Jsonnet implementaton in pure Haskell.
Please see the README on GitHub at https://github.com/moleike/jsonnet-haskell#readme
haskell-jsonnet
A full-fledged Haskell implementation of the Jsonnet spec. For an introduction to the language itself, see the tutorial or language reference. We are using the same test suite used in the offical C++ and Go implementation (which is fairly comprehensive).
Progress
Here is the implementation status of the main language features:
- [X] array and object comprehension
- [X] array slices
- [X] Python-style string formatting
- [X] text blocks
- [X] verbatim strings
- [X] object-level locals
- [ ] object-level asserts
- [X] keyword parameters
- [X] default arguments
- [ ] top-level arguments
- [ ] external variables
- [X] hidden fields (@CristhianMotoche)
- [X] tailstrict annotation
- [X] outermost object reference
$
- [X] mixin inheritence (operator
+
withself
andsuper
) - [X] field composition (operator
+:
) - [ ] multiple file output
Build
Using the stack build tool:
% git clone github.com/moleike/haskell-jsonnet.git
% cd haskell-jsonnet
% stack build
Install
% stack install # to install
Usage
% hs-jsonnet --help
Usage: hs-jsonnet [-v|--version] [-e|--exec] [<filename>]
[-o|--output-file <filename>] [-S|--string]
Available options:
-v,--version Print version of the program
-h,--help Show this help text
-e,--exec Treat filename as code
<filename> Jsonnet source file or stdin
-o,--output-file <filename>
Write to the output file rather than stdout
-S,--string Expect a string, manifest as plain text
Output formats
By default Jsonnet programs evaluate to a JSON document, serialized using aeson
.
The std
library provides several methods to output other formats, e.g. to generate a Yaml stream instead:
% hs-jsonnet -S -e "std.manifestYamlStream(['a', 1, []])"
---
"a"
---
1
---
[]
...
Note the we need to use the option -S
to output a verbatim string, instead of default JSON.
Similarly, to output prettified JSON:
% cat pretty.jsonnet
std.manifestJsonEx(
{
x: [1, 2, 3, true, false, null,
"string\nstring"],
y: { a: 1, b: 2, c: [1, 2] },
}, " ")
% hs-jsonnet -S pretty.jsonnet
{
"x": [
1,
2,
3,
true,
false,
null,
"string\nstring"
],
"y": {
"a": 1,
"b": 2,
"c": [
1,
2
]
}
}
See the Standard library documentation for more details.
Benchmarks
Preliminary results using the benchmarks here for comparison.
Contributing
See CONTRIBUTING.md.
Acknowledgments
I took inspiration from Expresso, hnix, fixplate, Disco, and numerous other libraries. Thanks to their authors.
License
See LICENSE.
Copyright © 2020–present Alexandre Moreno.