The following would probably add more complexity than you want but, just so you're aware of all the options:
Gcfg's documentation claims(I haven't actually done it myself) that it provides one more alternative, by way of the fmt.Scanner interface. Any named type that you declare can be parsed from the INI file, so long as it implements fmt.Scanner.
With this in mind, you could, if you felt like it, do something along the lines of the following:
package main
import (
"fmt"
"strconv"
"strings"
)
type OptionalInt struct {
IsSet bool
Value int
}
//This method definition is rather impromptu and may not be the best way to scan an int
func (optInt *OptionalInt) Scan (state fmt.ScanState, verb rune) (err error) {
var token []byte
var n int
token, err = state.Token(true, nil)
if err==nil {
n, err = strconv.Atoi(string(token))
if err==nil{
optInt.Value = n
optInt.IsSet = true
}
}
return
}
type Config struct {
Port OptionalInt
TimeOut OptionalInt
}
func main(){
//whatever...
}
If you do this then, once you've loaded all the data from the INI file into your Config structure, the data will appear in a set of OptionalInt fields. And for each such field, you will be able to check IsSet, as well as the Value inside.
If this approach appeals to you and you end up trying it, maybe you could post a comment here so that the rest of us will know how it works out.
if (Config.Server.Host == "" && Config.Server.Port == 0)
? I don't think you'll need to use reflect, but if you do, have a look at golang.org/pkg/reflect/#DeepEqual .