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yam 🍠

A sweet little formatter for YAML

Installation

go install github.com/chainguard-dev/yam@latest

Usage

Format...

To update file contents to match your formatting configuration, just specify one or more YAML files.

yam a.yaml b.yaml

You can also specify directories with YAML files in them. (Yam doesn't recurse through directories in directories.)

yam ./dir-with-some-yamls

And you can format files in the current working directory if you don't pass any arguments:

yam

Lint...

To lint files instead of formatting them, just add --lint to the command. With this flag, Yam doesn't make any changes to your files, but it will exit 1 if any files don't match your formatting configuration.

yam a.yaml --lint

When linting, if Yam finds any files that don't pass the lint check, it will output a diff of what it got vs. what it expected to see.

Formatting/Linting Options

Gap Lines

To expect a gap (empty line) in between child elements of a given node, just pass a yq-style path to the node, using --gap. You can use this flag as many times as needed.

yam a.yaml --gap '.'
yam a.yaml --gap '.foo.bar'
yam a.yaml --gap '.people[].address'
yam a.yaml --gap '.recipes[0].ingredients'
yam a.yaml --gap '.types.*.inputs'

Indentation

You can also set the indent size (number of spaces) using --indent. Yam uses 2-space indentation by default.

yam a.yaml --indent 4

Sorting sequences

You can also sort sequences so that for example you get alphabetized packages list using --sort where --sort takes in a yq-style path to the node that should be sorted.

yam a.yaml --sort .packages

Note This is only meant to be used for scalars, behavior for objects is not supported.

Using a config file

Yam will also look for a .yam.yaml file in the current working directory as a source of configuration. Using a config file is optional. CLI flag values take priority over config file values. The config file can be used to configure indent and gap values only.

Example .yam.yaml:

indent: 4   # Defaults to 2

gap:        # Defaults to none
- "."
- ".users"

Yam's Encoder

Yam has a special YAML encoder it uses to handle formatting as it writes out YAML bytes. This encoder is configurable.

Yam bases its encoder on the YAML encoder from https://github.com/go-yaml/yaml, and uses this library's yaml.Node type as the input to encoding operations.

This means you're able to decode data using https://github.com/go-yaml/yaml, modify data as needed, and then encode the yaml.Node using yam's encoder instead. This is nifty if you want to write YAML data that's correctly formatted from the beginning.

For example, before:

import (
    // ...
    "gopkg.in/yaml.v3"
)

func someFunction(myData yaml.Node, w io.Writer) {
    enc := yaml.NewEncoder(w)

    // use the encoder!
	_ = enc.Encode(myData)
}

And after:

import (
    // ...
    "github.com/chainguard-dev/yam/pkg/yam/formatted"
)

func someFunction(myData yaml.Node, w io.Writer) {
    enc := formatted.NewEncoder(w)

    // use the encoder!
    _ = enc.Encode(myData)
}

Configuring the encoder

Yam's encoder has chainable methods that can be used for configuring its options.

For example:

enc := formatted.NewEncoder(w).SetIndent(2).SetGapExpressions(".", ".users")

Configuring the encoder with .yam.yaml

You can also tell the encoder to behave similarly to the yam command, in that a .yam.yaml is automatically read if available.

enc := formatted.NewEncoder(w).AutomaticConfig()

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A sweet little formatter for YAML

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