AngularJS configuration generator for a module of constants
npm install gulp-ng-config







It's often useful to generate a file of constants, usually as environment variables, for your Angular apps.
This Gulp plugin will allow you to provide an object of properties and will generate an Angular module of constants.
npm install gulp-ng-configgulpNgConfig(moduleName)gulpNgConfig and out will come an angular module of constants.javascript
var gulp = require('gulp');
var gulpNgConfig = require('gulp-ng-config');gulp.task('test', function () {
gulp.src('configFile.json')
.pipe(gulpNgConfig('myApp.config'))
.pipe(gulp.dest('.'))
});
`
Assume that configFile.json contains:
`json
{
"string": "my string",
"integer": 12345,
"object": {"one": 2, "three": ["four"]},
"array": ["one", 2, {"three": "four"}, [5, "six"]]
}
`
Running gulp test will take configFile.json and produce configFile.js with the following content:`js
angular.module('myApp.config', [])
.constant('string', "my string")
.constant('integer', 12345)
.constant('object', {"one":2,"three":["four"]})
.constant('array', ["one",2,{"three":"four"},[5,"six"]]);
`
We now can include this configuration module in our main app and access the constants
`js
angular.module('myApp', ['myApp.config']).run(function (string) {
console.log("The string constant!", string) // outputs "my string"
});
`
Configuration
Currently there are a few configurable options to control the output of your configuration file:
- options.environment
- options.constants
- options.createModule
- options.type
- options.wrap
- options.parser
- options.pretty
- options.keys,
- options.templateFilePath$3
Type: String OptionalIf your configuration contains multiple environments, you can supply the key you want the plugin to load from your configuration file.
Example
config.json file with multiple environments:
`json
{
"local": {
"EnvironmentConfig": {
"api": "http://localhost/"
}
},
"production": {
"EnvironmentConfig": {
"api": "https://api.production.com/"
}
}
}
`Usage of the plugin:
`js
gulpNgConfig('myApp.config', {
environment: 'production'
})
`Expected output:
`js
angular.module('myApp.config', [])
.constant('EnvironmentConfig', {"api": "https://api.production.com/"});
`#### Nested Environment
If the configuration is nested it can be accessed by the namespace, for example
`json
{
"version": "0.1.0",
"env": {
"local": {
"EnvironmentConfig": {
"api": "http://localhost/"
}
},
"production": {
"EnvironmentConfig": {
"api": "https://api.production.com/"
}
}
}
}
`Usage of the plugin:
`js
gulpNgConfig('myApp.config', {
environment: 'env.production'
})
`Expected output:
`js
angular.module('myApp.config', [])
.constant('EnvironmentConfig', {"api": "https://api.production.com/"});
`#### Multiple Environment keys
Multiple environment keys can be supplied in an array, for example for global and environmental constants
`json
{
"global": {
"version": "0.1.0"
},
"env": {
"local": {
"EnvironmentConfig": {
"api": "http://localhost/"
}
},
"production": {
"EnvironmentConfig": {
"api": "https://api.production.com/"
}
}
}
}
`Usage of the plugin:
`js
gulpNgConfig('myApp.config', {
environment: ['env.production', 'global']
})
`Expected output:
`js
angular.module('myApp.config', [])
.constant('EnvironmentConfig', {"api": "https://api.production.com/"});
.constant('version', '0.1.0');
`$3
Type: Object OptionalYou can also override properties from your json file or add more by including them in the gulp tasks:
`javascript
gulpNgConfig('myApp.config', {
constants: {
string: 'overridden',
random: 'value'
}
});
`
Generating configFile.js
`js
angular.module('myApp.config', [])
.constant('string', "overridden")
.constant('integer', 12345)
.constant('object', {"one":2,"three":["four"]})
.constant('array', ["one",2,{"three":"four"},[5,"six"]])
.constant('random', "value");`$3
Type: String Default value: 'constant' OptionalThis allows configuring the type of service that is created -- a
constant or a value. By default, a constant is created, but a value can be overridden. Possible types:-
'constant'
- 'value'`javascript
gulpNgConfig('myApp.config', {
type: 'value'
});
`This will produce
configFile.js with a value service.
`javascript
angular.module('myApp.config', [])
.value('..', '..');
`$3
Type: Boolean Default value: true OptionalBy default, a new module is created with the name supplied. You can access an existing module, rather than creating one, by setting
createModule to false.
`javascript
gulpNgConfig('myApp.config', {
createModule: false
});
`This will produce
configFile.js with an existing angular module
`javascript
angular.module('myApp.config')
.constant('..', '..');
`$3
Type: Boolean or String Default value: false OptionalPresets:
-
ES6
- ES2015Wrap the configuration module in an IIFE or your own wrapper.
`js
gulpNgConfig('myApp.config', {
wrap: true
})
`Will produce an IIFE wrapper for your configuration module:
`javascript
(function () {
return angular.module('myApp.config') // [] has been removed
.constant('..', '..');
})();
`You can provide a custom wrapper. Provide any string you want, just make sure to include
<%= module %> for where you want to embed the angular module.
`js
gulpNgConfig('myApp.config', {
wrap: 'define(["angular"], function () {\n return <%= module %> \n});'
});
`The reuslting file will contain:
`js
define(["angular"], function () {
return angular.module('myApp.config', [])
.constant('..', '..');
});
`$3
Type: String Default value: 'json' OptionalBy default, json file is used to generate the module. You can provide yml file to generate the module. Just set
parser to 'yml' or 'yaml'. If your file type is yml and you have not defined parser, your file will still be parsed and js be generated correctly.
For example, you have a config.yml file,
`yml
string: my string
integer: 12345
object:
one: 2
three:
- four
``javascript
gulp.src("config.yml")
.pipe(gulpNgConfig('myApp.config', {
parser: 'yml'
}));
`Generating,
`js
angular.module('myApp.config', [])
.constant('string', "my string")
.constant('integer', 12345)
.constant('object', {"one":2,"three":["four"]});
`$3
Type: Number|Boolean Default value: false OptionalThis allows
JSON.stringify to produce a pretty formatted output string.`js
gulp.src('config.json')
.pipe(gulpNgConfig('myApp.config', {
pretty: true // or 2, 4, etc -- all representing the number of spaces to indent
}));
`Will output a formatted
JSON object in the constants, instead of inline.
`js
angular.module("gulp-ng-config", [])
.constant("one", {
"two": "three"
});
`$3
Type: Array OptionalIf you only want some of the keys from the object imported, you can supply the keys you want the plugin to load.
Example
config.json file with unwanted keys:
`json
{
"version": "0.0.1",
"wanted key": "wanted value",
"unwanted key": "unwanted value"
}
`Usage of the plugin:
`js
gulpNgConfig("myApp.config", {
keys: ["version", "wanted key"]
})
`Expected output:
`js
angular.module("myApp.config", [])
.constant("version", "0.0.1")
.constant("wanted key", "wanted value");
`$3
Type: String OptionalThis allows the developer to provide a custom output template.
Sample template:
angularConfigTemplate.html
`html
var foo = 'bar';angular.module("<%= moduleName %>"<% if (createModule) { %>, []<% } %>)<% _.forEach(constants, function (constant) { %>
.<%= type %>("<%= constant.name %>", <%= constant.value %>)<% }); %>;
`Configuration:
`json
{
"Foo": "bar"
}
`Gulp task:
`js
gulp.src('config.json')
.pipe(gulpNgConfig('myApp.config', {
templateFilePath: path.normalize(path.join(__dirname, 'templateFilePath.html'))
}));
`Sample output:
`js
var foo = 'bar';angular.module('myApp.config', [])
.constant('Foo', 'bar');
`Additional Usages
$3
Use buffer-to-vinyl to create and stream a vinyl file into gulp-ng-config. Now config values can come from environment variables, command-line arguments or anywhere else.`js
var b2v = require('buffer-to-vinyl');
var gulpNgConfig = require('gulp-ng-config');gulp.task('make-config', function() {
var json = JSON.stringify({
// your config here
});
return b2v.stream(new Buffer(json), 'config.js')
.pipe(gulpNgConfig('myApp.config'))
.pipe(gulp.dest('build'));
});
`$3
An ES6/ES2015 template can be generated by passing wrap: true as a configuration to the pluginContributing
Contributions, issues, suggestions, and all other remarks are welcomed. To run locally just fork & clone the project and run npm install. Before submitting a Pull Request, make sure that your changes pass gulp test`, and if you are introducing or changing a feature, that you add/update any tests involved.