Mainflux.mainflux/vendor/github.com/spf13/viper
Dušan Borovčanin 3d3aa525a6
NOISSUE - Switch to Google Zanzibar Access control approach (#1919)
* Return Auth service

Signed-off-by: dusanb94 <dusan.borovcanin@mainflux.com>

Update Compose to run with SpiceDB and Auth svc

Signed-off-by: dusanb94 <dusan.borovcanin@mainflux.com>

Update auth gRPC API

Signed-off-by: dusanb94 <dusan.borovcanin@mainflux.com>

Remove Users' policies

Signed-off-by: dusanb94 <dusan.borovcanin@mainflux.com>

Move Groups to internal

Signed-off-by: dusanb94 <dusan.borovcanin@mainflux.com>

Use shared groups in Users

Signed-off-by: dusanb94 <dusan.borovcanin@mainflux.com>

Remove unused code

Signed-off-by: dusanb94 <dusan.borovcanin@mainflux.com>

Use pkg Groups in Things

Signed-off-by: dusanb94 <dusan.borovcanin@mainflux.com>

Remove Things groups

Signed-off-by: dusanb94 <dusan.borovcanin@mainflux.com>

Make imports consistent

Signed-off-by: dusanb94 <dusan.borovcanin@mainflux.com>

Update Groups networking

Signed-off-by: dusanb94 <dusan.borovcanin@mainflux.com>

Remove things groups-specific API

Signed-off-by: dusanb94 <dusan.borovcanin@mainflux.com>

Move Things Clients to the root

Signed-off-by: dusanb94 <dusan.borovcanin@mainflux.com>

Move Clients to Users root

Signed-off-by: dusanb94 <dusan.borovcanin@mainflux.com>

Temporarily remove tracing

Signed-off-by: dusanb94 <dusan.borovcanin@mainflux.com>

Fix imports

Signed-off-by: dusanb94 <dusan.borovcanin@mainflux.com>

Add buffer config for gRPC

Signed-off-by: dusanb94 <dusan.borovcanin@mainflux.com>

Update auth type for Things

Signed-off-by: dusanb94 <dusan.borovcanin@mainflux.com>

Use Auth for login

Signed-off-by: dusanb94 <dusan.borovcanin@mainflux.com>

Add temporary solution for refresh token

Signed-off-by: dusanb94 <dusan.borovcanin@mainflux.com>

Update Tokenizer interface

Signed-off-by: dusanb94 <dusan.borovcanin@mainflux.com>

Updade tokens issuing

Signed-off-by: dusanb94 <dusan.borovcanin@mainflux.com>

Fix token issuing

Signed-off-by: dusanb94 <dusan.borovcanin@mainflux.com>

Update JWT validator and refactor Tokenizer

Signed-off-by: dusanb94 <dusan.borovcanin@mainflux.com>

Rename access timeout

Signed-off-by: dusanb94 <dusan.borovcanin@mainflux.com>

Rename login to authenticate

Signed-off-by: dusanb94 <dusan.borovcanin@mainflux.com>

Update Identify to use SubjectID

Signed-off-by: dusanb94 <dusan.borovcanin@mainflux.com>

Add Auth to Groups

Signed-off-by: dusanb94 <dusan.borovcanin@mainflux.com>

Use the Auth service for Groups

Signed-off-by: dusanb94 <dusan.borovcanin@mainflux.com>

Update auth schema

Signed-off-by: dusanb94 <dusan.borovcanin@mainflux.com>

Fix Auth for Groups

Signed-off-by: dusanb94 <dusan.borovcanin@mainflux.com>

Add auth for addons (#14)

Signed-off-by: Arvindh <arvindh91@gmail.com>

Speparate Login and Refresh tokens

Signed-off-by: dusanb94 <dusan.borovcanin@mainflux.com>

Merge authN and authZ requests for things

Signed-off-by: dusanb94 <dusan.borovcanin@mainflux.com>

Add connect and disconnect

Signed-off-by: dusanb94 <dusan.borovcanin@mainflux.com>

Update sharing

Signed-off-by: dusanb94 <dusan.borovcanin@mainflux.com>

Fix policies addition and removal

Signed-off-by: dusanb94 <dusan.borovcanin@mainflux.com>

Update relation with roels

Signed-off-by: dusanb94 <dusan.borovcanin@mainflux.com>

Add gRPC to Things

Signed-off-by: dusanb94 <dusan.borovcanin@mainflux.com>

Assign and Unassign members to group and Listing of Group members (#15)

* add auth for addons

Signed-off-by: Arvindh <arvindh91@gmail.com>

* add assign and unassign to group

Signed-off-by: Arvindh <arvindh91@gmail.com>

* add group incomplete repo implementation

Signed-off-by: Arvindh <arvindh91@gmail.com>

* groups for users

Signed-off-by: Arvindh <arvindh91@gmail.com>

* groups for users

Signed-off-by: Arvindh <arvindh91@gmail.com>

* groups for users

Signed-off-by: Arvindh <arvindh91@gmail.com>

* groups for users

Signed-off-by: Arvindh <arvindh91@gmail.com>

---------

Signed-off-by: Arvindh <arvindh91@gmail.com>

Move coap mqtt and ws policies to spicedb (#16)

Signed-off-by: Rodney Osodo <28790446+rodneyosodo@users.noreply.github.com>

Remove old policies

Signed-off-by: dusanb94 <dusan.borovcanin@mainflux.com>

NOISSUE - Things authorize to return thingID (#18)

This commit modifies the authorize endpoint to the grpc endpoint to return thingID. The authorize endpoint allows adapters to get the publisher of the message.

Signed-off-by: Rodney Osodo <28790446+rodneyosodo@users.noreply.github.com>

Add Groups to users service (#17)

* add assign and unassign to group

Signed-off-by: Arvindh <arvindh91@gmail.com>

* add group incomplete repo implementation

Signed-off-by: Arvindh <arvindh91@gmail.com>

* groups for users

Signed-off-by: Arvindh <arvindh91@gmail.com>

* groups for users

Signed-off-by: Arvindh <arvindh91@gmail.com>

* groups for users

Signed-off-by: Arvindh <arvindh91@gmail.com>

* groups for users

Signed-off-by: Arvindh <arvindh91@gmail.com>

* groups for users stable 1

Signed-off-by: Arvindh <arvindh91@gmail.com>

* groups for users stable 2

Signed-off-by: Arvindh <arvindh91@gmail.com>

* groups for users & things

Signed-off-by: Arvindh <arvindh91@gmail.com>

* Amend signature

Signed-off-by: Arvindh <arvindh91@gmail.com>

* fix merge error

Signed-off-by: Arvindh <arvindh91@gmail.com>

---------

Signed-off-by: Arvindh <arvindh91@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: dusanb94 <dusan.borovcanin@mainflux.com>

* NOISSUE - Fix es code (#21)

Signed-off-by: Rodney Osodo <28790446+rodneyosodo@users.noreply.github.com>
Signed-off-by: dusanb94 <dusan.borovcanin@mainflux.com>

* NOISSUE - Fix Bugs (#20)

* fix bugs

Signed-off-by: Arvindh <arvindh91@gmail.com>

* fix bugs

Signed-off-by: Arvindh <arvindh91@gmail.com>

---------

Signed-off-by: Arvindh <arvindh91@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: dusanb94 <dusan.borovcanin@mainflux.com>

* NOISSUE - Test e2e (#19)

* fix: connect method

Signed-off-by: Rodney Osodo <28790446+rodneyosodo@users.noreply.github.com>

* fix: e2e

Signed-off-by: Rodney Osodo <28790446+rodneyosodo@users.noreply.github.com>

* fix changes in sdk and e2e

Signed-off-by: Rodney Osodo <28790446+rodneyosodo@users.noreply.github.com>

* feat(docker): remove unnecessary port mapping

Remove the port mapping for MQTT broker in the docker-compose.yml file.

Signed-off-by: Rodney Osodo <28790446+rodneyosodo@users.noreply.github.com>

* Enable group listing

Signed-off-by: Rodney Osodo <28790446+rodneyosodo@users.noreply.github.com>

* feat(responses): update ChannelsPage struct

The ChannelsPage struct in the responses.go file has been updated. The "Channels" field has been renamed to "Groups" to provide more accurate naming. This change ensures consistency and clarity in the codebase.

Signed-off-by: Rodney Osodo <28790446+rodneyosodo@users.noreply.github.com>

* feat(things): add UpdateClientSecret method

Add the UpdateClientSecret method to the things service. This method allows updating the client secret for a specific client identified by the provided token, id, and key parameters.

Signed-off-by: Rodney Osodo <28790446+rodneyosodo@users.noreply.github.com>

---------

Signed-off-by: Rodney Osodo <28790446+rodneyosodo@users.noreply.github.com>
Signed-off-by: dusanb94 <dusan.borovcanin@mainflux.com>

* Use smaller buffers for gRPC

Signed-off-by: dusanb94 <dusan.borovcanin@mainflux.com>

* Clean up tests (#22)

Signed-off-by: Rodney Osodo <28790446+rodneyosodo@users.noreply.github.com>
Signed-off-by: dusanb94 <dusan.borovcanin@mainflux.com>

* Add Connect Disconnect endpoints (#23)

* fix bugs

Signed-off-by: Arvindh <arvindh91@gmail.com>

* fix bugs

Signed-off-by: Arvindh <arvindh91@gmail.com>

* fix list of things in a channel and Add connect disconnect endpoint

Signed-off-by: Arvindh <arvindh91@gmail.com>

* fix list of things in a channel and Add connect disconnect endpoint

Signed-off-by: Arvindh <arvindh91@gmail.com>

---------

Signed-off-by: Arvindh <arvindh91@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: dusanb94 <dusan.borovcanin@mainflux.com>

* Add: Things share with users (#25)

* fix list of things in a channel and Add connect disconnect endpoint

Signed-off-by: Arvindh <arvindh91@gmail.com>

* add: things share with other users

Signed-off-by: Arvindh <arvindh91@gmail.com>

---------

Signed-off-by: Arvindh <arvindh91@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: dusanb94 <dusan.borovcanin@mainflux.com>

* NOISSUE - Rename gRPC Services (#24)

* Rename things and users auth service

Signed-off-by: Rodney Osodo <28790446+rodneyosodo@users.noreply.github.com>

* docs: add authorization docs for gRPC services

Signed-off-by: Rodney Osodo <28790446+rodneyosodo@users.noreply.github.com>

* Rename things and users grpc services

Signed-off-by: Rodney Osodo <28790446+rodneyosodo@users.noreply.github.com>

* Remove mainflux.env package

Signed-off-by: Rodney Osodo <28790446+rodneyosodo@users.noreply.github.com>

---------

Signed-off-by: Rodney Osodo <28790446+rodneyosodo@users.noreply.github.com>
Signed-off-by: dusanb94 <dusan.borovcanin@mainflux.com>

* Add: Listing of things, channels, groups, users  (#26)

* add: listing of channels, users, groups, things

Signed-off-by: Arvindh <arvindh91@gmail.com>

* add: listing of channels, users, groups, things

Signed-off-by: Arvindh <arvindh91@gmail.com>

* add: listing of channels, users, groups, things

Signed-off-by: Arvindh <arvindh91@gmail.com>

* add: listing of channels, users, groups, things

Signed-off-by: Arvindh <arvindh91@gmail.com>

---------

Signed-off-by: Arvindh <arvindh91@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: dusanb94 <dusan.borovcanin@mainflux.com>

* NOISSUE - Clean Up Users (#27)

* feat(groups): rename redis package to events

- Renamed the `redis` package to `events` in the `internal/groups` directory.
- Updated the file paths and names accordingly.
- This change reflects the more accurate purpose of the package and improves code organization.

Signed-off-by: Rodney Osodo <28790446+rodneyosodo@users.noreply.github.com>

* feat(auth): Modify identity method

Change request and response of identity method

Add accessToken and refreshToken to Token response

Signed-off-by: Rodney Osodo <28790446+rodneyosodo@users.noreply.github.com>

* clean up users, remove dead code

Signed-off-by: Rodney Osodo <28790446+rodneyosodo@users.noreply.github.com>

* feat(users): add unit tests for user service

This commit adds unit tests for the user service in the `users` package. The tests cover various scenarios and ensure the correct behavior of the service.

Signed-off-by: Rodney Osodo <28790446+rodneyosodo@users.noreply.github.com>

---------

Signed-off-by: Rodney Osodo <28790446+rodneyosodo@users.noreply.github.com>
Signed-off-by: dusanb94 <dusan.borovcanin@mainflux.com>

* Add: List of user groups & removed repeating code in groups (#29)

* removed repeating code in list groups

Signed-off-by: Arvindh <arvindh91@gmail.com>

* add: list of user group

Signed-off-by: Arvindh <arvindh91@gmail.com>

* fix: otel handler operator name for endpoints

Signed-off-by: Arvindh <arvindh91@gmail.com>

---------

Signed-off-by: Arvindh <arvindh91@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: dusanb94 <dusan.borovcanin@mainflux.com>

* NOISSUE - Clean Up Things Service (#28)

* Rework things service

Signed-off-by: Rodney Osodo <28790446+rodneyosodo@users.noreply.github.com>

* add tests

Signed-off-by: Rodney Osodo <28790446+rodneyosodo@users.noreply.github.com>

---------

Signed-off-by: Rodney Osodo <28790446+rodneyosodo@users.noreply.github.com>
Signed-off-by: dusanb94 <dusan.borovcanin@mainflux.com>

* NOISSUE - Clean Up Auth Service (#30)

* clean up auth service

Signed-off-by: Rodney Osodo <28790446+rodneyosodo@users.noreply.github.com>

* feat(auth): remove unused import

Remove the unused import of `emptypb` in `auth.pb.go`. This import is not being used in the codebase and can be safely removed.

Signed-off-by: Rodney Osodo <28790446+rodneyosodo@users.noreply.github.com>

---------

Signed-off-by: Rodney Osodo <28790446+rodneyosodo@users.noreply.github.com>
Signed-off-by: dusanb94 <dusan.borovcanin@mainflux.com>

* NOISSUE - Update API docs (#31)

Signed-off-by: rodneyosodo <blackd0t@protonmail.com>
Signed-off-by: dusanb94 <dusan.borovcanin@mainflux.com>

* Remove TODO comments and cleanup the code

Signed-off-by: dusanb94 <dusan.borovcanin@mainflux.com>

* Update dependenices

Signed-off-by: dusanb94 <dusan.borovcanin@mainflux.com>

---------

Signed-off-by: Arvindh <arvindh91@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: dusanb94 <dusan.borovcanin@mainflux.com>
Signed-off-by: Rodney Osodo <28790446+rodneyosodo@users.noreply.github.com>
Signed-off-by: rodneyosodo <blackd0t@protonmail.com>
Co-authored-by: b1ackd0t <28790446+rodneyosodo@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Arvindh <30824765+arvindh123@users.noreply.github.com>
2023-10-15 22:02:13 +02:00
..
internal/encoding NOISSUE - Switch to Google Zanzibar Access control approach (#1919) 2023-10-15 22:02:13 +02:00
.editorconfig NOISSUE - Switch to Google Zanzibar Access control approach (#1919) 2023-10-15 22:02:13 +02:00
.envrc NOISSUE - Switch to Google Zanzibar Access control approach (#1919) 2023-10-15 22:02:13 +02:00
.gitignore NOISSUE - Switch to Google Zanzibar Access control approach (#1919) 2023-10-15 22:02:13 +02:00
.golangci.yaml NOISSUE - Update dependencies (#1838) 2023-07-06 20:44:12 +02:00
.yamlignore NOISSUE - Switch to Google Zanzibar Access control approach (#1919) 2023-10-15 22:02:13 +02:00
.yamllint.yaml NOISSUE - Switch to Google Zanzibar Access control approach (#1919) 2023-10-15 22:02:13 +02:00
LICENSE MF-295 add mqtt benchmark tool (#817) 2019-08-13 12:56:31 +02:00
Makefile NOISSUE - Switch to Google Zanzibar Access control approach (#1919) 2023-10-15 22:02:13 +02:00
README.md NOISSUE - Switch to Google Zanzibar Access control approach (#1919) 2023-10-15 22:02:13 +02:00
TROUBLESHOOTING.md NOISSUE - Fix Nginx entrypoint script (#1597) 2022-04-26 18:41:22 +02:00
flags.go NOISSUE - Switch to Google Zanzibar Access control approach (#1919) 2023-10-15 22:02:13 +02:00
flake.lock NOISSUE - Switch to Google Zanzibar Access control approach (#1919) 2023-10-15 22:02:13 +02:00
flake.nix NOISSUE - Switch to Google Zanzibar Access control approach (#1919) 2023-10-15 22:02:13 +02:00
logger.go NOISSUE - Switch to Google Zanzibar Access control approach (#1919) 2023-10-15 22:02:13 +02:00
util.go NOISSUE - Switch to Google Zanzibar Access control approach (#1919) 2023-10-15 22:02:13 +02:00
viper.go NOISSUE - Switch to Google Zanzibar Access control approach (#1919) 2023-10-15 22:02:13 +02:00
viper_go1_15.go NOISSUE - Switch to Google Zanzibar Access control approach (#1919) 2023-10-15 22:02:13 +02:00
viper_go1_16.go NOISSUE - Switch to Google Zanzibar Access control approach (#1919) 2023-10-15 22:02:13 +02:00
watch.go NOISSUE - Switch to Google Zanzibar Access control approach (#1919) 2023-10-15 22:02:13 +02:00
watch_unsupported.go NOISSUE - Switch to Google Zanzibar Access control approach (#1919) 2023-10-15 22:02:13 +02:00

README.md

Viper v2 feedback

Viper is heading towards v2 and we would love to hear what you would like to see in it. Share your thoughts here: https://forms.gle/R6faU74qPRPAzchZ9

Thank you!

Viper

Mentioned in Awesome Go run on repl.it

GitHub Workflow Status Join the chat at https://gitter.im/spf13/viper Go Report Card Go Version PkgGoDev

Go configuration with fangs!

Many Go projects are built using Viper including:

Install

go get github.com/spf13/viper

Note: Viper uses Go Modules to manage dependencies.

What is Viper?

Viper is a complete configuration solution for Go applications including 12-Factor apps. It is designed to work within an application, and can handle all types of configuration needs and formats. It supports:

  • setting defaults
  • reading from JSON, TOML, YAML, HCL, envfile and Java properties config files
  • live watching and re-reading of config files (optional)
  • reading from environment variables
  • reading from remote config systems (etcd or Consul), and watching changes
  • reading from command line flags
  • reading from buffer
  • setting explicit values

Viper can be thought of as a registry for all of your applications configuration needs.

Why Viper?

When building a modern application, you dont want to worry about configuration file formats; you want to focus on building awesome software. Viper is here to help with that.

Viper does the following for you:

  1. Find, load, and unmarshal a configuration file in JSON, TOML, YAML, HCL, INI, envfile or Java properties formats.
  2. Provide a mechanism to set default values for your different configuration options.
  3. Provide a mechanism to set override values for options specified through command line flags.
  4. Provide an alias system to easily rename parameters without breaking existing code.
  5. Make it easy to tell the difference between when a user has provided a command line or config file which is the same as the default.

Viper uses the following precedence order. Each item takes precedence over the item below it:

  • explicit call to Set
  • flag
  • env
  • config
  • key/value store
  • default

Important: Viper configuration keys are case insensitive. There are ongoing discussions about making that optional.

Putting Values into Viper

Establishing Defaults

A good configuration system will support default values. A default value is not required for a key, but its useful in the event that a key hasn't been set via config file, environment variable, remote configuration or flag.

Examples:

viper.SetDefault("ContentDir", "content")
viper.SetDefault("LayoutDir", "layouts")
viper.SetDefault("Taxonomies", map[string]string{"tag": "tags", "category": "categories"})

Reading Config Files

Viper requires minimal configuration so it knows where to look for config files. Viper supports JSON, TOML, YAML, HCL, INI, envfile and Java Properties files. Viper can search multiple paths, but currently a single Viper instance only supports a single configuration file. Viper does not default to any configuration search paths leaving defaults decision to an application.

Here is an example of how to use Viper to search for and read a configuration file. None of the specific paths are required, but at least one path should be provided where a configuration file is expected.

viper.SetConfigName("config") // name of config file (without extension)
viper.SetConfigType("yaml") // REQUIRED if the config file does not have the extension in the name
viper.AddConfigPath("/etc/appname/")   // path to look for the config file in
viper.AddConfigPath("$HOME/.appname")  // call multiple times to add many search paths
viper.AddConfigPath(".")               // optionally look for config in the working directory
err := viper.ReadInConfig() // Find and read the config file
if err != nil { // Handle errors reading the config file
	panic(fmt.Errorf("fatal error config file: %w", err))
}

You can handle the specific case where no config file is found like this:

if err := viper.ReadInConfig(); err != nil {
	if _, ok := err.(viper.ConfigFileNotFoundError); ok {
		// Config file not found; ignore error if desired
	} else {
		// Config file was found but another error was produced
	}
}

// Config file found and successfully parsed

NOTE [since 1.6]: You can also have a file without an extension and specify the format programmatically. For those configuration files that lie in the home of the user without any extension like .bashrc

Writing Config Files

Reading from config files is useful, but at times you want to store all modifications made at run time. For that, a bunch of commands are available, each with its own purpose:

  • WriteConfig - writes the current viper configuration to the predefined path, if exists. Errors if no predefined path. Will overwrite the current config file, if it exists.
  • SafeWriteConfig - writes the current viper configuration to the predefined path. Errors if no predefined path. Will not overwrite the current config file, if it exists.
  • WriteConfigAs - writes the current viper configuration to the given filepath. Will overwrite the given file, if it exists.
  • SafeWriteConfigAs - writes the current viper configuration to the given filepath. Will not overwrite the given file, if it exists.

As a rule of the thumb, everything marked with safe won't overwrite any file, but just create if not existent, whilst the default behavior is to create or truncate.

A small examples section:

viper.WriteConfig() // writes current config to predefined path set by 'viper.AddConfigPath()' and 'viper.SetConfigName'
viper.SafeWriteConfig()
viper.WriteConfigAs("/path/to/my/.config")
viper.SafeWriteConfigAs("/path/to/my/.config") // will error since it has already been written
viper.SafeWriteConfigAs("/path/to/my/.other_config")

Watching and re-reading config files

Viper supports the ability to have your application live read a config file while running.

Gone are the days of needing to restart a server to have a config take effect, viper powered applications can read an update to a config file while running and not miss a beat.

Simply tell the viper instance to watchConfig. Optionally you can provide a function for Viper to run each time a change occurs.

Make sure you add all of the configPaths prior to calling WatchConfig()

viper.OnConfigChange(func(e fsnotify.Event) {
	fmt.Println("Config file changed:", e.Name)
})
viper.WatchConfig()

Reading Config from io.Reader

Viper predefines many configuration sources such as files, environment variables, flags, and remote K/V store, but you are not bound to them. You can also implement your own required configuration source and feed it to viper.

viper.SetConfigType("yaml") // or viper.SetConfigType("YAML")

// any approach to require this configuration into your program.
var yamlExample = []byte(`
Hacker: true
name: steve
hobbies:
- skateboarding
- snowboarding
- go
clothing:
  jacket: leather
  trousers: denim
age: 35
eyes : brown
beard: true
`)

viper.ReadConfig(bytes.NewBuffer(yamlExample))

viper.Get("name") // this would be "steve"

Setting Overrides

These could be from a command line flag, or from your own application logic.

viper.Set("Verbose", true)
viper.Set("LogFile", LogFile)
viper.Set("host.port", 5899)   // set subset

Registering and Using Aliases

Aliases permit a single value to be referenced by multiple keys

viper.RegisterAlias("loud", "Verbose")

viper.Set("verbose", true) // same result as next line
viper.Set("loud", true)   // same result as prior line

viper.GetBool("loud") // true
viper.GetBool("verbose") // true

Working with Environment Variables

Viper has full support for environment variables. This enables 12 factor applications out of the box. There are five methods that exist to aid working with ENV:

  • AutomaticEnv()
  • BindEnv(string...) : error
  • SetEnvPrefix(string)
  • SetEnvKeyReplacer(string...) *strings.Replacer
  • AllowEmptyEnv(bool)

When working with ENV variables, its important to recognize that Viper treats ENV variables as case sensitive.

Viper provides a mechanism to try to ensure that ENV variables are unique. By using SetEnvPrefix, you can tell Viper to use a prefix while reading from the environment variables. Both BindEnv and AutomaticEnv will use this prefix.

BindEnv takes one or more parameters. The first parameter is the key name, the rest are the name of the environment variables to bind to this key. If more than one are provided, they will take precedence in the specified order. The name of the environment variable is case sensitive. If the ENV variable name is not provided, then Viper will automatically assume that the ENV variable matches the following format: prefix + "_" + the key name in ALL CAPS. When you explicitly provide the ENV variable name (the second parameter), it does not automatically add the prefix. For example if the second parameter is "id", Viper will look for the ENV variable "ID".

One important thing to recognize when working with ENV variables is that the value will be read each time it is accessed. Viper does not fix the value when the BindEnv is called.

AutomaticEnv is a powerful helper especially when combined with SetEnvPrefix. When called, Viper will check for an environment variable any time a viper.Get request is made. It will apply the following rules. It will check for an environment variable with a name matching the key uppercased and prefixed with the EnvPrefix if set.

SetEnvKeyReplacer allows you to use a strings.Replacer object to rewrite Env keys to an extent. This is useful if you want to use - or something in your Get() calls, but want your environmental variables to use _ delimiters. An example of using it can be found in viper_test.go.

Alternatively, you can use EnvKeyReplacer with NewWithOptions factory function. Unlike SetEnvKeyReplacer, it accepts a StringReplacer interface allowing you to write custom string replacing logic.

By default empty environment variables are considered unset and will fall back to the next configuration source. To treat empty environment variables as set, use the AllowEmptyEnv method.

Env example

SetEnvPrefix("spf") // will be uppercased automatically
BindEnv("id")

os.Setenv("SPF_ID", "13") // typically done outside of the app

id := Get("id") // 13

Working with Flags

Viper has the ability to bind to flags. Specifically, Viper supports Pflags as used in the Cobra library.

Like BindEnv, the value is not set when the binding method is called, but when it is accessed. This means you can bind as early as you want, even in an init() function.

For individual flags, the BindPFlag() method provides this functionality.

Example:

serverCmd.Flags().Int("port", 1138, "Port to run Application server on")
viper.BindPFlag("port", serverCmd.Flags().Lookup("port"))

You can also bind an existing set of pflags (pflag.FlagSet):

Example:

pflag.Int("flagname", 1234, "help message for flagname")

pflag.Parse()
viper.BindPFlags(pflag.CommandLine)

i := viper.GetInt("flagname") // retrieve values from viper instead of pflag

The use of pflag in Viper does not preclude the use of other packages that use the flag package from the standard library. The pflag package can handle the flags defined for the flag package by importing these flags. This is accomplished by a calling a convenience function provided by the pflag package called AddGoFlagSet().

Example:

package main

import (
	"flag"
	"github.com/spf13/pflag"
)

func main() {

	// using standard library "flag" package
	flag.Int("flagname", 1234, "help message for flagname")

	pflag.CommandLine.AddGoFlagSet(flag.CommandLine)
	pflag.Parse()
	viper.BindPFlags(pflag.CommandLine)

	i := viper.GetInt("flagname") // retrieve value from viper

	// ...
}

Flag interfaces

Viper provides two Go interfaces to bind other flag systems if you dont use Pflags.

FlagValue represents a single flag. This is a very simple example on how to implement this interface:

type myFlag struct {}
func (f myFlag) HasChanged() bool { return false }
func (f myFlag) Name() string { return "my-flag-name" }
func (f myFlag) ValueString() string { return "my-flag-value" }
func (f myFlag) ValueType() string { return "string" }

Once your flag implements this interface, you can simply tell Viper to bind it:

viper.BindFlagValue("my-flag-name", myFlag{})

FlagValueSet represents a group of flags. This is a very simple example on how to implement this interface:

type myFlagSet struct {
	flags []myFlag
}

func (f myFlagSet) VisitAll(fn func(FlagValue)) {
	for _, flag := range flags {
		fn(flag)
	}
}

Once your flag set implements this interface, you can simply tell Viper to bind it:

fSet := myFlagSet{
	flags: []myFlag{myFlag{}, myFlag{}},
}
viper.BindFlagValues("my-flags", fSet)

Remote Key/Value Store Support

To enable remote support in Viper, do a blank import of the viper/remote package:

import _ "github.com/spf13/viper/remote"

Viper will read a config string (as JSON, TOML, YAML, HCL or envfile) retrieved from a path in a Key/Value store such as etcd or Consul. These values take precedence over default values, but are overridden by configuration values retrieved from disk, flags, or environment variables.

Viper uses crypt to retrieve configuration from the K/V store, which means that you can store your configuration values encrypted and have them automatically decrypted if you have the correct gpg keyring. Encryption is optional.

You can use remote configuration in conjunction with local configuration, or independently of it.

crypt has a command-line helper that you can use to put configurations in your K/V store. crypt defaults to etcd on http://127.0.0.1:4001.

$ go get github.com/bketelsen/crypt/bin/crypt
$ crypt set -plaintext /config/hugo.json /Users/hugo/settings/config.json

Confirm that your value was set:

$ crypt get -plaintext /config/hugo.json

See the crypt documentation for examples of how to set encrypted values, or how to use Consul.

Remote Key/Value Store Example - Unencrypted

etcd

viper.AddRemoteProvider("etcd", "http://127.0.0.1:4001","/config/hugo.json")
viper.SetConfigType("json") // because there is no file extension in a stream of bytes, supported extensions are "json", "toml", "yaml", "yml", "properties", "props", "prop", "env", "dotenv"
err := viper.ReadRemoteConfig()

etcd3

viper.AddRemoteProvider("etcd3", "http://127.0.0.1:4001","/config/hugo.json")
viper.SetConfigType("json") // because there is no file extension in a stream of bytes, supported extensions are "json", "toml", "yaml", "yml", "properties", "props", "prop", "env", "dotenv"
err := viper.ReadRemoteConfig()

Consul

You need to set a key to Consul key/value storage with JSON value containing your desired config. For example, create a Consul key/value store key MY_CONSUL_KEY with value:

{
    "port": 8080,
    "hostname": "myhostname.com"
}
viper.AddRemoteProvider("consul", "localhost:8500", "MY_CONSUL_KEY")
viper.SetConfigType("json") // Need to explicitly set this to json
err := viper.ReadRemoteConfig()

fmt.Println(viper.Get("port")) // 8080
fmt.Println(viper.Get("hostname")) // myhostname.com

Firestore

viper.AddRemoteProvider("firestore", "google-cloud-project-id", "collection/document")
viper.SetConfigType("json") // Config's format: "json", "toml", "yaml", "yml"
err := viper.ReadRemoteConfig()

Of course, you're allowed to use SecureRemoteProvider also

NATS

viper.AddRemoteProvider("nats", "nats://127.0.0.1:4222", "myapp.config")
viper.SetConfigType("json")
err := viper.ReadRemoteConfig()

Remote Key/Value Store Example - Encrypted

viper.AddSecureRemoteProvider("etcd","http://127.0.0.1:4001","/config/hugo.json","/etc/secrets/mykeyring.gpg")
viper.SetConfigType("json") // because there is no file extension in a stream of bytes,  supported extensions are "json", "toml", "yaml", "yml", "properties", "props", "prop", "env", "dotenv"
err := viper.ReadRemoteConfig()

Watching Changes in etcd - Unencrypted

// alternatively, you can create a new viper instance.
var runtime_viper = viper.New()

runtime_viper.AddRemoteProvider("etcd", "http://127.0.0.1:4001", "/config/hugo.yml")
runtime_viper.SetConfigType("yaml") // because there is no file extension in a stream of bytes, supported extensions are "json", "toml", "yaml", "yml", "properties", "props", "prop", "env", "dotenv"

// read from remote config the first time.
err := runtime_viper.ReadRemoteConfig()

// unmarshal config
runtime_viper.Unmarshal(&runtime_conf)

// open a goroutine to watch remote changes forever
go func(){
	for {
		time.Sleep(time.Second * 5) // delay after each request

		// currently, only tested with etcd support
		err := runtime_viper.WatchRemoteConfig()
		if err != nil {
			log.Errorf("unable to read remote config: %v", err)
			continue
		}

		// unmarshal new config into our runtime config struct. you can also use channel
		// to implement a signal to notify the system of the changes
		runtime_viper.Unmarshal(&runtime_conf)
	}
}()

Getting Values From Viper

In Viper, there are a few ways to get a value depending on the values type. The following functions and methods exist:

  • Get(key string) : any
  • GetBool(key string) : bool
  • GetFloat64(key string) : float64
  • GetInt(key string) : int
  • GetIntSlice(key string) : []int
  • GetString(key string) : string
  • GetStringMap(key string) : map[string]any
  • GetStringMapString(key string) : map[string]string
  • GetStringSlice(key string) : []string
  • GetTime(key string) : time.Time
  • GetDuration(key string) : time.Duration
  • IsSet(key string) : bool
  • AllSettings() : map[string]any

One important thing to recognize is that each Get function will return a zero value if its not found. To check if a given key exists, the IsSet() method has been provided.

Example:

viper.GetString("logfile") // case-insensitive Setting & Getting
if viper.GetBool("verbose") {
	fmt.Println("verbose enabled")
}

Accessing nested keys

The accessor methods also accept formatted paths to deeply nested keys. For example, if the following JSON file is loaded:

{
    "host": {
        "address": "localhost",
        "port": 5799
    },
    "datastore": {
        "metric": {
            "host": "127.0.0.1",
            "port": 3099
        },
        "warehouse": {
            "host": "198.0.0.1",
            "port": 2112
        }
    }
}

Viper can access a nested field by passing a . delimited path of keys:

GetString("datastore.metric.host") // (returns "127.0.0.1")

This obeys the precedence rules established above; the search for the path will cascade through the remaining configuration registries until found.

For example, given this configuration file, both datastore.metric.host and datastore.metric.port are already defined (and may be overridden). If in addition datastore.metric.protocol was defined in the defaults, Viper would also find it.

However, if datastore.metric was overridden (by a flag, an environment variable, the Set() method, …) with an immediate value, then all sub-keys of datastore.metric become undefined, they are “shadowed” by the higher-priority configuration level.

Viper can access array indices by using numbers in the path. For example:

{
    "host": {
        "address": "localhost",
        "ports": [
            5799,
            6029
        ]
    },
    "datastore": {
        "metric": {
            "host": "127.0.0.1",
            "port": 3099
        },
        "warehouse": {
            "host": "198.0.0.1",
            "port": 2112
        }
    }
}

GetInt("host.ports.1") // returns 6029

Lastly, if there exists a key that matches the delimited key path, its value will be returned instead. E.g.

{
    "datastore.metric.host": "0.0.0.0",
    "host": {
        "address": "localhost",
        "port": 5799
    },
    "datastore": {
        "metric": {
            "host": "127.0.0.1",
            "port": 3099
        },
        "warehouse": {
            "host": "198.0.0.1",
            "port": 2112
        }
    }
}

GetString("datastore.metric.host") // returns "0.0.0.0"

Extracting a sub-tree

When developing reusable modules, it's often useful to extract a subset of the configuration and pass it to a module. This way the module can be instantiated more than once, with different configurations.

For example, an application might use multiple different cache stores for different purposes:

cache:
  cache1:
    max-items: 100
    item-size: 64
  cache2:
    max-items: 200
    item-size: 80

We could pass the cache name to a module (eg. NewCache("cache1")), but it would require weird concatenation for accessing config keys and would be less separated from the global config.

So instead of doing that let's pass a Viper instance to the constructor that represents a subset of the configuration:

cache1Config := viper.Sub("cache.cache1")
if cache1Config == nil { // Sub returns nil if the key cannot be found
	panic("cache configuration not found")
}

cache1 := NewCache(cache1Config)

Note: Always check the return value of Sub. It returns nil if a key cannot be found.

Internally, the NewCache function can address max-items and item-size keys directly:

func NewCache(v *Viper) *Cache {
	return &Cache{
		MaxItems: v.GetInt("max-items"),
		ItemSize: v.GetInt("item-size"),
	}
}

The resulting code is easy to test, since it's decoupled from the main config structure, and easier to reuse (for the same reason).

Unmarshaling

You also have the option of Unmarshaling all or a specific value to a struct, map, etc.

There are two methods to do this:

  • Unmarshal(rawVal any) : error
  • UnmarshalKey(key string, rawVal any) : error

Example:

type config struct {
	Port int
	Name string
	PathMap string `mapstructure:"path_map"`
}

var C config

err := viper.Unmarshal(&C)
if err != nil {
	t.Fatalf("unable to decode into struct, %v", err)
}

If you want to unmarshal configuration where the keys themselves contain dot (the default key delimiter), you have to change the delimiter:

v := viper.NewWithOptions(viper.KeyDelimiter("::"))

v.SetDefault("chart::values", map[string]any{
	"ingress": map[string]any{
		"annotations": map[string]any{
			"traefik.frontend.rule.type":                 "PathPrefix",
			"traefik.ingress.kubernetes.io/ssl-redirect": "true",
		},
	},
})

type config struct {
	Chart struct{
		Values map[string]any
	}
}

var C config

v.Unmarshal(&C)

Viper also supports unmarshaling into embedded structs:

/*
Example config:

module:
    enabled: true
    token: 89h3f98hbwf987h3f98wenf89ehf
*/
type config struct {
	Module struct {
		Enabled bool

		moduleConfig `mapstructure:",squash"`
	}
}

// moduleConfig could be in a module specific package
type moduleConfig struct {
	Token string
}

var C config

err := viper.Unmarshal(&C)
if err != nil {
	t.Fatalf("unable to decode into struct, %v", err)
}

Viper uses github.com/mitchellh/mapstructure under the hood for unmarshaling values which uses mapstructure tags by default.

Decoding custom formats

A frequently requested feature for Viper is adding more value formats and decoders. For example, parsing character (dot, comma, semicolon, etc) separated strings into slices.

This is already available in Viper using mapstructure decode hooks.

Read more about the details in this blog post.

Marshalling to string

You may need to marshal all the settings held in viper into a string rather than write them to a file. You can use your favorite format's marshaller with the config returned by AllSettings().

import (
	yaml "gopkg.in/yaml.v2"
	// ...
)

func yamlStringSettings() string {
	c := viper.AllSettings()
	bs, err := yaml.Marshal(c)
	if err != nil {
		log.Fatalf("unable to marshal config to YAML: %v", err)
	}
	return string(bs)
}

Viper or Vipers?

Viper comes ready to use out of the box. There is no configuration or initialization needed to begin using Viper. Since most applications will want to use a single central repository for their configuration, the viper package provides this. It is similar to a singleton.

In all of the examples above, they demonstrate using viper in its singleton style approach.

Working with multiple vipers

You can also create many different vipers for use in your application. Each will have its own unique set of configurations and values. Each can read from a different config file, key value store, etc. All of the functions that viper package supports are mirrored as methods on a viper.

Example:

x := viper.New()
y := viper.New()

x.SetDefault("ContentDir", "content")
y.SetDefault("ContentDir", "foobar")

//...

When working with multiple vipers, it is up to the user to keep track of the different vipers.

Q & A

Why is it called “Viper”?

A: Viper is designed to be a companion to Cobra. While both can operate completely independently, together they make a powerful pair to handle much of your application foundation needs.

Why is it called “Cobra”?

Is there a better name for a commander?

Does Viper support case sensitive keys?

tl;dr: No.

Viper merges configuration from various sources, many of which are either case insensitive or uses different casing than the rest of the sources (eg. env vars). In order to provide the best experience when using multiple sources, the decision has been made to make all keys case insensitive.

There has been several attempts to implement case sensitivity, but unfortunately it's not that trivial. We might take a stab at implementing it in Viper v2, but despite the initial noise, it does not seem to be requested that much.

You can vote for case sensitivity by filling out this feedback form: https://forms.gle/R6faU74qPRPAzchZ9

Is it safe to concurrently read and write to a viper?

No, you will need to synchronize access to the viper yourself (for example by using the sync package). Concurrent reads and writes can cause a panic.

Troubleshooting

See TROUBLESHOOTING.md.

Development

For an optimal developer experience, it is recommended to install Nix and direnv.

Alternatively, install Go on your computer then run make deps to install the rest of the dependencies.

Run the test suite:

make test

Run linters:

make lint # pass -j option to run them in parallel

Some linter violations can automatically be fixed:

make fmt

License

The project is licensed under the MIT License.