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Cuttlefish for Application Users
If you're a user of an erlang application that supports cuttlefish conf files, welcome!
Cuttlefish is a pun on the pronunciation of 'sysctl'. As someone configuring an application, you might be familiar with 'sysctl' and it's with that in mind that we designed Cuttlefish.
Here are the simple rules of the syntax:
- Everything you need to know about a single setting is on one line
- Lines are structured
Key
=Value
- Any line starting with
#
is a comment, and will be ignored.
The author of your particular application will have included a
Cuttlefish schema as part of their application. That schema defines
what keys can be defined and what the datatypes for those values can
be. They also define how they map to the traditional app.config
of
an Erlang application. Honestly, Cuttlefish exists so you don't have
to worry about app.config
s anymore. Leave that to Erlang developers
who actually like that syntax!
With that said, you probably know about app.config
s from previous
versions of the Erlang application you're dealing with. In that case,
note that until you port your app.config
to a .conf
file,
Cuttlefish will see your app.config
sitting where it's supposed to,
and use that instead.
There may be settings that an Erlang developer chooses not to expose
via Cuttlefish, and in that scenario, you have the ability to add an
advanced.config
file to the same directory your .conf
file lives
in. This will allow you to override anything Cuttlefish does with a
specific Erlang term, if you wind up missing that kind of thing.