.. index:: single: Yaml single: Components; Yaml
The Yaml component loads and dumps YAML files.
The Symfony Yaml component parses YAML strings to convert them to PHP arrays. It is also able to convert PHP arrays to YAML strings.
YAML, YAML Ain't Markup Language, is a human friendly data serialization standard for all programming languages. YAML is a great format for your configuration files. YAML files are as expressive as XML files and as readable as INI files.
The Symfony Yaml Component implements a selected subset of features defined in the YAML 1.2 version specification.
Tip
Learn more about the Yaml component in the :doc:`/components/yaml/yaml_format` article.
$ composer require symfony/yaml
One of the goals of Symfony Yaml is to find the right balance between speed and features. It supports just the needed features to handle configuration files. Notable lacking features are: document directives, multi-line quoted messages, compact block collections and multi-document files.
It sports a real parser and is able to parse a large subset of the YAML specification, for all your configuration needs. It also means that the parser is pretty robust, easy to understand, and simple enough to extend.
Whenever you have a syntax problem with your YAML files, the library outputs a helpful message with the filename and the line number where the problem occurred. It eases the debugging a lot.
It is also able to dump PHP arrays to YAML with object support, and inline level configuration for pretty outputs.
It supports most of the YAML built-in types like dates, integers, octal numbers, booleans, and much more...
Full support for references, aliases, and full merge key. Don't repeat yourself by referencing common configuration bits.
The Symfony Yaml component consists of two main classes: one parses YAML strings (:class:`Symfony\\Component\\Yaml\\Parser`), and the other dumps a PHP array to a YAML string (:class:`Symfony\\Component\\Yaml\\Dumper`).
On top of these two classes, the :class:`Symfony\\Component\\Yaml\\Yaml` class acts as a thin wrapper that simplifies common uses.
The :method:`Symfony\\Component\\Yaml\\Yaml::parse` method parses a YAML string and converts it to a PHP array:
use Symfony\Component\Yaml\Yaml; $value = Yaml::parse("foo: bar"); // $value = ['foo' => 'bar']
If an error occurs during parsing, the parser throws a :class:`Symfony\\Component\\Yaml\\Exception\\ParseException` exception indicating the error type and the line in the original YAML string where the error occurred:
use Symfony\Component\Yaml\Exception\ParseException; try { $value = Yaml::parse('...'); } catch (ParseException $exception) { printf('Unable to parse the YAML string: %s', $exception->getMessage()); }
The :method:`Symfony\\Component\\Yaml\\Yaml::parseFile` method parses the YAML contents of the given file path and converts them to a PHP value:
use Symfony\Component\Yaml\Yaml; $value = Yaml::parseFile('/path/to/file.yaml');
If an error occurs during parsing, the parser throws a ParseException
exception.
The :method:`Symfony\\Component\\Yaml\\Yaml::dump` method dumps any PHP array to its YAML representation:
use Symfony\Component\Yaml\Yaml; $array = [ 'foo' => 'bar', 'bar' => ['foo' => 'bar', 'bar' => 'baz'], ]; $yaml = Yaml::dump($array); file_put_contents('/path/to/file.yaml', $yaml);
If an error occurs during the dump, the parser throws a :class:`Symfony\\Component\\Yaml\\Exception\\DumpException` exception.
The YAML format supports two kind of representation for arrays, the expanded one, and the inline one. By default, the dumper uses the expanded representation:
foo: bar
bar:
foo: bar
bar: baz
The second argument of the :method:`Symfony\\Component\\Yaml\\Yaml::dump` method customizes the level at which the output switches from the expanded representation to the inline one:
echo Yaml::dump($array, 1);
foo: bar
bar: { foo: bar, bar: baz }
echo Yaml::dump($array, 2);
foo: bar
bar:
foo: bar
bar: baz
By default, the YAML component will use 4 spaces for indentation. This can be changed using the third argument as follows:
// uses 8 spaces for indentation echo Yaml::dump($array, 2, 8);
foo: bar
bar:
foo: bar
bar: baz
Long numeric literals, being integer, float or hexadecimal, are known for their poor readability in code and configuration files. That's why YAML files allow to add underscores to improve their readability:
parameters:
credit_card_number: 1234_5678_9012_3456
long_number: 10_000_000_000
pi: 3.14159_26535_89793
hex_words: 0x_CAFE_F00D
During the parsing of the YAML contents, all the _
characters are removed
from the numeric literal contents, so there is not a limit in the number of
underscores you can include or the way you group contents.
You can dump objects by using the DUMP_OBJECT
flag:
$object = new \stdClass(); $object->foo = 'bar'; $dumped = Yaml::dump($object, 2, 4, Yaml::DUMP_OBJECT); // !php/object 'O:8:"stdClass":1:{s:5:"foo";s:7:"bar";}'
And parse them by using the PARSE_OBJECT
flag:
$parsed = Yaml::parse($dumped, Yaml::PARSE_OBJECT); var_dump(is_object($parsed)); // true echo $parsed->foo; // bar
The YAML component uses PHP's serialize()
method to generate a string
representation of the object.
Caution!
Object serialization is specific to this implementation, other PHP YAML
parsers will likely not recognize the php/object
tag and non-PHP
implementations certainly won't - use with discretion!
You can dump objects as Yaml maps by using the DUMP_OBJECT_AS_MAP
flag:
$object = new \stdClass(); $object->foo = 'bar'; $dumped = Yaml::dump(['data' => $object], 2, 4, Yaml::DUMP_OBJECT_AS_MAP); // $dumped = "data:\n foo: bar"
And parse them by using the PARSE_OBJECT_FOR_MAP
flag:
$parsed = Yaml::parse($dumped, Yaml::PARSE_OBJECT_FOR_MAP); var_dump(is_object($parsed)); // true var_dump(is_object($parsed->data)); // true echo $parsed->data->foo; // bar
The YAML component uses PHP's (array)
casting to generate a string
representation of the object as a map.
By default, the parser will encode invalid types as null
. You can make the
parser throw exceptions by using the PARSE_EXCEPTION_ON_INVALID_TYPE
flag:
$yaml = '!php/object \'O:8:"stdClass":1:{s:5:"foo";s:7:"bar";}\''; Yaml::parse($yaml, Yaml::PARSE_EXCEPTION_ON_INVALID_TYPE); // throws an exception
Similarly you can use DUMP_EXCEPTION_ON_INVALID_TYPE
when dumping:
$data = new \stdClass(); // by default objects are invalid. Yaml::dump($data, 2, 4, Yaml::DUMP_EXCEPTION_ON_INVALID_TYPE); // throws an exception
By default, the YAML parser will convert unquoted strings which look like a
date or a date-time into a Unix timestamp; for example 2016-05-27
or
2016-05-27T02:59:43.1Z
(ISO-8601):
Yaml::parse('2016-05-27'); // 1464307200
You can make it convert to a DateTime
instance by using the PARSE_DATETIME
flag:
$date = Yaml::parse('2016-05-27', Yaml::PARSE_DATETIME); var_dump(get_class($date)); // DateTime
In YAML, multiple lines can be represented as literal blocks. By default, the dumper will encode multiple lines as an inline string:
$string = ["string" => "Multiple\nLine\nString"]; $yaml = Yaml::dump($string); echo $yaml; // string: "Multiple\nLine\nString"
You can make it use a literal block with the DUMP_MULTI_LINE_LITERAL_BLOCK
flag:
$string = ["string" => "Multiple\nLine\nString"]; $yaml = Yaml::dump($string, 2, 4, Yaml::DUMP_MULTI_LINE_LITERAL_BLOCK); echo $yaml; // string: | // Multiple // Line // String
By default, the YAML parser treats the PHP constants included in the contents as
regular strings. Use the PARSE_CONSTANT
flag and the special !php/const
syntax to parse them as proper PHP constants:
$yaml = '{ foo: PHP_INT_SIZE, bar: !php/const PHP_INT_SIZE }'; $parameters = Yaml::parse($yaml, Yaml::PARSE_CONSTANT); // $parameters = ['foo' => 'PHP_INT_SIZE', 'bar' => 8];
The YAML parser supports PHP enumerations, both unit and backed enums.
By default, they are parsed as regular strings. Use the PARSE_CONSTANT
flag
and the special !php/enum
syntax to parse them as proper PHP enums:
enum FooEnum: string { case Foo = 'foo'; case Bar = 'bar'; } // ... $yaml = '{ foo: FooEnum::Foo, bar: !php/enum FooEnum::Foo }'; $parameters = Yaml::parse($yaml, Yaml::PARSE_CONSTANT); // the value of the 'foo' key is a string because it missed the `!php/enum` syntax // $parameters = ['foo' => 'FooEnum::Foo', 'bar' => FooEnum::Foo]; $yaml = '{ foo: FooEnum::Foo, bar: !php/enum FooEnum::Foo->value }'; $parameters = Yaml::parse($yaml, Yaml::PARSE_CONSTANT); // the value of the 'foo' key is a string because it missed the `!php/enum` syntax // $parameters = ['foo' => 'FooEnum::Foo', 'bar' => 'foo'];
.. versionadded:: 6.2 The support for PHP enumerations was introduced in Symfony 6.2.
Non UTF-8 encoded strings are dumped as base64 encoded data:
$imageContents = file_get_contents(__DIR__.'/images/logo.png'); $dumped = Yaml::dump(['logo' => $imageContents]); // logo: !!binary iVBORw0KGgoAAAANSUhEUgAAA6oAAADqCAY...
Binary data is automatically parsed if they include the !!binary
YAML tag:
$dumped = 'logo: !!binary iVBORw0KGgoAAAANSUhEUgAAA6oAAADqCAY...'; $parsed = Yaml::parse($dumped); $imageContents = $parsed['logo'];
In addition to the built-in support of tags like !php/const
and
!!binary
, you can define your own custom YAML tags and parse them with the
PARSE_CUSTOM_TAGS
flag:
$data = "!my_tag { foo: bar }"; $parsed = Yaml::parse($data, Yaml::PARSE_CUSTOM_TAGS); // $parsed = Symfony\Component\Yaml\Tag\TaggedValue('my_tag', ['foo' => 'bar']); $tagName = $parsed->getTag(); // $tagName = 'my_tag' $tagValue = $parsed->getValue(); // $tagValue = ['foo' => 'bar']
If the contents to dump contain :class:`Symfony\\Component\\Yaml\\Tag\\TaggedValue` objects, they are automatically transformed into YAML tags:
use Symfony\Component\Yaml\Tag\TaggedValue; $data = new TaggedValue('my_tag', ['foo' => 'bar']); $dumped = Yaml::dump($data); // $dumped = '!my_tag { foo: bar }'
The official YAML specification uses both null
and ~
to represent null
values. This component uses null
by default when dumping null values but
you can dump them as ~
with the DUMP_NULL_AS_TILDE
flag:
$dumped = Yaml::dump(['foo' => null]); // foo: null $dumped = Yaml::dump(['foo' => null], 2, 4, Yaml::DUMP_NULL_AS_TILDE); // foo: ~
The syntax of YAML contents can be validated through the CLI using the :class:`Symfony\\Component\\Yaml\\Command\\LintCommand` command.
First, install the Console component:
$ composer require symfony/console
Create a console application with lint:yaml
as its only command:
// lint.php use Symfony\Component\Console\Application; use Symfony\Component\Yaml\Command\LintCommand; (new Application('yaml/lint')) ->add(new LintCommand()) ->getApplication() ->setDefaultCommand('lint:yaml', true) ->run();
Then, execute the script for validating contents:
# validates a single file
$ php lint.php path/to/file.yaml
# or validates multiple files
$ php lint.php path/to/file1.yaml path/to/file2.yaml
# or all the files in a directory
$ php lint.php path/to/directory
# or all the files in multiple directories
$ php lint.php path/to/directory1 path/to/directory2
# or contents passed to STDIN
$ cat path/to/file.yaml | php lint.php
# you can also exclude one or more files from linting
$ php lint.php path/to/directory --exclude=path/to/directory/foo.yaml --exclude=path/to/directory/bar.yaml
The result is written to STDOUT and uses a plain text format by default.
Add the --format
option to get the output in JSON format:
$ php lint.php path/to/file.yaml --format json
Tip
The linting command will also report any deprecations in the checked YAML files. This may for example be useful for recognizing deprecations of contents of YAML files during automated tests.
.. toctree:: :maxdepth: 1 :glob: yaml/*