NAME
Config::Trivial::Storable - Very simple tool for reading and writing very simple Storable configuration files
VERSION
This documentation refers to Config::Trivial::Storable version 0.31
SYNOPSIS
use Config::Trivial::Storable;
my $config = Config::Trivial::Storable->new(config_file => "path/to/my/config.conf");
my $settings = $config->retrieve;
say "Setting Colour is:\t", $settings->{'colour'};
$settings->{'new-item'} = "New Setting";
$settings->store;
DESCRIPTION
Use this module when you want use "Yet Another" very simple, light weight configuration file reader. The module extends Config::Trivial by providing Storable Support. See those modules for more details.
SUBROUTINES/METHODS
store
The store method outputs a Storable binary version of the configuration rather than a plain text version that the write version would.
There are two optional parameters that can be passed, a file name to use instead of the current one, and a reference of a hash to write out instead of the currently loaded one.
$config->store(
file_name => "/path/to/somewhere/else",
configuration => $settings);
The method returns true on success. If the file already exists then it is backed up first. The store takes place using Storable's "lock_store" which uses Perl's flock. If the file cannot be written to then it will die.
Configuration data passed by this method is only written to file, it is not stored in the internal configuration object. To store data in the internal use the set_configuration data method. The option to pass a hash_ref in this method may be removed in future versions.
If you do not specify a file name then the module will default to writing to the calling file - which is obviously silly and it will try to avoid doing this - hence the error message: "Can't retrieve store from the calling file.".
retrieve
This is the analogue to read, only it reads data from a Storable binary.
$config->retrieve;
If both Storable and traditional text configuration files are set then retrieve will use the Storable version in preference, but if the text version is newer then that will be used instead. Thus you can easily edit the text version and any code using this module will automatically switch to using it.
set_storable_file
If you want to explicitly set the file name of a storable file you may use this method. If you set a file name by both set_storable_file and set_config_file, then the retrieve method will "magically" decided which to use. The read method will ignore any storable settings.
CONFIG FORMAT
About The Configuration File Format
This module extends Config::Trivial
with optional support for using Storable binaries as a configuration file format, rather than plain text files.
The format of the text files is as with Config::Trivial
and remains unchanged, as this module inherits from that one. The Storable format is offered so that modules can simple "retrieve" their configuration without the use of any particular configuration module.
This module extends Config::Trivial
so that they can be used to quickly read configuration in one format and convert to another.
DEPENDENCIES
At the moment the module only uses core modules, plus Config::Trivial
The test suite optionally uses POD::Coverage
, Test::Pod::Coverage
, Test::Pod
and IO::Warnings
which will be skipped if you do not have them.
BUGS AND LIMITATIONS
Patches very welcome... ;-)
MISC
History
See Changes file.
EXPORT
None.
AUTHOR
Adam Trickett, <atrickett@cpan.org>
SEE ALSO
perl, Config::Trivial, Storable.
LICENSE AND COPYRIGHT
This version as Config::Trivial::Storable
, Copyright Adam John Trickett 2006-2014
OSI Certified Open Source Software. Free Software Foundation Free Software.
This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public License along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.