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303 lines
8.4 KiB
Markdown
303 lines
8.4 KiB
Markdown
# Applications Configuration Panel
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<div class="alert alert-warning">For now, all those features are <b>EXPERIMENTAL</b>
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and aren't ready for production and are probably going to change again, if you
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still decide to use them don't expect them to be stable and follow to core
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development of YunoHost otherwise <b>they might randomly breaks on your apps</b>
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</div>
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Configuration panel, or "config_panel", is a way for an application to ship a
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custom configuration panel available in the YunoHost's admin interface for the
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application. This is generally used to replace the "you need to manually edit
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this configuration file (or files) in whatever format/language for this
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application in cli and do all those complex commands" to "just use to
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configuration panel to change the options of the application".
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Yes, this is one place to add this so asked "how can I make my application from
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public to private and vice versa" user request.
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config_panel is probably the most complex YunoHost apps feature as you'll need
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to write both a description of the panel in toml and a script that will need to
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both work in a "display mode" and "handle inputs" mode. But this is still very
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doable and very worth it if you need it.
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Here how it looks like in the admin interface:
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![actions admin screenshot](images/config_panel_example.png)
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## Usage
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### Admin interface
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The configuration panel for an application can be accessed with this url:
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https://my_domain.tld/yunohost/admin/#/apps/$app_id/config-panel
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<div class="alert alert-warning">For now since those features are still
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experimental you won't find any direct links to the app actions on the app
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page</div>
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### CLI
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For now the CLI API for the config panel is not very good at all, you can still
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use it but it's really impracticable.
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* `yunohost app config show-panel $app_id` will show the panel. **But for now
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it's very broken and will asked question for unfilled value of the panel**.
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* `yunohost app config apply` will call the script with apply and... no values
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since you aren't passing them, except if you are ready to play with the `-a`
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flag and pass every global value in the HTTP POST format (protip: you don't)
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In conclusion: don't use the CLI for now, we need to design something better.
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## How to add a config_ panel to your application
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### config_panel.toml
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Firs, you need to write a `config_panel.toml` (or `config_panel.json` if you
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REALLY wants it but we really don't recommend it has it is very error prone and
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frustrating to write by hand) that will be located at the root of you
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application, next to the manifest.json/toml. It looks like this:
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<div class="alert alert-info">
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The options are written in **[YunoHost Arguments
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Format](#/packaging_apps_arguments_format)** like in `manifest.toml/json`
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</div>
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```toml
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version = "0.1" # version number, not used yet but important
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name = "name that will be displayed on the admin"
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[section_id]
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name = "name of the section that will be displayed"
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[section_id.sub_section_id]
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name = "sub section"
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# those arguments are in yunohost argument format like manifest.json
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[section_id.sub_section_id.option_id]
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ask.en = "the text displayed for the option"
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type = "argument_option"
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default = true
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help = "A public Leed will be accessible for third party apps.<br>By turning on 'anonymous readers' in Leed configuration, you can made your feeds public."
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[section_id.sub_section_id.another_option_id]
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...
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[section_id.another_sub_section_id]
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name = "stuff"
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[another_section_id]
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name = "stuff"
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...
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```
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And a real world example with the rendered admin:
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![config_panel_toml_example](images/config_panel_toml_example.png)
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As a text format:
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```toml
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version = "0.1"
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name = "Leed configuration panel"
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[main]
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name = "Leed configuration"
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[main.is_public]
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name = "Public access"
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# those arguments are in yunohost argument format
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[main.is_public.is_public]
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ask.en = "Is it a public website ?"
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type = "boolean"
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default = true
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help = "A public Leed will be accessible for third party apps.<br>By turning on 'anonymous readers' in Leed configuration, you can made your feeds public."
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[main.overwrite_files]
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name = "Overwriting config files"
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[main.overwrite_files.overwrite_nginx]
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ask.en = "Overwrite the nginx config file ?"
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type = "boolean"
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default = true
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help = "If the file is overwritten, a backup will be created."
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[main.overwrite_files.overwrite_phpfpm]
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ask.en = "Overwrite the php-fpm config file ?"
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type = "boolean"
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default = true
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help = "If the file is overwritten, a backup will be created."
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...
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```
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### the scripts/config script
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To make your configuration panel functional you need write a "config" script
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that will be location in the "script" folder like the "install" script. This
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script will be called at 2 different occasions:
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* when the configuration panel is displayed and yunohost needs to fill the values
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* when the configuration is modified by the user
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Every option of the configuration panel will be send to the script
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following this naming convention:
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```bash
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YNH_{section_id}_{sub_section_id}_{option_id} (everything in upper case)
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```
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For example, this option value:
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```toml
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[main]
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name = "Leed configuration"
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[main.is_public]
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name = "Public access"
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# those arguments are in yunohost argument format
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[main.is_public.is_public]
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...
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```
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Will be available under this name in the config script:
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```
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YNH_CONFIG_MAIN_IS_PUBLIC_IS_PUBLIC
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```
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Also, the same "scripts/config" script is called in both situation. To differentiate
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those situation the first argument passed to the config script is either "show"
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or "apply".
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A common pattern to handle that is to write your script following this pattern:
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```bash
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show_config() {
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# do stuff
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}
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apply_config() {
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# do stuff
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}
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case $1 in
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show) show_config;;
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apply) apply_config;;
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esac
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```
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#### The "show" part
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The show part is when the user ask to see the current state of the
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configuration panel (like opening to configuration panel page on the admin
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interface). The role of the scripts/config script here is to gather all the
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relevant information, by for example parsing a configuration file or querying a
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database, and communicate it to YunoHost. To do so, you need to use the helper
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`ynh_return` like so:
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```bash
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ynh_return "YNH_CONFIG_SOME_VARIABLE_NAME=some_value"
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```
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For example, for this config_panel:
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```toml
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[main]
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name = "Leed configuration"
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[main.is_public]
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name = "Public access"
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# those arguments are in yunohost argument format
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[main.is_public.is_public]
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...
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```
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You would do:
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```bash
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ynh_return "YNH_CONFIG_MAIN_IS_PUBLIC_IS_PUBLIC=1"
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```
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If you don't provide any value for a configuration **the default value will be used**.
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Expanding our previous example you would have this scripts/config script:
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```bash
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show_config() {
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ynh_return "YNH_CONFIG_MAIN_IS_PUBLIC_IS_PUBLIC=1"
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}
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apply_config() {
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# do stuff
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}
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case $1 in
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show) show_config;;
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apply) apply_config;;
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esac
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```
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#### The "apply" part
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The "apply" part is called when the user click on "submit" on the configuration
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page on the admin interface. This part is simpler to write:
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- the scripts/config will be called with "apply"
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- all the value in the config panel (modified or not) are available as global
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variable in the script following the format `YNH_{section_id}_{sub_section_id}_{option_id}`
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(exactly the same than for show)
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- the script is responsible for doing whatever it wants with those information
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- once the script as succeeded, the admin interface display the config panel
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again so the script is called again in "show" mode
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Expanding the previous script that could look like that:
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```bash
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show_config() {
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ynh_return "YNH_CONFIG_MAIN_IS_PUBLIC_IS_PUBLIC=1"
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}
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apply_config() {
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value=$YNH_CONFIG_MAIN_IS_PUBLIC_IS_PUBLIC
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# do some stuff with value
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}
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case $1 in
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show) show_config;;
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apply) apply_config;;
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esac
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```
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Or if you want a full useless simple script that store the value in a file,
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this can looks like this:
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```bash
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dummy_config_file="dummy_config_file.ini"
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show_config() {
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if [ -e $dummy_config_file ]
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then
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ynh_return "YNH_CONFIG_MAIN_IS_PUBLIC_IS_PUBLIC=$(cat $dummy_config_file)"
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fi
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# the default value will be used
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}
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apply_config() {
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echo $YNH_CONFIG_MAIN_IS_PUBLIC_IS_PUBLIC > $dummy_config_file
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}
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case $1 in
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show) show_config;;
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apply) apply_config;;
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esac
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```
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