# Tips, Tricks, Troubleshooting ## Validating yaml files Yaml files can be surprisingly lenient in what can be parsed as a yaml file. A reasonable way of validation a yaml file is to ensure the top level is a map or array (although it is valid yaml to have scalars at the top level, but often this is not what you want). This can be done by: ``` yq e --exit-status 'tag == "!!map" or tag== "!!seq"' file.txt > /dev/null ``` ## Split expressions over multiple lines to improve readablity Feel free to use multiple lines in your expression to improve readability. ```bash yq eval --inplace ' .a.b.c[0].frog = "thingo" | .a.b.c[0].frog style= "double" | .different.path.somehere = "foo" | .different.path.somehere style= "folded" ' my_file.yaml ``` ## Create bash array Given a yaml file like ```yaml coolActions: - create - edit - delete ``` You can create a bash array named `actions` by: ```bash > readarray actions < <(yq e '.coolActions[]' sample.yaml) > echo "${actions[1]}" edit ``` ## Set contents from another file Use an environment variable with the `strenv` operator to inject the contents from an environment variable. ```bash LICENSE=$(cat LICENSE) yq eval -n '.a = strenv(LICENSE)' ``` ## Special characters in strings The `strenv` operator is a great way to handle special characters in strings: ```bash VAL='.a |!@ == "string2"' yq e '.a = strenv(VAL)' example.yaml ``` ## Quotes in Windows Powershell Powershell has its [own](https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/powershell/module/microsoft.powershell.core/about/about\_quoting\_rules?view=powershell-7.1) way of handling quotes: ```bash PS > yq e -n '.test = ""something""' test: something PS > ``` See [https://github.com/mikefarah/yq/issues/747](https://github.com/mikefarah/yq/issues/747) for more trickery. ## Merge / combine all documents into one To merge all given yaml files into one, use the `reduce` operator with the `*` (multiply) operator. Note the use of `ea` or `eval-all` to load all files into memory so that they can be merged. ``` yq ea '. as $item ireduce ({}; . * $item )' file1.yml file2.yml ... ``` ## Merge an array of objects by key See [here](https://mikefarah.gitbook.io/yq/operators/multiply-merge#merge-arrays-of-objects-together-matching-on-a-key) for a working example. ## Creating a new file / working with blank documents To create a new `yaml` file simply: ``` yq e -n '.someNew="content"' > newfile.yml ``` ## Comparing yaml files The best way to run a diff is to use `yq` to normalise the yaml files and then just use diff. Here is a simple example of using pretty print `-P` to normalise the styling and running diff: ``` diff <(yq e -P examples/data1.yaml) <(yq e -P examples/data2.yaml) ``` This way you can use the full power of `diff` and normalise the yaml files as you like - for instance you may also want to remove all comments using `... comments=""` ## Reading multiple streams (STDINs) Like `diff` and other bash commands, you can use `<(exp)` to pipe in multiple streams of data into `yq`. instance: ``` yq e '.apple' <(curl -s https://somewhere/data1.yaml) <(cat file.yml) ``` ## Updating deeply selected paths The most important thing to remember to do is to have brackets around the LHS expression - otherwise what `yq` will do is first filter by the selection, and then, separately, update the filtered result and return that subset. ``` yq '(.foo.bar[] | select(name == "fred) | .apple) = "cool"' ``` ## Combining multiple files into one In order to combine multiple yaml files into a single file (with `---` separators) you can just: ``` yq e '.' somewhere/*.yaml ``` ## Multiple updates to the same path You can use the [with](../operators/with.md) operator to set a nested context: ``` yq eval 'with(.a.deeply ; .nested = "newValue" | .other= "newThing")' sample.yml ``` The first argument expression sets the root context, and the second expression runs against that root context. ## yq adds a !!merge tag automatically The merge functionality from yaml v1.1 (e.g. `<<:`has actually been removed in the 1.2 spec. Thankfully, `yq` underlying yaml parser still supports that tag - and it's extra nice in that it explicitly puts the `!!merge` tag on key of the map entry. This tag tells other yaml parsers that this entry is a merge entry, as opposed to a regular string key that happens to have a value of `<<:`. This is backwards compatible with the 1.1 spec of yaml, it's simply an explicit way of specifying the type (for instance, you can use a `!!str` tag to enforce a particular value to be a string. Although this does affect the readability of the yaml to humans, it still works and processes fine with various yaml processors.