ff

ff stands for flags-first, and provides an opinionated way to populate
a flag.FlagSet with
configuration data from the environment. By default, it parses only
from the command line, but you can enable parsing from a configuration
file (lower priority) and/or environment variables (lowest priority).
Building a commandline application in the style of kubectl
or docker
?
Consider package ffcli,
a natural companion to, and extension of, package ff.
Usage
Define a flag.FlagSet in your func main.
import (
"flag"
"os"
"time"
"github.com/peterbourgon/ff/v2"
)
func main() {
fs := flag.NewFlagSet("my-program", flag.ExitOnError)
var (
listenAddr = fs.String("listen-addr", "localhost:8080", "listen address")
refresh = fs.Duration("refresh", 15*time.Second, "refresh interval")
debug = fs.Bool("debug", false, "log debug information")
_ = fs.String("config", "", "config file (optional)")
)
Then, call ff.Parse instead of fs.Parse.
Options
are available to control parse behavior.
ff.Parse(fs, os.Args[1:],
ff.WithConfigFileFlag("config"),
ff.WithConfigFileParser(ff.PlainParser),
ff.WithEnvVarPrefix("MY_PROGRAM"),
)
This example will parse flags from the commandline args, just like regular
package flag, with the highest priority. If a -config
file is specified, it
will try to parse it using the PlainParser, which expects files in this format.
listen-addr localhost:8080
refresh 30s
debug true
You could also use the JSONParser, which expects a JSON object.
{
"listen-addr": "localhost:8080",
"refresh": "30s",
"debug": true
}
Or, you could write your own config file parser.
// ConfigFileParser interprets the config file represented by the reader
// and calls the set function for each parsed flag pair.
type ConfigFileParser func(r io.Reader, set func(name, value string) error) error
Finally, the example will look in the environment for variables with a
MY_PROGRAM
prefix. Flag names are capitalized, and separator characters are
converted to underscores. In this case, for example, MY_PROGRAM_LISTEN_ADDR
would match to listen-addr
. Parsing of env vars containing commas has special
behavior, see
WithEnvVarIgnoreCommas
for details.
Flags and env vars
One common use case is to allow configuration from both flags and env vars.
package main
import (
"flag"
"fmt"
"os"
"github.com/peterbourgon/ff/v2"
)
func main() {
fs := flag.NewFlagSet("myservice", flag.ExitOnError)
var (
port = fs.Int("port", 8080, "listen port for server (also via PORT)")
debug = fs.Bool("debug", false, "log debug information (also via DEBUG)")
)
ff.Parse(fs, os.Args[1:], ff.WithEnvVarNoPrefix())
fmt.Printf("port %d, debug %v\n", *port, *debug)
}
$ env PORT=9090 myservice
port 9090, debug false
$ env PORT=9090 DEBUG=1 myservice -port=1234
port 1234, debug true