3

I was wondering whether there is a convention for storing config files in c++. At the moment I am storing the config files in the same directory as the source code that uses them. When building I make sure via the CMakeLists to copy them to the correct location so I can just access them in a relative way (e.g. "config.cfg" iso "/foo/bar/config.cfg) for convenience.

2
  • 2
    It depends very much on the operating system. On Windows the convention is to either use the registry, or use the installation directory for the default configuration and %APPDATA% for user-settings. On Linux it can be ~/.theusersconfig, /etc/globalconfig and /install/path/defaultconfig (but may also be completely different). On OSX I don't know. Apr 2, 2015 at 10:07
  • I'm not sure what tools are you using to configure your building process and the destination platform, but in my case with autotools on debina I use: for config files: -DPACKAGE_CONF_DIR="$(sysconfdir)" for data files:-DPACKAGE_DATA_DIR="$(pkgdatadir)" by default that variables become /usr/local/etc and /usr/local/share for Debian Linux and the correct counter part for windows, but you can change them before building to something else. Jun 16, 2018 at 15:32

1 Answer 1

5

The practice for config files is non portable and operating system dependent. You have also to ask yourself if your configuration is defined per installation/system or per user.

In general, it is a very bad idea to store config in the same directory as your execuable, at least once the developpement is finished. In general executables may be shared between several users and should therefore for security reasons be located in directories that are write-protected for everybody but the system administrator.

For unix/linux, you could for example consider:

  • /etc or a subfolder thereof, if your configuration is per installed system,
  • ~/ if it's user defined configuration. The usual practice would be to start the filename with a dot. This article will tell you more.

For windows systems, you should consider:

  • the usual approach now, goes to the registry. Of course, this uses the windows api and is fully non portable.
  • a subfolder of C:\ProgramData or C:\Users\All users\AppData\Local if your configuration is per installed system,
  • a subfolder of C:\Users\%USERNAME%\AppData\Local for the users's own configuration. This SO questions shows how to find the right folders.
1

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.