In development mode, I have the following directory tree :

| my_project/
| setup.py
| my_project/
    | __init__.py
    | main.py
    | conf/
        | myproject.conf

I use ConfigParser to parse the myproject.conf file.

In my code, it's easy to load the file with a good path : my_project/conf/myproject.conf

The problem is : When I install my project using the setup.py, the configuration file are situated (thanks to setup.py) in the /etc/my_project/myproject.conf and my application in the /usr/lib/python<version>/site-packages/my_project/.

How can I refer my my_project/conf/myproject.conf file in my project in "production" mode, and refer to the local file (my_project/conf/myproject.conf) in "devel" mode.

In addition, I would like to be portable if possible (Work on windows for example).

What's the good practice to do that ?

link|improve this question

feedback

3 Answers

up vote 4 down vote accepted

Have you seen how configuration files work? Read up on "rc" files, as they're sometimes called. "bashrc", "vimrc", etc.

There's usually a multi-step search for the configuration file.

  1. Local directory. ./myproject.conf.

  2. User's home directory (~user/myproject.conf)

  3. A standard system-wide directory (/etc/myproject/myproject.conf)

  4. A place named by an environment variable (MYPROJECT_CONF)

The Python installation would be the last place to look.

config= None
for loc in os.curdir, os.path.expanduser("~"), "/etc/myproject", os.environ.get("MYPROJECT_CONF"):
    try: 
        with open(os.path.join(loc,"myproject.conf")) as source:
            config.readfp( source )
    except IOError:
        pass
link|improve this answer
This isn't how it works in Windows, though, which the question asked for. – endolith Mar 18 at 23:48
This will "Work on windows". It may not be "typical" for Windows, but it certainly works. – S.Lott Mar 20 at 9:39
feedback

If you're using setuptools, see the chapter on using non-package data files. Don't try to look for the files yourself.

link|improve this answer
feedback

I don't think there is a clean way to deal with that. You could simply choose to test for the existence of the 'local' file, which would work in dev mode. Otherwise, fall back to the production path:

main_base = os.path.dirname(__file__)
config_file = os.path.join([main_base, "conf", "myproject.conf"])

if not os.path.exists(config_file):
    config_file = PROD_CONFIG_FILE   # this could also be different based on the OS
link|improve this answer
feedback

Your Answer

 
or
required, but never shown

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