12 KiB
yq
a lightweight and portable command-line YAML, JSON and XML processor. yq
uses jq like syntax but works with yaml files as well as json and xml. It doesn't yet support everything jq
does - but it does support the most common operations and functions, and more is being added continuously.
yq is written in go - so you can download a dependency free binary for your platform and you are good to go! If you prefer there are a variety of package managers that can be used as well as Docker and Podman, all listed below.
Notice for v4.x versions prior to 4.18.1
Since 4.18.1, yq's 'eval/e' command is the default command and no longers needs to be specified.
Older versions will still need to specify 'eval/e'.
Similarly, '-' is no longer required as a filename to read from STDIN (unless reading from multiple files).
TLDR:
Prior to 4.18.1
cat file.yaml | yq e '.cool' -
4.18+
cat file.yaml | yq '.cool'
When merging multiple files together, eval-all/ea
is still required to tell yq
to run the expression against all the document at once.
Quick Usage Guide
Read a value:
yq '.a.b[0].c' file.yaml
Pipe from STDIN:
cat file.yaml | yq '.a.b[0].c'
Update a yaml file, inplace
yq -i '.a.b[0].c = "cool"' file.yaml
Update using environment variables
NAME=mike yq -i '.a.b[0].c = strenv(NAME)' file.yaml
Merge multiple files
# note the use of `ea` to evaluate all the files at once
# instead of in sequence
yq ea '. as $item ireduce ({}; . * $item )' path/to/*.yml
Multiple updates to a yaml file
yq -i '
.a.b[0].c = "cool" |
.x.y.z = "foobar" |
.person.name = strenv(NAME)
' file.yaml
See the documentation for more.
Install
Download the latest binary
wget
Use wget to download the pre-compiled binaries:
Compressed via tar.gz
wget https://github.com/mikefarah/yq/releases/download/${VERSION}/${BINARY}.tar.gz -O - |\
tar xz && mv ${BINARY} /usr/bin/yq
Plain binary
wget https://github.com/mikefarah/yq/releases/download/${VERSION}/${BINARY} -O /usr/bin/yq &&\
chmod +x /usr/bin/yq
For instance, VERSION=v4.2.0 and BINARY=yq_linux_amd64
MacOS / Linux via Homebrew:
Using Homebrew
brew install yq
Linux via snap:
snap install yq
Snap notes
yq
installs with strict confinement in snap, this means it doesn't have direct access to root files. To read root files you can:
sudo cat /etc/myfile | yq '.a.path'
And to write to a root file you can either use sponge:
sudo cat /etc/myfile | yq '.a.path = "value"' | sudo sponge /etc/myfile
or write to a temporary file:
sudo cat /etc/myfile | yq '.a.path = "value"' | sudo tee /etc/myfile.tmp
sudo mv /etc/myfile.tmp /etc/myfile
rm /etc/myfile.tmp
Run with Docker or Podman
Oneshot use:
docker run --rm -v "${PWD}":/workdir mikefarah/yq [command] [flags] [expression ]FILE...
Note that you can run yq
in docker without network access and other privileges if you desire,
namely --security-opt=no-new-privileges --cap-drop all --network none
.
podman run --rm -v "${PWD}":/workdir mikefarah/yq [command] [flags] [expression ]FILE...
Pipe in via STDIN:
You'll need to pass the -i\--interactive
flag to docker:
cat myfile.yml | docker run -i --rm mikefarah/yq '.this.thing'
cat myfile.yml | podman run -i --rm mikefarah/yq '.this.thing'
Run commands interactively:
docker run --rm -it -v "${PWD}":/workdir --entrypoint sh mikefarah/yq
podman run --rm -it -v "${PWD}":/workdir --entrypoint sh mikefarah/yq
It can be useful to have a bash function to avoid typing the whole docker command:
yq() {
docker run --rm -i -v "${PWD}":/workdir mikefarah/yq "$@"
}
yq() {
podman run --rm -i -v "${PWD}":/workdir mikefarah/yq "$@"
}
Running as root:
yq
's container image no longer runs under root (https://github.com/mikefarah/yq/pull/860). If you'd like to install more things in the container image, or you're having permissions issues when attempting to read/write files you'll need to either:
docker run --user="root" -it --entrypoint sh mikefarah/yq
podman run --user="root" -it --entrypoint sh mikefarah/yq
Or, in your Dockerfile:
FROM mikefarah/yq
USER root
RUN apk add bash
USER yq
GitHub Action
- name: Set foobar to cool
uses: mikefarah/yq@master
with:
cmd: yq -i '.foo.bar = "cool"' 'config.yml'
See https://mikefarah.gitbook.io/yq/usage/github-action for more.
Go Get:
GO111MODULE=on go get github.com/mikefarah/yq/v4
Community Supported Installation methods
As these are supported by the community ❤️ - however, they may be out of date with the officially supported releases.
Webi
webi yq
See webi Supported by @adithyasunil26 (https://github.com/webinstall/webi-installers/tree/master/yq)
Arch Linux
pacman -S go-yq
Windows:
choco install yq
Supported by @chillum (https://chocolatey.org/packages/yq)
Mac:
Using MacPorts
sudo port selfupdate
sudo port install yq
Supported by @herbygillot (https://ports.macports.org/maintainer/github/herbygillot)
Alpine Linux
- Enable edge/community repo by adding
$MIRROR/alpine/edge/community
to/etc/apk/repositories
- Update database index with
apk update
- Install yq with
apk add yq
Supported by Tuan Hoang https://pkgs.alpinelinux.org/package/edge/community/x86/yq
On Ubuntu 16.04 or higher from Debian package:
sudo apt-key adv --keyserver keyserver.ubuntu.com --recv-keys CC86BB64
sudo add-apt-repository ppa:rmescandon/yq
sudo apt update
sudo apt install yq -y
Supported by @rmescandon (https://launchpad.net/~rmescandon/+archive/ubuntu/yq)
Features
- Detailed documentation with many examples
- Written in portable go, so you can download a lovely dependency free binary
- Uses similar syntax as
jq
but works with YAML, JSON and XML files - Fully supports multi document yaml files
- Supports yaml front matter blocks (e.g. jekyll/assemble)
- Colorized yaml output
- Deeply data structures
- Sort keys
- Manipulate yaml comments, styling, tags and anchors and aliases.
- Update inplace
- Complex expressions to select and update
- Keeps yaml formatting and comments when updating (though there are issues with whitespace)
- Load content from other files
- Convert to/from json
- Convert to/from xml
- Convert to properties
- Convert to csv/tsv
- Pipe data in by using '-'
- General shell completion scripts (bash/zsh/fish/powershell)
- Reduce to merge multiple files or sum an array or other fancy things.
- Github Action to use in your automated pipeline (thanks @devorbitus)
Usage
Check out the documentation for more detailed and advanced usage.
Usage:
yq [flags]
yq [command]
Examples:
# yq defaults to 'eval' command if no command is specified. See "yq eval --help" for more examples.
cat myfile.yml | yq '.stuff' # outputs the data at the "stuff" node from "myfile.yml"
yq -i '.stuff = "foo"' myfile.yml # update myfile.yml inplace
Available Commands:
completion Generate the autocompletion script for the specified shell
eval (default) Apply the expression to each document in each yaml file in sequence
eval-all Loads _all_ yaml documents of _all_ yaml files and runs expression once
help Help about any command
shell-completion Generate completion script
Flags:
-C, --colors force print with colors
-e, --exit-status set exit status if there are no matches or null or false is returned
-f, --front-matter string (extract|process) first input as yaml front-matter. Extract will pull out the yaml content, process will run the expression against the yaml content, leaving the remaining data intact
--header-preprocess Slurp any header comments and separators before processing expression. (default true)
-h, --help help for yq
-I, --indent int sets indent level for output (default 2)
-i, --inplace update the file inplace of first file given.
-p, --input-format string [yaml|y|xml|x] parse format for input. Note that json is a subset of yaml. (default "yaml")
-M, --no-colors force print with no colors
-N, --no-doc Don't print document separators (---)
-n, --null-input Don't read input, simply evaluate the expression given. Useful for creating docs from scratch.
-o, --output-format string [yaml|y|json|j|props|p|xml|x] output format type. (default "yaml")
-P, --prettyPrint pretty print, shorthand for '... style = ""'
-s, --split-exp string print each result (or doc) into a file named (exp). [exp] argument must return a string. You can use $index in the expression as the result counter.
--unwrapScalar unwrap scalar, print the value with no quotes, colors or comments (default true)
-v, --verbose verbose mode
-V, --version Print version information and quit
--xml-attribute-prefix string prefix for xml attributes (default "+")
--xml-content-name string name for xml content (if no attribute name is present). (default "+content")
Use "yq [command] --help" for more information about a command.
Known Issues / Missing Features
yq
attempts to preserve comment positions and whitespace as much as possible, but it does not handle all scenarios (see https://github.com/go-yaml/yaml/tree/v3 for details)- Powershell has its own...opinions on quoting yq
See tips and tricks for more common problems and solutions.