As of this writing, there already exists a defacto standard library for YAML processing Go: https://github.com/go-yaml/yaml. However we feel that some features are lacking, namely:
- Pretty format for error notifacations
- Directly manipulate the YAML abstract syntax tree
- Support
Anchor
andAlias
when marshaling - Allow referencing elements declared in another file via anchors
- This library should be considered alpha grade. API may still change.
- Pretty format for error notifacations
- Support
Scanner
orLexer
orParser
as public API - Support
Anchor
andAlias
to Marshaler - Allow referencing elements declared in another file via anchors
Support compatible interface to go-yaml/yaml
by using reflect
var v struct {
A int
B string
}
v.A = 1
v.B = "hello"
bytes, err := yaml.Marshal(v)
if err != nil {
...
}
fmt.Println(string(bytes)) // "a: 1\nb: hello\n"
yml := `
%YAML 1.2
---
a: 1
b: c
`
var v struct {
A int
B string
}
if err := yaml.Unmarshal([]byte(yml), &v); err != nil {
...
}
For custom marshal/unmarshaling, implement one of Bytes or Interface Marshaler/Unmarshaler. The difference is that while BytesMarshaler/BytesUnmarshaler behave like encoding.json
, InterfaceMarshaler/InterfaceUnmarshaler behave like gopkg.in/yaml.v2
.
Semantically both are the same, but they differ in performance. Because indentation matter in YAML, you cannot simply accept a valid YAML fragment from a Marshaler, and expect it to work when it is attached to the parent container's serialized form. Therefore when we receive use the BytesMarshaler, which returns []byte, we must decode it once to figure out how to make it work in the given context. If you use the InterfaceMarshaler, we can skip the decoding.
If you are repeatedly marshaling complex objects, the latter is always better performance wise. But if you are, for example, just providing a choice between a config file format that is read only once, the former is probably easier to code.
testdata
directory includes anchor.yml
file
├── testdata
└── anchor.yml
And anchor.yml
is defined the following.
a: &a
b: 1
c: hello
Then, if yaml.ReferenceDirs("testdata")
option passed to yaml.Decoder
,
Decoder
try to find anchor definition from YAML files the under testdata
directory.
buf := bytes.NewBufferString("a: *a\n")
dec := yaml.NewDecoder(buf, yaml.ReferenceDirs("testdata"))
var v struct {
A struct {
B int
C string
}
}
if err := dec.Decode(&v); err != nil {
...
}
fmt.Printf("%+v\n", v) // {A:{B:1 C:hello}}
If you want to use anchor
or alias
, you can define it as a struct tag.
type T struct {
A int
B string
}
var v struct {
C *T `yaml:"c,anchor=x"`
D *T `yaml:"d,alias=x"`
}
v.C = &T{A: 1, B: "hello"}
v.D = v.C
bytes, err := yaml.Marshal(v)
if err != nil {
panic(err)
}
fmt.Println(string(bytes))
/*
c: &x
a: 1
b: hello
d: *x
*/
If you do not explicitly declare the anchor name, the default behavior is to
use the equivalent of strings.ToLower($FieldName)
as the name of the anchor.
If you do not explicitly declare the alias name AND the value is a pointer to another element, we look up the anchor name by finding out which anchor field the value is assigned to by looking up its pointer address.
type T struct {
I int
S string
}
var v struct {
A *T `yaml:"a,anchor"`
B *T `yaml:"b,anchor"`
C *T `yaml:"c,alias"`
D *T `yaml:"d,alias"`
}
v.A = &T{I: 1, S: "hello"}
v.B = &T{I: 2, S: "world"}
v.C = v.A // C has same pointer address to A
v.D = v.B // D has same pointer address to B
bytes, err := yaml.Marshal(v)
if err != nil {
...
}
fmt.Println(string(bytes))
/*
a: &a
i: 1
s: hello
b: &b
i: 2
s: world
c: *a
d: *b
*/
Merge key and alias ( <<: *alias
) can be used by embedding a structure with the inline,alias
tag .
type Person struct {
*Person `yaml:",omitempty,inline,alias"` // embed Person type for default value
Name string `yaml:",omitempty"`
Age int `yaml:",omitempty"`
}
defaultPerson := &Person{
Name: "John Smith",
Age: 20,
}
people := []*Person{
{
Person: defaultPerson, // assign default value
Name: "Ken", // override Name property
Age: 10, // override Age property
},
{
Person: defaultPerson, // assign default value only
},
}
var doc struct {
Default *Person `yaml:"default,anchor"`
People []*Person `yaml:"people"`
}
doc.Default = defaultPerson
doc.People = people
bytes, err := yaml.Marshal(doc)
if err != nil {
...
}
fmt.Println(string(bytes))
/*
default: &default
name: John Smith
age: 20
people:
- <<: *default
name: Ken
age: 10
- <<: *default
*/
Error values produced during parsing has two extra features over regular error values.
First by default they contain extra information on the location of the error from the source YAML document, to make it easier finding the error location.
Second, the error messages can optionally be colorized.
If you would like to control exactly how the output looks like, consider
using yaml.FormatError
, which accepts two boolean values to
control turning on/off these features
$ go get -u github.com/goccy/go-yaml
print yaml file with color
$ go get -u github.com/goccy/go-yaml/cmd/ycat
MIT