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The config API gives callers a way to access Git configuration files (and files which have the same syntax). See git-config[1] for a discussion of the config file syntax.

General Usage

Config files are parsed linearly, and each variable found is passed to a caller-provided callback function. The callback function is responsible for any actions to be taken on the config option, and is free to ignore some options. It is not uncommon for the configuration to be parsed several times during the run of a Git program, with different callbacks picking out different variables useful to themselves.

A config callback function takes three parameters:

  • the name of the parsed variable. This is in canonical "flat" form: the section, subsection, and variable segments will be separated by dots, and the section and variable segments will be all lowercase. E.g., core.ignorecase, diff.SomeType.textconv.

  • the value of the found variable, as a string. If the variable had no value specified, the value will be NULL (typically this means it should be interpreted as boolean true).

  • a void pointer passed in by the caller of the config API; this can contain callback-specific data

A config callback should return 0 for success, or -1 if the variable could not be parsed properly.

Basic Config Querying

Most programs will simply want to look up variables in all config files that Git knows about, using the normal precedence rules. To do this, call git_config with a callback function and void data pointer.

git_config will read all config sources in order of increasing priority. Thus a callback should typically overwrite previously-seen entries with new ones (e.g., if both the user-wide ~/.gitconfig and repo-specific .git/config contain color.ui, the config machinery will first feed the user-wide one to the callback, and then the repo-specific one; by overwriting, the higher-priority repo-specific value is left at the end).

The git_config_with_options function lets the caller examine config while adjusting some of the default behavior of git_config. It should almost never be used by "regular" Git code that is looking up configuration variables. It is intended for advanced callers like git-config, which are intentionally tweaking the normal config-lookup process. It takes two extra parameters:

filename

If this parameter is non-NULL, it specifies the name of a file to parse for configuration, rather than looking in the usual files. Regular git_config defaults to NULL.

respect_includes

Specify whether include directives should be followed in parsed files. Regular git_config defaults to 1.

There is a special version of git_config called git_config_early. This version takes an additional parameter to specify the repository config, instead of having it looked up via git_path. This is useful early in a Git program before the repository has been found. Unless you’re working with early setup code, you probably don’t want to use this.

Reading Specific Files

To read a specific file in git-config format, use git_config_from_file. This takes the same callback and data parameters as git_config.

Value Parsing Helpers

To aid in parsing string values, the config API provides callbacks with a number of helper functions, including:

git_config_int

Parse the string to an integer, including unit factors. Dies on error; otherwise, returns the parsed result.

git_config_ulong

Identical to git_config_int, but for unsigned longs.

git_config_bool

Parse a string into a boolean value, respecting keywords like "true" and "false". Integer values are converted into true/false values (when they are non-zero or zero, respectively). Other values cause a die(). If parsing is successful, the return value is the result.

git_config_bool_or_int

Same as git_config_bool, except that integers are returned as-is, and an is_bool flag is unset.

git_config_maybe_bool

Same as git_config_bool, except that it returns -1 on error rather than dying.

git_config_string

Allocates and copies the value string into the dest parameter; if no string is given, prints an error message and returns -1.

git_config_pathname

Similar to git_config_string, but expands ~ or ~user into the user’s home directory when found at the beginning of the path.

Include Directives

By default, the config parser does not respect include directives. However, a caller can use the special git_config_include wrapper callback to support them. To do so, you simply wrap your "real" callback function and data pointer in a struct config_include_data, and pass the wrapper to the regular config-reading functions. For example:

int read_file_with_include(const char *file, config_fn_t fn, void *data)
{
	struct config_include_data inc = CONFIG_INCLUDE_INIT;
	inc.fn = fn;
	inc.data = data;
	return git_config_from_file(git_config_include, file, &inc);
}

git_config respects includes automatically. The lower-level git_config_from_file does not.

Writing Config Files

Git gives multiple entry points in the Config API to write config values to files namely git_config_set_in_file and git_config_set, which write to a specific config file or to .git/config respectively. They both take a key/value pair as parameter. In the end they both call git_config_set_multivar_in_file which takes four parameters:

  • the name of the file, as a string, to which key/value pairs will be written.

  • the name of key, as a string. This is in canonical "flat" form: the section, subsection, and variable segments will be separated by dots, and the section and variable segments will be all lowercase. E.g., core.ignorecase, diff.SomeType.textconv.

  • the value of the variable, as a string. If value is equal to NULL, it will remove the matching key from the config file.

  • the value regex, as a string. It will disregard key/value pairs where value does not match.

  • a multi_replace value, as an int. If value is equal to zero, nothing or only one matching key/value is replaced, else all matching key/values (regardless how many) are removed, before the new pair is written.

It returns 0 on success.

Also, there are functions git_config_rename_section and git_config_rename_section_in_file with parameters old_name and new_name for renaming or removing sections in the config files. If NULL is passed through new_name parameter, the section will be removed from the config file.

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