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732 lines
28 KiB
Markdown
# ConfigLib
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**A Minecraft library for saving, loading, updating, and commenting YAML configuration files.**
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This library facilitates creating, saving, loading, updating, and commenting YAML configuration
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files. It does so by automatically mapping instances of configuration classes to serializable maps
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which are first transformed into YAML and then saved to some specified file.
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For a step-by-step tutorial that shows most features of this library in action check out
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the [Tutorial](https://github.com/Exlll/ConfigLib/wiki/Tutorial) page on the wiki!
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## Features
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* Automatic creation, saving, loading, and updating of configuration files
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* Support for comments through annotations
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* Support for all primitive types, their wrapper types, and strings
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* Support for enums, records, and POJOs (+ inheritance!)
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* Support for (nested) lists, sets, arrays, and maps
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* Support for `BigInteger` and `BigDecimal`
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* Support for `LocalDate`, `LocalTime`, `LocalDateTime`, and `Instant`
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* Support for `UUID`, `File`, `Path`, `URL`, and `URI`
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* Support for Bukkit's `ConfigurationSerializable` types (e.g. `ItemStack`)
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* Option to exclude fields from being converted
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* Option to format field and component names before conversion
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* Option to customize null handling
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* Option to customize serialization by providing your own serializers
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* Option to add headers and footers to configuration files
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* ...and a few more!
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## Usage example
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This section contains a short usage example to get you started. The whole range of features is
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discussed in the following sections. Information on how to import this library is located at the end
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of this documentation.
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For a step-by-step tutorial with a more advanced example check out
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the [Tutorial](https://github.com/Exlll/ConfigLib/wiki/Tutorial) page on the wiki.
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If you want support for Bukkit classes like `ItemStack`, check out
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the [Configuration properties](#configuration-properties) section.
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```java
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public final class Example {
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// * To create a configuration annotate a class with @Configuration and make sure that
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// it has a no-args constructor.
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// * Now add fields to that class and assign them default values.
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// * That's it! Fields can be private; setters are not required.
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@Configuration
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public static class BaseConfiguration {
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private String host = "127.0.0.1";
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private int port = 1234;
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// The library supports lists, sets, and maps.
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private Set<String> blockedAddresses = Set.of("8.8.8.8");
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// Fields can be ignored by making them final, transient, static or by
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// annotating them with @Ignore.
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private final double ignoreMe = 3.14;
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}
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// This library supports records; no @Configuration annotation required
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public record User(
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String username,
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@Comment("Please choose a strong password.")
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String password
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) {}
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// Subclassing of configurations and nesting of configurations in other configurations
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// is also supported. Subclasses don't need to be annotated again.
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public static final class UserConfiguration extends BaseConfiguration {
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// You can add comments with the @Comment annotation. Each string in the comment
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// array is written (as a comment) on a new line.
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@Comment({"The admin user has full access.", "Choose a proper password!"})
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User admin = new User("root", "toor"); // The User class is a record!
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List<User> blockedUsers = List.of(
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new User("user1", null), // null values are supported
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new User("user2", null)
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);
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}
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public static void main(String[] args) {
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var configFile = Paths.get("/tmp/config.yml");
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var config = new UserConfiguration();
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// Save a new instance to the configuration file
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YamlConfigurations.save(configFile, UserConfiguration.class, config);
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// Load a new instance from the configuration file
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config = YamlConfigurations.load(configFile, UserConfiguration.class);
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System.out.println(config.admin.username);
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System.out.println(config.blockedUsers);
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// Modify and save the configuration file
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config.blockedUsers.add(new User("user3", "pass3"));
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YamlConfigurations.save(configFile, UserConfiguration.class, config);
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}
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}
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```
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By running the above code, a new YAML configuration is created at `/tmp/config.yml`. Its content
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looks like this:
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```yaml
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host: 127.0.0.1
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port: 1234
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blockedAddresses:
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- 8.8.8.8
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# The admin user has full access.
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# Choose a proper password!
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admin:
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username: root
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# Please choose a strong password.
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password: toor
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blockedUsers:
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- username: user1
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- username: user2
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- username: user3
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password: pass3
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```
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Two things are noticeable here:
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1. Not every user in the `blockedUsers` list has a `password` mapping. This is because null values
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are not output by default. That behavior can be changed by the builder.
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2. The password of the user with username `user3` has no comment. This is due to limitations of
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the YAML library. Configurations in lists, sets, or maps cannot have their comments printed.
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## General information
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In the following sections the term _configuration type_ refers to any record type or to any
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non-generic class that is directly or indirectly (i.e. through subclassing) annotated with
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`@de.exlll.configlib.Configuration`. Accordingly, the term _configuration_ refers to an instance of
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such a type.
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### Declaring configuration types
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To declare a configuration type, either define a record or annotate a class with `@Configuration`
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and make sure that it has a no-args constructor. The no-args constructor can be set `private`. Inner
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classes (i.e. the ones that are nested but not `static`) have an implicit synthetic constructor with
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at least one argument and are therefore not supported.
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Now simply add components to your record or fields to your class whose type is any of the supported
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types listed in the next section. You can (and should) initialize all fields of a configuration
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class with non-null default values.
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### Supported types
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A configuration type may only contain fields or components of the following types:
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| Type class | Types |
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|-----------------------------|--------------------------------------------------------------------|
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| Boolean types | `boolean`, and `Boolean` |
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| Integer types | `byte`, `short`, `int`, `long`, and their respective wrapper types |
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| Floating point types | `float`, `double`, and their respective wrapper types |
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| Characters and strings | `char`, `Character`, `String` |
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| Big numeric types | `BigInteger`, `BigDecimal` |
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| Time related types | `LocalTime`, `LocalDate`, `LocalDateTime`, `Instant` |
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| Utility types | `UUID`, `File`, `Path`, `URL`, `URI` |
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| Enums | Any Java enum |
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| Configurations | Any Java record or any class annotated with `@Configuration` |
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| `ConfigurationSerializable` | All Bukkit classes that implement this interface, like `ItemStack` |
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| Collections | (Nested) Lists, sets, maps*, or arrays of previously listed types |
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(*) Map keys can only be of simple or enum type, i.e. they cannot be in the `Collections`,
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`Configurations`, or `ConfigurationSerializable` type class.
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#### Examples of supported types
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The following class contains examples of types that this library supports:
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```java
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public final class SupportedTypes {
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boolean supported;
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Character supported;
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String supported;
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LocalTime supported;
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UUID supported;
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ExampleEnum supported; // where 'ExampleEnum' is some Java enum type
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ExampleConfig supported; // where 'ExampleConfig' is a class annotated with @Configuration
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ExampleRecord supported; // where 'ExampleRecord' is a Java record
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/* collection types */
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List<BigInteger> supported;
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Set<Double> supported;
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LocalDate[] supported;
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Map<ExampleEnum, ExampleConfig> supported;
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/* nested collection types */
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List<Map<ExampleEnum, LocalDate>> supported;
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int[][] supported;
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Map<Integer, List<Map<Short, Set<ExampleRecord>>>> supported;
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// supported if a custom serializer is registered
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java.awt.Point supported;
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// supported when a special properties object is used (explained further below)
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org.bukkit.inventory.ItemStack supported;
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}
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```
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<details>
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<summary>Examples of unsupported types</summary>
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The following class contains examples of types that this library does (and will) not support:
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```java
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public final class UnsupportedTypes<T> {
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Map<Point, String> unsupported; // invalid map key
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Map<List<String>, String> unsupported; // invalid map key
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Box<String> unsupported; // custom parameterized type
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List<? extends String> unsupported; // wildcard type
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List<?> unsupported; // wildcard type
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List<?>[] unsupported; // wildcard type
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T unsupported; // type variable
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List unsupported; // raw type
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List[] unsupported; // raw type
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List<String>[] unsupported; // generic array type
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Set<Integer>[] unsupported; // generic array type
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Map<Byte, Byte>[] unsupported; // generic array type
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}
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```
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</details>
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### Loading and saving configurations
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There are two ways to load and save configurations. Which way you choose depends on your liking.
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Both ways have three methods in common:
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* The `save` method saves a configuration to a file. The file is created if it does not exist and
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is overwritten otherwise.
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* The `load` method creates a new configuration instance and populates it with values taken from a
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file. For classes, the no-args constructor is used to create a new instance. For records, the
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canonical constructor is called.
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* The `update` method is a combination of `load` and `save` and the method you'd usually want to
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use: it takes care of creating the configuration file if it does not exist and otherwise updates
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it to reflect changes to (the fields or components of) the configuration type.
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<details>
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<summary>Example of <code>update</code> behavior when configuration file exists</summary>
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Let's say you have the following configuration type:
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```java
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@Configuration
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public final class C {
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int i = 10;
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int j = 11;
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}
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```
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... and a YAML configuration file that contains:
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```yaml
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i: 20
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k: 30
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```
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Now, when you use one of the methods below to call `update` for that configuration type and file,
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the configuration instance that `update` returns will have its `i` variable initialized to `20`
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and its `j` variable will have its default of `11`. After the operation, the configuration file will
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contain:
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```yaml
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i: 20
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j: 11
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```
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</details>
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To exemplify the usage of these three methods we assume for the following sections that you have
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implemented the configuration type below and have access to some regular `java.nio.file.Path`
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object `configurationFile`.
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```java
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@Configuration
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public final class Config { /* some fields */ }
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```
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#### Way 1
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The first way is to create a configuration store and use it directly to save, load, or update
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configurations.
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```java
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YamlConfigurationProperties properties = YamlConfigurationProperties.newBuilder().build();
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YamlConfigurationStore<Config> store = new YamlConfigurationStore<>(Config.class, properties);
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Config config1 = store.load(configurationFile);
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store.save(config1, configurationFile);
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Config config2 = store.update(configurationFile);
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```
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#### Way 2
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The second way is to use the static methods from the `YamlConfigurations` class.
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```java
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Config config1 = YamlConfigurations.load(configurationFile, Config.class);
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YamlConfigurations.save(configurationFile, Config.class, config1);
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Config config2 = YamlConfigurations.update(configurationFile, Config.class);
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```
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Each of these methods has two additional overloads: One that takes a properties object and another
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that lets you configure a properties object builder. For example, the overloads of the `load`
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method are:
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```java
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// overload 1
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YamlConfigurationProperties properties = YamlConfigurationProperties.newBuilder().build();
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Config c1 = YamlConfigurations.load(configurationFile, Config.class, properties);
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// overload 2
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Config c2 = YamlConfigurations.load(
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configurationFile,
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Config.class,
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builder -> builder.inputNulls(true).outputNulls(false)
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);
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```
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<hr>
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All three methods can also be passed a Java record instead of a class. To provide default values
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for records when calling the `update` method, you can add a constructor with no parameters that
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initializes its components. This constructor is only called if the configuration file does not
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exist.
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```java
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record User(String name, String email) {
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User() { this("John Doe", "john@doe.com"); }
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}
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User user = YamlConfigurations.update(configurationFile, User.class);
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```
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### Configuration properties
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Instances of the `ConfigurationProperties` class allow customization of how configurations are
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stored and loaded. To create such an instance, instantiate a new builder using
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the `YamlConfigurationProperties.newBuilder()` method, configure it, and finally call its `build()`
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method. Alternatively, you can use the `toBuilder()` method of an
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existing `YamlConfigurationProperties` to create a new builder that is initialized with values
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takes from the properties object.
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Check out the methods of the builder class to see which configuration options are available.
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#### Support for Bukkit classes like `ItemStack`
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There is a special `YamlConfigurationProperties` object with name `BUKKIT_DEFAULT_PROPERTIES`
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that adds support for Bukkit's `ConfigurationSerializable` types. If you want to use any of these
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types in your configuration, you have to use that object as a starting point:
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```java
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YamlConfigurationProperties properties = ConfigLib.BUKKIT_DEFAULT_PROPERTIES.toBuilder()
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// ...further configure the builder...
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.build();
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```
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To get access to this object, you have to import `configlib-paper` instead of `configlib-yaml` as
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described in the [Import](#import) section.
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### Comments
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The fields or components of a configuration can be annotated with the `@Comment` annotation. This
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annotation takes an array of strings. Each of these strings is written onto a new line as a comment.
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The strings can contain `\n` characters. Empty strings are written as newlines (not as comments).
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If a configuration type _C_ that defines comments is used (as a field or component) within another
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configuration type, the comments of _C_ are written with the proper indentation. However, if
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instances of _C_ are stored inside a collection, their comments are not printed when the collection
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is written.
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Serializing the following configuration as YAML ...
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```java
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@Configuration
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public final class ExampleConfiguration {
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@Comment({"Hello", "", " ", "World"})
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private String commentedField = "commented field";
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}
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```
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... results in the YAML file shown below:
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```yaml
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# Hello
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#
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# World
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commentedField: commented field
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```
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Similarly, if you define the following record configuration and save it ...
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```java
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record User(@Comment("The name") String name, @Comment("The address") Address address) {}
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record Address(@Comment("The street") String street) {}
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User user = new User("John Doe", new Address("10 Downing St"));
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```
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... you get:
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```yaml
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# The name
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name: John Doe
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# The address
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address:
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# The street
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street: 10 Downing St
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```
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### Subclassing
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Subclassing of configurations types is supported. Subclasses of configuration types don't need to be
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annotated with `@Configuration`. When a configuration is written, the fields of parent classes
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are written before the fields of the child in a top to bottom manner. Parent configurations can
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be `abstract`.
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#### Shadowing of fields
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Shadowing of fields refers to the situation where a subclass of configuration has a field that has
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the same name as a field in one of its super classes. Shadowing of fields is currently not
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supported. (This restriction might easily be lifted. If you need this feature, please open an issue
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and describe how to handle name clashes.)
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### Ignoring and filtering fields
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Fields that are `final`, `static`, `transient` or annotated with `@Ignore` are neither serialized
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nor updated during deserialization. You can filter out additional fields by providing an instance of
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`FieldFilter` to the configuration properties. Record components cannot be filtered.
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### Handling of missing and `null` values
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#### Missing values
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When a configuration file is read, values that correspond to a field of a configuration type or to a
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component of a record type might be missing.
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That can happen, for example, when somebody deleted that field from the configuration file, when the
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definition of a configuration or record type is changed, or when the `NameFormatter` that was used
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to create that file is replaced.
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In such cases, fields of configuration types keep the default value you assigned to them and record
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components are initialized with the default value of their corresponding type.
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#### Null values
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**NOTE:** Null values written to a configuration file generally don't give any indication about
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which kinds of values the configuration expects. Therefore, they not only make it harder for the
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users of that configuration file to properly configure it, but they might also prevent loading a
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configuration if the values the users set are of the wrong type.
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Although strongly discouraged, null values are supported and `ConfigurationProperties` let you
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configure how they are handled when serializing and deserializing a configuration:
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* By setting `outputNulls` to false, class fields, record components, and collection elements that
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are null are not output. Any comments that belong to such fields are also not written.
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* By setting `inputNulls` to false, null values read from the configuration file are treated as
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missing and are, therefore, handled as described in the section above.
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* By setting `inputNulls` to true, null values read from the configuration file override the
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corresponding default values of a configuration type with null or set the component value of a
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record type to null. If the field or component type is primitive, an exception is thrown.
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The following code forbids null values to be output but allows null values to be input. By default,
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both are forbidden which makes the call to `outputNulls` in this case redundant.
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```java
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YamlConfigurationProperties.newBuilder()
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.outputNulls(false)
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.inputNulls(true)
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.build();
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```
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### Field and component name formatting
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You can define how fields and component names are formatted by configuring the configuration
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properties with a custom formatter. Formatters are implementations of the `NameFormatter`
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interface. You can implement this interface yourself or use one of the several formatters this
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library provides. These pre-defined formatters can be found in the `NameFormatters` class.
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The following code formats fields using the `IDENTITY` formatter (which is the default).
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```java
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YamlConfigurationProperties.newBuilder()
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.setNameFormatter(NameFormatters.IDENTITY)
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.build();
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```
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### Type conversion and custom serializers
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Before instances of the types listed in the [supported types](#supported-types) section can be
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stored, they need to be converted into serializable types (i.e. into types the underlying YAML
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library knows how to handle). The conversion happens according to the following table:
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| Source type | Target type |
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|-----------------------------|------------------|
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| Boolean types | `Boolean` |
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| Integer types | `Long` |
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| Floating point types | `Double` |
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| Characters and strings | `String` |
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| Big numeric types | `String` |
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| Time related types | `String` |
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| Utility types | `String` |
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| Enums | `String` |
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| Configurations | `Map<String, ?>` |
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| `Set<S>` | `List<T>`* |
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| `List<S>` | `List<T>` |
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| `S[]` | `List<T>` |
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| `Map<S1, S2>` | `Map<T1, T2>` |
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| `ConfigurationSerializable` | `String` |
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(*) By default, sets are serialized as lists. This can be changed through the configuration
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properties. This also means that `Set`s are valid target types.
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|
|
|
#### Serializer selection
|
|
|
|
To convert the value of a field or record component `F` with (source) type `S` into a serializable
|
|
value of some target type, a serializer has to be selected. Serializers are instances of
|
|
the `de.exlll.configlib.Serializer` interface and are selected based on `S`. Put differently,
|
|
serializers are always selected based on the compile-time type of `F` and never on the runtime type
|
|
of its value.
|
|
|
|
<details>
|
|
<summary>Why should I care about this?</summary>
|
|
|
|
This distinction makes a difference (and might lead to confusion) when you have fields or record
|
|
components whose type is a configuration type, and you extend that configuration type. Concretely,
|
|
assume you have written two configuration classes `A` and `B` where `B extends A`. Then, if you
|
|
use `A a = new B()` in your main configuration, only the fields of a `A` will be stored when you
|
|
save your main configuration. That is because the serializer of field `a` was selected based on the
|
|
compile-time type of `a` which is `A` and not `B`. The same happens if you have a `List<A>` and put
|
|
instances of `B` (or some other subclass of `A`) in it.
|
|
|
|
</details>
|
|
|
|
#### Custom serializers
|
|
|
|
If you want to add support for a type that is not a record or whose class is not annotated
|
|
with `@Configuration`, you can register a custom serializer. Serializers are instances of
|
|
the `de.exlll.configlib.Serializer` interface. When implementing that interface you have to make
|
|
sure that you convert your source type into one of the valid target types listed in the table above.
|
|
The serializer then has to be registered through a `ConfigurationProperties` object.
|
|
|
|
The following `Serializer` serializes instances of `java.awt.Point` into strings and vice versa.
|
|
|
|
```java
|
|
public final class PointSerializer implements Serializer<Point, String> {
|
|
@Override
|
|
public String serialize(Point element) {
|
|
return element.x + ":" + element.y;
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@Override
|
|
public Point deserialize(String element) {
|
|
String[] parts = element.split(":");
|
|
int x = Integer.parseInt(parts[0]);
|
|
int y = Integer.parseInt(parts[1]);
|
|
return new Point(x, y);
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
Custom serializers takes precedence over the serializers provided by this library.
|
|
|
|
### Changing the type of fields or record components
|
|
|
|
Changing the type of fields or record components is not supported. If you change the type of one of
|
|
these but your configuration file still contains a value of the old type, a type mismatch will
|
|
occur when loading a configuration from that file. Instead, remove the old element and add a new one
|
|
with a different name.
|
|
|
|
### Recursive type definitions
|
|
|
|
Recursive type definitions are currently not allowed but might be supported in a future version if
|
|
this feature is requested.
|
|
|
|
<details>
|
|
<summary>Examples of recursive type definitions</summary>
|
|
|
|
Neither direct nor indirect recursive type definitions are supported.
|
|
|
|
```java
|
|
public final class RecursiveTypDefinitions {
|
|
// Direct recursive definition
|
|
@Configuration
|
|
static final class R {
|
|
R r;
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// Indirect recursive definition
|
|
@Configuration
|
|
static final class R1 {
|
|
R2 r2;
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@Configuration
|
|
static final class R2 {
|
|
R1 r1;
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
</details>
|
|
|
|
## Project structure
|
|
|
|
This project contains three classes of modules:
|
|
|
|
* The `configlib-core` module contains most of the logic of this library. In it, you can find (among
|
|
other things), the object mapper that converts configuration instances to maps (and vice versa),
|
|
most serializers, and the classes responsible for the extraction of comments. It does not
|
|
contain anything Minecraft related.
|
|
* The `configlib-yaml` module contains the classes that can save configuration instances as YAML
|
|
files and instantiate new instances from such files. This module does not contain anything
|
|
Minecraft related, either.
|
|
* The `configlib-paper`, `configlib-velocity`, and `configlib-waterfall` modules contain basic
|
|
plugins that are used to conveniently load this library. These three modules shade the `-core`
|
|
module, the `-yaml` module, and the YAML parser when the `shadowJar` task is executed. The shaded
|
|
jar files are released on the [releases page](https://github.com/Exlll/ConfigLib/releases).
|
|
* The `configlib-paper` module additionally contains the `ConfigLib.BUKKIT_DEFAULT_PROPERTIES`
|
|
object which adds support for the serialization of Bukkit classes like `ItemStack` as
|
|
described [here](#support-for-bukkit-classes-like-itemstack).
|
|
|
|
## Import
|
|
|
|
To use this library, import it into your project with Maven or Gradle. Examples of how to do that
|
|
are at the end of this section within the spoilers. Currently, there are two repositories from
|
|
which you can choose: [jitpack.io](https://jitpack.io/#Exlll/ConfigLib) and GitHub (which requires
|
|
authentication, see this [issue](https://github.com/Exlll/ConfigLib/issues/12) if you have any
|
|
problems).
|
|
|
|
This library has additional dependencies (namely, a YAML parser) which are not exposed by the
|
|
artifact you import. The current repository provides plugin versions of this library which bundle
|
|
all its dependencies, so you don't have to worry about them. Also, these versions make it easier for
|
|
you to update this library if you have written multiple plugins that use it.
|
|
|
|
The plugin versions can be downloaded from
|
|
the [releases page](https://github.com/Exlll/ConfigLib/releases) where you can identify them by
|
|
their `-paper-`, `-waterfall-`, and `-velocity-` infix and `-all` suffix. Except for the `-paper-`
|
|
version, the other two plugin versions currently don't add any additional functionality. If you use
|
|
these versions, don't forget to add them as a dependency in the `plugin.yml` (for Paper and
|
|
Waterfall) or to the dependencies array (for Velocity) of your own plugin.
|
|
|
|
Alternatively, if you don't want to use an extra plugin, you can shade the `-yaml` version with its
|
|
YAML parser yourself.
|
|
|
|
### Import examples
|
|
|
|
If you want serialization support for Bukkit classes like `ItemStack`, replace `configlib-yaml`
|
|
with `configlib-paper` (see [here](#support-for-bukkit-classes-like-itemstack)).
|
|
|
|
<details>
|
|
<summary>Import via <code>jitpack.io</code></summary>
|
|
|
|
**Maven**
|
|
|
|
```xml
|
|
<repository>
|
|
<id>jitpack.io</id>
|
|
<url>https://jitpack.io</url>
|
|
</repository>
|
|
|
|
<dependency>
|
|
<groupId>com.github.Exlll.ConfigLib</groupId>
|
|
<artifactId>configlib-yaml</artifactId>
|
|
<version>v4.1.0</version>
|
|
</dependency>
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
**Gradle**
|
|
|
|
```groovy
|
|
repositories { maven { url 'https://jitpack.io' } }
|
|
|
|
dependencies { implementation 'com.github.Exlll.ConfigLib:configlib-yaml:v4.1.0' }
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
```kotlin
|
|
repositories { maven { url = uri("https://jitpack.io") } }
|
|
|
|
dependencies { implementation("com.github.Exlll.ConfigLib:configlib-yaml:v4.1.0") }
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
</details>
|
|
|
|
<details>
|
|
<summary>Import via GitHub</summary>
|
|
|
|
Importing via GitHub requires authentication. Check
|
|
this [issue](https://github.com/Exlll/ConfigLib/issues/12) if you have any trouble with that.
|
|
|
|
**Maven**
|
|
|
|
```xml
|
|
<repository>
|
|
<id>de.exlll</id>
|
|
<url>https://maven.pkg.github.com/Exlll/ConfigLib</url>
|
|
</repository>
|
|
|
|
<dependency>
|
|
<groupId>de.exlll</groupId>
|
|
<artifactId>configlib-yaml</artifactId>
|
|
<version>4.1.0</version>
|
|
</dependency>
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
**Gradle**
|
|
|
|
```groovy
|
|
repositories { maven { url 'https://maven.pkg.github.com/Exlll/ConfigLib' } }
|
|
|
|
dependencies { implementation 'de.exlll:configlib-yaml:4.1.0' }
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
```kotlin
|
|
repositories { maven { url = uri("https://maven.pkg.github.com/Exlll/ConfigLib") } }
|
|
|
|
dependencies { implementation("de.exlll:configlib-yaml:4.1.0") }
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
</details>
|
|
|
|
## Future work
|
|
|
|
This section contains ideas for upcoming features. If you want any of these to happen any time soon,
|
|
please [open an issue](https://github.com/Exlll/ConfigLib/issues/new) where we can discuss the
|
|
details.
|
|
|
|
- JSON, TOML, XML support
|
|
- Post-load/Pre-save hooks
|
|
- More features and control over updating/versioning
|
|
- More control over the ordering of fields, especially in parent/child class scenarios
|
|
- Recursive definitions
|
|
- Shadowing of fields
|