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rebar.config |
yamerl: YAML 1.2 parser in Erlang
YAML is a human friendly data serialization format. The specification for this language and many examples are available from the Official YAML web site. You may also want to check the YAML Wikipedia article.
yamerl is a pure Erlang application which is able to parse YAML 1.1 and YAML 1.2 documents, as well as JSON documents. It only depends on standard Erlang/OTP applications, no external dependency is required. It doesn't use native code either (neither port drivers nor NIFs).
yamerl is distributed under the terms of the 2-clause BSD license; see COPYING
.
Installation
Rebar
If you use rebar, you can run the following command to build the application:
rebar compile
Autotools
If you use the Autotools and make(1)
, run the following commands to build the application:
# Generate Autotools files.
autoreconf -vif
# Build the application.
./configure
make
# Install it.
sudo make install
The default installation path is your Erlang's distribution libraries directory (see code:lib_dir()
).
Getting started
Before using yamerl, the application must be started:
application:start(yamerl).
Now, one can use the yamerl_constr
module to parse and construct a list of documents from:
- an in-memory document (string or binary);
- a file;
- a stream.
Because a YAML input stream may contain multiple documents, yamerl_constr
always returns a list of documents, even if the input stream only contains one.
Parsing an in-memory document
yamerl_constr:string("Hello World!").
% List of documents; here, only one document.
[
% Document #1; contains a single scalar.
"Hello World!"
]
Here, the returned value is a list of documents containing one document. This document has a scalar as its sole node.
Parsing a file
Considering the following YAML file:
# applications.yaml
- application: kernel
version: 2.15.3
path: /usr/local/lib/erlang/lib/kernel-2.15.3
- application: stdlib
version: 1.18.3
path: /usr/local/lib/erlang/lib/stdlib-1.18.3
- application: sasl
version: 2.2.1
path: /usr/local/lib/erlang/lib/sasl-2.2.1
yamerl_constr:file("applications.yaml").
% List of documents; again, only one document here.
[
% List of mappings.
[
% Mapping, represented as a proplist: each entry has the form {Key, Value}.
[
{"application", "kernel"},
{"version", "2.15.3"},
{"path", "/usr/local/lib/erlang/lib/kernel-2.15.3"}
], [
{"application", "stdlib"},
{"version", "1.18.3"},
{"path", "/usr/local/lib/erlang/lib/stdlib-1.18.3"}
], [
{"application", "sasl"},
{"version", "2.2.1"},
{"path", "/usr/local/lib/erlang/lib/sasl-2.2.1"}
]
]
]
Parsing a stream
The developer is responsible for reading the stream and provide the chunks to yamerl.
% Initialize a new construction state. It takes a term describing the
% source; it may be any Erlang term.
Parser0 = yamerl_constr:new({file, "<stdin>"}),
% Read chunks and feed the parser. A new parser state is returned.
{continue, Parser1} = yamerl_constr:next_chunk(Parser0, Chunk1),
% ...
{continue, Parser2} = yamerl_constr:next_chunk(Parser1, Chunk2),
% When the stream ends, tell the parser it's the last chunk.
Documents = yamerl_constr:last_chunk(Parser2, Chunk3).
Simple vs. full document structures
yamerl_constr
comes with two built-in modes:
- It can output simple documents, eg. documents based on basic Erlang structures (strings, numbers, lists, proplists). This is the default mode.
- It can output detailed documents using records. These records carry more information such as line/column, tag URI, YAML node type, module used to construct it, etc.
If we use the following YAML document:
# system.yaml
- os: FreeBSD
version: 9.0-RELEASE-p3
Simple documents:
yamerl_constr:file("system.yaml").
% List of documents.
[
% List of mappings.
[
% Mapping with two entries.
[
{"os", "FreeBSD"},
{"version","9.0-RELEASE-p3"}
]
]
]
Full documents:
yamerl_constr:file("system.yaml", [{detailed_constr, true}]).
% List of documents.
[
% Document with a list as its root node.
{yamerl_doc,
{yamerl_seq, yamerl_node_seq, "tag:yaml.org,2002:seq", [{line, 2}, {column, 1}], [
% Mapping #1.
{yamerl_map, yamerl_node_map, "tag:yaml.org,2002:map", [{line, 2}, {column, 3}], [
{
% Mapping entry #1.
{yamerl_str, yamerl_node_str, "tag:yaml.org,2002:str", [{line, 2}, {column, 3}], "os"},
{yamerl_str, yamerl_node_str, "tag:yaml.org,2002:str", [{line, 2}, {column, 7}], "FreeBSD"}
}, {
% Mapping entry #2.
{yamerl_str, yamerl_node_str, "tag:yaml.org,2002:str", [{line, 3}, {column, 3}], "version"},
{yamerl_str, yamerl_node_str, "tag:yaml.org,2002:str", [{line, 3}, {column, 12}], "9.0-RELEASE-p3"}
}
]}
],
1}
}
]
Complete documentation
See the doc
subdirectory for a complete user guide and reference manual.