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  • License Apache-2.0

Configuration management and environment resolution for Guide

Package Exports

  • @forwardimpact/libconfig
  • @forwardimpact/libconfig/index.js

This package does not declare an exports field, so the exports above have been automatically detected and optimized by JSPM instead. If any package subpath is missing, it is recommended to post an issue to the original package (@forwardimpact/libconfig) to support the "exports" field. If that is not possible, create a JSPM override to customize the exports field for this package.

Readme

libconfig

Environment-aware application settings — services and CLIs load configuration without custom plumbing.

Getting Started

import { createConfig, createServiceConfig } from '@forwardimpact/libconfig';

const config = await createServiceConfig('myservice', { port: 3000 });

Bootstrap

A product's init verb hands its starter material to bootstrapProject, which writes config/config.json and .env under namespace-scoped ownership semantics. Same-key-same-value writes are no-ops; same-key- different-value writes refuse without explicit overwrite intent, so two products with disjoint top-level namespaces can converge against the same target directory.

import { bootstrapProject } from '@forwardimpact/libconfig';

await bootstrapProject({
  target,                              // absolute path; defaults to process.cwd()
  fragment: {                          // top-level keys are product-owned namespaces; {} or omitted is allowed
    product: {
      guide: { systemPrompt: '…' },    // fit-guide's slice under top-level `product`
    },
    service: {
      mcp:   { systemPrompt: '…' },    // fit-guide's slice under top-level `service`
    },
  },
  env: {                               // .env entries; {} or omitted is allowed
    SERVICE_SECRET: '…',
    MCP_TOKEN:      '…',
  },
  overwrites: {                        // explicit overwrite intent, partitioned per file
    config: ['product'],               // top-level namespace names (single segment)
    env:    ['MCP_TOKEN'],             // bare keys
  },
});
  • Entry pointbootstrapProject({ target, fragment, env, overwrites }). Returns void on success; throws a refusal Error whose cause carries { kind, path, overwriteSurface } when a write conflicts and the caller did not signal overwrite intent.
  • Namespace declaration — the top-level keys of fragment are the namespaces a product owns. Use the nested form ({ product: { guide: … } }) — that's the shape the libconfig reader resolves and the shape every in-tree caller emits. Cross-namespace writes (different top-level keys, or disjoint sub-keys under a shared top-level) never collide; within a namespace, any leaf disagreement refuses with a leaf-path diagnostic.
  • Overwrite intent — pass overwrites.config: [topLevelKey] (single- segment names) or overwrites.env: [bareKey] to opt in to replacing a conflicting value. The refusal message names both the conflicting leaf path (e.g. product.guide.systemPrompt) and the surface; the overwrite-intent entry remains the top-level key (product) — forgiving a single leaf forgives the whole namespace by design, so pick the smallest top-level that contains the disputed leaf.
  • .env primitivesbootstrapProject delegates per-key .env writes to @forwardimpact/libsecret's updateEnvFile, which preserves comment lines, the trailing newline, and mode 0o600.

bootstrapProject always materialises target/config/config.json (writing {} when fragment is empty and the file is absent) so subsequent reader invocations anchor locally rather than upward-walking into an ancestor config/. .env is created only when at least one entry is supplied; an empty env against an existing .env is a no-op.