yq/pkg/yqlib/doc/operators/multiply-merge.md
2022-01-22 16:40:17 +11:00

460 lines
6.7 KiB
Markdown

# Multiply (Merge)
Like the multiple operator in jq, depending on the operands, this multiply operator will do different things. Currently numbers, arrays and objects are supported.
## Objects and arrays - merging
Objects are merged deeply matching on matching keys. By default, array values override and are not deeply merged.
Note that when merging objects, this operator returns the merged object (not the parent). This will be clearer in the examples below.
### Merge Flags
You can control how objects are merged by using one or more of the following flags. Multiple flags can be used together, e.g. `.a *+? .b`. See examples below
- `+` append arrays
- `d` deeply merge arrays
- `?` only merge _existing_ fields
- `n` only merge _new_ fields
### Merging files
Note the use of `eval-all` to ensure all documents are loaded into memory.
```bash
yq eval-all 'select(fileIndex == 0) * select(fileIndex == 1)' file1.yaml file2.yaml
```
## Multiply integers
Given a sample.yml file of:
```yaml
a: 3
b: 4
```
then
```bash
yq eval '.a *= .b' sample.yml
```
will output
```yaml
a: 12
b: 4
```
## Merge objects together, returning merged result only
Given a sample.yml file of:
```yaml
a:
field: me
fieldA: cat
b:
field:
g: wizz
fieldB: dog
```
then
```bash
yq eval '.a * .b' sample.yml
```
will output
```yaml
field:
g: wizz
fieldA: cat
fieldB: dog
```
## Merge objects together, returning parent object
Given a sample.yml file of:
```yaml
a:
field: me
fieldA: cat
b:
field:
g: wizz
fieldB: dog
```
then
```bash
yq eval '. * {"a":.b}' sample.yml
```
will output
```yaml
a:
field:
g: wizz
fieldA: cat
fieldB: dog
b:
field:
g: wizz
fieldB: dog
```
## Merge keeps style of LHS
Given a sample.yml file of:
```yaml
a: {things: great}
b:
also: "me"
```
then
```bash
yq eval '. * {"a":.b}' sample.yml
```
will output
```yaml
a: {things: great, also: "me"}
b:
also: "me"
```
## Merge arrays
Given a sample.yml file of:
```yaml
a:
- 1
- 2
- 3
b:
- 3
- 4
- 5
```
then
```bash
yq eval '. * {"a":.b}' sample.yml
```
will output
```yaml
a:
- 3
- 4
- 5
b:
- 3
- 4
- 5
```
## Merge, only existing fields
Given a sample.yml file of:
```yaml
a:
thing: one
cat: frog
b:
missing: two
thing: two
```
then
```bash
yq eval '.a *? .b' sample.yml
```
will output
```yaml
thing: two
cat: frog
```
## Merge, only new fields
Given a sample.yml file of:
```yaml
a:
thing: one
cat: frog
b:
missing: two
thing: two
```
then
```bash
yq eval '.a *n .b' sample.yml
```
will output
```yaml
thing: one
cat: frog
missing: two
```
## Merge, appending arrays
Given a sample.yml file of:
```yaml
a:
array:
- 1
- 2
- animal: dog
value: coconut
b:
array:
- 3
- 4
- animal: cat
value: banana
```
then
```bash
yq eval '.a *+ .b' sample.yml
```
will output
```yaml
array:
- 1
- 2
- animal: dog
- 3
- 4
- animal: cat
value: banana
```
## Merge, only existing fields, appending arrays
Given a sample.yml file of:
```yaml
a:
thing:
- 1
- 2
b:
thing:
- 3
- 4
another:
- 1
```
then
```bash
yq eval '.a *?+ .b' sample.yml
```
will output
```yaml
thing:
- 1
- 2
- 3
- 4
```
## Merge, deeply merging arrays
Merging arrays deeply means arrays are merge like objects, with indexes as their key. In this case, we merge the first item in the array, and do nothing with the second.
Given a sample.yml file of:
```yaml
a:
- name: fred
age: 12
- name: bob
age: 32
b:
- name: fred
age: 34
```
then
```bash
yq eval '.a *d .b' sample.yml
```
will output
```yaml
- name: fred
age: 34
- name: bob
age: 32
```
## Merge arrays of objects together, matching on a key
The approach, at a high level, is to reduce into a merged map (keyed by the unique key)
and then convert that back into an array.
First the expression will create a map from the arrays keyed by '.a', the unique field we want to merge by.
The reduce operator is merging '({}; . * $item )', so array elements with the matching key will be merged together.
Next, we convert the map back to an array, using reduce again, concatenating all the map values together.
Finally, we set the result of the merged array back into the first doc.
To use this, you will need to update '.myArray' in the expression to your array (e.g. .my.array), and '.a' to be the key field of your array (e.g. '.name')
Thanks Kev from [stackoverflow](https://stackoverflow.com/a/70109529/1168223)
Given a sample.yml file of:
```yaml
myArray:
- a: apple
b: appleB
- a: kiwi
b: kiwiB
- a: banana
b: bananaB
something: else
```
And another sample another.yml file of:
```yaml
myArray:
- a: banana
c: bananaC
- a: apple
b: appleB2
- a: dingo
c: dingoC
```
then
```bash
yq eval-all '
(
((.myArray[] | {.a: .}) as $item ireduce ({}; . * $item )) as $uniqueMap
| ( $uniqueMap | to_entries | .[]) as $item ireduce([]; . + $item.value)
) as $mergedArray
| select(fi == 0) | .myArray = $mergedArray
' sample.yml another.yml
```
will output
```yaml
myArray:
- a: apple
b: appleB2
- a: kiwi
b: kiwiB
- a: banana
b: bananaB
c: bananaC
- a: dingo
c: dingoC
something: else
```
## Merge to prefix an element
Given a sample.yml file of:
```yaml
a: cat
b: dog
```
then
```bash
yq eval '. * {"a": {"c": .a}}' sample.yml
```
will output
```yaml
a:
c: cat
b: dog
```
## Merge with simple aliases
Given a sample.yml file of:
```yaml
a: &cat
c: frog
b:
f: *cat
c:
g: thongs
```
then
```bash
yq eval '.c * .b' sample.yml
```
will output
```yaml
g: thongs
f: *cat
```
## Merge copies anchor names
Given a sample.yml file of:
```yaml
a:
c: &cat frog
b:
f: *cat
c:
g: thongs
```
then
```bash
yq eval '.c * .a' sample.yml
```
will output
```yaml
g: thongs
c: &cat frog
```
## Merge with merge anchors
Given a sample.yml file of:
```yaml
foo: &foo
a: foo_a
thing: foo_thing
c: foo_c
bar: &bar
b: bar_b
thing: bar_thing
c: bar_c
foobarList:
b: foobarList_b
!!merge <<:
- *foo
- *bar
c: foobarList_c
foobar:
c: foobar_c
!!merge <<: *foo
thing: foobar_thing
```
then
```bash
yq eval '.foobar * .foobarList' sample.yml
```
will output
```yaml
c: foobarList_c
!!merge <<:
- *foo
- *bar
thing: foobar_thing
b: foobarList_b
```
## Custom types: that are really numbers
When custom tags are encountered, yq will try to decode the underlying type.
Given a sample.yml file of:
```yaml
a: !horse 2
b: !goat 3
```
then
```bash
yq eval '.a = .a * .b' sample.yml
```
will output
```yaml
a: !horse 6
b: !goat 3
```
## Custom types: that are really maps
Custom tags will be maintained.
Given a sample.yml file of:
```yaml
a: !horse
cat: meow
b: !goat
dog: woof
```
then
```bash
yq eval '.a = .a * .b' sample.yml
```
will output
```yaml
a: !horse
cat: meow
dog: woof
b: !goat
dog: woof
```