Write/Update
yq w <yaml_file> <path> <new value>
To Stdout¶
Given a sample.yaml file of:
b:
c: 2
then
yq w sample.yaml b.c cat
will output:
b:
c: cat
From STDIN¶
cat sample.yaml | yq w - b.c blah
Adding new fields¶
Any missing fields in the path will be created on the fly.
Given a sample.yaml file of:
b:
c: 2
then
yq w sample.yaml b.d[0] "new thing"
will output:
b:
c: cat
d:
- new thing
Appending value to an array field¶
Given a sample.yaml file of:
b:
c: 2
d:
- new thing
- foo thing
then
yq w sample.yaml "b.d[+]" "bar thing"
will output:
b:
c: cat
d:
- new thing
- foo thing
- bar thing
Note that the path is in quotes to avoid the square brackets being interpreted by your shell.
Multiple Documents - update a single document¶
Given a sample.yaml file of:
something: else
---
b:
c: 2
then
yq w -d1 sample.yaml b.c 5
will output:
something: else
---
b:
c: 5
Multiple Documents - update all documents¶
Given a sample.yaml file of:
something: else
---
b:
c: 2
then
yq w -d'*' sample.yaml b.c 5
will output:
something: else
b:
c: 5
---
b:
c: 5
Note that '*' is in quotes to avoid being interpreted by your shell.
Updating files in-place¶
Given a sample.yaml file of:
b:
c: 2
then
yq w -i sample.yaml b.c cat
will update the sample.yaml file so that the value of 'c' is cat.
Updating multiple values with a script¶
Given a sample.yaml file of:
b:
c: 2
e:
- name: Billy Bob
and a script update_instructions.yaml of:
b.c: 3
b.e[0].name: Howdy Partner
then
yq w -s update_instructions.yaml sample.yaml
will output:
b:
c: 3
e:
- name: Howdy Partner
And, of course, you can pipe the instructions in using '-':
cat update_instructions.yaml | yq w -s - sample.yaml
Values starting with a hyphen (or dash)¶
The flag terminator needs to be used to stop the app from attempting to parse the subsequent arguments as flags:
yq w -- my.path -3
will output
my:
path: -3
Keys with dots¶
When specifying a key that has a dot use key lookup indicator.
b:
foo.bar: 7
yaml r sample.yaml 'b[foo.bar]'
yaml w sample.yaml 'b[foo.bar]' 9
Any valid yaml key can be specified as part of a key lookup.
Note that the path is in quotes to avoid the square brackets being interpreted by your shell.
Keys (and values) with leading dashes¶
If a key or value has leading dashes, yq won't know that you are passing a value as opposed to a flag (and you will get a 'bad flag syntax' error).
To fix that, you will need to tell it to stop processing flags by adding '--' after the last flag like so:
yq n -t -- --key --value
Will result in
`
--key: --value