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327 lines
10 KiB
327 lines
10 KiB
Configuration parser
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====================
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Libucw contains a parser for configuration files. The syntax of the
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configuration files is described in <<config:>>, here we explain the
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interface of the parser.
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Basically, you write a description of the configuration file syntax,
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which maps configuration items to variables of your program. Then
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Then you run the parser and it fills your variables with the values
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from the configuration file.
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The descriptions are modular. The configuration can be split to sections,
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each section declared at a separate place. You can also define your own
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data types.
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- <<example,Example>>
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* <<ex_structure,The structure>>
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* <<ex_load,Loading configuration>>
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- <<deep,Getting deeper>>
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* <<conf_multi,Arrays and lists>>
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* <<reload,Reloading configuration>>
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* <<custom_parser,Creating custom parsers>>
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* <<hooks,Hooks>>
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- <<conf_h,ucw/conf.h>>
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* <<conf_ctxt,Configuration contexts>>
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* <<conf_load,Safe configuration loading>>
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* <<conf_types,Data types>>
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* <<conf_macros,Convenience macros>>
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* <<alloc,Memory allocation>>
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* <<journal,Undo journal>>
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* <<declare,Section declaration>>
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* <<bparser,Parsers for basic types>>
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* <<conf_direct,Direct access>>
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* <<conf_dump,Debug dumping>>
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- <<getopt_h,ucw/getopt.h>>
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* <<conf_getopt,Loading configuration by cf_getopt()>> (obsolete)
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* <<getopt_example,Example>> (obsolete)
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[[example]]
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Example
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-------
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If you want to just load simple configuration, this is the part you
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want to read. This simple example should give you the overview. Look
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at the <<conf_macros,convenience macros>> section to see list of
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supported data types, sections, etc.
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[[ex_cfile]]
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Suppose you have configuration file with the following content and you
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want to load it:
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HelloWorld {
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Text "Hello planet"
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Count 3
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}
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[[ex_structure]]
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The structure
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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First, you declare the structure and let the configuration parser know
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it exists.
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#include <ucw/lib.h>
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#include <ucw/conf.h>
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static char *hw_text = "Hello world";
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static int hw_count = 1;
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static int hw_wait_answer = 0;
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static struct cf_section hw_config = {
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CF_ITEMS {
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CF_STRING("Text", &hw_text),
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CF_INT("Count", &hw_count),
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CF_INT("WaitAnswer", &hw_wait_answer),
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CF_END
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}
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};
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static void CONSTRUCTOR hw_init(void) {
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cf_declare_section("HelloWorld", &hw_config, 0);
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}
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The variables are used to store the loaded values. Their initial
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values work as defaults, if nothing else is loaded. The hw_config()
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structure assigns the variables to configuration names. The hw_init()
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function (because of the `CONSTRUCTOR` macro) is run before main()
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is called and it tells the parser that the section exists (alternatively,
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you can call @cf_declare_section() at the start of your main()).
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You can plug in as many configuration sections as you like, from
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various places across your code.
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[[ex_load]]
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Loading configuration
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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You can load the configuration explicitly by calling @cf_load().
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That can be convenient when writing a library, but in normal programs,
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you can ask the <<opt:,option parser>> to handle it for you.
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A typical example follows, please see the <<opt:conf,interface between
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conf and opt>> for details.
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#include <ucw/lib.h>
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#include <ucw/opt.h>
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static struct opt_section options = {
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OPT_ITEMS {
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// More options can be specified here
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OPT_HELP("Configuration options:"),
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OPT_CONF_OPTIONS,
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OPT_END
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}
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};
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int main(int argc, char **argv)
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{
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cf_def_file = "default.cf";
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opt_parse(&options, argv+1);
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// Configuration file is already loaded here
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return 0;
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}
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[[deep]]
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Getting deeper
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--------------
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Since the configuration system is somehow complicated, this part gives
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you a little overview of what you can find and where.
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[[conf_multi]]
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Arrays and lists
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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It is sometime needed to have multiple items of the same type. There
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are three ways to do that:
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*Static arrays*::
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An array with fixed maximum length. You provide
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the length and already allocated array which is filled with items.
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The configuration may contain less than the maximum length items.
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+
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For example, you can have an static array of five unsigned integers:
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+
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static uint array[] = { 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 };
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+
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static struct cf_section section = {
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CF_ITEMS {
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CF_UINT_ARY("array", array, 5),
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CF_END
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}
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};
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*Dynamic arrays*::
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Similar to static array, but you provide pointer
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to pointer to the given item (eg. if you want dynamic array of
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integers, you give `**int`). The parser allocates a <<gary:,growing array>>
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of the required size.
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+
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If you want dynamic array of strings, you would use:
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+
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static char *array[];
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+
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static struct cf_section section = {
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CF_ITEMS {
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CF_STRING_DYN("array", &array, CF_ANY_NUM),
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CF_END
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}
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};
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*Lists*::
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Linked lists based on <<lists:clists,clists>>. You provide description
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of single node and pointer to the
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<<lists:struct_clist,`struct clist`>> variable. All the nodes will
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be created dynamically and put there.
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+
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First element of your structure must be <<lists:struct_cnode,`cnode`>>.
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+
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The first example is list of strings and uses <<lists:simple_lists,simple
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lists>>:
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+
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static struct clist list;
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+
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static struct cf_section section = {
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CF_ITEMS {
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CF_LIST("list", &list, &cf_string_list_config),
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CF_END
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}
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};
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+
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Another example, describing how to create more complicated list node
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than just a string can be found at the <<def_CF_TYPE,`CF_TYPE`>> macro.
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[[reload]]
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Reloading configuration
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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The configuration system allows you to reload configuration at
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runtime. The new config changes the values against the default values.
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It means, if the default value for variable `A` is `10`, the currently
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loaded config sets it to `42` and the new config does not talk about
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this variable, `A` will have a value of `10` after a successful load.
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Furthermore, if the loading of a new configuration fails, the current
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configuration is preserved.
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All this is done with <<journal,config journalling>>. The load of the
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first config creates a journal entry. If you try to load some new
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configuration, it is partially rolled back to defaults (the rollback
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happens, but instead of removing the journal entry, another journal
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entry is added for the rollback). If the loading succeeds, the two
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journal entries are removed and a new one, for the new configuration,
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is added. If it fails, the first one is replayed and the rollback
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entry is removed.
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See @cf_reload().
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[[custom_parser]]
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Creating custom parsers
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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If you need to parse some data type the configuration system can't
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handle, you can write your own <<xtypes:,extended type>>
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and use <<def_CF_XTYPE,`CF_XTYPE`>> macro to declare a new option.
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There is also an obsolete way to write a custom parser.
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Before you start, you should know a few things.
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The parser needs to support <<journal,journalling>>. To accomplish that,
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you have to use the <<alloc,configuration mempool>> for memory allocation.
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Now, you need a function with the same signature as
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<<type_cf_parser1,`cf_parser1`>>. Parse the first parameter (the
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string) and store the data in the second parameter. You may want to
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write a dumper function, with signature of
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<<type_cf_dumper1,`cf_dumper1`>> (needed for debug dumps).
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Fill in a structure <<struct_cf_user_type,cf_user_type>> and use the
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new data type in your configuration description with
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<<def_CF_USER,`CF_USER`>> macro as its @t parameter.
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You do not need to call @cf_journal_block() on the variable you store
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the result. It is true you change it, but it was stored to journal
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before your parser function was called.
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[[hooks]]
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Hooks
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~~~~~
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The configuration system supports hooks. They are used to initialize the
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configuration (if simple default value of variable is not enough) and
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to check the sanity of loaded data.
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Each hook is of type <<type_cf_hook,`cf_hook`>> and you can include
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them in configuration description using <<def_CF_INIT,`CF_INIT`>> and
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<<def_CF_COMMIT,`CF_COMMIT`>> macros.
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The hooks should follow similar guidelines as custom parsers (well,
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init hooks do not need to call @cf_journal_block()) to support
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journalling. If you change nothing in the commit hook, you do not need
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to care about the journalling either.
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You may use the return value to inform about errors. Just return the
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error message, or NULL if everything went well.
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Another similar function is a copy function. It is very similar to a
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hook and is used when the item is copied and is too complicated to use
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simple memcpy(). Its type is <<type_cf_copier,`cf_copier`>> and is
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specified by the <<def_CF_COPY,`CF_COPY`>> macro. It's return value is
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the same as the one of a hook.
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[[conf_h]]
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ucw/conf.h
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----------
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This header file contains the public interface of the configuration module.
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!!ucw/conf.h
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[[getopt_h]]
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ucw/getopt.h
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------------
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This header contains routines for parsing command line arguments and
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loading the default configuration.
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In new programs, please consider using the new <<opt:,option parser>>
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instead. The getopt interface is already considered obsolete and may
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be removed in the future.
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!!ucw/getopt.h
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Example
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~~~~~~~
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Typically, @cf_getopt() is used as follows: it works like
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the traditional @getopt_long() from the C library, but it also handles
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configuration files.
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#include <ucw/lib.h>
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#include <ucw/conf.h>
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#include <ucw/getopt.h>
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static char short_opts[] = CF_SHORT_OPTS "v";
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static struct option long_opts[] = {
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CF_LONG_OPTS
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{ "verbose", 0, 0, 'v' },
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{ NULL, 0, 0, 0 }
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};
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static int verbose;
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int main(int argc, char *argv[]) {
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cf_def_file = "default.cf";
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int opt;
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while((opt = cf_getopt(argc, argv, short_opts, long_opts, NULL)) >= 0)
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switch(opt) {
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case 'v': verbose = 1; break;
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default: fprintf("Unknown option %c\n", opt); return 1;
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}
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}
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The `short_opts` and `long_opts` variables describe the command line
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arguments. Notice the `CF_SHORT_OPTS` and `CF_LONG_OPTS` macros. They
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add the `-S` and `-C` options for the configuration parser as described
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in <<config:>>. These options are handled internally by @cf_getopt().
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You can rely on the configuration files having been loaded before the
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first of your program's options is parsed.
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