Dollar config lets you keep dynamic settings in a declarative way and query them with runtime params.
npm install dollar-config
const DollarConfig = require('dollar-config');
const config = new DollarConfig(require('config.json'));
config.get('path.to.setting', runtimeParams);
No magic here.
{
"foo": 1
}
config.get('foo');
> 1
Provides a fallback for an absent setting.
{
"foo": 1,
"$default": 0
}
config.get('bar');
> 0
Looks up a param and returns its value.
{
"foo": {
"$param": "bar"
}
}
config.get('foo', { bar: 1 });
> 1
Use an array to provide a default value:
{
"foo": {
"$param": [ "bar", 0 ]
}
}
config.get('foo', { baz: 1 });
> 0
Replaces ${paramName}
with param value.
{
"greeting": {
"$template": "Hello, ${name}!"
}
}
config.get('greeting', { name: 'John' });
> Hello, John!
Picks the first truthy param and returns correspondent setting.
Falls back to an optional $default
if none of the params is truthy.
N.B. $default
, if present, must be the last item for lookup performance.
{
"foo": {
"$guard": [
[ "bar", "no luck" ],
[ "baz", "close, but no cigar" ],
[ "qux", "you are the champion" ],
[ "$default", "oops" ]
]
}
}
config.get('foo', { bar: false, baz: '', qux: 1 });
> you are the champion
config.get('foo', {})
> oops
Matches param value to a list of cases and picks correspondent setting.
Falls back to an optional $default
if no match is found.
N.B. $default
, if present, must be the last item for lookup performance.
{
"meal": {
"$switch": [
"dayOfTime",
[
[ "morning", "breakfast" ],
[ "midday", "lunch" ],
[ "evening", "dinner" ],
[ "$default", "fridge" ]
]
]
}
}
config.get('meal', { dayOfTime: 'midday' });
> lunch
config.get('meal', { dayOfTime: 'night' });
> fridge
Calls the referenced function and returns it's value.
Functions are provided as an option to config constructor.
Each function recevies params
as a single argument.
{
"expectedSalary": {
"$function": "double"
}
}
const config = new DollarConfig(require('config.json'), {
functions: {
double: (params) => params.currentSalary * 2
}
});
config.get('expectedSalary', { currentSalary: 500 });
> 1000
Deep properties are accessible with dot-notation:
{
"foo": {
"bar": {
"$param": "baz.qux"
}
}
}
config.get('foo.bar', { baz: { qux: 1 } });
> 1
You can mix and match $-keywords to get the desired effect:
{
"foo": {
"$switch": [
"bar",
[
[
"baz",
{
"$guard": [
[ "qux", { "$param": "xyz" } ]
]
}
]
]
]
}
}
config.get('foo', { bar: 'baz', qux: true, xyz: 1 });
> 1
The .bind()
method clones your config, converting all dynamic keys to getters, so that you can use them as a normal object:
const config = new DollarConfig({
foo: 1,
bar: { $param: 'baz' }
});
config.bind({ baz: 2 });
> { foo: 1, bar: 2 }
Because all dynamic keys are evaluated lazily, you can even make self-references:
const config = new DollarConfig({
foo: { $param: 'baz' },
bar: { $param: 'config.foo' }
});
const params = { baz: 1 };
params.config = config.bind(params);
params.config
> { foo: 1, bar: 1 }
After the first invocation getters replace themselves with evaluated values (a.k.a memoization):
let i = 1;
const config = new DollarConfig(
{ foo: { $function: 'bar' } },
{ functions: { bar: () => i++ } }
);
const boundConfig = config.bind({});
boundConfig.foo
> 1
boundConfig.foo
> 1
Dollar config express middleware binds provided config to the express req
and puts the result into req.config
:
{
"foo": {
"$param": "query.bar"
}
}
const dollarConfigMiddleware = require('dollar-config/middleware');
app.use(dollarConfigMiddleware(require('config.json'));
// /?bar=1
app.use((req, res, next) => {
req.config.foo === 1 // true
});
The middleware accepts dollar config instances as well:
const dollarConfigMiddleware = require('dollar-config/middleware');
const config = new DollarConfig(require('config.json'));
app.use(dollarConfigMiddleware(config));
You can use special ajv plugin to validate dollar-configs against JSON schemas.
const ajv = require('dollar-config/ajv')(new Ajv());
const validate = ajv.compile(require('schema.json'));
Or, with ajv-cli:
ajv validate -d config.json -s schema.json -c dollar-config/ajv
The plugin introduces a custom dynamic
keyword which accepts any valid JSON schema inside it:
{
"type": "object",
"properties": {
"foo": {
"dynamic": {
"type": "number"
}
}
}
}
validate({ foo: 1 });
> true
validate({ foo: { $param: 'bar' } });
> true
The plugin checks that leaf values of $-keywords match original schema:
validate({ foo: { $param: [ 'bar', 1 ] } });
> true
validate({ foo: { $param: [ 'bar', '1' ] } });
> false (expected number, got string)
validate({ foo: { $guard: [ [ 'bar': '1' ] ] } });
> false (expected number, got string)
Using $template
implies that the original schema is string:
validate({ foo: { $template: '${bar}/${baz}' } });
> false (expected original schema to be string, got number)
Sometimes you want to have separate configs for different environments. Dollar config lets you keep all the settings in one source config and generate per-environment configs. dollar-config/build
can be used to inline predefined params. Other dynamic params are returned as-is.
{
"backendUrl": {
"$switch": [
"environment",
[
[ "prestable", "https://prestable-backend/" ],
[ "$default", "https://production-backend/" ]
]
]
},
"backendQuery": {
"foo": { "$param": "bar" }
}
}
const buildConfig = require('dollar-config/build');
const config = require('config.json');
buildConfig(config, { environment: 'prestable' });
>
{
backendUrl: "https://prestable-backend/",
backendQuery: {
"foo": { "$param": "bar" }
}
}
buildConfig(config, { environment: 'production' });
>
{
backendUrl: "https://production-backend/",
backendQuery: {
"foo": { "$param": "bar" }
}
}