More JSON Configuration!
========================

A JSON template format intended for configuration files.

Motivation
----------

This module has superficial similarity to the `JSON Reference
Draft <https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-pbryan-zyp-json-ref-03>`__,
which seems inspired by the committee-driven XPath specification, and as
a result, made some poor design choices. Here are the improvements this
module makes:

1. This module uses the dot (``.``) as a path separator in the URL
   fragment. For example, an absolute reference looks like
   ``{"$ref": "#message.type.name"}``, and a relative reference looks
   like ``{"$ref": "#..type.name"}``. This syntax better matches that
   used by Javascript.
2. The properties found in a ``$ref`` object are not ignored. Rather,
   they are to *override* the referenced object properties. This allows
   you to reference a default document, and replace the particular
   properties as needed. *more below*
3. References can accept URL parameters: JSON is treated like a string
   template for more sophisticated value replacement. *see below*
4. You can reference files and environment variables in addition to
   general URLs.

Usage
-----

Load your settings easily:

::

    settings = mo_json_config.get(url):

Comments
--------

End-of-line Comments are allowed, using either ``#`` or ``//`` prefix:

.. code:: javascript

        {
            "key1": "value1",  //Comment 1
        }

.. code:: python

            "key1": "value1",  #Comment 1

Multiline comments are also allowed, using either Python's triple-quotes
(``""" ... """``) or Javascript's block quotes ``/*...*/``

.. code:: javascript

        {
            "key1": /* Comment 1 */ "value1",
        }

.. code:: python

            "key1": """Comment 1""" "value1",

Example References
------------------

The ``$ref`` property is special. Its value is interpreted as a URL
pointing to more JSON

Absolute Internal Reference
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

The simplest form of URL is an absolute reference to a node in the same
document:

.. code:: python

        {
            "message": "Hello world",
            "repeat": {"$ref": "#message"}
        }

The reference must start with ``#``, and the object with the ``$ref`` is
replaced with the value it points to:

.. code:: python

        {
            "message": "Hello world",
            "repeat": "Hello world"
        }

Relative Internal References
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

References that start with dot (``.``) are relative, with each
additional dot referring to successive parents. In this case the ``..``
refers to the ref-object's parent, and expands just like the previous
example:

.. code:: python

        {
            "message": "Hello world",
            "repeat": {"$ref": "#..message"}
        }

File References
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Configuration is often stored on the local file system. You can in-line
the JSON found in a file by using the ``file://`` scheme:

It is good practice to store sensitive data in a secure place...

.. code:: python

        {# LOCATED IN C:\users\kyle\password.json
            "host": "database.example.com",
            "username": "kyle",
            "password": "pass123"
        }

...and then refer to it in your configuration file:

.. code:: python

        {
            "host": "example.com",
            "port": "8080",
            "$ref": "file:///C:/users/kyle/password.json"
        }

which will be expanded at run-time to:

.. code:: python

        {
            "host": "example.com",
            "port": "8080",
            "username": "kyle",
            "password": "pass123"
        }

Please notice the triple slash (``///``) is referring to an absolute
file reference.

References To Objects
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Ref-objects that point to other objects (dicts) are not replaced
completely, but rather are merged with the target; with the ref-object
properties taking precedence. This is seen in the example above: The
"host" property is not overwritten by the target's.

Relative File Reference
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Here is the same, using a relative file reference; which is relative to
the file that contains this JSON

.. code:: python

        {#LOCATED IN C:\users\kyle\dev-debug.json
            "host": "example.com",
            "port": "8080",
            "$ref": "file://password.json"
        }

Home Directory Reference
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

You may also use the tilde (``~``) to refer to the current user's home
directory. Here is the same again, but this example can be anywhere in
the file system.

.. code:: python

        {
            "host": "example.com",
            "port": "8080",
            "$ref": "file://~/password.json"
        }

HTTP Reference
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Configuration can be stored remotely, especially in the case of larger
configurations which are too unwieldy to inline:

.. code:: python

        {
            "schema":{"$ref": "http://example.com/sources/my_db.json"}
        }

Scheme-Relative Reference
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

You are also able to leave the scheme off, so that whole constellations
of configuration files can refer to each other no matter if they are on
the local file system, or remote:

.. code:: python

        {# LOCATED AT SOMEWHERE AT http://example.com
            "schema":{"$ref": "///sources/my_db.json"}
        }

And, of course, relative references are also allowed:

.. code:: python

        {# LOCATED AT http://example.com/sources/dev-debug.json
            "schema":{"$ref": "//sources/my_db.json"}
        }

Fragment Reference
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Some remote configuration files are quite large...

.. code:: python

        {# LOCATED IN C:\users\kyle\password.json
            "database":{
                "username": "kyle",
                "password": "pass123"
            },
            "email":{
                "username": "ekyle",
                "password": "pass123"
            }
        }

... and you only need one fragment. For this use the hash (``#``)
followed by the dot-delimited path into the document:

.. code:: python

        {
            "host": "mail.example.com",
            "username": "ekyle"
            "password": {"$ref": "//~/password.json#email.password"}
        }

Environment Variables Reference
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

json.ref uses the unconventional ``env`` scheme for accessing
environment variables:

.. code:: python

        {
            "host": "mail.example.com",
            "username": "ekyle"
            "password": {"$ref": "env://MAIL_PASSWORD"}
        }

Parameterized References
------------------------

JSON documents are allowed named parameters, which are surrounded by
moustaches ``{{.}}``.

.. code:: javascript

        {//above_example.json
            {{var_name}}: "value"
        }

Parameter replacement is performed on the unicode text before being
interpreted by the JSON parser. It is your responsibility to ensure the
parameter replacement will result in valid JSON.

You pass the parameters by including them as URL parameters:

::

    {"$ref": "//~/above_example.json?var_name=%22hello%22"}

Which will expand to

.. code:: javascript

        {
            "hello": "value"
        }

The pipe (``|``) symbol can be used to perform some common conversions

.. code:: javascript

        {
            {{var_name|quote}}: "value"
        }

The ``quote`` transformation will deal with quoting, so ...

::

    {"$ref": "//~/above_example.json?var_name=hello"}

... expands to the same:

.. code:: javascript

        {
            "hello": "value"
        }

Please see
```expand_template`` <../README.md#function-expand_template>`__ for more
on the parameter replacement, and transformations available

--------------

also see http://tools.ietf.org/id/draft-pbryan-zyp-json-ref-03.html
