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1 1 .. _config_overview:
2 2
3 3 ============================================
4 4 Overview of the IPython configuration system
5 5 ============================================
6 6
7 7 This section describes the IPython configuration system.
8 8
9 9 The following discussion is for users who want to configure
10 10 IPython to their liking. Developers who want to know how they can
11 11 enable their objects to take advantage of the configuration system
12 12 should consult the :ref:`developer guide <developer_guide>`
13 13
14 14 The main concepts
15 15 =================
16 16
17 17 There are a number of abstractions that the IPython configuration system uses.
18 18 Each of these abstractions is represented by a Python class.
19 19
20 20 Configuration object: :class:`~IPython.config.loader.Config`
21 21 A configuration object is a simple dictionary-like class that holds
22 22 configuration attributes and sub-configuration objects. These classes
23 23 support dotted attribute style access (``Foo.bar``) in addition to the
24 24 regular dictionary style access (``Foo['bar']``). Configuration objects
25 25 are smart. They know how to merge themselves with other configuration
26 26 objects and they automatically create sub-configuration objects.
27 27
28 28 Application: :class:`~IPython.config.application.Application`
29 29 An application is a process that does a specific job. The most obvious
30 30 application is the :command:`ipython` command line program. Each
31 31 application reads *one or more* configuration files and a single set of
32 32 command line options
33 33 and then produces a master configuration object for the application. This
34 34 configuration object is then passed to the configurable objects that the
35 35 application creates. These configurable objects implement the actual logic
36 36 of the application and know how to configure themselves given the
37 37 configuration object.
38 38
39 39 Applications always have a `log` attribute that is a configured Logger.
40 40 This allows centralized logging configuration per-application.
41 41
42 42 Configurable: :class:`~IPython.config.configurable.Configurable`
43 43 A configurable is a regular Python class that serves as a base class for
44 44 all main classes in an application. The
45 45 :class:`~IPython.config.configurable.Configurable` base class is
46 46 lightweight and only does one things.
47 47
48 48 This :class:`~IPython.config.configurable.Configurable` is a subclass
49 49 of :class:`~IPython.utils.traitlets.HasTraits` that knows how to configure
50 50 itself. Class level traits with the metadata ``config=True`` become
51 51 values that can be configured from the command line and configuration
52 52 files.
53 53
54 54 Developers create :class:`~IPython.config.configurable.Configurable`
55 55 subclasses that implement all of the logic in the application. Each of
56 56 these subclasses has its own configuration information that controls how
57 57 instances are created.
58 58
59 59 Singletons: :class:`~IPython.config.configurable.SingletonConfigurable`
60 60 Any object for which there is a single canonical instance. These are
61 61 just like Configurables, except they have a class method
62 62 :meth:`~IPython.config.configurable.SingletonConfigurable.instance`,
63 63 that returns the current active instance (or creates one if it
64 64 does not exist). Examples of singletons include
65 65 :class:`~IPython.config.application.Application`s and
66 66 :class:`~IPython.core.interactiveshell.InteractiveShell`. This lets
67 67 objects easily connect to the current running Application without passing
68 68 objects around everywhere. For instance, to get the current running
69 69 Application instance, simply do: ``app = Application.instance()``.
70 70
71 71
72 72 .. note::
73 73
74 74 Singletons are not strictly enforced - you can have many instances
75 75 of a given singleton class, but the :meth:`instance` method will always
76 76 return the same one.
77 77
78 78 Having described these main concepts, we can now state the main idea in our
79 79 configuration system: *"configuration" allows the default values of class
80 80 attributes to be controlled on a class by class basis*. Thus all instances of
81 81 a given class are configured in the same way. Furthermore, if two instances
82 82 need to be configured differently, they need to be instances of two different
83 83 classes. While this model may seem a bit restrictive, we have found that it
84 84 expresses most things that need to be configured extremely well. However, it
85 85 is possible to create two instances of the same class that have different
86 86 trait values. This is done by overriding the configuration.
87 87
88 88 Now, we show what our configuration objects and files look like.
89 89
90 90 Configuration objects and files
91 91 ===============================
92 92
93 93 A configuration file is simply a pure Python file that sets the attributes
94 94 of a global, pre-created configuration object. This configuration object is a
95 95 :class:`~IPython.config.loader.Config` instance. While in a configuration
96 96 file, to get a reference to this object, simply call the :func:`get_config`
97 97 function. We inject this function into the global namespace that the
98 98 configuration file is executed in.
99 99
100 100 Here is an example of a super simple configuration file that does nothing::
101 101
102 102 c = get_config()
103 103
104 104 Once you get a reference to the configuration object, you simply set
105 105 attributes on it. All you have to know is:
106 106
107 107 * The name of each attribute.
108 108 * The type of each attribute.
109 109
110 110 The answers to these two questions are provided by the various
111 111 :class:`~IPython.config.configurable.Configurable` subclasses that an
112 112 application uses. Let's look at how this would work for a simple configurable
113 113 subclass::
114 114
115 115 # Sample configurable:
116 116 from IPython.config.configurable import Configurable
117 117 from IPython.utils.traitlets import Int, Float, Unicode, Bool
118 118
119 119 class MyClass(Configurable):
120 120 name = Unicode(u'defaultname', config=True)
121 121 ranking = Int(0, config=True)
122 122 value = Float(99.0)
123 123 # The rest of the class implementation would go here..
124 124
125 125 In this example, we see that :class:`MyClass` has three attributes, two
126 126 of whom (``name``, ``ranking``) can be configured. All of the attributes
127 127 are given types and default values. If a :class:`MyClass` is instantiated,
128 128 but not configured, these default values will be used. But let's see how
129 129 to configure this class in a configuration file::
130 130
131 131 # Sample config file
132 132 c = get_config()
133 133
134 134 c.MyClass.name = 'coolname'
135 135 c.MyClass.ranking = 10
136 136
137 137 After this configuration file is loaded, the values set in it will override
138 138 the class defaults anytime a :class:`MyClass` is created. Furthermore,
139 139 these attributes will be type checked and validated anytime they are set.
140 140 This type checking is handled by the :mod:`IPython.utils.traitlets` module,
141 141 which provides the :class:`Unicode`, :class:`Int` and :class:`Float` types.
142 142 In addition to these traitlets, the :mod:`IPython.utils.traitlets` provides
143 143 traitlets for a number of other types.
144 144
145 145 .. note::
146 146
147 147 Underneath the hood, the :class:`Configurable` base class is a subclass of
148 148 :class:`IPython.utils.traitlets.HasTraits`. The
149 149 :mod:`IPython.utils.traitlets` module is a lightweight version of
150 150 :mod:`enthought.traits`. Our implementation is a pure Python subset
151 151 (mostly API compatible) of :mod:`enthought.traits` that does not have any
152 152 of the automatic GUI generation capabilities. Our plan is to achieve 100%
153 153 API compatibility to enable the actual :mod:`enthought.traits` to
154 154 eventually be used instead. Currently, we cannot use
155 155 :mod:`enthought.traits` as we are committed to the core of IPython being
156 156 pure Python.
157 157
158 158 It should be very clear at this point what the naming convention is for
159 159 configuration attributes::
160 160
161 161 c.ClassName.attribute_name = attribute_value
162 162
163 163 Here, ``ClassName`` is the name of the class whose configuration attribute you
164 164 want to set, ``attribute_name`` is the name of the attribute you want to set
165 165 and ``attribute_value`` the the value you want it to have. The ``ClassName``
166 166 attribute of ``c`` is not the actual class, but instead is another
167 167 :class:`~IPython.config.loader.Config` instance.
168 168
169 169 .. note::
170 170
171 171 The careful reader may wonder how the ``ClassName`` (``MyClass`` in
172 172 the above example) attribute of the configuration object ``c`` gets
173 173 created. These attributes are created on the fly by the
174 174 :class:`~IPython.config.loader.Config` instance, using a simple naming
175 175 convention. Any attribute of a :class:`~IPython.config.loader.Config`
176 176 instance whose name begins with an uppercase character is assumed to be a
177 177 sub-configuration and a new empty :class:`~IPython.config.loader.Config`
178 178 instance is dynamically created for that attribute. This allows deeply
179 179 hierarchical information created easily (``c.Foo.Bar.value``) on the fly.
180 180
181 181 Configuration files inheritance
182 182 ===============================
183 183
184 184 Let's say you want to have different configuration files for various purposes.
185 185 Our configuration system makes it easy for one configuration file to inherit
186 186 the information in another configuration file. The :func:`load_subconfig`
187 187 command can be used in a configuration file for this purpose. Here is a simple
188 188 example that loads all of the values from the file :file:`base_config.py`::
189 189
190 190 # base_config.py
191 191 c = get_config()
192 192 c.MyClass.name = 'coolname'
193 193 c.MyClass.ranking = 100
194 194
195 195 into the configuration file :file:`main_config.py`::
196 196
197 197 # main_config.py
198 198 c = get_config()
199 199
200 200 # Load everything from base_config.py
201 201 load_subconfig('base_config.py')
202 202
203 203 # Now override one of the values
204 204 c.MyClass.name = 'bettername'
205 205
206 206 In a situation like this the :func:`load_subconfig` makes sure that the
207 207 search path for sub-configuration files is inherited from that of the parent.
208 208 Thus, you can typically put the two in the same directory and everything will
209 209 just work.
210 210
211 211 You can also load configuration files by profile, for instance:
212 212
213 213 .. sourcecode:: python
214 214
215 215 load_subconfig('ipython_config.py', profile='default')
216 216
217 217 to inherit your default configuration as a starting point.
218 218
219 219
220 220 Class based configuration inheritance
221 221 =====================================
222 222
223 223 There is another aspect of configuration where inheritance comes into play.
224 224 Sometimes, your classes will have an inheritance hierarchy that you want
225 225 to be reflected in the configuration system. Here is a simple example::
226 226
227 227 from IPython.config.configurable import Configurable
228 228 from IPython.utils.traitlets import Int, Float, Unicode, Bool
229 229
230 230 class Foo(Configurable):
231 231 name = Unicode(u'fooname', config=True)
232 232 value = Float(100.0, config=True)
233 233
234 234 class Bar(Foo):
235 235 name = Unicode(u'barname', config=True)
236 236 othervalue = Int(0, config=True)
237 237
238 238 Now, we can create a configuration file to configure instances of :class:`Foo`
239 239 and :class:`Bar`::
240 240
241 241 # config file
242 242 c = get_config()
243 243
244 244 c.Foo.name = u'bestname'
245 245 c.Bar.othervalue = 10
246 246
247 247 This class hierarchy and configuration file accomplishes the following:
248 248
249 249 * The default value for :attr:`Foo.name` and :attr:`Bar.name` will be
250 250 'bestname'. Because :class:`Bar` is a :class:`Foo` subclass it also
251 251 picks up the configuration information for :class:`Foo`.
252 252 * The default value for :attr:`Foo.value` and :attr:`Bar.value` will be
253 253 ``100.0``, which is the value specified as the class default.
254 254 * The default value for :attr:`Bar.othervalue` will be 10 as set in the
255 255 configuration file. Because :class:`Foo` is the parent of :class:`Bar`
256 256 it doesn't know anything about the :attr:`othervalue` attribute.
257 257
258 258
259 259 .. _ipython_dir:
260 260
261 261 Configuration file location
262 262 ===========================
263 263
264 264 So where should you put your configuration files? IPython uses "profiles" for
265 265 configuration, and by default, all profiles will be stored in the so called
266 266 "IPython directory". The location of this directory is determined by the
267 267 following algorithm:
268 268
269 269 * If the ``ipython-dir`` command line flag is given, its value is used.
270 270
271 271 * If not, the value returned by :func:`IPython.utils.path.get_ipython_dir`
272 272 is used. This function will first look at the :envvar:`IPYTHONDIR`
273 273 environment variable and then default to :file:`~/.ipython`.
274 274 Historical support for the :envvar:`IPYTHON_DIR` environment variable will
275 275 be removed in a future release.
276 276
277 277 For most users, the configuration directory will be :file:`~/.ipython`.
278 278
279 279 Previous versions of IPython on Linux would use the XDG config directory,
280 280 creating :file:`~/.config/ipython` by default. We have decided to go
281 281 back to :file:`~/.ipython` for consistency among systems. IPython will
282 282 issue a warning if it finds the XDG location, and will move it to the new
283 283 location if there isn't already a directory there.
284 284
285 285 Once the location of the IPython directory has been determined, you need to know
286 286 which profile you are using. For users with a single configuration, this will
287 287 simply be 'default', and will be located in
288 288 :file:`<IPYTHONDIR>/profile_default`.
289 289
290 290 The next thing you need to know is what to call your configuration file. The
291 291 basic idea is that each application has its own default configuration filename.
292 292 The default named used by the :command:`ipython` command line program is
293 293 :file:`ipython_config.py`, and *all* IPython applications will use this file.
294 294 Other applications, such as the parallel :command:`ipcluster` scripts or the
295 295 QtConsole will load their own config files *after* :file:`ipython_config.py`. To
296 296 load a particular configuration file instead of the default, the name can be
297 297 overridden by the ``config_file`` command line flag.
298 298
299 299 To generate the default configuration files, do::
300 300
301 301 $ ipython profile create
302 302
303 303 and you will have a default :file:`ipython_config.py` in your IPython directory
304 304 under :file:`profile_default`. If you want the default config files for the
305 305 :mod:`IPython.parallel` applications, add ``--parallel`` to the end of the
306 306 command-line args.
307 307
308 308
309 309 Locating these files
310 310 --------------------
311 311
312 312 From the command-line, you can quickly locate the IPYTHONDIR or a specific
313 313 profile with:
314 314
315 315 .. sourcecode:: bash
316 316
317 317 $ ipython locate
318 318 /home/you/.ipython
319 319
320 320 $ ipython locate profile foo
321 321 /home/you/.ipython/profile_foo
322 322
323 323 These map to the utility functions: :func:`IPython.utils.path.get_ipython_dir`
324 324 and :func:`IPython.utils.path.locate_profile` respectively.
325 325
326 326
327 327 .. _Profiles:
328 328
329 329 Profiles
330 330 ========
331 331
332 332 A profile is a directory containing configuration and runtime files, such as
333 333 logs, connection info for the parallel apps, and your IPython command history.
334 334
335 335 The idea is that users often want to maintain a set of configuration files for
336 336 different purposes: one for doing numerical computing with NumPy and SciPy and
337 337 another for doing symbolic computing with SymPy. Profiles make it easy to keep a
338 338 separate configuration files, logs, and histories for each of these purposes.
339 339
340 340 Let's start by showing how a profile is used:
341 341
342 342 .. code-block:: bash
343 343
344 344 $ ipython --profile=sympy
345 345
346 346 This tells the :command:`ipython` command line program to get its configuration
347 347 from the "sympy" profile. The file names for various profiles do not change. The
348 348 only difference is that profiles are named in a special way. In the case above,
349 349 the "sympy" profile means looking for :file:`ipython_config.py` in :file:`<IPYTHONDIR>/profile_sympy`.
350 350
351 351 The general pattern is this: simply create a new profile with:
352 352
353 353 .. code-block:: bash
354 354
355 355 $ ipython profile create <name>
356 356
357 357 which adds a directory called ``profile_<name>`` to your IPython directory. Then
358 358 you can load this profile by adding ``--profile=<name>`` to your command line
359 359 options. Profiles are supported by all IPython applications.
360 360
361 361 IPython ships with some sample profiles in :file:`IPython/config/profile`. If
362 362 you create profiles with the name of one of our shipped profiles, these config
363 363 files will be copied over instead of starting with the automatically generated
364 364 config files.
365 365
366 366 Security Files
367 367 --------------
368 368
369 369 If you are using the notebook, qtconsole, or parallel code, IPython stores
370 370 connection information in small JSON files in the active profile's security
371 371 directory. This directory is made private, so only you can see the files inside. If
372 372 you need to move connection files around to other computers, this is where they will
373 373 be. If you want your code to be able to open security files by name, we have a
374 374 convenience function :func:`IPython.utils.path.get_security_file`, which will return
375 375 the absolute path to a security file from its filename and [optionally] profile
376 376 name.
377 377
378 378 .. _startup_files:
379 379
380 380 Startup Files
381 381 -------------
382 382
383 383 If you want some code to be run at the beginning of every IPython session with
384 384 a particular profile, the easiest way is to add Python (``.py``) or
385 385 IPython (``.ipy``) scripts to your :file:`<profile>/startup` directory. Files
386 386 in this directory will always be executed as soon as the IPython shell is
387 387 constructed, and before any other code or scripts you have specified. If you
388 388 have multiple files in the startup directory, they will be run in
389 389 lexicographical order, so you can control the ordering by adding a '00-'
390 390 prefix.
391 391
392 392
393 393 .. _commandline:
394 394
395 395 Command-line arguments
396 396 ======================
397 397
398 398 IPython exposes *all* configurable options on the command-line. The command-line
399 399 arguments are generated from the Configurable traits of the classes associated
400 400 with a given Application. Configuring IPython from the command-line may look
401 401 very similar to an IPython config file
402 402
403 403 IPython applications use a parser called
404 404 :class:`~IPython.config.loader.KeyValueLoader` to load values into a Config
405 405 object. Values are assigned in much the same way as in a config file:
406 406
407 407 .. code-block:: bash
408 408
409 409 $ ipython --InteractiveShell.use_readline=False --BaseIPythonApplication.profile='myprofile'
410 410
411 411 Is the same as adding:
412 412
413 413 .. sourcecode:: python
414 414
415 415 c.InteractiveShell.use_readline=False
416 416 c.BaseIPythonApplication.profile='myprofile'
417 417
418 418 to your config file. Key/Value arguments *always* take a value, separated by '='
419 419 and no spaces.
420 420
421 421 Common Arguments
422 422 ----------------
423 423
424 424 Since the strictness and verbosity of the KVLoader above are not ideal for everyday
425 425 use, common arguments can be specified as flags_ or aliases_.
426 426
427 427 Flags and Aliases are handled by :mod:`argparse` instead, allowing for more flexible
428 428 parsing. In general, flags and aliases are prefixed by ``--``, except for those
429 429 that are single characters, in which case they can be specified with a single ``-``, e.g.:
430 430
431 431 .. code-block:: bash
432 432
433 433 $ ipython -i -c "import numpy; x=numpy.linspace(0,1)" --profile testing --colors=lightbg
434 434
435 435 Aliases
436 436 *******
437 437
438 438 For convenience, applications have a mapping of commonly used traits, so you don't have
439 439 to specify the whole class name:
440 440
441 441 .. code-block:: bash
442 442
443 443 $ ipython --profile myprofile
444 444 # and
445 445 $ ipython --profile='myprofile'
446 446 # are equivalent to
447 447 $ ipython --BaseIPythonApplication.profile='myprofile'
448 448
449 449 Flags
450 450 *****
451 451
452 452 Applications can also be passed **flags**. Flags are options that take no
453 453 arguments. They are simply wrappers for
454 454 setting one or more configurables with predefined values, often True/False.
455 455
456 456 For instance:
457 457
458 458 .. code-block:: bash
459 459
460 460 $ ipcontroller --debug
461 461 # is equivalent to
462 462 $ ipcontroller --Application.log_level=DEBUG
463 463 # and
464 464 $ ipython --matploitlib
465 465 # is equivalent to
466 466 $ ipython --matplotlib auto
467 467 # or
468 468 $ ipython --no-banner
469 469 # is equivalent to
470 470 $ ipython --TerminalIPythonApp.display_banner=False
471 471
472 472 Subcommands
473 473 -----------
474 474
475 475
476 476 Some IPython applications have **subcommands**. Subcommands are modeled after
477 477 :command:`git`, and are called with the form :command:`command subcommand
478 478 [...args]`. Currently, the QtConsole is a subcommand of terminal IPython:
479 479
480 480 .. code-block:: bash
481 481
482 482 $ ipython qtconsole --profile myprofile
483 483
484 484 and :command:`ipcluster` is simply a wrapper for its various subcommands (start,
485 485 stop, engines).
486 486
487 487 .. code-block:: bash
488 488
489 489 $ ipcluster start --profile=myprofile -n 4
490 490
491 491
492 492 To see a list of the available aliases, flags, and subcommands for an IPython application, simply pass ``-h`` or ``--help``. And to see the full list of configurable options (*very* long), pass ``--help-all``.
493 493
494 494
495 495 Design requirements
496 496 ===================
497 497
498 498 Here are the main requirements we wanted our configuration system to have:
499 499
500 500 * Support for hierarchical configuration information.
501 501
502 502 * Full integration with command line option parsers. Often, you want to read
503 503 a configuration file, but then override some of the values with command line
504 504 options. Our configuration system automates this process and allows each
505 505 command line option to be linked to a particular attribute in the
506 506 configuration hierarchy that it will override.
507 507
508 508 * Configuration files that are themselves valid Python code. This accomplishes
509 509 many things. First, it becomes possible to put logic in your configuration
510 510 files that sets attributes based on your operating system, network setup,
511 511 Python version, etc. Second, Python has a super simple syntax for accessing
512 512 hierarchical data structures, namely regular attribute access
513 513 (``Foo.Bar.Bam.name``). Third, using Python makes it easy for users to
514 514 import configuration attributes from one configuration file to another.
515 515 Fourth, even though Python is dynamically typed, it does have types that can
516 516 be checked at runtime. Thus, a ``1`` in a config file is the integer '1',
517 517 while a ``'1'`` is a string.
518 518
519 519 * A fully automated method for getting the configuration information to the
520 520 classes that need it at runtime. Writing code that walks a configuration
521 521 hierarchy to extract a particular attribute is painful. When you have
522 522 complex configuration information with hundreds of attributes, this makes
523 523 you want to cry.
524 524
525 525 * Type checking and validation that doesn't require the entire configuration
526 526 hierarchy to be specified statically before runtime. Python is a very
527 527 dynamic language and you don't always know everything that needs to be
528 528 configured when a program starts.
529 529
530
531 .. _`XDG Base Directory`: http://standards.freedesktop.org/basedir-spec/basedir-spec-latest.html
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