ButlerConfig¶
-
class
lsst.daf.butler.
ButlerConfig
(other=None)¶ Bases:
lsst.daf.butler.Config
Contains the configuration for a
Butler
The configuration is read and merged with default configurations for the particular classes. The defaults are read according to the rules outlined in
ConfigSubset
. Each component of the configuration associated with a configuration class reads its own defaults.Parameters: - other :
str
,Config
, optional Path to butler configuration YAML file or a directory containing a “butler.yaml” file. If
None
the butler will be configured based entirely on defaults read from the environment. No defaults will be read if aButlerConfig
is supplied directly.
Methods Summary
asArray
(name)Get a value as an array. clear
()copy
()dump
(output)Writes the config to a yaml stream. dumpToFile
(path)Writes the config to a file. get
(k[,d])items
()keys
()merge
(other)Like Config.update, but will add keys & values from other that DO NOT EXIST in self. nameTuples
([topLevelOnly])Get tuples representing the name hierarchies of all keys. names
([topLevelOnly, delimiter])Get a delimited name of all the keys in the hierarchy. overrideParameters
(configType, config, full)Generic helper function for overriding specific config parameters pop
(k[,d])If key is not found, d is returned if given, otherwise KeyError is raised. popitem
()as a 2-tuple; but raise KeyError if D is empty. ppprint
()helper function for debugging, prints a config out in a readable way in the debugger. setdefault
(k[,d])update
(other)Like dict.update, but will add or modify keys in nested dicts, instead of overwriting the nested dict entirely. values
()Methods Documentation
-
asArray
(name)¶ Get a value as an array.
May contain one or more elements.
Parameters: - name :
str
Key to use to retrieve value.
Returns: - array :
collections.Sequence
The value corresponding to name, but guaranteed to be returned as a list with at least one element. If the value is a
Sequence
(and not astr
) the value itself will be returned, else the value will be the first element.
- name :
-
clear
() → None. Remove all items from D.¶
-
copy
()¶
-
dump
(output)¶ Writes the config to a yaml stream.
Parameters: - output
The YAML stream to use for output.
-
dumpToFile
(path)¶ Writes the config to a file.
Parameters: - path :
str
Path to the file to use for output.
- path :
-
get
(k[, d]) → D[k] if k in D, else d. d defaults to None.¶
-
items
() → a set-like object providing a view on D's items¶
-
keys
() → a set-like object providing a view on D's keys¶
-
merge
(other)¶ Like Config.update, but will add keys & values from other that DO NOT EXIST in self.
Keys and values that already exist in self will NOT be overwritten.
Parameters:
-
nameTuples
(topLevelOnly=False)¶ Get tuples representing the name hierarchies of all keys.
The tuples returned from this method are guaranteed to be usable to access items in the configuration object.
Parameters: - topLevelOnly :
bool
, optional If False, the default, a full hierarchy of names is returned. If True, only the top level are returned.
Returns: - topLevelOnly :
-
names
(topLevelOnly=False, delimiter=None)¶ Get a delimited name of all the keys in the hierarchy.
The values returned from this method are guaranteed to be usable to access items in the configuration object.
Parameters: - topLevelOnly :
bool
, optional If False, the default, a full hierarchy of names is returned. If True, only the top level are returned.
- delimiter :
str
, optional Delimiter to use when forming the keys. If the delimiter is present in any of the keys, it will be escaped in the returned names. If
None
given a delimiter will be automatically provided. The delimiter can not be alphanumeric.
Returns: Raises: - ValueError:
The supplied delimiter is alphanumeric.
Notes
This is different than the built-in method
dict.keys
, which will return only the first level keys.- topLevelOnly :
-
static
overrideParameters
(configType, config, full, toUpdate=None, toCopy=None)¶ Generic helper function for overriding specific config parameters
Allows for named parameters to be set to new values in bulk, and for other values to be set by copying from a reference config.
Assumes that the supplied config is compatible with
`configType
and will attach the updated values to the supplied config by looking for the related component key. It is assumed thatconfig
andfull
are from the same part of the configuration hierarchy.Parameters: - configType :
ConfigSubset
Config type to use to extract relevant items from
config
.- config :
Config
A
Config
to update. Only the subset understood by the suppliedConfigSubset
will be modified. Default values will not be inserted and the content will not be validated since mandatory keys are allowed to be missing until populated later by merging.- full :
Config
A complete config with all defaults expanded that can be converted to a
configType
. Read-only and will not be modified by this method. Values are read from here iftoCopy
is defined.Repository-specific options that should not be obtained from defaults when Butler instances are constructed should be copied from
full
toConfig
.- toUpdate :
dict
, optional A
dict
defining the keys to update and the new value to use. The keys and values can be any supported byConfig
assignment.- toCopy :
tuple
, optional tuple
of keys whose values should be copied fromfull
intoconfig
.
Raises: - ValueError
Neither
toUpdate
nottoCopy
were defined.
- configType :
-
pop
(k[, d]) → v, remove specified key and return the corresponding value.¶ If key is not found, d is returned if given, otherwise KeyError is raised.
-
popitem
() → (k, v), remove and return some (key, value) pair¶ as a 2-tuple; but raise KeyError if D is empty.
-
ppprint
()¶ helper function for debugging, prints a config out in a readable way in the debugger.
use: pdb> print(myConfigObject.ppprint())
Returns: - s :
str
A prettyprint formatted string representing the config
- s :
-
setdefault
(k[, d]) → D.get(k,d), also set D[k]=d if k not in D¶
-
update
(other)¶ Like dict.update, but will add or modify keys in nested dicts, instead of overwriting the nested dict entirely.
For example, for the given code: foo = {“a”: {“b”: 1}} foo.update({“a”: {“c”: 2}})
Parameters:
-
values
() → an object providing a view on D's values¶
- other :