Documentation ¶
Overview ¶
Package yaml implements YAML support for the Go language.
Source code and other details for the project are available at GitHub:
https://github.com/go-yaml/yaml
Index ¶
Constants ¶
This section is empty.
Variables ¶
This section is empty.
Functions ¶
func Marshal ¶
Marshal serializes the value provided into a YAML document. The structure of the generated document will reflect the structure of the value itself. Maps and pointers (to struct, string, int, etc) are accepted as the in value.
Struct fields are only unmarshalled if they are exported (have an upper case first letter), and are unmarshalled using the field name lowercased as the default key. Custom keys may be defined via the "yaml" name in the field tag: the content preceding the first comma is used as the key, and the following comma-separated options are used to tweak the marshalling process. Conflicting names result in a runtime error.
The field tag format accepted is:
`(...) yaml:"[<key>][,<flag1>[,<flag2>]]" (...)`
The following flags are currently supported:
omitempty Only include the field if it's not set to the zero value for the type or to empty slices or maps. Does not apply to zero valued structs. flow Marshal using a flow style (useful for structs, sequences and maps). inline Inline the field, which must be a struct or a map, causing all of its fields or keys to be processed as if they were part of the outer struct. For maps, keys must not conflict with the yaml keys of other struct fields.
In addition, if the key is "-", the field is ignored.
For example:
type T struct { F int "a,omitempty" B int } yaml.Marshal(&T{B: 2}) // Returns "b: 2\n" yaml.Marshal(&T{F: 1}} // Returns "a: 1\nb: 0\n"
func Unmarshal ¶
Unmarshal decodes the first document found within the in byte slice and assigns decoded values into the out value.
Maps and pointers (to a struct, string, int, etc) are accepted as out values. If an internal pointer within a struct is not initialized, the yaml package will initialize it if necessary for unmarshalling the provided data. The out parameter must not be nil.
The type of the decoded values should be compatible with the respective values in out. If one or more values cannot be decoded due to a type mismatches, decoding continues partially until the end of the YAML content, and a *yaml.TypeError is returned with details for all missed values.
Struct fields are only unmarshalled if they are exported (have an upper case first letter), and are unmarshalled using the field name lowercased as the default key. Custom keys may be defined via the "yaml" name in the field tag: the content preceding the first comma is used as the key, and the following comma-separated options are used to tweak the marshalling process (see Marshal). Conflicting names result in a runtime error.
For example:
type T struct { F int `yaml:"a,omitempty"` B int } var t T yaml.Unmarshal([]byte("a: 1\nb: 2"), &t)
See the documentation of Marshal for the format of tags and a list of supported tag options.
Types ¶
type MapSlice ¶
type MapSlice []MapItem
MapSlice encodes and decodes as a YAML map. The order of keys is preserved when encoding and decoding.
type Marshaler ¶
type Marshaler interface {
MarshalYAML() (interface{}, error)
}
The Marshaler interface may be implemented by types to customize their behavior when being marshaled into a YAML document. The returned value is marshaled in place of the original value implementing Marshaler.
If an error is returned by MarshalYAML, the marshaling procedure stops and returns with the provided error.
type TypeError ¶
type TypeError struct {
Errors []string
}
A TypeError is returned by Unmarshal when one or more fields in the YAML document cannot be properly decoded into the requested types. When this error is returned, the value is still unmarshaled partially.
type Unmarshaler ¶
The Unmarshaler interface may be implemented by types to customize their behavior when being unmarshaled from a YAML document. The UnmarshalYAML method receives a function that may be called to unmarshal the original YAML value into a field or variable. It is safe to call the unmarshal function parameter more than once if necessary.