Categorygithub.com/jmespath/go-jmespath
modulepackage
0.4.0
Repository: https://github.com/jmespath/go-jmespath.git
Documentation: pkg.go.dev

# README

go-jmespath - A JMESPath implementation in Go

Build Status

go-jmespath is a GO implementation of JMESPath, which is a query language for JSON. It will take a JSON document and transform it into another JSON document through a JMESPath expression.

Using go-jmespath is really easy. There's a single function you use, jmespath.search:

> import "github.com/jmespath/go-jmespath"
>
> var jsondata = []byte(`{"foo": {"bar": {"baz": [0, 1, 2, 3, 4]}}}`) // your data
> var data interface{}
> err := json.Unmarshal(jsondata, &data)
> result, err := jmespath.Search("foo.bar.baz[2]", data)
result = 2

In the example we gave the search function input data of {"foo": {"bar": {"baz": [0, 1, 2, 3, 4]}}} as well as the JMESPath expression foo.bar.baz[2], and the search function evaluated the expression against the input data to produce the result 2.

The JMESPath language can do a lot more than select an element from a list. Here are a few more examples:

> var jsondata = []byte(`{"foo": {"bar": {"baz": [0, 1, 2, 3, 4]}}}`) // your data
> var data interface{}
> err := json.Unmarshal(jsondata, &data)
> result, err := jmespath.search("foo.bar", data)
result = { "baz": [ 0, 1, 2, 3, 4 ] }


> var jsondata  = []byte(`{"foo": [{"first": "a", "last": "b"},
                           {"first": "c", "last": "d"}]}`) // your data
> var data interface{}
> err := json.Unmarshal(jsondata, &data)
> result, err := jmespath.search({"foo[*].first", data)
result [ 'a', 'c' ]


> var jsondata = []byte(`{"foo": [{"age": 20}, {"age": 25},
                           {"age": 30}, {"age": 35},
                           {"age": 40}]}`) // your data
> var data interface{}
> err := json.Unmarshal(jsondata, &data)
> result, err := jmespath.search("foo[?age > `30`]")
result = [ { age: 35 }, { age: 40 } ]

You can also pre-compile your query. This is usefull if you are going to run multiple searches with it:

	> var jsondata = []byte(`{"foo": "bar"}`)
	> var data interface{}
    > err := json.Unmarshal(jsondata, &data)
	> precompiled, err := Compile("foo")
	> if err != nil{
    >   // ... handle the error
    > }
    > result, err := precompiled.Search(data)
	result = "bar"

More Resources

The example above only show a small amount of what a JMESPath expression can do. If you want to take a tour of the language, the best place to go is the JMESPath Tutorial.

One of the best things about JMESPath is that it is implemented in many different programming languages including python, ruby, php, lua, etc. To see a complete list of libraries, check out the JMESPath libraries page.

And finally, the full JMESPath specification can be found on the JMESPath site.

# Packages

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No description provided by the author

# Functions

Compile parses a JMESPath expression and returns, if successful, a JMESPath object that can be used to match against data.
MustCompile is like Compile but panics if the expression cannot be parsed.
NewLexer creates a new JMESPath lexer.
NewParser creates a new JMESPath parser.
Search evaluates a JMESPath expression against input data and returns the result.

# Constants

go:generate stringer -type astNodeType.
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# Structs

ASTNode represents the abstract syntax tree of a JMESPath expression.
JMESPath is the representation of a compiled JMES path query.
Lexer contains information about the expression being tokenized.
Parser holds state about the current expression being parsed.
SyntaxError is the main error used whenever a lexing or parsing error occurs.