Metadata-Version: 2.4
Name: typed-format-version
Version: 0.2.2
Summary: Extract the version of a structured file's format specification.
Project-URL: Homepage, https://devel.ringlet.net/devel/typed-format-version/
Project-URL: Source, https://gitlab.com/ppentchev/typed-format-version
Project-URL: API Reference, https://devel.ringlet.net/devel/typed-format-version/api-python/
Author-email: Peter Pentchev <roam@ringlet.net>
Classifier: Development Status :: 5 - Production/Stable
Classifier: Intended Audience :: Developers
Classifier: License :: DFSG approved
Classifier: License :: Freely Distributable
Classifier: License :: OSI Approved :: BSD License
Classifier: Operating System :: OS Independent
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.8
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.9
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.10
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.11
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.12
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.13
Classifier: Topic :: Software Development :: Libraries
Classifier: Topic :: Software Development :: Libraries :: Python Modules
Classifier: Typing :: Typed
Requires-Python: >=3.8
Requires-Dist: typedload<3,>=2
Description-Content-Type: text/markdown

<!--
SPDX-FileCopyrightText: Peter Pentchev <roam@ringlet.net>
SPDX-License-Identifier: BSD-2-Clause
-->

# typed-format-version: load format.version.{major,minor} from a structured file.

## DEPRECATED in favor of media-type-version

This library is deprecated.
The author is not aware of any other libraries and programs using it, and
he himself has moved on to using a `mediaType` declaration to specify both
the format and its version.
See [the media-type-version Python library][pypi-media-type-version] and
[the media-type-version Rust crate][crates-io-media-type-version] for
more information.

## Overview

This module tries to parse a format.version "section" in some raw data that
may have been loaded from a configuration file, and determines whether that
section contains valid "major" and "minor" integer values. The caller can
then choose the correct schema to validate the loaded data against, e.g. by
using the `typedload` library with the correct top-level dataclass definition.

The most commonly used function will probably be `get_version()`: it takes
a raw data dictionary and returns a `Version` object with a `major` and `minor`
integer attributes, if the data contained a valid "format" dictionary with
a "version" dictionary within it. Optionally the `get_version()` function can
remove the top-level "format" member, if a true value is passed for the `pop`
argument.

## Python examples

Load some data from a file, make sure it is in the correct format:

    try:
        raw = json.load(pathlib.Path(cfgfile).open())
        ver = typed_format_version.get_version(raw)
    except (OSError, ValueError) as err:
        sys.exit(f"Invalid data format for {cfgfile}: {err}")
    if ver.as_version_tuple() != (0, 2):
        sys.exit("Only config format 0.2 supported right now")
    cfg = typedload.load(raw, ConfigData)

Determine the best version to validate against, allowing more fields to be
added in minor versions that we do not know about yet:

    SCHEMAS = {
        (0, 1): ConfigTop_0_1,
        (0, 2): ConfigTop_0_2,
        (1, 0): ConfigTop_1_0,
    }
    try:
        raw = json.load(pathlib.Path(cfgfile).open())
        exact_ver = typed_format_version.get_version(raw)
        mver = typed_format_version.determine_version_match(exact_ver, SCHEMAS)
    except (OSError, ValueError) as err:
        sys.exit(f"Invalid data format for {cfgfile}: {err}")
    
    # Either load the data directly...
    cfg = typedload.load(raw, SCHEMAS[mver.version], failonextra=mver.failonextra)
    
    # ...or do something with mver.version, possibly examining ver further and
    # "upgrading" the loaded configuration from earlier versions by e.g.
    # adding default values for fields or reshaping the data.

## Rust examples

Load some data from a file, make sure it is in the correct format:

    use std::fs;
    
    use anyhow::{bail, Context};
    
    let contents = fs::read_to_string(&infile).with_context(|| format!("Could not read {}", infile.display()))?;
    let fver = typed_format_version::get_version_from_str(&contents, serde_json::from_str)
        .with_contedxt(|| format!("Could not parse format.version from {}", infile.display()))?;
    if (fver.major(), fver.minor()) != (0, 2) {
        bail!("Only config format 0.2 supported right now");
    }
    let cfg: ConfigData = serde_json::from_str(&contents)
        .with_context(|| format!("Could not parse {}", infile.display()))?;

Upgrade from an earlier versions of the data format:

    let cfg = match fver.major() {
        0 => {
            let cfg_0: ConfigData_0 = serde_json::from_str(&contents)
                .with_context(|| format!("Could not parse {}", infile.display()))?;
            upgrade_from_version_0(cfg_0)
        },
        1 => serde_json::from_str::<ConfigData>(&contents)
            .with_context(|| format!("Could not parse {}", infile.display()))?,
        _ => bail!(format!("Unexpected major format version {}", fver.major()),
    };

## Contact

The `typed-format-version` library is developed in
[a GitLab repository](https://gitlab.com/ppentchev/typed-format-version).
It was written by [Peter Pentchev](mailto:roam@ringlet.net).

[crates-io-media-type-version]: https://crates.io/crates/media-type-version "The media-type-version Rust crate"
[pypi-media-type-version]: https://pypi.org/project/media-type-version "The media-type-version Python library"
