configparser
— Configuration file parser¶
Source code: Lib/configparser.py
This module provides the ConfigParser
class which implements a basic
configuration language which provides a structure similar to what’s found in
Microsoft Windows INI files. You can use this to write Python programs which
can be customized by end users easily.
Note
This library does not interpret or write the value-type prefixes used in the Windows Registry extended version of INI syntax.
See also
- Module
tomllib
TOML is a well-specified format for application configuration files. It is specifically designed to be an improved version of INI.
- Module
shlex
Support for creating Unix shell-like mini-languages which can also be used for application configuration files.
- Module
json
The
json
module implements a subset of JavaScript syntax which is sometimes used for configuration, but does not support comments.
Quick Start¶
Let’s take a very basic configuration file that looks like this:
[DEFAULT]
ServerAliveInterval = 45
Compression = yes
CompressionLevel = 9
ForwardX11 = yes
[bitbucket.org]
User = hg
[topsecret.server.com]
Port = 50022
ForwardX11 = no
The structure of INI files is described in the following section. Essentially, the file
consists of sections, each of which contains keys with values.
configparser
classes can read and write such files. Let’s start by
creating the above configuration file programmatically.
>>> import configparser
>>> config = configparser.ConfigParser()
>>> config['DEFAULT'] = {'ServerAliveInterval': '45',
... 'Compression': 'yes',
... 'CompressionLevel': '9'}
>>> config['bitbucket.org'] = {}
>>> config['bitbucket.org']['User'] = 'hg'
>>> config['topsecret.server.com'] = {}
>>> topsecret = config['topsecret.server.com']
>>> topsecret['Port'] = '50022' # mutates the parser
>>> topsecret['ForwardX11'] = 'no' # same here
>>> config['DEFAULT']['ForwardX11'] = 'yes'
>>> with open('example.ini', 'w') as configfile:
... config.write(configfile)
...
As you can see, we can treat a config parser much like a dictionary. There are differences, outlined later, but the behavior is very close to what you would expect from a dictionary.
Now that we have created and saved a configuration file, let’s read it back and explore the data it holds.
>>> config = configparser.ConfigParser()
>>> config.sections()
[]
>>> config.read('example.ini')
['example.ini']
>>> config.sections()
['bitbucket.org', 'topsecret.server.com']
>>> 'bitbucket.org' in config
True
>>> 'bytebong.com' in config
False
>>> config['bitbucket.org']['User']
'hg'
>>> config['DEFAULT']['Compression']
'yes'
>>> topsecret = config['topsecret.server.com']
>>> topsecret['ForwardX11']
'no'
>>> topsecret['Port']
'50022'
>>> for key in config['bitbucket.org']:
... print(key)
user
compressionlevel
serveraliveinterval
compression
forwardx11
>>> config['bitbucket.org']['ForwardX11']
'yes'
As we can see above, the API is pretty straightforward. The only bit of magic
involves the DEFAULT
section which provides default values for all other
sections [1]. Note also that keys in sections are
case-insensitive and stored in lowercase [1].
It is possible to read several configurations into a single
ConfigParser
, where the most recently added configuration has the
highest priority. Any conflicting keys are taken from the more recent
configuration while the previously existing keys are retained.
>>> another_config = configparser.ConfigParser()
>>> another_config.read('example.ini')
['example.ini']
>>> another_config['topsecret.server.com']['Port']
'50022'
>>> another_config.read_string("[topsecret.server.com]\nPort=48484")
>>> another_config['topsecret.server.com']['Port']
'48484'
>>> another_config.read_dict({"topsecret.server.com": {"Port": 21212}})
>>> another_config['topsecret.server.com']['Port']
'21212'
>>> another_config['topsecret.server.com']['ForwardX11']
'no'
This behaviour is equivalent to a ConfigParser.read()
call with several
files passed to the filenames parameter.
Supported Datatypes¶
Config parsers do not guess datatypes of values in configuration files, always storing them internally as strings. This means that if you need other datatypes, you should convert on your own:
>>> int(topsecret['Port'])
50022
>>> float(topsecret['CompressionLevel'])
9.0
Since this task is so common, config parsers provide a range of handy getter
methods to handle integers, floats and booleans. The last one is the most
interesting because simply passing the value to bool()
would do no good
since bool('False')
is still True
. This is why config parsers also
provide getboolean()
. This method is case-insensitive and
recognizes Boolean values from 'yes'
/'no'
, 'on'
/'off'
,
'true'
/'false'
and '1'
/'0'
[1]. For example:
>>> topsecret.getboolean('ForwardX11')
False
>>> config['bitbucket.org'].getboolean('ForwardX11')
True
>>> config.getboolean('bitbucket.org', 'Compression')
True
Apart from getboolean()
, config parsers also
provide equivalent getint()
and
getfloat()
methods. You can register your own
converters and customize the provided ones. [1]
Fallback Values¶
As with a dictionary, you can use a section’s get()
method to
provide fallback values:
>>> topsecret.get('Port')
'50022'
>>> topsecret.get('CompressionLevel')
'9'
>>> topsecret.get('Cipher')
>>> topsecret.get('Cipher', '3des-cbc')
'3des-cbc'
Please note that default values have precedence over fallback values.
For instance, in our example the 'CompressionLevel'
key was
specified only in the 'DEFAULT'
section. If we try to get it from
the section 'topsecret.server.com'
, we will always get the default,
even if we specify a fallback:
>>> topsecret.get('CompressionLevel', '3')
'9'
One more thing to be aware of is that the parser-level get()
method
provides a custom, more complex interface, maintained for backwards
compatibility. When using this method, a fallback value can be provided via
the fallback
keyword-only argument:
>>> config.get('bitbucket.org', 'monster',
... fallback='No such things as monsters')
'No such things as monsters'
The same fallback
argument can be used with the
getint()
, getfloat()
and
getboolean()
methods, for example:
>>> 'BatchMode' in topsecret
False
>>> topsecret.getboolean('BatchMode', fallback=True)
True
>>> config['DEFAULT']['BatchMode'] = 'no'
>>> topsecret.getboolean('BatchMode', fallback=True)
False
Supported INI File Structure¶
A configuration file consists of sections, each led by a [section]
header,
followed by key/value entries separated by a specific string (=
or :
by
default [1]). By default, section names are case sensitive but keys are not
[1]. Leading and trailing whitespace is removed from keys and values.
Values can be omitted if the parser is configured to allow it [1],
in which case the key/value delimiter may also be left
out. Values can also span multiple lines, as long as they are indented deeper
than the first line of the value. Depending on the parser’s mode, blank lines
may be treated as parts of multiline values or ignored.
By default, a valid section name can be any string that does not contain ‘\n’ or ‘]’.
To change this, see ConfigParser.SECTCRE
.
Configuration files may include comments, prefixed by specific
characters (#
and ;
by default [1]). Comments may appear on
their own on an otherwise empty line, possibly indented. [1]
For example:
[Simple Values]
key=value
spaces in keys=allowed
spaces in values=allowed as well
spaces around the delimiter = obviously
you can also use : to delimit keys from values
[All Values Are Strings]
values like this: 1000000
or this: 3.14159265359
are they treated as numbers? : no
integers, floats and booleans are held as: strings
can use the API to get converted values directly: true
[Multiline Values]
chorus: I'm a lumberjack, and I'm okay
I sleep all night and I work all day
[No Values]
key_without_value
empty string value here =
[You can use comments]
# like this
; or this
# By default only in an empty line.
# Inline comments can be harmful because they prevent users
# from using the delimiting characters as parts of values.
# That being said, this can be customized.
[Sections Can Be Indented]
can_values_be_as_well = True
does_that_mean_anything_special = False
purpose = formatting for readability
multiline_values = are
handled just fine as
long as they are indented
deeper than the first line
of a value
# Did I mention we can indent comments, too?
Interpolation of values¶
On top of the core functionality, ConfigParser
supports
interpolation. This means values can be preprocessed before returning them
from get()
calls.
- class configparser.BasicInterpolation¶
The default implementation used by
ConfigParser
. It enables values to contain format strings which refer to other values in the same section, or values in the special default section [1]. Additional default values can be provided on initialization.For example:
[Paths] home_dir: /Users my_dir: %(home_dir)s/lumberjack my_pictures: %(my_dir)s/Pictures [Escape] # use a %% to escape the % sign (% is the only character that needs to be escaped): gain: 80%%
In the example above,
ConfigParser
with interpolation set toBasicInterpolation()
would resolve%(home_dir)s
to the value ofhome_dir
(/Users
in this case).%(my_dir)s
in effect would resolve to/Users/lumberjack
. All interpolations are done on demand so keys used in the chain of references do not have to be specified in any specific order in the configuration file.With
interpolation
set toNone
, the parser would simply return%(my_dir)s/Pictures
as the value ofmy_pictures
and%(home_dir)s/lumberjack
as the value ofmy_dir
.
- class configparser.ExtendedInterpolation¶
An alternative handler for interpolation which implements a more advanced syntax, used for instance in
zc.buildout
. Extended interpolation is using${section:option}
to denote a value from a foreign section. Interpolation can span multiple levels. For convenience, if thesection:
part is omitted, interpolation defaults to the current section (and possibly the default values from the special section).For example, the configuration specified above with basic interpolation, would look like this with extended interpolation:
[Paths] home_dir: /Users my_dir: ${home_dir}/lumberjack my_pictures: ${my_dir}/Pictures [Escape] # use a $$ to escape the $ sign ($ is the only character that needs to be escaped): cost: $$80
Values from other sections can be fetched as well:
[Common] home_dir: /Users library_dir: /Library system_dir: /System macports_dir: /opt/local [Frameworks] Python: 3.2 path: ${Common:system_dir}/Library/Frameworks/ [Arthur] nickname: Two Sheds last_name: Jackson my_dir: ${Common:home_dir}/twosheds my_pictures: ${my_dir}/Pictures python_dir: ${Frameworks:path}/Python/Versions/${Frameworks:Python}
Mapping Protocol Access¶
New in version 3.2.
Mapping protocol access is a generic name for functionality that enables using
custom objects as if they were dictionaries. In case of configparser
,
the mapping interface implementation is using the
parser['section']['option']
notation.
parser['section']
in particular returns a proxy for the section’s data in
the parser. This means that the values are not copied but they are taken from
the original parser on demand. What’s even more important is that when values
are changed on a section proxy, they are actually mutated in the original
parser.
configparser
objects behave as close to actual dictionaries as possible.
The mapping interface is complete and adheres to the
MutableMapping
ABC.
However, there are a few differences that should be taken into account:
By default, all keys in sections are accessible in a case-insensitive manner [1]. E.g.
for option in parser["section"]
yields onlyoptionxform
’ed option key names. This means lowercased keys by default. At the same time, for a section that holds the key'a'
, both expressions returnTrue
:"a" in parser["section"] "A" in parser["section"]
All sections include
DEFAULTSECT
values as well which means that.clear()
on a section may not leave the section visibly empty. This is because default values cannot be deleted from the section (because technically they are not there). If they are overridden in the section, deleting causes the default value to be visible again. Trying to delete a default value causes aKeyError
.DEFAULTSECT
cannot be removed from the parser:trying to delete it raises
ValueError
,parser.clear()
leaves it intact,parser.popitem()
never returns it.
parser.get(section, option, **kwargs)
- the second argument is not a fallback value. Note however that the section-levelget()
methods are compatible both with the mapping protocol and the classic configparser API.parser.items()
is compatible with the mapping protocol (returns a list of section_name, section_proxy pairs including the DEFAULTSECT). However, this method can also be invoked with arguments:parser.items(section, raw, vars)
. The latter call returns a list of option, value pairs for a specifiedsection
, with all interpolations expanded (unlessraw=True
is provided).
The mapping protocol is implemented on top of the existing legacy API so that subclasses overriding the original interface still should have mappings working as expected.
Customizing Parser Behaviour¶
There are nearly as many INI format variants as there are applications using it.
configparser
goes a long way to provide support for the largest sensible
set of INI styles available. The default functionality is mainly dictated by
historical background and it’s very likely that you will want to customize some
of the features.
The most common way to change the way a specific config parser works is to use
the __init__()
options:
defaults, default value:
None
This option accepts a dictionary of key-value pairs which will be initially put in the
DEFAULT
section. This makes for an elegant way to support concise configuration files that don’t specify values which are the same as the documented default.Hint: if you want to specify default values for a specific section, use
read_dict()
before you read the actual file.dict_type, default value:
dict
This option has a major impact on how the mapping protocol will behave and how the written configuration files look. With the standard dictionary, every section is stored in the order they were added to the parser. Same goes for options within sections.
An alternative dictionary type can be used for example to sort sections and options on write-back.
Please note: there are ways to add a set of key-value pairs in a single operation. When you use a regular dictionary in those operations, the order of the keys will be ordered. For example:
>>> parser = configparser.ConfigParser() >>> parser.read_dict({'section1': {'key1': 'value1', ... 'key2': 'value2', ... 'key3': 'value3'}, ... 'section2': {'keyA': 'valueA', ... 'keyB': 'valueB', ... 'keyC': 'valueC'}, ... 'section3': {'foo': 'x', ... 'bar': 'y', ... 'baz': 'z'} ... }) >>> parser.sections() ['section1', 'section2', 'section3'] >>> [option for option in parser['section3']] ['foo', 'bar', 'baz']
allow_no_value, default value:
False
Some configuration files are known to include settings without values, but which otherwise conform to the syntax supported by
configparser
. The allow_no_value parameter to the constructor can be used to indicate that such values should be accepted:>>> import configparser >>> sample_config = """ ... [mysqld] ... user = mysql ... pid-file = /var/run/mysqld/mysqld.pid ... skip-external-locking ... old_passwords = 1 ... skip-bdb ... # we don't need ACID today ... skip-innodb ... """ >>> config = configparser.ConfigParser(allow_no_value=True) >>> config.read_string(sample_config) >>> # Settings with values are treated as before: >>> config["mysqld"]["user"] 'mysql' >>> # Settings without values provide None: >>> config["mysqld"]["skip-bdb"] >>> # Settings which aren't specified still raise an error: >>> config["mysqld"]["does-not-exist"] Traceback (most recent call last): ... KeyError: 'does-not-exist'
delimiters, default value:
('=', ':')
Delimiters are substrings that delimit keys from values within a section. The first occurrence of a delimiting substring on a line is considered a delimiter. This means values (but not keys) can contain the delimiters.
See also the space_around_delimiters argument to
ConfigParser.write()
.comment_prefixes, default value:
('#', ';')
inline_comment_prefixes, default value:
None
Comment prefixes are strings that indicate the start of a valid comment within a config file. comment_prefixes are used only on otherwise empty lines (optionally indented) whereas inline_comment_prefixes can be used after every valid value (e.g. section names, options and empty lines as well). By default inline comments are disabled and
'#'
and';'
are used as prefixes for whole line comments.Changed in version 3.2: In previous versions of
configparser
behaviour matchedcomment_prefixes=('#',';')
andinline_comment_prefixes=(';',)
.Please note that config parsers don’t support escaping of comment prefixes so using inline_comment_prefixes may prevent users from specifying option values with characters used as comment prefixes. When in doubt, avoid setting inline_comment_prefixes. In any circumstances, the only way of storing comment prefix characters at the beginning of a line in multiline values is to interpolate the prefix, for example:
>>> from configparser import ConfigParser, ExtendedInterpolation >>> parser = ConfigParser(interpolation=ExtendedInterpolation()) >>> # the default BasicInterpolation could be used as well >>> parser.read_string(""" ... [DEFAULT] ... hash = # ... ... [hashes] ... shebang = ... ${hash}!/usr/bin/env python ... ${hash} -*- coding: utf-8 -*- ... ... extensions = ... enabled_extension ... another_extension ... #disabled_by_comment ... yet_another_extension ... ... interpolation not necessary = if # is not at line start ... even in multiline values = line #1 ... line #2 ... line #3 ... """) >>> print(parser['hashes']['shebang']) #!/usr/bin/env python # -*- coding: utf-8 -*- >>> print(parser['hashes']['extensions']) enabled_extension another_extension yet_another_extension >>> print(parser['hashes']['interpolation not necessary']) if # is not at line start >>> print(parser['hashes']['even in multiline values']) line #1 line #2 line #3
strict, default value:
True
When set to
True
, the parser will not allow for any section or option duplicates while reading from a single source (usingread_file()
,read_string()
orread_dict()
). It is recommended to use strict parsers in new applications.Changed in version 3.2: In previous versions of
configparser
behaviour matchedstrict=False
.empty_lines_in_values, default value:
True
In config parsers, values can span multiple lines as long as they are indented more than the key that holds them. By default parsers also let empty lines to be parts of values. At the same time, keys can be arbitrarily indented themselves to improve readability. In consequence, when configuration files get big and complex, it is easy for the user to lose track of the file structure. Take for instance:
[Section] key = multiline value with a gotcha this = is still a part of the multiline value of 'key'
This can be especially problematic for the user to see if she’s using a proportional font to edit the file. That is why when your application does not need values with empty lines, you should consider disallowing them. This will make empty lines split keys every time. In the example above, it would produce two keys,
key
andthis
.default_section, default value:
configparser.DEFAULTSECT
(that is:"DEFAULT"
)The convention of allowing a special section of default values for other sections or interpolation purposes is a powerful concept of this library, letting users create complex declarative configurations. This section is normally called
"DEFAULT"
but this can be customized to point to any other valid section name. Some typical values include:"general"
or"common"
. The name provided is used for recognizing default sections when reading from any source and is used when writing configuration back to a file. Its current value can be retrieved using theparser_instance.default_section
attribute and may be modified at runtime (i.e. to convert files from one format to another).interpolation, default value:
configparser.BasicInterpolation
Interpolation behaviour may be customized by providing a custom handler through the interpolation argument.
None
can be used to turn off interpolation completely,ExtendedInterpolation()
provides a more advanced variant inspired byzc.buildout
. More on the subject in the dedicated documentation section.RawConfigParser
has a default value ofNone
.converters, default value: not set
Config parsers provide option value getters that perform type conversion. By default
getint()
,getfloat()
, andgetboolean()
are implemented. Should other getters be desirable, users may define them in a subclass or pass a dictionary where each key is a name of the converter and each value is a callable implementing said conversion. For instance, passing{'decimal': decimal.Decimal}
would addgetdecimal()
on both the parser object and all section proxies. In other words, it will be possible to write bothparser_instance.getdecimal('section', 'key', fallback=0)
andparser_instance['section'].getdecimal('key', 0)
.If the converter needs to access the state of the parser, it can be implemented as a method on a config parser subclass. If the name of this method starts with
get
, it will be available on all section proxies, in the dict-compatible form (see thegetdecimal()
example above).
More advanced customization may be achieved by overriding default values of these parser attributes. The defaults are defined on the classes, so they may be overridden by subclasses or by attribute assignment.
- ConfigParser.BOOLEAN_STATES¶
By default when using
getboolean()
, config parsers consider the following valuesTrue
:'1'
,'yes'
,'true'
,'on'
and the following valuesFalse
:'0'
,'no'
,'false'
,'off'
. You can override this by specifying a custom dictionary of strings and their Boolean outcomes. For example:>>> custom = configparser.ConfigParser() >>> custom['section1'] = {'funky': 'nope'} >>> custom['section1'].getboolean('funky') Traceback (most recent call last): ... ValueError: Not a boolean: nope >>> custom.BOOLEAN_STATES = {'sure': True, 'nope': False} >>> custom['section1'].getboolean('funky') False
Other typical Boolean pairs include
accept
/reject
orenabled
/disabled
.
- ConfigParser.optionxform(option)
This method transforms option names on every read, get, or set operation. The default converts the name to lowercase. This also means that when a configuration file gets written, all keys will be lowercase. Override this method if that’s unsuitable. For example:
>>> config = """ ... [Section1] ... Key = Value ... ... [Section2] ... AnotherKey = Value ... """ >>> typical = configparser.ConfigParser() >>> typical.read_string(config) >>> list(typical['Section1'].keys()) ['key'] >>> list(typical['Section2'].keys()) ['anotherkey'] >>> custom = configparser.RawConfigParser() >>> custom.optionxform = lambda option: option >>> custom.read_string(config) >>> list(custom['Section1'].keys()) ['Key'] >>> list(custom['Section2'].keys()) ['AnotherKey']
Note
The optionxform function transforms option names to a canonical form. This should be an idempotent function: if the name is already in canonical form, it should be returned unchanged.
- ConfigParser.SECTCRE¶
A compiled regular expression used to parse section headers. The default matches
[section]
to the name"section"
. Whitespace is considered part of the section name, thus[ larch ]
will be read as a section of name" larch "
. Override this attribute if that’s unsuitable. For example:>>> import re >>> config = """ ... [Section 1] ... option = value ... ... [ Section 2 ] ... another = val ... """ >>> typical = configparser.ConfigParser() >>> typical.read_string(config) >>> typical.sections() ['Section 1', ' Section 2 '] >>> custom = configparser.ConfigParser() >>> custom.SECTCRE = re.compile(r"\[ *(?P<header>[^]]+?) *\]") >>> custom.read_string(config) >>> custom.sections() ['Section 1', 'Section 2']
Note
While ConfigParser objects also use an
OPTCRE
attribute for recognizing option lines, it’s not recommended to override it because that would interfere with constructor options allow_no_value and delimiters.
Legacy API Examples¶
Mainly because of backwards compatibility concerns, configparser
provides also a legacy API with explicit get
/set
methods. While there
are valid use cases for the methods outlined below, mapping protocol access is
preferred for new projects. The legacy API is at times more advanced,
low-level and downright counterintuitive.
An example of writing to a configuration file:
import configparser
config = configparser.RawConfigParser()
# Please note that using RawConfigParser's set functions, you can assign
# non-string values to keys internally, but will receive an error when
# attempting to write to a file or when you get it in non-raw mode. Setting
# values using the mapping protocol or ConfigParser's set() does not allow
# such assignments to take place.
config.add_section('Section1')
config.set('Section1', 'an_int', '15')
config.set('Section1', 'a_bool', 'true')
config.set('Section1', 'a_float', '3.1415')
config.set('Section1', 'baz', 'fun')
config.set('Section1', 'bar', 'Python')
config.set('Section1', 'foo', '%(bar)s is %(baz)s!')
# Writing our configuration file to 'example.cfg'
with open('example.cfg', 'w') as configfile:
config.write(configfile)
An example of reading the configuration file again:
import configparser
config = configparser.RawConfigParser()
config.read('example.cfg')
# getfloat() raises an exception if the value is not a float
# getint() and getboolean() also do this for their respective types
a_float = config.getfloat('Section1', 'a_float')
an_int = config.getint('Section1', 'an_int')
print(a_float + an_int)
# Notice that the next output does not interpolate '%(bar)s' or '%(baz)s'.
# This is because we are using a RawConfigParser().
if config.getboolean('Section1', 'a_bool'):
print(config.get('Section1', 'foo'))
To get interpolation, use ConfigParser
:
import configparser
cfg = configparser.ConfigParser()
cfg.read('example.cfg')
# Set the optional *raw* argument of get() to True if you wish to disable
# interpolation in a single get operation.
print(cfg.get('Section1', 'foo', raw=False)) # -> "Python is fun!"
print(cfg.get('Section1', 'foo', raw=True)) # -> "%(bar)s is %(baz)s!"
# The optional *vars* argument is a dict with members that will take
# precedence in interpolation.
print(cfg.get('Section1', 'foo', vars={'bar': 'Documentation',
'baz': 'evil'}))
# The optional *fallback* argument can be used to provide a fallback value
print(cfg.get('Section1', 'foo'))
# -> "Python is fun!"
print(cfg.get('Section1', 'foo', fallback='Monty is not.'))
# -> "Python is fun!"
print(cfg.get('Section1', 'monster', fallback='No such things as monsters.'))
# -> "No such things as monsters."
# A bare print(cfg.get('Section1', 'monster')) would raise NoOptionError
# but we can also use:
print(cfg.get('Section1', 'monster', fallback=None))
# -> None
Default values are available in both types of ConfigParsers. They are used in interpolation if an option used is not defined elsewhere.
import configparser
# New instance with 'bar' and 'baz' defaulting to 'Life' and 'hard' each
config = configparser.ConfigParser({'bar': 'Life', 'baz': 'hard'})
config.read('example.cfg')
print(config.get('Section1', 'foo')) # -> "Python is fun!"
config.remove_option('Section1', 'bar')
config.remove_option('Section1', 'baz')
print(config.get('Section1', 'foo')) # -> "Life is hard!"
ConfigParser Objects¶
- class configparser.ConfigParser(defaults=None, dict_type=dict, allow_no_value=False, delimiters=('=', ':'), comment_prefixes=('#', ';'), inline_comment_prefixes=None, strict=True, empty_lines_in_values=True, default_section=configparser.DEFAULTSECT, interpolation=BasicInterpolation(), converters={})¶
The main configuration parser. When defaults is given, it is initialized into the dictionary of intrinsic defaults. When dict_type is given, it will be used to create the dictionary objects for the list of sections, for the options within a section, and for the default values.
When delimiters is given, it is used as the set of substrings that divide keys from values. When comment_prefixes is given, it will be used as the set of substrings that prefix comments in otherwise empty lines. Comments can be indented. When inline_comment_prefixes is given, it will be used as the set of substrings that prefix comments in non-empty lines.
When strict is
True
(the default), the parser won’t allow for any section or option duplicates while reading from a single source (file, string or dictionary), raisingDuplicateSectionError
orDuplicateOptionError
. When empty_lines_in_values isFalse
(default:True
), each empty line marks the end of an option. Otherwise, internal empty lines of a multiline option are kept as part of the value. When allow_no_value isTrue
(default:False
), options without values are accepted; the value held for these isNone
and they are serialized without the trailing delimiter.When default_section is given, it specifies the name for the special section holding default values for other sections and interpolation purposes (normally named
"DEFAULT"
). This value can be retrieved and changed on runtime using thedefault_section
instance attribute.Interpolation behaviour may be customized by providing a custom handler through the interpolation argument.
None
can be used to turn off interpolation completely,ExtendedInterpolation()
provides a more advanced variant inspired byzc.buildout
. More on the subject in the dedicated documentation section.All option names used in interpolation will be passed through the
optionxform()
method just like any other option name reference. For example, using the default implementation ofoptionxform()
(which converts option names to lower case), the valuesfoo %(bar)s
andfoo %(BAR)s
are equivalent.When converters is given, it should be a dictionary where each key represents the name of a type converter and each value is a callable implementing the conversion from string to the desired datatype. Every converter gets its own corresponding
get*()
method on the parser object and section proxies.Changed in version 3.1: The default dict_type is
collections.OrderedDict
.Changed in version 3.2: allow_no_value, delimiters, comment_prefixes, strict, empty_lines_in_values, default_section and interpolation were added.
Changed in version 3.5: The converters argument was added.
Changed in version 3.7: The defaults argument is read with
read_dict()
, providing consistent behavior across the parser: non-string keys and values are implicitly converted to strings.Changed in version 3.8: The default dict_type is
dict
, since it now preserves insertion order.- defaults()¶
Return a dictionary containing the instance-wide defaults.
- sections()¶
Return a list of the sections available; the default section is not included in the list.
- add_section(section)¶
Add a section named section to the instance. If a section by the given name already exists,
DuplicateSectionError
is raised. If the default section name is passed,ValueError
is raised. The name of the section must be a string; if not,TypeError
is raised.Changed in version 3.2: Non-string section names raise
TypeError
.
- has_section(section)¶
Indicates whether the named section is present in the configuration. The default section is not acknowledged.
- options(section)¶
Return a list of options available in the specified section.
- has_option(section, option)¶
If the given section exists, and contains the given option, return
True
; otherwise returnFalse
. If the specified section isNone
or an empty string, DEFAULT is assumed.
- read(filenames, encoding=None)¶
Attempt to read and parse an iterable of filenames, returning a list of filenames which were successfully parsed.
If filenames is a string, a
bytes
object or a path-like object, it is treated as a single filename. If a file named in filenames cannot be opened, that file will be ignored. This is designed so that you can specify an iterable of potential configuration file locations (for example, the current directory, the user’s home directory, and some system-wide directory), and all existing configuration files in the iterable will be read.If none of the named files exist, the
ConfigParser
instance will contain an empty dataset. An application which requires initial values to be loaded from a file should load the required file or files usingread_file()
before callingread()
for any optional files:import configparser, os config = configparser.ConfigParser() config.read_file(open('defaults.cfg')) config.read(['site.cfg', os.path.expanduser('~/.myapp.cfg')], encoding='cp1250')
New in version 3.2: The encoding parameter. Previously, all files were read using the default encoding for
open()
.New in version 3.6.1: The filenames parameter accepts a path-like object.
New in version 3.7: The filenames parameter accepts a
bytes
object.
- read_file(f, source=None)¶
Read and parse configuration data from f which must be an iterable yielding Unicode strings (for example files opened in text mode).
Optional argument source specifies the name of the file being read. If not given and f has a
name
attribute, that is used for source; the default is'<???>'
.New in version 3.2: Replaces
readfp()
.
- read_string(string, source='<string>')¶
Parse configuration data from a string.
Optional argument source specifies a context-specific name of the string passed. If not given,
'<string>'
is used. This should commonly be a filesystem path or a URL.New in version 3.2.
- read_dict(dictionary, source='<dict>')¶
Load configuration from any object that provides a dict-like
items()
method. Keys are section names, values are dictionaries with keys and values that should be present in the section. If the used dictionary type preserves order, sections and their keys will be added in order. Values are automatically converted to strings.Optional argument source specifies a context-specific name of the dictionary passed. If not given,
<dict>
is used.This method can be used to copy state between parsers.
New in version 3.2.
- get(section, option, *, raw=False, vars=None[, fallback])¶
Get an option value for the named section. If vars is provided, it must be a dictionary. The option is looked up in vars (if provided), section, and in DEFAULTSECT in that order. If the key is not found and fallback is provided, it is used as a fallback value.
None
can be provided as a fallback value.All the
'%'
interpolations are expanded in the return values, unless the raw argument is true. Values for interpolation keys are looked up in the same manner as the option.Changed in version 3.2: Arguments raw, vars and fallback are keyword only to protect users from trying to use the third argument as the fallback fallback (especially when using the mapping protocol).
- getint(section, option, *, raw=False, vars=None[, fallback])¶
A convenience method which coerces the option in the specified section to an integer. See
get()
for explanation of raw, vars and fallback.
- getfloat(section, option, *, raw=False, vars=None[, fallback])¶
A convenience method which coerces the option in the specified section to a floating point number. See
get()
for explanation of raw, vars and fallback.
- getboolean(section, option, *, raw=False, vars=None[, fallback])¶
A convenience method which coerces the option in the specified section to a Boolean value. Note that the accepted values for the option are
'1'
,'yes'
,'true'
, and'on'
, which cause this method to returnTrue
, and'0'
,'no'
,'false'
, and'off'
, which cause it to returnFalse
. These string values are checked in a case-insensitive manner. Any other value will cause it to raiseValueError
. Seeget()
for explanation of raw, vars and fallback.
- items(raw=False, vars=None)¶
- items(section, raw=False, vars=None)
When section is not given, return a list of section_name, section_proxy pairs, including DEFAULTSECT.
Otherwise, return a list of name, value pairs for the options in the given section. Optional arguments have the same meaning as for the
get()
method.Changed in version 3.8: Items present in vars no longer appear in the result. The previous behaviour mixed actual parser options with variables provided for interpolation.
- set(section, option, value)¶
If the given section exists, set the given option to the specified value; otherwise raise
NoSectionError
. option and value must be strings; if not,TypeError
is raised.
- write(fileobject, space_around_delimiters=True)¶
Write a representation of the configuration to the specified file object, which must be opened in text mode (accepting strings). This representation can be parsed by a future
read()
call. If space_around_delimiters is true, delimiters between keys and values are surrounded by spaces.
Note
Comments in the original configuration file are not preserved when writing the configuration back. What is considered a comment, depends on the given values for comment_prefix and inline_comment_prefix.
- remove_option(section, option)¶
Remove the specified option from the specified section. If the section does not exist, raise
NoSectionError
. If the option existed to be removed, returnTrue
; otherwise returnFalse
.
- remove_section(section)¶
Remove the specified section from the configuration. If the section in fact existed, return
True
. Otherwise returnFalse
.
- optionxform(option)¶
Transforms the option name option as found in an input file or as passed in by client code to the form that should be used in the internal structures. The default implementation returns a lower-case version of option; subclasses may override this or client code can set an attribute of this name on instances to affect this behavior.
You don’t need to subclass the parser to use this method, you can also set it on an instance, to a function that takes a string argument and returns a string. Setting it to
str
, for example, would make option names case sensitive:cfgparser = ConfigParser() cfgparser.optionxform = str
Note that when reading configuration files, whitespace around the option names is stripped before
optionxform()
is called.
- readfp(fp, filename=None)¶
Deprecated since version 3.2: Use
read_file()
instead.Changed in version 3.2:
readfp()
now iterates on fp instead of callingfp.readline()
.For existing code calling
readfp()
with arguments which don’t support iteration, the following generator may be used as a wrapper around the file-like object:def readline_generator(fp): line = fp.readline() while line: yield line line = fp.readline()
Instead of
parser.readfp(fp)
useparser.read_file(readline_generator(fp))
.
- configparser.MAX_INTERPOLATION_DEPTH¶
The maximum depth for recursive interpolation for
get()
when the raw parameter is false. This is relevant only when the default interpolation is used.
RawConfigParser Objects¶
- class configparser.RawConfigParser(defaults=None, dict_type=dict, allow_no_value=False, *, delimiters=('=', ':'), comment_prefixes=('#', ';'), inline_comment_prefixes=None, strict=True, empty_lines_in_values=True, default_section=configparser.DEFAULTSECT[, interpolation])¶
Legacy variant of the
ConfigParser
. It has interpolation disabled by default and allows for non-string section names, option names, and values via its unsafeadd_section
andset
methods, as well as the legacydefaults=
keyword argument handling.Changed in version 3.8: The default dict_type is
dict
, since it now preserves insertion order.Note
Consider using
ConfigParser
instead which checks types of the values to be stored internally. If you don’t want interpolation, you can useConfigParser(interpolation=None)
.- add_section(section)¶
Add a section named section to the instance. If a section by the given name already exists,
DuplicateSectionError
is raised. If the default section name is passed,ValueError
is raised.Type of section is not checked which lets users create non-string named sections. This behaviour is unsupported and may cause internal errors.
- set(section, option, value)¶
If the given section exists, set the given option to the specified value; otherwise raise
NoSectionError
. While it is possible to useRawConfigParser
(orConfigParser
with raw parameters set to true) for internal storage of non-string values, full functionality (including interpolation and output to files) can only be achieved using string values.This method lets users assign non-string values to keys internally. This behaviour is unsupported and will cause errors when attempting to write to a file or get it in non-raw mode. Use the mapping protocol API which does not allow such assignments to take place.
Exceptions¶
- exception configparser.Error¶
Base class for all other
configparser
exceptions.
- exception configparser.NoSectionError¶
Exception raised when a specified section is not found.
- exception configparser.DuplicateSectionError¶
Exception raised if
add_section()
is called with the name of a section that is already present or in strict parsers when a section if found more than once in a single input file, string or dictionary.New in version 3.2: Optional
source
andlineno
attributes and arguments to__init__()
were added.
- exception configparser.DuplicateOptionError¶
Exception raised by strict parsers if a single option appears twice during reading from a single file, string or dictionary. This catches misspellings and case sensitivity-related errors, e.g. a dictionary may have two keys representing the same case-insensitive configuration key.
- exception configparser.NoOptionError¶
Exception raised when a specified option is not found in the specified section.
- exception configparser.InterpolationError¶
Base class for exceptions raised when problems occur performing string interpolation.
- exception configparser.InterpolationDepthError¶
Exception raised when string interpolation cannot be completed because the number of iterations exceeds
MAX_INTERPOLATION_DEPTH
. Subclass ofInterpolationError
.
- exception configparser.InterpolationMissingOptionError¶
Exception raised when an option referenced from a value does not exist. Subclass of
InterpolationError
.
- exception configparser.InterpolationSyntaxError¶
Exception raised when the source text into which substitutions are made does not conform to the required syntax. Subclass of
InterpolationError
.
- exception configparser.MissingSectionHeaderError¶
Exception raised when attempting to parse a file which has no section headers.
- exception configparser.ParsingError¶
Exception raised when errors occur attempting to parse a file.
Changed in version 3.2: The
filename
attribute and__init__()
argument were renamed tosource
for consistency.
Footnotes