JSPM

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  • License MIT

Simple config handling for your app or module

Package Exports

  • conf

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 (conf) to support the "exports" field. If that is not possible, create a JSPM override to customize the exports field for this package.

Readme

conf Build Status: Linux and macOS Build status: Windows

Simple config handling for your app or module

All you have to care about is what to persist. This module will handle all the dull details like where and how.

Install

$ npm install --save conf

Usage

const Conf = require('conf');
const config = new Conf();

config.set('unicorn', '🦄');
console.log(config.get('unicorn'));
//=> '🦄'

// Use dot-notation to access nested properties
config.set('foo.bar', true);
console.log(config.get('foo'));
//=> {bar: true}

config.delete('unicorn');
console.log(config.get('unicorn'));
//=> undefined

Or create a subclass.

API

Conf([options])

Returns a new instance.

options

defaults

Type: Object

Default config.

configName

Type: string
Default: config

Name of the config file (without extension).

Useful if you need multiple config files for your app or module. For example, different config files between two major versions.

projectName

Type: string
Default: The name field in the package.json closest to where conf is imported.

You only need to specify this if you don't have a package.json file in your project.

cwd

Type: string
Default: System default user config directory

You most likely don't need this. Please don't use it unless you really have to.

Overrides projectName.

The only use-case I can think of is having the config located in the app directory or on some external storage.

Instance

You can use dot-notation in a key to access nested properties.

The instance is iterable so you can use it directly in a for…of loop.

.set(key, value)

Set an item.

.set(object)

Set multiple items at once.

.get(key, [defaultValue])

Get an item or defaultValue if the item does not exist.

.has(key)

Check if an item exists.

.delete(key)

Delete an item.

.clear()

Delete all items.

.size

Get the item count.

.store

Get all the config as an object or replace the current config with an object:

conf.store = {
    hello: 'world'
};

.path

Get the path to the config file.

FAQ

How is this different from configstore?

I'm also the author of configstore. While it's pretty good, I did make some mistakes early on that are hard to change at this point. This module is the result of everything I learned from making configstore. Mainly where config is stored. In configstore, the config is stored in ~/.config (which is mainly a Linux convention) on all systems, while conf stores config in the system default user config directory. The ~/.config directory, it turns out, often have an incorrect permission on macOS and Windows, which has caused a lot of grief for users.

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License

MIT © Sindre Sorhus