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Cockpit

Super DRY Settings for Ruby, Rails, and Sinatra Apps with pluggable backend support.

Install

sudo gem install cockpit

How it works

You can define arbitrarily nested key/value pairs of any type, and customize them from an Admin panel or the terminal, and save them to the MySQL, MongoDB, Redis, in memory, or even a File.

  1. Settings can be associated with a model class
  2. Settings can be associated with a model instance, which can use the model class settings as defaults
  3. Settings can be global and not reference a model at all (basic key/value store).

You define settings like this:

Cockpit :active_record do
  site do
    title "My Site"
    time_zone :default => lambda { "Hawaii" }
    feed do
      per_page 10
      formats %w(rss atom)
    end
  end
end

That gives you an instance of Cockpit::Settings, a tree data structure.

Global Settings API

If you've defined your :active_record settings like above, which are global settings, you can use them like this:

Get Methods

Cockpit::Settings["site.feed.per_page"] #=> 10
Cockpit::Settings("site.feed.per_page") #=> 10
Cockpit::Settings.site.feed.per_page.value #=> 10

Everything ultimately passes through the hash form of the method, Cockpit::Settings["path"], so that's the most optimized way to do it.

You can also check to see if these settings exist:

Cockpit::Settings.site.feed.per_page? #=> true

Set Methods

Cockpit::Settings["site.feed.per_page"] = 20
Cockpit::Settings("site.feed.per_page", 20)
Cockpit::Settings.site.feed.per_page.value = 20

Behind the Scenes

When you define settings using the DSL, they get stored as Cockpit::Spec objects into a global hash in the Cockpit::Settings class, which is a dictionary of specs[class][name] = spec. Global specs aren't associated with a class (e.g. model class), so the class is NilClass. You can have multiple global settings classes if you'd like, just give them names:

Cockpit :store => :active_record, :name => :more_settings do
  hello "world"
end

You can access specific global settings like this:

Cockpit::Settings.find(:more_settings).hello.value #=> "world"

Instance Settings API

You can also associate settings with any object (plain Object, ActiveRecord, MongoMapper::Document, etc.):

class User < ActiveRecord::Base
  include Cockpit
  
  cockpit do
    preferences do
      favorite_color "red"
    end
    settings do
      birthday :after => :queue_birthday_message, :if => lambda { |key, value|
        value =~ /\d\d\/\d\d\/\d\d\d\d/ # 10/03/1986
      }
      number_of_children, Integer
    end
  end
  
  def queue_birthday_message(key, value)
    BirthdayMailer.enqueue(value # ,...)
  end
end

And access them like this:

user = User.new
user.cockpit["settings.number_of_children"] #=> 300
user.cockpit["preferences.favorite_color"] = "green"
user.cockpit.settings.number_of_children.value = 0
user.cockpit.preferences? #=> true

If your model class doesn't have methods named after the cockpit keys, it will generate methods for you and delegate them to the cockpit:

user.preferences.favorite_color? #=> true
user.settings? #=> true
user.preferences.favorite_color.value = "turquoise"

Swappable Backend

The current backends supported are these keys:

  • active_record
  • mongo
  • memory

Soon, or as need be, I'll support redis, files, couchdb, etc. Haven't needed them yet.

Caching

For Active Record, Cockpit just adds a has_many :settings declaration to your model, and loads all of the settings on the first call, caching any further gets to settings for that model. This means basically that settings are extendable database attributes for your model.

Use Cases

This makes it really easy to edit random settings from an interface, such as an admin panel. Next goal is to add callbacks around save/destroy so you can run processes when settings are changed (such as changing your google_analytics, which would require re-rendering views if they were cached).

The goal is to make this enormous configuration dsl work, so I can define an entire site in a DSL.

Other API Notes

When you specify the DSL, that creates a flat tree of defaults, which aren't saved to the database. Then when you update the setting, it saves to the database, otherwise when the value is read and is null, it will use the default from the in-memory/dsl-defined tree.

You can also associate a hash with each setting definition. This is great for say options, defaults, titles and tooltips, etc. Here's an example:

Cockpit :active_record do
  site do
    time_zones "MST", :options => Proc.new { TZInfo::Timezone.all.map(&:name) }
  end
end

assert_equal TZInfo::Timezone.all.map(&:name), Cockpit::Settings["site.time_zones"][:options].call

And you can access the definition object directly:

Cockpit::Settings.definition("site.time_zones").attributes[:options]

You can even do this in the terminal:

irb -r 'rubygems'
require 'cockpit'
Cockpit { site { title "Lance" } }
puts Cockpit::Settings["site.title"] #=> "Lance"

copyright @viatropos 2010

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