Question

I have the following YAML:

paths:
  patha: /path/to/root/a
  pathb: /path/to/root/b
  pathc: /path/to/root/c

How can I "normalise" this, by removing /path/to/root/ from the three paths, and have it as its own setting, something like:

paths:
  root: /path/to/root/
  patha: *root* + a
  pathb: *root* + b
  pathc: *root* + c

Obviously that's invalid, I just made it up. What's the real syntax? Can it be done?

Was it helpful?

Solution

I don't think it is possible. You can reuse "node" but not part of it.

bill-to: &id001
    given  : Chris
    family : Dumars
ship-to: *id001

This is perfectly valid YAML and fields given and family are reused in ship-to block. You can reuse a scalar node the same way but there's no way you can change what's inside and add that last part of a path to it from inside YAML.

If repetition bother you that much I suggest to make your application aware of root property and add it to every path that looks relative not absolute.

OTHER TIPS

Yes, using custom tags. Example in Python, making the !join tag join strings in an array:

import yaml

## define custom tag handler
def join(loader, node):
    seq = loader.construct_sequence(node)
    return ''.join([str(i) for i in seq])

## register the tag handler
yaml.add_constructor('!join', join)

## using your sample data
yaml.load("""
paths:
    root: &BASE /path/to/root/
    patha: !join [*BASE, a]
    pathb: !join [*BASE, b]
    pathc: !join [*BASE, c]
""")

Which results in:

{
    'paths': {
        'patha': '/path/to/root/a',
        'pathb': '/path/to/root/b',
        'pathc': '/path/to/root/c',
        'root': '/path/to/root/'
     }
}

The array of arguments to !join can have any number of elements of any data type, as long as they can be converted to string, so !join [*a, "/", *b, "/", *c] does what you would expect.

Another way to look at this is to simply use another field.

paths:
  root_path: &root
     val: /path/to/root/
  patha: &a
    root_path: *root
    rel_path: a
  pathb: &b
    root_path: *root
    rel_path: b
  pathc: &c
    root_path: *root
    rel_path: c

YML definition:

dir:
  default: /home/data/in/
  proj1: ${dir.default}p1
  proj2: ${dir.default}p2
  proj3: ${dir.default}p3 

Somewhere in thymeleaf

<p th:utext='${@environment.getProperty("dir.default")}' />
<p th:utext='${@environment.getProperty("dir.proj1")}' /> 

Output: /home/data/in/ /home/data/in/p1

In some languages, you can use an alternative library, For example, tampax is an implementation of YAML handling variables:

const tampax = require('tampax');

const yamlString = `
dude:
  name: Arthur
weapon:
  favorite: Excalibur
  useless: knife
sentence: "{{dude.name}} use {{weapon.favorite}}. The goal is {{goal}}."`;

const r = tampax.yamlParseString(yamlString, { goal: 'to kill Mordred' });
console.log(r.sentence);

// output : "Arthur use Excalibur. The goal is to kill Mordred."

I've create a library, available on Packagist, that performs this function: https://packagist.org/packages/grasmash/yaml-expander

Example YAML file:

type: book
book:
  title: Dune
  author: Frank Herbert
  copyright: ${book.author} 1965
  protaganist: ${characters.0.name}
  media:
    - hardcover
characters:
  - name: Paul Atreides
    occupation: Kwisatz Haderach
    aliases:
      - Usul
      - Muad'Dib
      - The Preacher
  - name: Duncan Idaho
    occupation: Swordmaster
summary: ${book.title} by ${book.author}
product-name: ${${type}.title}

Example logic:

// Parse a yaml string directly, expanding internal property references.
$yaml_string = file_get_contents("dune.yml");
$expanded = \Grasmash\YamlExpander\Expander::parse($yaml_string);
print_r($expanded);

Resultant array:

array (
  'type' => 'book',
  'book' => 
  array (
    'title' => 'Dune',
    'author' => 'Frank Herbert',
    'copyright' => 'Frank Herbert 1965',
    'protaganist' => 'Paul Atreides',
    'media' => 
    array (
      0 => 'hardcover',
    ),
  ),
  'characters' => 
  array (
    0 => 
    array (
      'name' => 'Paul Atreides',
      'occupation' => 'Kwisatz Haderach',
      'aliases' => 
      array (
        0 => 'Usul',
        1 => 'Muad\'Dib',
        2 => 'The Preacher',
      ),
    ),
    1 => 
    array (
      'name' => 'Duncan Idaho',
      'occupation' => 'Swordmaster',
    ),
  ),
  'summary' => 'Dune by Frank Herbert',
);

That your example is invalid is only because you chose a reserved character to start your scalars with. If you replace the * with some other non-reserved character (I tend to use non-ASCII characters for that as they are seldom used as part of some specification), you end up with perfectly legal YAML:

paths:
  root: /path/to/root/
  patha: ♦root♦ + a
  pathb: ♦root♦ + b
  pathc: ♦root♦ + c

This will load into the standard representation for mappings in the language your parser uses and does not magically expand anything.
To do that use a locally default object type as in the following Python program:

# coding: utf-8

from __future__ import print_function

import ruamel.yaml as yaml

class Paths:
    def __init__(self):
        self.d = {}

    def __repr__(self):
        return repr(self.d).replace('ordereddict', 'Paths')

    @staticmethod
    def __yaml_in__(loader, data):
        result = Paths()
        loader.construct_mapping(data, result.d)
        return result

    @staticmethod
    def __yaml_out__(dumper, self):
        return dumper.represent_mapping('!Paths', self.d)

    def __getitem__(self, key):
        res = self.d[key]
        return self.expand(res)

    def expand(self, res):
        try:
            before, rest = res.split(u'♦', 1)
            kw, rest = rest.split(u'♦ +', 1)
            rest = rest.lstrip() # strip any spaces after "+"
            # the lookup will throw the correct keyerror if kw is not found
            # recursive call expand() on the tail if there are multiple
            # parts to replace
            return before + self.d[kw] + self.expand(rest)
        except ValueError:
            return res

yaml_str = """\
paths: !Paths
  root: /path/to/root/
  patha: ♦root♦ + a
  pathb: ♦root♦ + b
  pathc: ♦root♦ + c
"""

loader = yaml.RoundTripLoader
loader.add_constructor('!Paths', Paths.__yaml_in__)

paths = yaml.load(yaml_str, Loader=yaml.RoundTripLoader)['paths']

for k in ['root', 'pathc']:
    print(u'{} -> {}'.format(k, paths[k]))

which will print:

root -> /path/to/root/
pathc -> /path/to/root/c

The expanding is done on the fly and handles nested definitions, but you have to be careful about not invoking infinite recursion.

By specifying the dumper, you can dump the original YAML from the data loaded in, because of the on-the-fly expansion:

dumper = yaml.RoundTripDumper
dumper.add_representer(Paths, Paths.__yaml_out__)
print(yaml.dump(paths, Dumper=dumper, allow_unicode=True))

this will change the mapping key ordering. If that is a problem you have to make self.d a CommentedMap (imported from ruamel.yaml.comments.py)

I have wrote my own library on Python to expand variables being loaded from directories with a hierarchy like:

/root
 |
 +- /proj1
     |
     +- config.yaml
     |
     +- /proj2
         |
         +- config.yaml
         |
         ... and so on ...

The key difference here is that the expansion must be applied only after all the config.yaml files is loaded, where the variables from the next file can override the variables from the previous, so the pseudocode should look like this:

env = YamlEnv()
env.load('/root/proj1/config.yaml')
env.load('/root/proj1/proj2/config.yaml')
...
env.expand()

As an additional option the xonsh script can export the resulting variables into environment variables (see the yaml_update_global_vars function).

The scripts:

https://sourceforge.net/p/contools/contools/HEAD/tree/trunk/Scripts/Tools/cmdoplib.yaml.py https://sourceforge.net/p/contools/contools/HEAD/tree/trunk/Scripts/Tools/cmdoplib.yaml.xsh

Pros:

  • simple, does not support recursion and nested variables
  • can replace an undefined variable to a placeholder (${MYUNDEFINEDVAR} -> *$/{MYUNDEFINEDVAR})
  • can expand a reference from environment variable (${env:MYVAR})
  • can replace all \\ to / in a path variable (${env:MYVAR:path})

Cons:

  • does not support nested variables, so can not expand values in nested dictionaries (something like ${MYSCOPE.MYVAR} is not implemented)
  • does not detect expansion recursion, including recursion after a placeholder put
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