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CONFGET(1)		    General Commands Manual		    CONFGET(1)

NAME
       confget -- read a variable from a configuration file

SYNOPSIS
       confget	[-cOSx]	 [-N  |	 -n]  [-f  filename] [-m pattern] [-P postfix]
	       [-p prefix] [-s section]	[-t type] varname...
       confget [-OSx] [-N |  -n]  [-f  filename]  [-m  pattern]	 [-P  postfix]
	       [-p prefix] [-s section]	[-t type] -L pattern...
       confget	[-OSx]	[-N  |	-n]  [-f  filename]  [-m pattern] [-P postfix]
	       [-p prefix] [-s section]	[-t type] -l
       confget [-f filename] -q	sections [-t type]
       confget [-hTV]

DESCRIPTION
       The confget utility examines a INI-style	 configuration	file  and  re-
       trieves	the  value  of the specified variables from the	specified sec-
       tion.  Its intended use is to let shell scripts use the same  INI-style
       configuration files as other programs, to avoid duplication of data.

       The  confget  utility may retrieve the values of	one or more variables,
       list all	the variables in a specified section, list  only  those	 whose
       names  or  values  match	a specified pattern (shell glob	or regular ex-
       pression), or check if a	variable is present in the file	 at  all.   It
       has  a "shell-quoting" output mode that quotes the variable values in a
       way suitable for	passing	them directly to a Bourne-style	shell.

       Options:

       -c      Check-only mode;	exit with a code of 0 if any of	the  variables
	       are present in the configuration	file, and 1 if there are none.

       -f filename
	       Specify	the  configuration file	to read	from, or "-" (a	single
	       dash) for standard input.

       -h      Display program usage information and exit.

       -L      Variable	list mode; display the names and values	of  all	 vari-
	       ables  in the specified section with names matching one or more
	       specified patterns.

       -l      List mode; display the names and	values of all variables	in the
	       specified section.

       -m pattern
	       Only display variables with if their values match the specified
	       pattern.

       -N      Always display the variable name	along with the value.

       -n      Never display the variable name,	only the value.

       -O      Allow variables in the specified	section	to override  variables
	       in  the	unnamed	section	at the start of	the file.  This	is the
	       only case when confget even considers variables	in  more  than
	       one section.

       -P postfix
	       Display this string after the variable name as a	postfix.

       -p prefix
	       Display this string before the variable name as a prefix.

       -q query
	       Query for a specific type of information.  For the present, the
	       only  supported	value  for  the	 query argument	is "sections",
	       which lists the names of	the sections defined in	the configura-
	       tion file.

       -S      Quote the variable values so that the "var=value" lines may  be
	       passed directly to the Bourne shell.

       -s section
	       Specify	the  configuration section to read.  If	this option is
	       specified, confget will only consider variables defined in  the
	       specified section; see the -O option for	the only exception.

	       If  this	 option	 is  not specified, confget will use the first
	       section found in	the configuration file.	 However, if the  con-
	       figuration  file	contains variable definitions before a section
	       header, confget will only examine them instead.

	       If the -s option	is specified with an empty string as the  sec-
	       tion  name,  confget will only examine variables	defined	before
	       any section header (a "real" unnamed default section); this  is
	       incompatible with the -O	option.

       -T      List  the  available  configuration  file types that may	be se-
	       lected by the -t	option.

       -t type
	       Specify the configuration file type.

       -V      Display program version information and exit.

       -x      Treat the patterns as regular expressions instead of shell glob
	       patterns.

ENVIRONMENT
       Not taken into consideration.

EXIT STATUS
       If the -c option	is specified, the confget utility  will	 exit  with  a
       status  of 0 if any of the specified variables exist in the config file
       and 1 if	none of	them are present.

       In normal operation, no matter whether any variables were found in  the
       configuration file or not, the confget utility exits with a status of 0
       upon  normal completion.	 If any	errors should occur while accessing or
       parsing the configuration file, the confget utility will	display	a  di-
       agnostic	message	on the standard	error stream and exit with a status of
       1.

EXAMPLES
       Retrieve	 the variable machine_id from the system section of a configu-
       ration file:

	     confget -f	h.conf -s system machine_id

       Retrieve	the variable hostname from the db section, but only if it ends
       in ".ringlet.net":

	     confget -f	h.conf -s db -m	'*.ringlet.net'	hostname

       Display the names and values of all variables declared before any  sec-
       tion has	been defined:

	     confget -f	h.conf -s '' -l

       Display	the  names  and	 values	of all variables in the	system section
       with names beginning with "mach"	 or  ending  in	 "name",  appending  a
       "cfg_" at the start of each variable name:

	     confget -f	h.conf -s system -p 'cfg_' -L 'mach*' '*name'

       Display the names and values of all variables in	the system section:

	     confget -f	h.conf -s system -l

       Safely read the contents	of the db section:

	     eval `confget -f h.conf -s	db -p db_ -S -l`

SEE ALSO
       For  another  way  to parse INI files, see the Config::IniFiles(3) Perl
       module.

STANDARDS
       No standards documentation  was	harmed	in  the	 process  of  creating
       confget.

BUGS
       Please report any bugs in confget to the	author.

AUTHOR
       The  confget  utility  was  conceived  and  written  by	Peter Pentchev
       <roam@ringlet.net> in 2008.

FreeBSD	ports 15.0		  May 9, 2021			    CONFGET(1)

Want to link to this manual page? Use this URL:
<https://man.freebsd.org/cgi/man.cgi?query=confget&sektion=1&manpath=FreeBSD+Ports+15.0>

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