Download 
 
 
 
 
  
Package v-dem/queasy-config
This package contains a set of the classes intended for reading configuration files. Formats currently supported are: 
- 
PHP
 
- 
INI
 
- 
JSON
 
- 
XML
 
- 
CLI (command-line)
 
 
Features
- 
Easy to use - just like nested arrays or objects. Also it's possible to use `foreach()` with config instances.
 
- 
Support for default option values.
 
- 
Support for multi-file configurations. You can split your config into many files as you wish without changing program code.
 
- 
Options inheritance. If an option is missing at current config level, it will look for this option on upper levels.
 
- 
Unified config interface. You can switch between config formats without changing your code.
 
- 
Easy to extend with other config formats.
 
- 
Regular expressions support (it's possible to get config options by regular expression).
 
 
Planned features
Requirements
- 
PHP version 5.3 or higher
 
 
Documentation
See our Wiki page. 
Installation
> composer require v-dem/queasy-config:master-dev
 
Usage
Let's imagine we have the following config.php: 
return [
    'connection' => [
        'driver' => 'mysql',
        'host' => 'localhost',
        'name' => 'test',
        'user' => 'root',
        'password' => 'secret'
    ]
];
 
Or config.ini: 
[connection]
driver = mysql
host = localhost
name = test
user = root
password = secret
 
Or config.json: 
{
    "connection": {
        "driver": "mysql",
        "host": "localhost",
        "name": "test",
        "user": "root",
        "password": "secret"
    }
}
 
Or config.xml: 
<?xml version="1.0">
<config>
    <connection
        driver="mysql"
        host="localhost"
        name="test"
        user="root"
        password="secret" />
</config>
 
> You can mix different config types, for example top-level config of PHP type can refer to config files of other types. 
Creating config instance
Include Composer autoloader: 
require_once('vendor/autoload.php');
 
Create config instance (config file type will be detected by file name extension): 
$config = new queasy\config\Config('config.php'); // Can be also '.ini', '.json' or '.xml'
 
Accessing config instance
Now you can address config sections and options these ways: 
$databaseName = $config->database->name;
 
Or: 
$databaseName = $config['database']['name'];
 
It's possible to use a default value if an option is missing: 
// If 'host' is missing in config, 'localhost' will be used by default
$databaseHost = $config['database']->get('host', 'localhost');
 
A bit shorter way: 
// If 'host' is missing in config, 'localhost' will be used by default
$databaseHost = $config'database';
 
It's also possible to point that an option is required, and to throw ConfigException if this option is missing: 
// Throw ConfigException if 'name' is missing
$databaseName = $config['database']->need('name');
 
How to check if a section or an option is present in config: 
$hasDatabaseName = isset($config['database']);
$hasDatabaseName = isset($config['database']['name']);
 
If you don't want to check each section for presence when accessing a very nested option, you can use this trick: 
// $databaseName will contain 'default' if 'name' and/or 'database' options are missing
$databaseName = $config->get('database', [])->get('name', 'default');
 
A bit shorter way: 
// $databaseName will contain 'default' if 'name' and/or 'database' options are missing
$databaseName = $config('database', [])('name', 'default');
 
Multi-file configs
config.php:
 return [
    'connection' => [
        'driver' => 'mysql',
        'host' => 'localhost',
        'name' => 'test',
        'user' => 'root',
        'password' => 'secret'
    ],
    'queries' => new queasy\config\Config('queries.php') // Can be config of another type (INI, JSON etc)
];
 
queries.php:
 return [
    'selectActiveUsers' => 'SELECT * FROM `users` WHERE `is_active` = 1'
];
 
Accessing: $config = new queasy\config\Config('config.php');
$query = $config['queries']['selectActiveUsers'];
 
Almost the same for other config formats: 
config.ini:
 [connection]
driver = mysql
host = localhost
name = test
user = root
password = secret
queries = "@queasy:new queasy\config\Config('queries.ini')"
 
> There can be any PHP code after @queasy: so it's possible to use PHP constants etc. Be careful, eval() function is used to execute this expression. 
> Different config formats can be mixed this way. 
Merging configs
You can use Config's merge() method to merge two configs. For example, you can have a default configuration and allow users to add or override some options: 
$defaultConfig = new queasy\config\Config('defaults.php');
$optionalConfig = new queasy\config\Config($arrayWithOptionsToAddOrOverride);
$defaultConfig->merge($optionalConfig);
 
Using CLI config type
As an addition it's possible to use command-line arguments as config options source for CLI scripts (just use .cli extension, it will create appropriate loader): 
$config = new queasy\config\Config('.cli');
 
Options should be passed this way (unfortunately only this is supported currently): 
> php test.php option1=123 option2="some text"
 
I think it's useful to utilize merge() method there - default config file and optional arguments from command line. 
Testing
Tests can be run with miminum PHP 7.2 version due to PHPUnit requirements. To run them use 
> composer test
  |