# QMK CLI Configuration This document explains how `qmk config` works. # Introduction Configuration for the QMK CLI is a key/value system. Each key consists of a subcommand and an argument name separated by a period. This allows for a straightforward and direct translation between config keys and the arguments they set. ## Simple Example As an example let's look at the command `qmk compile --keyboard clueboard/66/rev4 --keymap default`. There are two command line arguments that could be read from configuration instead: * `compile.keyboard` * `compile.keymap` Let's set these now: ``` $ qmk config compile.keyboard=clueboard/66/rev4 compile.keymap=default compile.keyboard: None -> clueboard/66/rev4 compile.keymap: None -> default Ψ Wrote configuration to '/Users/example/Library/Application Support/qmk/qmk.ini' ``` Now I can run `qmk compile` without specifying my keyboard and keymap each time. ## Setting User Defaults Sometimes you want to share a setting between multiple commands. For example, multiple commands take the argument `--keyboard`. Rather than setting this value for every command you can set a user value which will be used by any command that takes that argument. Example: ``` $ qmk config user.keyboard=clueboard/66/rev4 user.keymap=default user.keyboard: None -> clueboard/66/rev4 user.keymap: None -> default Ψ Wrote configuration to '/Users/example/Library/Application Support/qmk/qmk.ini' ``` # CLI Documentation (`qmk config`) The `qmk config` command is used to interact with the underlying configuration. When run with no argument it shows the current configuration. When arguments are supplied they are assumed to be configuration tokens, which are strings containing no spaces with the following form: [.][=] ## Setting Configuration Values You can set configuration values by putting an equal sign (=) into your config key. The key must always be the full `
.` form. Example: ``` $ qmk config default.keymap=default default.keymap: None -> default Ψ Wrote configuration to '/Users/example/Library/Application Support/qmk/qmk.ini' ``` ## Reading Configuration Values You can read configuration values for the entire configuration, a single key, or for an entire section. You can also specify multiple keys to display more than one value. ### Entire Configuration Example qmk config ### Whole Section Example qmk config compile ### Single Key Example qmk config compile.keyboard ### Multiple Keys Example qmk config user compile.keyboard compile.keymap ## Deleting Configuration Values You can delete a configuration value by setting it to the special string `None`. Example: ``` $ qmk config default.keymap=None default.keymap: default -> None Ψ Wrote configuration to '/Users/example/Library/Application Support/qmk/qmk.ini' ``` ## Multiple Operations You can combine multiple read and write operations into a single command. They will be executed and displayed in order: ``` $ qmk config compile default.keymap=default compile.keymap=None compile.keymap=skully compile.keyboard=clueboard/66_hotswap/gen1 default.keymap: None -> default compile.keymap: skully -> None Ψ Wrote configuration to '/Users/example/Library/Application Support/qmk/qmk.ini' ``` # User Configuration Options | Key | Default Value | Description | |-----|---------------|-------------| | user.keyboard | None | The keyboard path (Example: `clueboard/66/rev4`) | | user.keymap | None | The keymap name (Example: `default`) | | user.name | None | The user's GitHub username. | # All Configuration Options | Key | Default Value | Description | |-----|---------------|-------------| | compile.keyboard | None | The keyboard path (Example: `clueboard/66/rev4`) | | compile.keymap | None | The keymap name (Example: `default`) | | hello.name | None | The name to greet when run. | | new_keyboard.keyboard | None | The keyboard path (Example: `clueboard/66/rev4`) | | new_keyboard.keymap | None | The keymap name (Example: `default`) |