- infos = Information about the profile plugin is in keys below
- infos/author = Thomas Waser thomas.waser@libelektra.org
- infos/licence = BSD
- infos/needs =
- infos/provides =
- infos/recommends =
- infos/placements = postgetstorage presetstorage
- infos/status = maintained libc nodep global preview unfinished
- infos/metadata =
- infos/description = helps switching between configuration profiles
Following the elektra keyname convention application configurations are stored under /sw/org/myapp/#
and /sw/org/myapp/#0/current
is the profile to be used.
The profile
plugin provides an easy way to switch configuration profiles.
The key /sw/org/myapp/#0/profile
defines what profile should be used as current
, e.g. /sw/org/myapp/#0/profile = myprofile
.
If a key /sw/org/myapp/#0/myprofile/key
is found and no key /sw/org/myapp/#0/current/key
exists an override key will be created linking /sw/org/myapp/#0/currrent/key
to /sw/org/myapp/#0/myapp/key
If neither /sw/org/myapp/#0/current/key
nor /sw/org/myapp/#0/myprofile/key
is found, but /sw/org/myapp/#0/%/key
, /sw/org/myapp/#0/current/key
will be linked to /sw/org/myapp/#0/%/key
.
So a cascading lookup will automatically implement following preferences (next to the namespace preferences):
- Usage of key in
current
- Usage of key in the profile set with
profile
- Usage of key in the
%
fallback profile
Suppose we have the configuration file profile.ini
in ~/.config
:
% cat profile.ini
[]
profile = myprofile
[current]
key2 = will win
[myprofile]
key1 = test1
key2 = test2
[%]
key2 = failed?
key3 = test3
Then we simply mount it without the profile plugin:
% kdb mount profile.ini /sw/org/myapp/#0 ini
But we have to make sure that the profile plugin is mounted globally:
% kdb global-mount profile
Then we can access /sw/org/myapp/#0
in a profile-aware way:
% kdb ls /sw
spec/sw/org/myapp/#0/current/key1
spec/sw/org/myapp/#0/current/key3
user/sw/org/myapp/#0
user/sw/org/myapp/#0/%
user/sw/org/myapp/#0/%/key2
user/sw/org/myapp/#0/%/key3
user/sw/org/myapp/#0/current
user/sw/org/myapp/#0/current/key2
user/sw/org/myapp/#0/profile
user/sw/org/myapp/#0/myprofile
user/sw/org/myapp/#0/myprofile/key1
user/sw/org/myapp/#0/myprofile/key2
As we can see with the -v
option, we will fetch keys from our myprofile
even though we request current
:
% kdb get -v /sw/org/myapp/#0/current/key1
got 25 keys
searching spec/sw/org/myapp/#0/current/key1, found: spec/sw/org/myapp/#0/current/key1, options: KDB_O_CALLBACK
The resulting keyname is user/sw/org/myapp/#0/myprofile/key1
test1
To switch profile we simply have to set one key:
kdb set user/sw/org/myapp/#0/profile newprofile
Usually, this will be done via commandline by setting proc/sw/org/myapp/#0/profile
.