5.3. Override Precedence#

When the same setting can come from multiple sources, FlareInspect resolves conflicts using a strict precedence order:

CLI flag → Config file → Environment variable → Default

The first source that provides a value wins. Sources later in the chain are ignored for that setting.

5.3.1. Precedence Order (highest to lowest)#

Priority

Source

Example

1 (highest)

CLI flag

--threshold 90

2

Config file

ci: { threshold: 80 } in .flareinspect.yml

3

Environment variable

CLOUDFLARE_TOKEN

4 (lowest)

Built-in default

concurrency: 3

5.3.2. Example: Threshold Resolution#

Suppose all three sources provide a threshold value:

  • CLI: --threshold 90

  • Config file: ci: { threshold: 80 }

  • Default: no threshold

FlareInspect uses 90 because the CLI flag takes precedence. If --threshold is omitted, the config file value of 80 is used. If neither is set, there is no threshold gate.

5.3.3. Example: Token Resolution#

  • CLI: --token abc123

  • Config file: token: $CLOUDFLARE_TOKEN

  • Environment: CLOUDFLARE_TOKEN=xyz789

FlareInspect uses abc123 from the CLI. Without the CLI flag, it reads the config file, interpolates $CLOUDFLARE_TOKEN to xyz789, and uses that.

5.3.4. Merging Behavior#

Settings are merged per-key, not replaced wholesale. A CLI flag overrides only the specific key it targets — all other keys continue to be resolved from the config file or defaults. For example, passing --checks dns,ssl on the CLI overrides only the checks list while the concurrency, zones, and other settings still come from the config file.