load the config text to a scalar
                   my $cfg = q{
                   [Section 1]
                   attr1 = at
                   attr2 = bat

                   [Section 2]
                   attr3 = cat
                   };

                   # here we parse the config from that scalar by passing a reference to it.
                   read_config( \$cfg, my %config );

                   use Data::Dumper 'Dumper';
                   warn Dumper [ \%config ];

       "write_config(%config_hash => $filename)"
       "write_config($config_hash_ref => $filename)"
       "write_config(%config_hash)"
       "write_config($config_hash_ref)"
           The "write_config()" subroutine takes two arguments:  the  hash  or  hash  reference  containing  the
           configuration data to be written out to disk, and an optional filename specifying which file it is to
           be written to.

           The  data  hash must conform to the two-level structure described earlier: with top-level keys naming
           sections and their values being references to second-level hashes that store the keys and  values  of
           the configuartion variables. If the structure of the hash differs from this, an exception is thrown.

           If  a  filename is also specified, the subroutine opens that file and writes to it. It no filename is
           specified, the subroutine uses the name of the file from which the hash was originally  loaded  using
           "read_config()".   It  no  filename  is  specified  and  the  hash  wasn't  originally  loaded  using
           "read_config()", an exception is thrown.

           The subroutine returns true on success and throws and exception on failure.

       If necessary (typically to avoid conflicts with other modules), you can have the module  export  its  two
       subroutines with different names by loading it with the appropriate options:

           use Config::Std { read_config => 'get_ini', write_config => 'update_ini' };

           # and later...

           get_ini($filename => %config_hash);

           # and later still...

           update_ini(%config_hash);

       You  can  also  control  how much spacing the module puts between single- line values when they are first
       written to a file, by using the "def_gap" option:

           # No empty line between single-line config values...
           use Config::Std { def_gap => 0 };

           # An empty line between all single-line config values...
           use Config::Std { def_gap => 1 };

       Regardless of the value passed for "def_gap", new multi-line values are always written with an empty line
       above and below them. Likewise, values that were previously read in from a file are always  written  back
       with whatever spacing they originally had.

DIAGNOSTICS

       Can't open config file '%s' (%s)
           You  tried  to  read  in  a  configuration file, but the file you specified didn't exist. Perhaps the
           filepath you specified was wrong. Or maybe your application didn't have permission to access the file
           you specified.

       Can't read from locked config file '$filename'
           You tried to read in a configuration file, but the file you specified was being  written  by  someone
           else  (they had a file lock active on it).  Either try again later, or work out who else is using the
           file.

       Scalar second argument to 'read_config' must be empty
           You passed a scalar variable  as  the  destination  into  "read_config()"  was  supposed  to  load  a
           configuration  file,  but  that  variable  already  had  a defined value, so "read_config()" couldn't
           autovivify a new hash for you. Did you mean to pass the subroutine a hash instead of a scalar?

       Can't save %s value for key '%s' (only scalars or array refs)
           You called "write_config" and passed it a hash containing a configuration variable whose value wasn't
           a single string, or a list of strings. The configuration file format supported by  this  module  only
           supports  those  two  data  types  as  values.  If  you really need to store other kinds of data in a
           configuration file, you should consider using "Data::Dumper" or "YAML" instead.

       Missing filename in call to write_config()
           You tried to calll "write_config()" with only a configuration hash, but that hash  wasn't  originally
           loaded  using "read_config()", so "write_config()" has no idea where to write it to. Either make sure
           the hash you're trying to save was originally  loaded  using  "read_config()",  or  else  provide  an
           explicit filename as the second argument to "write_config()".

       Can't open config file '%s' for writing (%s)
           You  tried  to  update or create a configuration file, but the file you specified could not be opened
           for writing (for the reason given in the parentheses). This is often caused by incorrect filepaths or
           lack of write permissions on a directory.

       Can't write to locked config file '%s'
           You tried to update or create a configuration file, but the file you specified was being  written  at
           the time by someone else (they had a file lock active on it). Either try again later, or work out who
           else is using the file.

CONFIGURATION AND ENVIRONMENT

       Config::Std  requires  no  configuration files or environment variables.  (To do so would be disturbingly
       recursive.)

DEPENDENCIES

       This module requires the Class::Std module (available from the CPAN)

INCOMPATIBILITIES

       Those variants of INI file dialect supporting partial-line comment are incompatible.  (This is the  price
       of keeping comments when re-writing.)

BUGS AND LIMITATIONS

       Memory leak re-reading
           A daemon re-reading its config file has reported a memory leak.

       Parallel testing not safe
           This  is  a  config  file  module.  Tests  written  before "TAP" got parallel testing are unsafe with
           parallel testing, surprise!  Settings are now included to force serial testing (until we refactor all
           tests to use temp dirs?).

           If using an older Perl < 5.21.1, and Module.PL, and getting out-of-sequence test failures  installing
           this module, either update Test::Harness~'>= 3.31' or export HARNESS_OPTIONS=j1 (or force/no-test, or
           use Build.PL and/or perl-5.22.0 or newer instead).

       Loading on demand
           If  you  attempt  to load "read_config()" and "write_config()" at runtime with "require", you can not
           rely upon the prototype to convert a regular hash to a reference.  To  work  around  this,  you  must
           explicitly pass a reference to the config hash.

               require Config::Std;
               Config::Std->import;

               my %config;
               read_config($file, \%config);
               write_config(\%config, $file);

       Windows line endings on Unix/Linux (RT#21547/23550)
           If the config file being read contains carriage returns and line feeds at the end of each line rather
           than  just  line feeds (i.e. the standard Windows file format, when read on a machine expecting POSIX
           file format), Config::Std emits an error with embedded newline.

           Workaround is match file line-endings to locale.

           This will be fixed in 1.000.

       leading comment vanishes (RT#24597,)
           A comment before the first section is not always retained on write-back, if the '' default section is
           empty.

       Please report any bugs or feature requests to "bug-config-std@rt.cpan.org", or through the web  interface
       at <http://rt.cpan.org>.

AUTHOR

       Damian   Conway    "<DCONWAY@cpan.org>"   Maintainers   Bill  Ricker     "<BRICKER@cpan.org>"  Tom  Metro
       "<tmetro@cpan.org>"

LICENCE AND COPYRIGHT

       Copyright (c) 2005, Damian Conway "<DCONWAY@cpan.org>".  Copyright (c) 2011,2014,2017, D.Conway, W.Ricker
       "<BRICKER@cpan.org>" All rights reserved.

       This module is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it  under  the  same  terms  as  Perl
       itself.

DISCLAIMER OF WARRANTY

       BECAUSE  THIS  SOFTWARE  IS LICENSED FREE OF CHARGE, THERE IS NO WARRANTY FOR THE SOFTWARE, TO THE EXTENT
       PERMITTED BY APPLICABLE LAW. EXCEPT WHEN OTHERWISE STATED IN WRITING THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS  AND/OR  OTHER
       PARTIES  PROVIDE  THE  SOFTWARE  "AS  IS"  WITHOUT  WARRANTY  OF  ANY  KIND, EITHER EXPRESSED OR IMPLIED,
       INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND  FITNESS  FOR  A  PARTICULAR
       PURPOSE.  THE  ENTIRE  RISK  AS  TO  THE  QUALITY AND PERFORMANCE OF THE SOFTWARE IS WITH YOU. SHOULD THE
       SOFTWARE PROVE DEFECTIVE, YOU ASSUME THE COST OF ALL NECESSARY SERVICING, REPAIR, OR CORRECTION.

       IN NO EVENT UNLESS REQUIRED BY APPLICABLE LAW OR AGREED TO IN WRITING WILL ANY COPYRIGHT HOLDER,  OR  ANY
       OTHER  PARTY WHO MAY MODIFY AND/OR REDISTRIBUTE THE SOFTWARE AS PERMITTED BY THE ABOVE LICENCE, BE LIABLE
       TO YOU FOR DAMAGES, INCLUDING ANY GENERAL, SPECIAL, INCIDENTAL, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES ARISING  OUT  OF
       THE  USE  OR  INABILITY  TO  USE  THE  SOFTWARE  (INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO LOSS OF DATA OR DATA BEING
       RENDERED INACCURATE OR LOSSES SUSTAINED BY YOU OR THIRD PARTIES OR A FAILURE OF THE SOFTWARE  TO  OPERATE
       WITH  ANY OTHER SOFTWARE), EVEN IF SUCH HOLDER OR OTHER PARTY HAS BEEN ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
       DAMAGES.

perl v5.26.1                                       2017-10-07                                   Config::Std(3pm)