dnscontrol/documentation/functions/global/require.md

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---
name: require
parameters:
- path
ts_ignore: true
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---
`require(...)` loads the specified JavaScript or JSON file, allowing
to split your configuration across multiple files.
If the supplied `path` string ends with `.js`, the file is interpreted
as JavaScript code, almost as though its contents had been included in
the currently-executing file. If the path string ends with `.json`,
`require()` returns the `JSON.parse()` of the file's contents.
If the path string begins with a `.`, it is interpreted relative to
the currently-loading file (which may not be the file where the
`require()` statement is, if called within a function), otherwise it
is interpreted relative to the program's working directory at the time
of the call.
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{% code title="dnsconfig.js" %}
```javascript
require("kubernetes/clusters.js");
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D("example.com", REG_MY_PROVIDER, PROVIDER,
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IncludeKubernetes()
);
```
{% endcode %}
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{% code title="kubernetes/clusters.js" %}
```javascript
require("./clusters/prod.js");
require("./clusters/dev.js");
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function IncludeKubernetes() {
return [includeK8Sprod(), includeK8Sdev()];
}
```
{% endcode %}
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{% code title="kubernetes/clusters/prod.js" %}
```javascript
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function includeK8Sprod() {
return [
// ...
];
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}
```
{% endcode %}
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{% code title="kubernetes/clusters/dev.js" %}
```javascript
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function includeK8Sdev() {
return [
// ...
];
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}
```
{% endcode %}
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You can also use it to require JSON files and initialize variables with it:
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{% code title="dnsconfig.js" %}
```javascript
var domains = require("./domain-ip-map.json")
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for (var domain in domains) {
D(domain, REG_MY_PROVIDER, PROVIDER,
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A("@", domains[domain])
);
}
```
{% endcode %}
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{% code title="domain-ip-map.json" %}
```javascript
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{
"example.com": "1.1.1.1",
"other-example.com``": "5.5.5.5"
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}
```
{% endcode %}
# Future
It might be better to rename the function to something like
`include()` instead, (leaving `require` as a deprecated alias) because
by analogy it is *much* closer to PHP's `include()` function than it
is to node's `require()`. After all, the reason node.js calls it
"require" is because it's a declarative statement saying the file is
needed, and so should be loaded if it hasn't already been loaded.
In contrast, DNSControl's `require()` is actually an imperative command to
load the file and execute the code or parse the data from it. (So if
two files both `require("./tools.js")`, for example, then it will be
loaded twice, whereas in node.js it would only be loaded once.)