1

I'm writing features and step definitions using Cucumber and Capybara, I want to store user credentials in a YAML file.

My question is if I have a cred.yml file in my support/config.yml, and I load the file in my env.rb (CONFIG = YAML.load_file("/config/config.yml")), will all of the information be accessible? If so how will I access/call user1 from env_1 for example?

Or if I want to only load one/multiple select environment at a time, how would I do that? And how would I access/call the different users?

Something like this: CONFIG = YAML.load_file("/config/config.yml")[ENV]?

config.yml file contents:

env_1:

 `user1: admin`
 `password1: password`
 `user2: teacher`
 `password2: password`

env_2:

 `user: student`
 `password: password`
 `user2: assistant`
 `password2: password`
1
  • 2
    why don't you just try an see what happens?
    – Uri Agassi
    May 15, 2014 at 15:48

1 Answer 1

4

YAML::load_file returns a nested hash:

require 'yaml'
config = YAML.load_file("config.yml") #=> {"env_1"=>{"user1"=>"admin", "password1"=>"password", "user2"=>"teacher", "password2"=>"password"}, "env_2"=>{"user"=>"student", "password"=>"password", "user2"=>"assistant", "password2"=>"password"}}

You can access env_1 with:

config["env_1"] #=> {"user1"=>"admin", "password1"=>"password", "user2"=>"teacher", "password2"=>"password"}

And its values with:

config["env_1"]["user1"] #=> "admin"
config["env_1"]["user2"] #=> "teacher"

Accessing env_2 works accordingly:

config["env_2"]["user"]  #=> "student"

Assuming your config.yml looks like this:

env_1:
  user1: admin
  password1: password
  user2: teacher
  password2: password
env_2:
  user: student
  password: password
  user2: assistant
  password2: password
1
  • Just to add on, if you're using Rails, it might be helpful to create your config with indifferent access, ie config = YAML.load("config.yml").with_indifferent_access May 15, 2014 at 16:24

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.