An I/O library for Pluto-style ini files.
Project description
inifix
inifix
is a small Python library offering a load/dump
interface similar to
standard library modules ``jsonor
tomllib`(together with `tomli_w`) for ini
configuration files in the style of Pluto and
Idefix.
While its primary goal is to follow Idefix's 'ini' format specification, it supports a small superset of it.
The key differences are:
inifix
supports section-free definitions. This means configuration files from FARGO 3D are also supported.- in
inifix
, strings can be escaped using'
or"
. This allows to have whitespaces in string values and to force string type decoding where numeric and boolean types would work.
In rare cases where Idefix's 'ini' format doesn't match Pluto's, inifix
takes
the path of least resistance to support both.
Known differences are:
- Idefix allows booleans to be written as
yes
andno
, as so doesinifix
, but these are not valid in Pluto (as of version 4.4). Note that in contrast to Idefix, which is truly case-insensitive about these special strings,inifix
(from version 5.0.0) only parse a restricted set of unescaped strings as booleans, liketrue
,TRUE
,True
,yes
,Yes
andYES
, butTruE
oryES
for instance will be parsed as strings. - Idefix allows integers to be written using decimal notation (e.g.
1.0
or1e3
). This creates some ambiguity when deserializing such strings, as the expected type (int
orfloat
) cannot be unambiguously guessed. By default,inifix
(from version 5.0) will parse these asfloat
s, allowing for 1-to-1 roundtrips. Idefix (as of version 2.1) is also resilient against integers written as decimal, soinifix
will not break any working inifile by a load/patch/dump routine. See Reading Options for more.
File format specifications details
Unroll !
- parameter names are alphanumeric strings - names and values are separated by non-newline white spaces - values are represented in unicode characters - all values are considered numbers if possible (e.g., `1e3` is read as `1000`) - number values are read as integers if no loss of precision ensues, and floats otherwise - unescaped strings `true`, `false`, `yes` and `no` are cast to booleans, as well as their respective upper-case and "title" variants (e.g. `TRUE` or `True`). - values that can't be read as number or booleans are read as strings. - string delimiters `"` and `'` can be used for strings containing whitespace, or to force string type for values that would otherwise be read as numbers and booleans. - a parameter can be associated to a single value or a list of whitespace-separated values - sections titles start with `[` and end with `]` - comments start with `#` and are ignoredA file is considered valid if calling inifix.load(<filename>)
doesn't raise an
error.
Examples
The following content is considered valid
# My awesome experiment
[Grid]
x 1 2 u 10 # a comment
y 4 5 l 100
[Time Integrator]
CFL 1e-3
tstop 1E3
and maps to
{
"Grid": {
"x": [1, 2, "u", 10],
"y": [4, 5, "l", 100]
},
"Time Integrator": {
"CFL": 0.001,
"tstop": 1000.0
}
}
The following section-less format doesn't comply to Pluto/Idefix's
specifications, but is also valid in inifix
mode fargo
# Time integrator
CFL 1e-3
tstop 1e3
and maps to
{
"mode": "fargo",
"CFL": 0.001,
"tstop": 1000.0
}
Note that strings using e-notation (e.g. 1e-3
or 1E3
here) are decoded as
floats. Reversely, when writing files, floats are re-encoded using e-notation
if it leads to a more compact representation. For instance, 100000.0
is encoded
as 1e5
, but 189.0
is left unchanged because 1.89e2
takes one more character.
In cases where both reprensations are equally compact (e.g. 1.0
VS 1e0
),
decimal is preferred in encoding.
While decoding, e
can be lower or upper case, but they are always encoded as
lower case.
Installation
python -m pip install inifix
Usage
The public API mimics that of Python's standard library json
,
and consists in four main functions:
inifix.load
andinifix.dump
read from and write to files respectivelyinifix.loads
reads from astr
and returns adict
, whileinifix.dumps
does the reverse operation.
Reading data
inifix.load
reads from a file and returns a dict
import inifix
with open("pluto.ini", "rb") as fh:
conf = inifix.load(fh)
# or equivalently
conf = inifix.load("pluto.ini")
Files are assumed to be encoded as UTF-8.
Reading options
inifix.load
and inifix.loads
accept an optional boolean flag
parse_scalars_as_lists
(new in inifix
v4.0.0), that is useful to simplify
handling unknown data: all values can be safely treated as arrays, and iterated
over, even in the presence of scalar strings. For illustration
>>> import inifix
>>> from pprint import pprint
>>> pprint(inifix.load("example.ini"))
{'Grid': {'x': [1, 2, 'u', 10], 'y': [4, 5, 'l', 100]},
'Time Integrator': {'CFL': 0.001, 'tstop': 1000.0}}
>>> pprint(inifix.load("example.ini", parse_scalars_as_lists=True))
{'Grid': {'x': [1, 2, 'u', 10], 'y': [4, 5, 'l', 100]},
'Time Integrator': {'CFL': [0.001], 'tstop': [1000.0]}}
inifix.load
and inifix.loads
also accept an integer_casting
argument (new
in inifix
v5.0.0), which can be set to decide how numbers written in decimal
notation which happen to have integral values (e.g. 1e2
or 30000.
) should be
parsed.
This argument accepts two values:
'stable'
(default) gives float
s while 'aggressive'
gives int
s,
matching the behavior of inifix
v4.5.0.
The key difference is that the default strategy is roundtrip-stable on types, while the aggressive mode isn't:
>>> import inifix
>>> data = {'option_a': [0, 1., 2e3, 4.5]}
>>> data
{'option_a': [0, 1.0, 2000.0, 4.5]}
>>> inifix.loads(inifix.dumps(data))
{'option_a': [0, 1.0, 2000.0, 4.5]}
>>> inifix.loads(inifix.dumps(data), integer_casting='aggressive')
{'option_a': [0, 1, 2000, 4.5]}
Aggressive casting may also lead to loss of precision beyond a certain range
>>> import inifix
>>> data = {'option_b': 9_007_199_254_740_993}
>>> inifix.loads(inifix.dumps(data))
{'option_b': 9007199254740993}
>>> inifix.loads(inifix.dumps(data), integer_casting='aggressive')
{'option_b': 9007199254740992}
By default, inifix.load
and inifix.loads
validate input data. This step can
be skipped by specifying skip_validation=True
.
Writing to a file or a string
inifix.dump
writes data to a file.
One typical use case is to combine inifix.load
and inifix.dump
to
programmatically update an existing configuration file at runtime via a
load/patch/dump routine.
>>> import inifix
>>> with open("pluto.ini", "rb") as fr:
... inifix.load(fr)
>>> conf["Time"]["CFL"] = 0.1
>>> with open("pluto-mod.ini", "wb") as fw:
... inifix.dump(conf, fw)
or, equivalently
>>> import inifix
>>> inifix.load("pluto.ini")
>>> conf["Time"]["CFL"] = 0.1
>>> inifix.dump(conf, "pluto-mod.ini")
Data will be validated against inifix's format specification at write time. Files are always encoded as UTF-8.
inifix.dumps
is the same as inifix.dump
except that it returns a string
instead of writing to a file.
>>> import inifix
>>> data = {"option_a": 1, "option_b": True}
>>> print(inifix.dumps(data))
option_a 1
option_b True
By default, inifix.dump
and inifix.dumps
validate input data. This step can
be skipped by specifying skip_validation=True
.
Schema Validation
inifix.validate_inifile_schema
can be used to validate an arbitrary
dictionary as writable to an inifile, following the library's format. This
will raise an exception (ValueError
) if the dictionary data
is invalid.
inifix.validate_inifile_schema(data)
Runtime formatting
inifix.format_string
formats a string representing the contents of an ini file.
See Formatting CLI for how to use this at scale.
Writing type-safe applications of inifix.load(s)
inifix.load
has no built-in expectations on the type of any specific parameter;
instead, all types are inferred at runtime, which allows the function to work
seamlessly with arbitrary parameter files.
However, this also means that the output is not (and cannot be) type-safe.
In other words, type checkers (e.g. mypy
) cannot infer exact types of outputs,
which is a problem in applications relying on type-checking.
A solution to this problem, which is actually not specific to inifix.load
and
works with any arbitrarily formed dict
, is to create a pipeline around this data
which implements type-checkable code, where data is also validated at runtime.
We'll illustrate this with a real-life example inspired from
nonos
.
Say, for instance, that we only care about a couple parameters from the [Output]
and [Hydro]
sections of idefix.ini
. Let's build a type-safe read_parameter_file
function around these.
class IdefixIni:
def __init__(self, *, Hydro, Output, **kwargs):
self.hydro = IdefixIniHydro(**Hydro)
self.output = IdefixIniOutput(**Output)
class IdefixIniHydro:
def __init__(self, **kwargs):
if "rotation" in kwargs:
self.frame = "COROT"
self.rotation = float(kwargs["rotation"])
else:
self.frame = "UNSET"
self.rotation = 0.0
class IdefixIniOutput:
def __init__(self, *, vtk, **kwargs):
self.vtk = float(vtk)
def read_parameter_file(file) -> IdefixIni:
return IdefixIni(**inifix.load(file))
ini = read_parameter_file("idefix.ini")
Type checkers can now safely assume that, ini.hydro.frame
, ini.hydro.rotation
and ini.output.vtk
all exist and are of type str
, float
and float
, respectively.
If this assumption is not verified at runtime, a TypeError
will be raised.
Note that we've used the catch-all **kwargs
construct to capture optional
parameters as well as any other parameters present (possibly none) that we do not
care about.
CLI
Command line tools are shipped with the package to validate or format compatible inifiles.
Validation CLI
This checks that your inifiles can be loaded with inifix.load
from the command line
$ inifix-validate pluto.ini
Validated pluto.ini
This CLI can also be called as python -m inifix.validate
.
Formatting CLI
To format a file in place, use
$ inifix-format pluto.ini
inifix-format is guaranteed to preserve comments and to only edit (add or remove) whitespace characters.
Files are always encoded as UTF-8.
To print a diff patch to stdout instead of editing the file, use the --diff
flag
$ inifix-format pluto.ini --diff
This CLI can also be called as python -m inifix.format
.
By default, inifix-format
also validates input data. This step can be skipped with the
--skip-validation
flag
pre-commit hooks
inifix-validate
and inifix-format
can be used as pre-commit
hooks with the
following configuration (add to .pre-commit-config.yaml
)
- repo: https://github.com/neutrinoceros/inifix.git
rev: v4.5.0
hooks:
- id: inifix-validate
or
- repo: https://github.com/neutrinoceros/inifix.git
rev: v4.5.0
hooks:
- id: inifix-format
Note that inifix-format
also validates data by default, so it is redundant to
utilize both hooks. Validation and formatting may nonetheless be decoupled as
- repo: https://github.com/neutrinoceros/inifix.git
rev: v4.5.0
hooks:
- id: inifix-validate
- id: inifix-format
+ args: [--skip-validation]
By default, both hooks target files matching the regular expression (\.ini)$
.
It is possible to override this expression as, e.g.,
hooks:
- id: inifix-format
+ files: (\.ini|\.par)$
Testing
We use the pytest framework to test
inifix
. The test suite can be run from the top level with a simple pytest
invocation.
$ python -m pip install --requirement requirements/tests.txt
$ pytest
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