================================== Getting started ================================== What is options handling ? ================================= Due to more and more available options required to set up an operating system, compiler options or whatever, it became quite annoying to hand the necessary options to where they are actually used and even more annoying to add new options. To circumvent these problems the configuration control was introduced... What is Tiramisu ? =================== Tiramisu is an options handler and an options controller, which aims at producing flexible and fast options access. The main advantages are its access rules and the fact that the whole consistency is preserved at any time, see :doc:`consistency`. There is of course type and structure validations, but also validations towards the whole options. Furthermore, options can be reached and changed according to the access rules from nearly everywhere in your appliance. Just the facts ============== .. _gettingtiramisu: Download --------- To obtain a copy of the sources, check it out from the repository using `git`. We suggest using `git` if one wants to access to the current developments. :: git clone git://git.labs.libre-entreprise.org/tiramisu.git This will get you a fresh checkout of the code repository in a local directory named ``tiramisu``. Getting started ------------------- Option objects can be created in different ways. Let's perform very basic :class:`~tiramisu.option.Option` and :class:`~tiramisu.config.Config` object manipulations: :: >>> from tiramisu.config import Config >>> from tiramisu.option import OptionDescription, BoolOption >>> # let's create a group of options... with only one option inside >>> descr = OptionDescription("optgroup", "", [ ... BoolOption("bool", "", default=False)]) >>> # c is a namespace as well as a container for the options >>> c = Config(descr) >>> c.bool False >>> c.bool = True >>> c.bool True So by now, we have: - a namespace (which is `c` here) - the access of an option's value by the attribute access way (here `bool`, which is a boolean option :class:`~tiramisu.option.BoolOption()`. So, option objects are produced at the entry point `c` and then handed down to where they are actually used when `c.bool` is triggered. This keeps options local but available at any timer and consistent. Once the namespace is created, we can set a :meth:`~config.CommonConfig.read_write()` access to the options:: >>> c.read_write() which enables us to set a bunch of access rules that we wil explain later in :doc:`status`.