CONFIGREADER(1) User Contributed Perl Documentation CONFIGREADER(1)NAMEConfigReader - Read directives from a configuration file.
DESCRIPTION
The ConfigReader library is a set of classes which reads directives
from a configuration file. The library is completely object oriented,
and it is envisioned that parsers for new styles of configuration files
can be easily added.
ConfigReader::Spec encapsulates a specification for configuration
directives. You can specify which directives can be in the
configuration file, aliases for the directive, whether the directive is
required or has a default value, and how to parse the directive value.
Here's an example of how one directive might be specified:
required $spec 'HomePage', 'new URI::URL';
This defines a required directive called 'HomePage'. To parse the
value from the configuration file, the URI::URL::new() method will be
called with the string value as its argument.
If the directive name is a simple string, it will be used both to refer
to the directive in the Perl program, and as the name in the
configuration file. You can also specify an alias by using an array
ref. For example, suppose you wanted to use "index" as the name of the
directive in the configuration file, but to avoid confusion with Perl's
index() function you wanted to refer to the directive inside the
program as the "file_index". This will do the trick:
['file_index', 'index']
You can specify any number of aliases for the directive:
['file_index', 'index', 'file_index', 'contents', ...]
The parsing function or method is called to translate the value string
from the configuration file into the value used by the program. It can
be specified in several different ways:
code ref static method object method undefined
You can also specify a default value to be used if a directive is not
specified in the configuration file.
string value code ref undefined
ConfigReader::Values stores a set of directive values that have been
read from a configuration file. It stores a reference to an associated
Spec as a member variable. Separating the specification from the
values makes it possible to use a single specification for multiple
sets of values.
ConfigReader::DirectiveStyle implements a reader for a common style of
configuration file. It is a subclass of ConfigReader::Values.
Directive names are followed by their value, one per line:
HomePage http://www.w3.org/
Services /etc/services
perl v5.14.1 1996-02-14 CONFIGREADER(1)