What's the proper way to manage configuration files that are embedded in a python module.
I have a python module (e.g. my_py_logger) that does a certain task (i.e. centralized logging). It's meant to be used by other python applications developed by the team. Once it is imported in a python application (e.g. my_py_app_a), developers are able to call a method in the logging module that init's the logging module. This method reads a config file. That config file is inside the my_py_logger package.
When I call this method from another package, python is not able to find the config file because the root folder has changed from my_py_logger's root source folder to my_py_app_a's root source folder.
my_py_logger
__init__.py
config/
default.conf
init_logger.py
my_py_app_a
__init__.py
app.py
I tried to use importlib.import_module(__name__)
in the my_py_logger module to get the absolute path of the main file in my_py_logger, so I can technically extract the parent directory from that string/path and concatenate "../config/default.conf" but this feels like a poor solution. I'm sure there is a better way to handle this situation. Maybe putting this as a config file is not the right solution, but I'm sure I'm not the first guy to try this in python.
What would be the correct solution?
~/.my_py_logger/default.conf
(if it doesn't exist) at logger init? This would allow a default config file per user.init_logger.py
using something likepathlib.Path(__file__).parent.joinpath('config', 'default.conf')
. Anyway, storing and modifying the config file inplace inside you module structure, from external modules, does not seems to be a good idea.~/.loggerrc
file, similar to.bashrc
or.condarc
approaches.